CHAPTER I
THE NEW TESTAMENT CHURCHES
AFTER our Lord had finished his work
on earth, and before he had ascended into glory, he gave to his
disciples the following commission: "All authority is given to
me in heaven and in earth. Go ye therefore, and teach all
nations, baptizing them into the name of the Father, and of the
Son, and of the Holy Spirit: teaching them to observe all things
whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo I am with you always
even unto the end of the world. Amen" (Matthew 28:18-20). Under
the terms of this commission Jesus gave to his churches the
authority to evangelize the world.
A New Testament Church
is a company of baptized believers voluntarily associated
together for the maintenance of the ordinances and the spread of
the gospel of Jesus Christ.
The distinctive
characteristics of this church are clearly marked in the New
Testament.
Such a church was a
voluntary association and was independent of all other churches.
It might be, and probably was, affiliated with other churches in
brotherly relations; but it remained independent of all outward
control, and was responsible to Christ alone, who was the
supreme lawgiver and the source of all authority. Originally the
teachers and the people conjointly administered the affairs of
the church.
In the
New Testament sense of the church there can be no such an
organization as a National or General Church, covering a
large district of country, composed of a number of local
organizations. The church, in the Scriptural sense, is always an
independent, local organization. Sister churches were "united
only by the ties of faith and charity. Independence and equality
formed the basis of their internal constitution" (Edward Gibbon,
The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, 1.554.
Boston, 1854). Gibbon, always artistic in the use of material,
continues: "Such was the mild and equal constitution by which
the Christians were governed for more than a hundred years after
the death of the apostles. Every society formed within itself a
separate and independent republic; and although the most distant
of these little states maintained a mutual, as well as friendly,
intercourse of letters and deputations, the Christian world was
not yet connected by any supreme or legislative assembly" (Thid,
558).
The officers of the
church were first, pastors, indifferently called elders or
bishops, and, secondly, deacons. These were the honorable
servants of a free people. The pastors possessed no authority
above their brethren, save that by service they purchased to
themselves a good degree of glory.
The more recent
Episcopal writers, such as Jacob and Hatch, do not derive their
system from the ancient Scriptural form of government, but
always acknowledge the primitive congretional form of
government, and declare that episcopacy is a later development
In the New Testament, elder and bishop are different names to
describe the same office. Dr. Lightfoot, the Bishop of Durham,
in a very exhaustive discussion of the subject, says:
It is clear,
that, at the close of the Apostolic Age, the two lower
orders of the three fold ministry were firmly and widely
established; but traces of the episcopate, properly
so-called, are few and Indistinct.
The episcopate
was formed out of the presbyterial order by elevation;
and the title, which originally was common to all, came
at length to be appropriated to the chief of them
(Lightfoot, Commentary on Philippians, 1~276).
Dean Stanley represents
the same view. He says:
According to the
strict rules of the church derived from those early
times, there are but two orders, presbyters and deacons
(Stanley, Christian Institutions, 210).
Bichard
B. Rackliam (The Acts of the Apostles cii), A. D. 1912, says of
the word bishop (episcopos):
We may
say at once that it had not yet acquired the definite sense
which it holds in the letters of Ignatius (A. D. 115), and which
it still holds today, viz., of a single ruler of a diocese. From
Acts xx. 28, Titus i. 6,7, and comparison with I Timothy iii.
2f., we should conclude that epescopus was simply a
synonym for presbyter, and that the two offices
were identical.
Knowling (The Expositors
Greek Testament, II. 435-437) reviews all of the authorities,
Ilatch (Smith and Chcetham, Dictionary of Christian Antiquities,
11.1700), Harnack (Gebhardt and Harnack, Clement of Rome, ed.
altera, 5), Steinmetz, etc., and reaches the following
conclusion:
This one passage
(Acts 20:28) is also sufficient to show that the
"presbyter" and the "bishop" were at first practically
identical.
Jerome,
at the end of the fourth century, reminds the bishops that they
owe their elevation above the presbyters, not ac much to divine
institution as to ecclesiastical usage; for before the outbreak
of controversies in the church there was no distinction between
the two, except that presbyter was a term of age, and
bishop a term of official dignity; but when men, at the
instigation of Satan, erected parties and sects, and, instead of
simply following Christ, named themselves of Paul, of Apollos,
or Cephas, all agreed to put one of the presbyters at the head
of the rest, that by his universal supervision of the churches,
he might kill the seeds of division (Hieron. Comm. ad Tit. i.
7). The great commentators of the Greek Church agree with Jerome
in maintaining the original identity of bishops and presbyters
in the New Testament. Thus did Chrysostom (Hom. i. in Ep. ad
Phil. i. 11); Theodoret (ad Phil. i. 1); Ambrosiaster (ad Eph.
iv. 11); and the pseudo-Augustinian (Questions V. et N. T. qu.
101).
There were two
ordinances m the primitive church, baptism and the Supper of the
Lord. Baptism was an outward confession of faith in Christ. It
thus expressed a belief in the death, burial and resurrection of
Jesus Christ, and a subsequent resurrection of all believers
through the eternal Spirit.
Only believers were
baptized and that upon a public profession of faith in Jesus
Christ. The church was composed of believers or holy persons.
The members were called in the New Testament "beloved of God,
called to be saints"; "sanctified in Christ Jesus"; "faithful in
Christ"; "God’s elect, holy, and beloved." The conditions of
membership were repentance, faith, righteousness, and the
initiatory rite of baptism, which was symbolical of the changed
life.
In this connection it is
interesting to note that all the Pedobaptist Confessions of
Faith include only believers in the definition of the proper
members of a church, The following definition of a church is
taken from the Augsburg Confession of Faith of the Lutheran
Church. It fairly represents all the rest. It says:
To speak
properly, the church of Christ is a congregation of the
members of Christ; that is, of the saints, which do
truly believe and rightly obey Christ.
So universal is this
definition of a church in all of the Confessions of Faith that
Kostlin, Professor of Theology in Halle, say’s: "The Reformed
Confessions describe the Church as the communion of believers or
saints, and condition its existence on the pure preaching of the
Word" (Kostlin, Schaff-Herzog Religious Encyclopaedia, I. 474).
The above definition,
consistently applied, excludes infant baptism, since infants are
incapable of faith, which always, in the New Testament, is a
prerequisite to baptism. The New Testament teaching is quite
clear on this point. John the Baptist required that those who
were applicants for baptism should experience repentance,
exercise faith, make a confession of sin and live a righteous
life (Math. 3 :2; Acts 19:4). Jesus first made disciples and
then baptized them (John 4:1), and gave distinct commandment
that teaching should precede baptism (Math. 28:19). In the
preaching of the apostles repentance antedates baptism (Acts 2
:38): the converts were filled with joy, and only men and women
were baptized (Acts 8:5, 8, 12). There is no account or
inference implying the baptism of an infant by Jesus or his
apostles.
This is generally
conceded by scholars.
Dollinger, a Catholic
scholar, Professor of Church History in the University of
Munich, says: "‘There is no proof or hint in the New Testament
that the apostles baptized infants or ordered them to be
baptized" (John Joseph Ignatius Dollinger, The First Age of the
Church, 11.184).
Dr. Edmund de Pressense,
a French Senator and Protestant, says: "No positive fact
sanctioning the practice (of infant baptism) can be adduced from
the New Testament; the historical proofs alleged are in no way
conclusive" (Pressense, Early Years of Christianity, 376.
London, 1870).
Many authors of books
treating directly on infant baptism affirm that it is not
mentioned in the Scriptures. One writer only is here quoted.
Joh. W. F. Hofling, Lutheran Professor of Theology at Erlangen,
says: "The sacred Scriptures furnish no historical proof that
children were baptized by the apostles" (Hofling, Das Sakrament
der Taufe, 99. Erlangen, 1846. 2 vols.).
A few of
the more recent authorities will not be amiss on this subject.
The "Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics," edited by Professor
James Hastings and Professor Kirsopp Lake, of the University of
Leyden, says: "There is no indication of the baptism
of children" in the New Testament.
The "Real Encyklopadie
fur Protestantiche Theologie und Kirche" (XIX. 403. 3rd
edition), the great German encyclopaedia, says:
The practice of
infant-baptism in the apostolic and post-apostolic age
cannot be proved. We hear indeed frequently of the
baptism of entire households, as in Acts 15: 32f; 18: 8;
1 Cor. 1: 16. But the last passage taken, 1 Cor. 7:14,
is not favorable to the supposition that infant baptism
was customary at that time. For then Paul would not have
written "else were your children unclean."
Principal Robert Rainy,
New College, Edinburgh, Presbyterian, says:
Baptism presupposed some
Christian instruction, and was preceded by fasting. It signified
the forgivenss of past sins, and was the visible point of
departure of the new life under Christian Influence’ and with
the Inspiration of Christian purposes and aims. Here it was the
"seal" which concerned a man to keep inviolate (Rainy, Ancient
Catholic Church, 75)
The form of baptism was
dipping, or an immersion in water. John baptized in the river
Jordan (Mark 1:5); and he baptized in Aenon near to Salim
"because there was much water there" (John 3 :23). Jesus was
baptized in the Jordan (Mark 1:9), and he "went into the water"
and he "came up out of the water" (Matthew 3 :16). The
symbolical passages (Rom. 6:3, 4; Col. 2 :12), which describe
baptism as burial and resurrection make it certain that
immersion was the New Testament act of baptism.
This,
indeed, is the meaning of the Greek word baptizein. The
word is defined by Liddell and Scott, the secular Greek lexicon
used in all colleges and universities, "to dip in or under the
water." In the lexicon of J. H. Thayer, the standard New
Testament lexicon, the word is defined as an "immersion in
water." All scholarship confirms this view. Prof. R. C. Jebb,
Litt. D., University of Cambridge, says: "I do not know whether
there is any authoritative Greek-English lexicon which makes the
word to mean ‘sprinkle’ or to ‘pour.’ I can only say that such a
meaning never belongs to the word in Classical Greek" (Letter to
the author. September 23, 1898). Dr. Adolf Harnack, University
of Berlin, says: "Baptism undoubtedly signifies immersion. No
proof can be found that it signifies anything else in the New
Testament, and in the most ancient Christian literature"
(Schaff, The Teaching of the Twelve, 50).
Dr. Dosker, Professor of
Church History, Presbyterian Theological Seminary, Louisville,
says:
Every candid historian will admit that the Baptist.
have, both philologically and historically, the better
of the argument, as to the prevailing mode of baptism.
The word baptizo means immersion, both in
classical and Biblical Greek, except where it is
manifestly used in a tropical sense (Dosker, The Dutch
Anabaptists, 176 Philadelphia, 1921).
Nothing is more certain
than that the New Testament churches uniformly practiced
immersion,
The Lord’s Supper shows
forth the death of the Saviour till he shall come again. It is a
perpetual memorial of the broken body and the shed blood of the
risen Lord. In the Scriptures the Lord’s Supper is always
preceded by the act of baptism, and there is no account of any
person participating in the Supper who had not previously been
baptized. That baptism should precede the Lord’s Supper is
avowed by scholars of all communions.
Dr.
William Wall sums up the entire historical field when he says:
"For no church ever gave the communion to any persons before
they were baptized. . . Since among all of the absurdities that
ever were held, none ever maintained that any person should
partake of the communion before he was baptized" (Wall, The
History of Infant Baptism, I. 632, 638. Oxford, 1862).
The Baptists have always
insisted that the ordinances were symbols and not sacraments.
Indeed this is the heart of their contention.
President E. Y. Mullins
has concisely stated the historical contention of Baptists in
the following words:
They have seen with
great vividness and clearness of outline the central spiritual
elements of Christianity. With a like vividness and clearness
they have perceived the significance of the outward form,,. For
them it has seemed as if the very life of Christianity depended
upon keeping the spiritual and ceremonial elements in their
respective places. Christian history certainly justifies them in
their view. Forms and ceremonies are like ladders. On them we
may climb up or down. If we keep them in their places as
symbols, the soul feeds on the truth symbolized. If we convert
them into sacraments, the soul misses the central vitality
itself, spiritual communion with God. An outward religious
ceremony derives its chief significance from the context in
which it is placed, from the general system of which it forms a
part. If a ceremony is set in the context of a spiritual system
of truths, it may become an indispensable element for the
furtherance of those truths. If it is set in the context of a
sacramental system, it may and does become a means for obscuring
the truth and enslaving the soul. It is this perception of the
value of ceremonies as symbols and of their perils as sacraments
which animates Baptists in their strenuous advocacy of a
spiritual interpretation of the ordinances of Christianity
(McGlothlin, Infant Baptism Historically Considered, 7).
The early churches were
missionary bodies. They were required to carry out the great
commission given by our Lord. The obedience to the missionary
program laid out by the divine Lord, the disciples in a few
generations preached the gospel to the known world.
The first church was
organized by Jesus and his apostles; and after the form of this
one all other churches should be modeled. The churches so
organized are to continue in the world until the kingdoms of
this earth shall become the kingdom of our Lord, even Christ.
Prophecy was full of the enduring character of the kingdom of
Christ (Daniel 2 :44, 45). Jesus maintained a like view of his
church and extended the promise to all the ages. He said: "Upon
this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall
not prevail against it" (Matt. 16:18). The word church here is
doubtless used in its ordinary, literal sense as a local
institution; and in the only other passage where it is found in
Matthew (18 :17) it must be taken with the same signification.
The great mass of scholarship supports the contention that this
passage refers to the local, visible church of Christ (Meyer,
Critical and Exegetical Handbook to the Gospel of Matthew).
The critical meaning of
the word does not differ from this (Thayer, Greek-English
Lexicon of the New Testament, 197). The word "church" was used
by our Lord and the apostles not so much in contra-distinction
to the Jewish Theocracy, as to the Jewish synagogue, and the
synagogue was always local (Cremer, Biblico-Theological Lexicon
of the New Testament Greek, 330, 331). The Roman Catholics have
always denied the existence of a universal spiritual church
(AIzog, Universal Church History, 1.108, 109). Until the German
Reformation there was practically no other conception of a
church. When Luther and others split off from the Roman Catholic
Church, a new interpretation of this passage was adopted to suit
the new views; so they held that Matthew 16:18 merely pointed to
the ultimate triumph of Christianity. But manifestly this
interpretation was remote from the meaning of the Lord.
Paul gives a large
promise: "Unto him be glory in the church of Jesus Christ
throughout all ages, world without end. Amen" (Ephesians 3:21).
Ellicott translates the passage: "To all the generations of the
ages of ages." The glory of Christ was to exist in all of the
ages in the church. The church was, therefore, bound to exist in
all of the ages. Even the redeemed in heaven are described in
the Scriptures as a church.
The author believes that
in every age since Jesus and the apostles, there have been
companies of believers, churches, who have substantially held to
the principles of the New Testament as now proclaimed by the
Baptists. No attempt is made in these pages to trace a
succession of bishops, as the Roman Catholics attempt to do,
back to the apostles. Such an attempt is "laboring in the fire
for mere vanity," and proceeds upon a mistaken view of the
nature of the kingdom of Christ, and of the sovereignty of God,
in his operations on the earth. Jesus himself, in a reply to an
inquiry put to him by the Pharisees (Luke 17:20-24), compares
his kingdom to the lightning, darting its rays in the most
sovereign and uncontrollable manner from one extremity of the
heavens to the other. And this view corresponds to God’s
dealings in the spiritual realm. Wherever God has his elect,
there in his own proper time, he sends the gospel to save them,
and churches after his model are organized (William Jones, The
History of the Christian Church, xvii. Philadelphia. 1832).
The New Testament
recognizes a democratic simplicity, and not a hierarchical
monarchy. There is no irregularity, but a perpetual proclamation
of principles. There is no intimation that there was not a
continuity of churches, for doubtless there was, but our
insistence is that this was not the dominant note in apostolic
life. No emphasis is put on a succession of baptisms, or the
historical order of churches. Some of the apostles were
disciples of John the Baptist (John 1 :35), but there is no
record of the baptism of others, though they were baptized.
Paul, the great missionary, was baptized by Ananias (Acts 9:17,
18), but it is not known who baptized Ananias. Nothing definite
is known of the origin of the church at Damascus. The church at
Antioch became the great foreign missionary center, but the
history of its origin is not distinctly given. The church at
Rome was already in existence when Paul wrote to them his
letter. These silences occur all through the New Testament, but
there is a constant recurrence of type, a persistence of
fundamental doctrines, and a proclamation of principles. This
marked the whole apostolic period, and for that matter, every
period since that time.
This recurrence of type
is recognized even where error was detected. The disciples
desired Jesus to rebuke a man who walked not with them (Mark 9
:40), but this Jesus refused to do. The church at Corinth was
imperfect in practice and life. The Judaizing teachers
constantly perverted the gospel, and John the Evangelist, in his
last days, combated insidious error, but the great doctrines of
the atoning work of Christ, conversion and repentance, the
baptism of believers, the purity of the church, the freedom of
the soul, and the collateral truths, were everywhere avowed. At
times these principles have been combated and those who held
them persecuted, often they have been obscured; sometimes they
have been advocated by ignorant men, and at other times by
brilliant graduates Of the universities, who frequently mixed
the truth with philosophical speculations; yet; always, often
under the most varied conditions, these principles have come to
the surface.
Baptist churches have
the most slender ties of organization, and a strong government
is not according to their polity. They are like the river Rhone,
which sometimes flows as a river broad and deep, but at other
times is hidden in the sands. It, however, never loses its
continuity or existence. It is simply hidden for a period.
Baptist churches may disappear and reappear in the most
unaccountable manner.. Persecuted everywhere by sword and by
fire, their principles would appear to be almost extinct, when
in a most wondrous way God would raise up some man, or some
company of martyrs, to proclaim the truth.
The footsteps of the
Baptists of the ages can more easily be traced by blood than by
baptism. It is a 1ineage of suffering rather than a succession
of bishops; a martyrdom of principle, rather than a dogmatic
decree of councils; a golden chord of love, rather than an iron
chain of succession, which, while attempting to rattle its links
back to the apostles, has been of more service in chaining some
protesting Baptist to the stake than in proclaiming the truth of
the New Testament. It is, nevertheless, a right royal
succession, that in every age the Baptists have been advocates
of liberty for all, and have held that the gospel of the Son of
God makes every man a free man in Christ Jesus.
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