|
The
coming of Christ as deliverer and Savior was
prophesied throughout the Old Testament. After the flood
in Noah's day, people grew corrupt again. In Genesis 12:1-4,
God called Abraham and promised that through his seed
all nations would be blessed. In the New Testament, Gal.
3:8, the Apostle Paul said, "and the scriptures farseeing
that God would justify the heathen through faith preached
before the gospel unto Abraham saying, 'In thee In verse
sixteen the same chapter, he stated, shall all nations
be blessed' ". In verse sixteen the same chapter, he stated,
"Now to Abraham and his seed was his promise made". He
did not say "and to seeds", as of many, but as of one
and "to thy seed", which is Christ. In this passage almost
four thousand years later, we find the promise to bless
the nations fulfilled in Christ. In Eph. 3:5, we read
the mystery of Christ was not known unto other generations.
In verse 11, he states that it was in the eternal purpose
of God that through the church would be made known the
manifold wisdom of God. Therefore, the promise to all
the faithful patriarchs and prophets of all was to be
fulfilled in the church, the body of Christ. Eph. 5: 23-25.
About six months before His death,
Christ said, "upon this rock I will build my church" Matthew
16:16-18. In the Old Testament many predictions were made
concerning the church or the Kingdom, and that it would
never be destroyed. In Isaiah 2:2-4, he states that when
the word of Jehovah would go forth from Jerusalem, Jehovah's
house was to be established and all nations would flow
into it. In Zach. 1:16, God speaking through the prophets
said, "My house shall be built in Jerusalem". In Mark
9:1, Jesus told his Apostles, "some of you standing here
shall not taste of death until you see the kingdom come".
In Luke 24:44-53, we have the record of Jesus Christ meeting
with the Apostles after his resurrection from the dead,
and we read; "and He said unto them; These are the words
which I spake unto you while I was yet with you, that
all things must needs be fulfilled which were written
in the law of Moses, and in the Prophets and in the Psalms
concerning me". In verse 47, Jesus states, "and that repentance
and remission of sins should be preached in His name,
among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem". Again we see
Jerusalem as the starting place of the church.
In
Acts 1:1-12, we have the record
of the scene after Christ had been seen of them forty
days after His resurrection. He told the Apostles in verse
4, "Not to depart from Jerusalem, but wait for the promise
of the Father". In verse 8, He said, "But you shall receive
power, after the Holy Spirit is come upon you, and you
shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem and Judah
and in Samaria and unto the uttermost parts of the earth".
In verse 12, we read, "Then returned they unto Jerusalem".
The Apostles received the baptismal measure of the Holy
Ghost as they were promised. There were people present
from every nation, each heard the Apostles speak in his
own language so that everyone could understand. The Apostle
Peter preached a great sermon on the death, the burial,
and the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
In Acts 2:37, Luke says, "They were pricked
in their hearts and said, what must we do?". In the next
verse the answer is given. "Repent you and be baptized,
everyone of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission
of sins and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost,
for the promise is unto you and to your children, and
to all who are afar off, even as many as the Lord our
God shall call". In verse 41, it states, "Then they that
gladly received His word were baptized and the same day
there were added unto them about three thousand souls".
In verse 47, we read, "they were praising God and having
favor with all the people, and the Lord added to the church
daily such as should be saved". This was the first time
in all the Bible that the church is spoken of as being
in existence. Christ purchased the church with his own
blood. Acts 20:28, and He is the head of the church, Col.
1:18. Thus the Apostle Paul wrote in Romans 16:16, "The
churches of Christ salute you".
The
church set forth in the New Testament rests upon seven
cardinal principles:
1. the death of Christ
2. the resurrection of Christ
3. the ascension of Christ
4. the sending of the Holy Spirit by Christ
5. baptism by His authority
6. baptism "into the name of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Ghost for the remission of sins"
7. salvation in the name of Christ.
Apart from
these foundation stones, there could
be no New Testament church. We ask, then, when and where
were these foundation stones laid?
A few months
before His death, Jesus said, "Upon
this rock I will build my church" (Matthew 16:18). He
spoke of some future occasion, but, after the first feast
of the Jewish Pentecost following His resurrection, the
church was always spoken of as being in existence. Thus,
the church had its beginning between the time that Jesus
promised to build it and the close of that next Pentecost
day.
The second
Chapter of Acts reveals for the first
time all seven of the aforementioned cardinal facts. Speaking
at Jerusalem during the Pentecost celebration and guided
by the Holy Spirit, the Apostle Peter publicly revealed
that Jesus who had been crucified, slain, and resurrected,
was God's Son, the promised Savior, the Christ.
Those who
heard Peter's words being exceedingly
sorry for their deeds and their rejection of Jesus, cried
out, "Men and brethren, what shall we do?" And Peter answered
them, saying "Repent and be baptized everyone of you in
the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins and
you shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost" (Acts 2:37-38).
Acting
under Jesus' earlier instructions
in Matthew 28:19 and 20, to 11..... teach all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Ghost . . . ", Peter had, thus, first
revealed baptism by Christ's authority. Remission of sins,
or salvation, was proclaimed in Jesus' name for the very
first time on this occasion. A few days later Peter explained,
"Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is
none other name under heaven given among men, whereby
we must be saved" (Acts 4:12).
All of
the foundation stones
of the church were firmly planted upon the first
Pentecost following the resurrection of our Lord. Afterward,
the church was spoken of as being in existence- indeed,
Peter spoke of this particular day as being "the beginning"
(Acts 11:15). Jesus, himself, spoke of that day as the
beginning date for the proclamation of the Gospel of Christ
(Luke 24:47-49). Thus, the laws governing His church became
functional on the very day it was started, and all men
from then until now enter it the same way.
Truly, Pentecost marked the beginning of
the church set forth in the New Testament. It was also
the beginning of the kingdom of Christ in its operational
sense, it was when Christ started to reign over his kingdom.
It was, in reality, the beginning of the entire Christian
system.
We do not,
therefore, search back to, or before the death of Christ
on the cross to learn the terms of entrance into His Church,
or kingdom. Neither do we search back to the law of Moses
or forward to Christ's return for the establishment of
His reign upon the earth. He is our king now. All are
subject to all of His laws now. When He comes again, it
will not be to set up a kingdom, but to raise those that
are in their graves, either to "the resurrection of life"
or to "the resurrection of condemnation" (John 5:29).
Any church not started in Jerusalem on the first Pentecost
day following Christ's resurrection is not His. Systems
not found in the New Testament constitute no part of the
Church therein set forth.
All that we know about the
church of our Lord, or the principles by which it is governed,
we learn from the New Testament, and it alone.
|