The Integrity of the Local ChurchI have chosen chapter 5 of 1 Corinthians to help us consider the integrity of the New Testament Church. This is a short chapter with only 13 verses out of which I wish to uncover five observations. Before I read this passage let me tell you a story that took place in 1837. A protracted meeting was held in Eatonton, Georgia. A number of people had been converted, and one day they were all gathering by the river for a baptism. One of the persons being baptized was a teenage girl. Her name was Caroline, or shortened, Carrie. Carrie had come to Christ with a great deal of conviction. She said in her own testimony, "I desire to be even more devoted to my Savior than I have ever been to the world." This, as we will see, was her intense desire. There at the riverside was one of her friends who was yet unconverted whose name was Julia. Julia, in fact, had been very close to Caroline or Carrie in all kinds of worldly exploits. So this unsaved girl was now watching the baptism of her closest friend. Somebody recorded the event in what I think is rather eloquent terminology, and I want to read it for you:
I was moved the first time I read that account, and I continue to be moved because it properly illustrates to us that great division between the world and the church. Here a young girl saw herself as leaving the companions of the world for the companionship and the fellowship of the local church. She would now have a new set of friends. She would find her great joys among that new set of friends. More than likely, she would spend her life among them in this very community. As a believer she was now choosing to live entirely differently than she had before, God giving her the grace to do that. That's the proper picture, and that's what baptism helps us to seethat is, it is a visible way of seeing that tremendous difference, that great line between the world and the church. In our day, on the main, we take this coming into the church in a much lighter vein. We don't see it so deeply and meaningfully as Caroline saw it when she was baptized so many years ago. The Corinthian Church, about which we're going to read, was a church that had begun to blur the distinction between the world and the church. Paul, of course, is addressing several problems that the Corinthian Church had. They were a problem-filled fellowship, not unlike some of the churches we have represented here. One of their problems had to do with this blending of the world and the church by their attitude concerning an evil person among them. I want to read the whole of the text, 1 Corinthians 5, and as I read this text, I want you to listen carefully for the sin the church was committing and how they were violating the agreement that was between them. Then I also want you to listen to the forceful way the Apostle Paul tells the church to act in relationship to this individual who has sinned. You are going to find five or six very strong phrases such as "take them away" or "put them away" or "do not associate with them," etc. I want you to look for those as we read through this text, and I think you'll feel the impact of this passage a bit more.
You can sense the Apostle's intense desire to keep the community pure. Now let's talk about five observations coming out of this text of Scripture that will help us to uncover the meaningsome of the importof our relationship with each other in the membership of a local church. The Church is a Society with RulesThe first observation is found in verses 1 and 2. Let me read that over again. "It is actually reported that there is sexual immorality among you, and such sexual immorality as not even named among the Gentilesthat a man has his father's wife! And you are puffed up, and have not mourned, that he who has done this deed might be taken away from among you." The observation that I wish for us to see from these first two verses is very simply this: When you enter into the church of the living God, you are joining a society with rules. Obviously the rule that is glaring at us right here is the command: there will be no sexual immorality in the church. That is not the only rule, however. If you go on down in the text, you find that Paul says in verse 11: "But now I have written to you not to keep company with anyone named a brother, who is sexually immoral, [one form of which has already been mentioned] or covetous, or an idolater, or a reviler, or a drunkard, or an extortionernot even to eat with such a person." There will be no extortion; there will be no idolatry; there will be no greed; there will be no drunkenness; there will be no reviling. There will be no deacon who reviles. There will be no Sunday school teacher who is covetous. There will be no member who is a drunkard on the sly. There are rules in the church. Now the Apostle Paul is actually shocked at what these people are doing. He's sort of gasping here as he hears this report and says what he says with his mouth agape. He's trying to display to them that this is a very foolish and difficult place in which they find themselves in that they have actually condoned sexual immorality and even beyond that, a sexual immorality that is of a sort that the Gentiles even condemn. In other words, even among the world, which is what the word "Gentiles" really conveys, there is a measure of decorum and some conviction that this is wrong. Even in our day of an elasticized conscience most of society, even the unbelieving society, would say that it is wrong for a man to have his father's wife in a sexual relationship. So, he is absolutely shocked. But the church on the other side, rather than being shocked and having a kinship with the apostle in his amazement, is tolerating it beautifully. Paul considers their failure to be shocked as arrogance. He says they are puffed up instead of mourning, indicating that they are proud of their tolerance. We think in our day that such toleration is high in the hierarchy of virtues, and therefore a person surely is not Christian unless he or she is tolerating every kind of indiscretion. Some of us speak as if this was a new thought pattern, but it's an old Corinthian problem. It is also somewhat difficult for churches to realize that we have rules and we must abide by them because somehow some of us think that such strictness mitigates against a good and correct concept of grace. In other words, here is a person who has come along having lived a sexually immoral life, let's say, or having lived in the world and done many awful things, but he comes to Jesus Christ, and the Lord does not take his former life into accountHe erases everything that has happened beforeand He receives him by grace on the basis of what Jesus Christ has done. So we say, the church must not have any rules because if we come to Christ by grace, and are fully accepted by grace, we must be accepted graciously by the church regardless of what we are doing. But that's not what this text teaches us. This text teaches us that when we come into the church, we come into a society with rules. I don't believe you're strict enough in your churches. Let me read something for you. Here is one congregation's rules about membership. I won't tell you the name of this congregation at first, and I'm not saying I espouse what they are doing, or how they are saying it. But, I want to show you one congregation that at least has some strictness about what it means to be a member. They say this in their by-laws:
Again, I'm not saying this group has discovered the best way to deal with membership, the right way or the wrong way. I'm just saying, here's a group that has some strictness about what it means to be a member. Would you like to know who these people are? This by-law comes from the Metropolitan Community Church of Los Angeles, the famous gay, lesbian, transvestite and bisexual organization. Now what I'm telling you is this: they are stricter than you are. Chances are very good that if you had a homosexual or bisexual person in your congregation, your church would be puffed up and would tolerate what they find, or, at a minimum, your church would not know what to do, nor would it have the will to do it. On top of that, most churches have no enforceable rules about membership. Which group then is the strictest? But this text teaches us that the local church is to have rules, and we must abide by them. The Church is a Society that is to Judge Its MembersThe second observation is verses 3-5. I want you to read it with me. "For I indeed, as absent in body but present in spirit, have already judged (as though I were present) him who has done this deed." By the way, he does not mention a continued action here but a single completed action, (i.e. "this deed"), and he mentions that twice. He continues: "In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, when you are gathered together, along with my spirit, with the power of our Lord Jesus Christ, deliver such a one to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus." The second observation is this: The church is a society that judges its members. In fact that the very word judge is used here in the passage ought to forever dispel the concept that Christians never judge. Christians do judge. It's true that Jesus said, "Judge not lest you be judged," but what He meant, of course, is that we are not to have that kind of critical judgment which puts down another in order to elevate ourselves. But to judge the members of a covenant community is absolutely necessary for the church to do. In fact, if we had the time, we would go on and read chapter 6 of 1 Corinthians where we find a full explanation about how courts ought to be set up within the church to judge between brothers. There are a number of passages that speak to the judgment that is made by believers. Every church discipline situation is a judgment situation. The church is clearly a society that judges its members. Now the Apostle Paul is very exercised here. The commentator Hendrickson said that he takes the gavel in his hand, so to speak, and chairs the meeting of the local church even though he is absent. He says, "even though I'm not with you as though I were present with you, my spirit being present with you." He's so adamant about what he believes and so sure that this man ought to be judged that he says, "Just think of me as being there, and I'll tell you ahead of time what my decision is. This man is to be expelled." Then he adds to that, "not only as if I were there with my apostolic authority, but with the name or the authority of the Lord Jesus Christ as well!" In other words, he is absolutely sure where Jesus stands on this issue also. "Deliver the man to Satan." Now the delivering to Satan is simply another way of saying that they were to excommunicate the man from the church. Simply put, here is a man professing to be a Christian and claiming to be under the headship of Christ by his membership in the local church, but in fact he is acting as a non-Christian. He is to be put away from you and put out into the world where Satan is the authority. Satan, being a cruel taskmaster, will make it hard on his body, and hopefully he will be converted before the Day of the Lord. As he remembers what the church was like, what he has heard from the church, and all those who loved him, perhaps he will yet be truly converted. I think that is the essence of what is being said. The second observation, again, is this: The church is a society that judges its members. The Church Has Good Reason to Expect Its Members to Conform to the RulesI will give you the third observation before I read: The church not only has rules and must judge its members, but the church has good reason to expect members to conform to the rules. Let me read that for you in verses 6 through 8:
The good reason is, of course, that a little leaven leavens the whole lump of dough. He is saying to these people, "You are the unleavened of God." In the Old Testament picture in the Passover, the Jews would take a period of days to clean up every speck of leaven from their house before Passover. Leaven represented evil, and all of the leaven, therefore, was to be removed. Then they were able to sacrifice the Passover Lamb. He says, in paraphrase, "Christ has been sacrificed, and you are therefore the unleavened as the church of God. That's who you are, but somehow you have added to yourselves this man who has done this evil, and it has caused some leaven or evil to enter into the fellowship. You had better be careful to remove it. A little leaven leavens the whole lump of dough. Purge this leaven out from you." Now, to those of you who cook, what would it be like if you left that chicken you were planning to cook on the counter for about two weeks before using it? I don't know where maggots come from, but I am sure that they would show up in that chicken. They would be there crawling in and out of the carcass right on your counter. The place would stink, and you would know you have a contaminated piece of meat. Now what if you took that contaminated piece of meat and you put it in a container with a fresh chicken? What would happen? Well, obviously, the fresh chicken would overwhelm the contamination of the rotten chicken, correct? No, it doesn't ever work that way, does it? Rather, the rotten chicken would actually contaminate the fresh chicken, and it will ruin it. You see, somehow we've gotten the idea that we should tolerate sin in our churches and be so magnanimous that any kind of person may be allowed among our church people. We think, somehow, we'll surely improve them. But the opposite is actually happening. I choose to believe that what the Apostle Paul said here is true. Do you believe it? It is true that there are people who struggle with sin and want desperately to rid themselves of it. We should be glad to have people who are weak, yet seeking help. But this is another case. We cannot just say it is true that evil people contaminate the rest, however, without corresponding action. If these evil persons among you are not lovingly disciplined, your supposed gracious spirit will be the ruin of some. A little leaven does leaven the whole lump of dough. So if you've got that Sunday school teacher who is getting drunk in private or that greedy businessman who steals from his employer, or that person who is slandering others, you are arrogant to permit this to continue. Haggai 2:10-14 and Hebrews 12: 14-16 tells us that very clearly, but I will leave that for you to read. Even if no other Scripture mentioned it, this passage would be enough. In fact, common sense itself ought to tell us that there is good reason to judge those who are consistently disobedient among us. When a Church Judges Its Members, |