by T. Austin-Sparks
When our Lord made the great pronouncement about His Church: "...I will build my Church; and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it", He intimated three things. One, that He would build a definite entity called His Church. Two, that that Church would encounter an opposing force in its full and final enmity. Three, that that power would be taken at its ultimate strength and be destroyed, that is, made incapable of prevailing against that Church. In this full statement there is a very definite indication of the fundamental nature of His true Church. We have been saying earlier that the Church is essentially a spiritual thing, and that spirituality is its basic principle. But can we be still clearer as to what we mean by spirituality? Yes, I think that we can, and that by using an alternative word, the word 'supernatural'.
The Church is Essentially Supernatural
The Church is the embodiment of TRUE Christianity, and TRUE Christianity is supernatural, or it is nothing! It is only when and where that is fully realized and accepted that the Church really exists and can be the power that it is intended to be.
1. Supernatural in Origin
First of all, Christianity and the Church (in truth,
identical terms) came down from heaven, and have still
unceasingly to be received and ENTERED from there.
This is the very foundational truth of Christ Himself and
of the Church in every individual incorporated into it.
The teaching of the New Testament everywhere is this. The
origin and home of Christ was in heaven. John's Gospel
and Paul's Letter to the Ephesians are a particular and
emphatic argument for this one thing, and they comprehend
the New Testament in this truth. In the former the
repeated affirmation of Christ as to His heavenly origin
is the basis of EVERYTHING in the whole Gospel. It
is a "verily, verily" - 'most truly', and
everything in the Gospel is intended to bear that out and
be evidence of it.
But when that has been recognized, the Gospel, and the
rest of the New Testament return from that to affirm
equally that the Church embodies that truth and fact of
Christ. John 3 will employ the identical language -
"verily, verily" - in connection with any
single individual entering the Church. That individual,
no matter if he be the best specimen and representative
of the Old Testament Israel (such as Nicodemus) just
"CANNOT" enter along the horizontal line
of this creation; he cannot enter by the door of nature,
of tradition, of 'religion'; he "MUST be born
from above". By THIS birth he is constituted
a SUPER-natural being in the INNERMOST
reality of his being: what Paul calls "a NEW
creation".
Then correspondingly the Church is born from above on the
Day of Pentecost. The difference between the same persons
before and after that event, and the corporate nature of
the new entity, are patent to all who have eyes to see.
It is supernatural.
2. Supernatural in Support
What was - and IS - true of the origin and home of
Christ and His Church is shown with OVERWHELMING
evidence to be true of their sustenance and survival.
'Bread from heaven' only means the sustaining, supporting
power of heavenly resources. This is seen in two
connections. One, in the law of utter dependence upon God
and heaven; the very principle of the Incarnation -
"He emptied himself" (Philippians 2:7). Again,
John's Gospel is a constant emphatic assertion of this.
The double "verily, verily" is employed to
affirm this - (5:19): "Verily, verily, I say unto
you, the Son can do nothing of (out from) himself",
etc., etc. For every work, for every word, for every
time, He declared that He was dependent upon His Father,
upon heaven. It explains His lowly birth, His lowly
upbringing, His later homelessness. It explains His being
"despised and rejected of men". But was there
ever a life and work so powerful as His?
The other connection is that of the Church. When we
consider the human material of the first nucleus, and MAINLY
of its growth; when we take into account what it did NOT
have of this world's goods and support; and when we think
of all that was against it in every conceivable way, bent
upon its annihilation; and then remark its more than
survival as an entity, there is only one word for it -
supernatural! I confess that I have marvelled at the
sustained and triumphant faith of a man like the Apostle
Paul when I see him suffering as he did, and when I read
his own catalogues of sufferings. The natural mind would
say: 'This is not the support of heaven', but we have the
verdict of many centuries, and it is the evidence and
verdict of the supernatural.
Surely all this is contained in that further double
"verily" of John 6, where - with an allusion to
Israel's life in the wilderness - Jesus declares Himself
to be the Bread of God from heaven. Indeed, so strong,
meaningful, and imperative is His mind on this matter
that in that chapter He uses the double
"verily" four times. The wilderness has always
been the symbol or figure of a place outside of the
world, and the succour and sustenance in conditions so
inimical to life demand resources from another realm. The
history of the spiritual life is the history of secret
supernatural support. Silently, without demonstration;
sustained, without failing, sufficient, without poverty,
the Manna fell, and the Heavenly Lord of Life has
maintained His Church in the same way. Yes, while it has
been silent and often almost imperceptible to the natural
senses, yet in FACT, it has been a working of
immense power. The New Testament will teach us that the
very birth and sustenance of the Church is the
counterpart of Israel's emancipation from Egypt. There
and then the power of God extended and exhausted the WHOLE
might of Egypt and its gods, and then nullified death
itself.
The part of the New Testament which most specifically
brings the Church into view uses such words as: "The
EXCEEDING greatness of his power which is to
usward who believe."
We have far from understood the terrific thing that was
involved in the death and resurrection of Christ IN
ORDER to secure the Church unto God!
Surely we have said enough already to do one or two very
supremely important things.
Firstly, to show what the true Church is according to the
New Testament revelation. If this is not a
misapprehension of that revelation, it must be a very
discriminating thing; that is, it must reveal a very
great difference between the true Church, on one side,
and that immense umbrella which goes by the name on the
other side, an umbrella under which have gathered so many
institutions and conflicting conceptions.
It should be a corrective of two extremes. The extreme of
a too great an inclusiveness which overlooks the
fundamental and essential nature of the supernatural, of
which we have spoken: the supernatural in the new birth
from heaven of every individual in the Church. Also a
corrective of the opposite extreme of an unscriptural
exclusiveness, which makes Christ smaller than He really
is in excluding from fellowship truly born-again
believers on the ground of some particular technique of
'protection', or some specific interpretation of truth.
Further, if what we have said is a true definition of the
Church and its nature, then, surely, it explains loss of
power, of impact, of supernatural influence, and it
explains the confusion, the poverty of spiritual food for
hungry sheep, and the scatteredness which is Satan's
special strategy to rob the Church of its vocation to
take the Kingdom and reign!
The explanation is that the great power of utter
dependence upon God, which is the categorical demand of
God for the showing of His own glory, has been
surrendered to recourse to the world for means, methods,
fashions, etc., to make God's work 'successful'. Satan is
not one bit afraid of anything that will use his own
kingdom for its glory! He will even sponsor anything that
will give him a place. The curse resting upon him and
this world will always spell frustration, confusion, and
eventual vanity to all that is of his kingdom, hence so
much of these very things in a Church which is - IN
ANY RESPECT - of this world. The Church has so
largely failed to discern why - in essential relation
to His mission and ministry - the temptation of Jesus
in the wilderness is given a place in three of the
Gospels, and in that specific connection John's
Gospel is so gathered up in chapter 17, where the
emphasis of Jesus is upon His not being of this world,
and the same of His Church!
The Church - universal and local - which is constituted
on spiritual and heavenly principles will have food
enough for its own needs, and to spare for all the world.
The hungry will gravitate toward such. It will be a SPIRITUAL
magnet which will draw the Lord's people together in a SPIRITUAL
fellowship. It will therefore be an object of Satan's
special attention to undo it. But, even if he succeeds in
destroying its TEMPORAL aspects, by martyrdom,
fire, dissensions, scatterings, places, etc., such a
church will have held SPIRITUAL values which are
indestructible and eternal - "for the things which
are seen are temporal (transient, passing) but the things
which are not seen are eternal".
The ultimate test is the eternal!
We said at the commencement that, while we are concerned
with the nature of the true Church universal, we have a
special concern for the local expression. We shall
therefore now concentrate our attention upon that
expression.
If we take seriously the first three chapters of the book
of the Revelation (and surely we must do so) we shall be
impressed with the Lord's serious concern for such local
expressions. A matchless presentation of Himself is given
by way of judging the churches ACCORDING TO HIMSELF.
Every feature of that presentation is a factor in
judgment. Then the churches are given a twofold symbolic
definition; one as of stars and the other as lampstands.
Leaving many details until later, we, at the moment, note
that the common feature is that of the power of
testimony. It is the POSITIVE element of a
challenge to world darkness. All through what follows in
relation to the churches the feature and factor of
positiveness of spiritual life and influence are dominant
and paramount. All controversy by the Lord with the
churches - on whatever specified account - is focused
upon this ultimate issue: the positive effect of the
church being where it is. Is there an impact within
(lampstands) and without (stars)? Are they telling,
accountable, effective, unmistakable? Have they an
influential impact upon their surroundings? Is there
spiritual power that has effects? Ultimately, the
continuance of their place in the Divine economy - being
retained or 'removed' - rests upon this issue. Many
things are detailed as the cause of the loss of power,
but it is that loss which makes for judgment.
Having noted the inclusive issue which determines
everything in a local testimony we proceed to ask and
answer the question: What are
The Essential Features of a True Local Church?
We are seeking to keep close and true to the overall
principle that the Church - universal and local - is
called to be an expression of Christ. It is impossible to
read the New Testament without seeing that the presence
of Christ anywhere was the presence of
1. Heavenly light and power
This we have just indicated as the basis of His judgment
of churches. With Him it was not only the light of
teaching or doctrine. It was teaching personified. There
was the teaching incarnated in manhood. His teaching and
His works were one. It was very practical light! It was
light from another world. If the stars RULED the
night they did so by the reflected light of the sun. If
the churches are to have the POWER of truth it
must be because they give a rebound of Christ upon human
darkness. A local expression of Christ should mean that
there is EFFECTIVE light, both for the Lord's
people (the candlesticks) and for the world (the stars).
The people who have contact with such a local church
should feel the POWER of the teaching, should be
affected by it, and it should be fruitful in them. This
is not only a test, but it is a testimony to what the
Lord has provided for. Is it a people LIVING in
the good of the heavenly light received through that
vessel? Is sin rebuked and exposed? Are sinners
convicted? Do the perplexed get understanding in that
presencing of Christ?
2. Heavenly life
The Lord said that His very coming into this world was
"that they might have life". Therefore, His
presence in a locality by means of the church there
should mean that all who come and go register a HEAVENLY
livingness. Not just excitableness, noise, activity,
etc., but a life which is not of this world. There are
not dead forms and customs. There is nothing in a rut.
Life is mediated by all that has a place and a part.
There is a spiritual LIFT as of RESURRECTION
life! No depression!
3. Heavenly food
Yet again, as we have seen earlier, the presence of
Christ meant bread for the hungry. The very
"compassion" of Christ meant that He could not
bear to have people come hungry and go away the same. A
true local expression of Christ will mean that that
company of His people will have, not only enough for
themselves, but the margin, or overflow to all the hungry
- spiritually hungry. That will be a house of bread where
none ever fails to be fed. The food will not be just
localized, but will be ministered to many beyond.
4. Heavenly fellowship
An impressive feature of Christ when personally present
among men was the way He transcended the things which
divide men in this world. He made no ATTEMPT to
make everyone and everything uniform by organization,
institution, denomination, class, category, forms,
systems, etc. Every type and temperament, if free from
prejudice and hypocrisy and of open heart and conscious
of spiritual need, found a COMMON ground of
fellowship and oneness in Him. He just rose above the
dividing things, and in response to Him people found that
things which had separated them just vanished. Christ
became their common ground.
Thus should it be in any local corporate expression of
Christ. Questions of association, denomination, sect,
tradition, etc., should not arise, but just vanish in the
presence of the warmth of fellowship and ENTIRE
occupation with Christ. The only effective way of true
unity, heavenly fellowship, is that of the higher than
earthly ground - the love of heaven.
5. Heavenly order
All the four things which we have mentioned as
characteristic of a true local expression of the Church
and of Christ will be helped or hindered by the presence
or absence of a heavenly, spiritual order. All
appointments, positions, "offices", should be
by the definite witness of the Holy Spirit; not by man's
choosing, whether by others or by the person's ambition.
As the result of much prayer by the church it should be
manifest where anointing and gift rests, so that the
function of those in any position of leadership should
definitely mean that the church is inspired, strengthened
and built up. Failing this HEAVENLY order, there
will exist an element of artificiality, a straining to MAKE
something and keep it going. The highest level of genius
will fall far short of the smallest measure of Divine
inspiration. It is this Divine inspiration that
determines all Divine service and functions. There is no EFFORT
or strain where the anointing rests, but spontaneity and
liberty and unction. Oil has ever been a symbol of the
Holy Spirit, and where He is things should move as in
oil.
This is not at all an impossible standard, but the normal
expression of the Lordship and Headship of Christ.
What God requires He makes possible.
In keeping with T. Austin-Sparks' wishes that what was freely received should be freely given and not sold for profit, and that his messages be reproduced word for word, we ask if you choose to share these messages with others, to please respect his wishes and offer them freely - free of any changes, free of any charge (except necessary distribution costs) and with this statement included.