The following is the text of a sermon preached on 18 May 2008.
We
gather here tonight one week after Pentecost, that wonderful miraculous
day when the Holy Spirit was poured out on Christ’s church, and we
gather as part of Christ’s church. We also gather knowing that the
highest court of our own denomination, the General Assembly is meeting
in Edinburgh this week, and that our own minister, Howard, is going to
play his part in making the decisions that will affect the church this
year and perhaps for many years to come.
And so on a
night like this, we look not at this or that Christian writer’s latest
book on “How to do Church” nor do we look at reports of this or that
General Assembly committee, but we turn instead to some words about the
Church that come from higher authority than even the General Assembly.
We turn to again at part of what our Lord Jesus Christ, the King and
Head of the Church, himself taught about the Church in Matthew 16:18
where we find the words we are going to concentrate on this evening:
“And on this rock I will build my Church and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.”
There are five things for us to have a look at in these words of Christ tonight.
There is a building: “My Church.”
There is a builder: Jesus Christ says “I will build my Church.”
There is a foundation: “On this rock I will build”
There is opposition and danger: “The gates of hell”
And there is the promise of safety and security: “The gates of hell shall not prevail against it.”
So
first, there is a building: “My Church.” Before any of the rest of this
verse can be properly understood, it is crucial that we understand what
this building, the Church is. It is a very special kind of building you
see. It is a building not made of bricks or stone or marble or wood. It
is a temple, but not one built by human hands, not one we can see
standing on the earth. There is no cathedral, no temple, no chapel, no
church building that you can see anywhere in the world and point to it
or photograph it on holiday and say of it: “You see that place? That is
the Church Christ is talking about in this verse.
No,
the building being talked about by Jesus here, the building that he
calls “my Church” is a great company of men, women and children. It is a
spiritual building consisting of everyone who believes in the Lord
Jesus Christ.
The word usually translated “Church” in
English bibles here is the Greek word Ekklesia. And that’s a very
interesting word. Literally it means “A Calling out” in the sense of
people being called out to form “a gathering” or “an Assembly”. The
Church is a group of people.
When William Tyndale first translated the New Testament he translated this verse as: “And
upon this rock I will build my congregation: and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.”
The New Jerusalem Bible translates it: "And on this rock I will build my community. And the gates of the underworld can never overpower it."
So
this Church that Christ talks about is a congregation or community of
people, not a collection of buildings or any human institution calling
itself a church. It is not any particular denomination or branch of the
church. It is not the Church of Scotland, or the Free Church of
Scotland, or the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland, or the Episcopal
Church, or the Methodist Church, the Baptist Church or any Charismatic
Church. And it is not the Russian or Greek Orthodox Churches
or the Roman Catholic Church. None of these bodies are the “Church”
that Christ referred to. None of them can claim to be definitively "His Church"though any and probably all of have members who
are indeed part of the church Christ refers to here.
The
Church in this verse consists of all true believers in the Lord Jesus
Christ. It consists of all of God’s chosen people. It is the body of Christ, the
flock of Good Shepherd, the Bride of the Lamb. It is the “one holy,
Catholic and Apostolic church” that the Nicene Creed talks about.
It
includes everyone who has repented of sin, and turned to Christ in
faith. This membership of this Church is made up of all who have been
washed in Christ’s blood, all who have been clothed in Christ’s
righteousness, all who have been born again and sanctified by Christ’s
Spirit.
J. C. Ryle says of it: "The Church of our text is
one that makes far less show than any visible church in the eyes of
men, but it is of far more importance in the eyes of God."
All the denominations, groups and fellowships
we find in the world are visible churches. They are all human
institutions to some extent, and they are all imperfect manifestations
of Christ’s own church to some extent. But the Church of this verse is
invisible, and it is not a human institution. It is an assembly or
gathering of people from all over the world and throughout all of human
history who form the covenant people of God, the people he chose, the
people he saves, the people who have faith in him and follow him as
their Lord.
J. C. Ryle gives an illustration of the
difference between the various visible churches in the world and the one
true, but invisible church made up of God’s chosen people who live by
faith in Christ. He says that the visible churches of this world, be
they Presbyterian, Episcopalian, Independent, Baptist, Charismatic,
Reformed or Methodist are “the scaffolding behind which the great
building is carried on.” The denominations are the scaffolding around
the true Church of Christ, which is being built in the background.
Think
of a mighty cathedral shrouded in scaffolding and plastic sheeting. The
scaffolding is what is visible, but it is not itself the building being
built. It is merely what can be seen, while within and behind the
scaffolding, the real building work is going on. I think that’s a
brilliant illustration. All this that we see around us, is merely
scaffolding, while the real building work of saving souls and rescuing
lives, of drawing men and women into a living covenant relationship with
God and with fellow Christians is slowly, silently, relentlessly going
on in the background.
The great congregation of the
redeemed is the Church Christ talks about in this verse. Outside of this
church, the body of Jesus Christ, the faithful congregation of all
believers, there is no salvation. By definition this must be so since only believers in Christ can be saved.
Second, there is a
builder: Jesus Christ. “I will build my Church…” says Christ. No one
else can or will build it for him. He must build it with his own hands.
The prophet Zechariah said of the coming Messiah in Zechariah 6:12-13:
“Thus
says the LORD of hosts, "Behold, the man whose name is the Branch: for
he shall branch out from his place, and he shall build the temple of the
LORD. It is he who shall build the temple of the LORD and shall bear
royal honor, and shall sit and rule on his throne. And there shall be a
priest on his throne, and the counsel of peace shall be between them
both."
The Messiah will build the temple of the LORD. Not one part of the Church can be built without his work and his blessing.
It
is Christ who calls the members of the Church to leave the world’s way
and follow him. It is Christ who breathes spiritual life into sinners
who were by nature dead in trespasses and sins. It is Christ who washes
away their sins. It is Christ who gives them peace. It is Christ who
gives them eternal life. It is Christ who grants them the gifts of
repentance and faith. It is Christ who enables them to become God’s
children.
He is the Alpha and Omega, the Author and
Perfecter of faith. He is the life. He is the King and Head. From Him
every part of the mystical body of Christians is supplied with all they
need. Through Him they are strengthened for duty. By Him they are kept
from falling. He preserves them to the end, and presents them faultless
before the Father’s throne with exceeding great joy. He is all in all to
all believers.
It is true that he does often carry on
his work through subordinates, through human beings. He works through
the preaching of his word, through the circulation and reading of the
Scriptures, through Christian literature, through providential
circumstances, through prayer, through church discipline, through
fellowship and human friendships, through evangelism and mission. He
works through all these things, but it is always Christ who is at work
to build his Church.
Preachers preach, theologians
write and discuss, but only the Lord Jesus Christ can build his Church.
Not TV evangelists, not Popes, not even General Assemblies. Christ alone
builds it.
Christ is the builder because of who he is
and what he has done for his people. And that leads us to the next part
of this verse.
Third, there is a foundation that Christ builds his Church on. “And on this rock I will build my Church.”
This
is the most controversial part of this verse. There have been many
different views put forward for what this foundation is that Christ will
build on. The Roman Catholic Church of course say that the Church is
built on the foundation of St Peter, the first pope, and on all the
popes who have succeeded him to the office of Bishop of Rome. I don’t
think it is too strong to say that such a view is totally without
biblical warrant. Even if you interpret the verse to mean that Christ
will build his church on the witness and work of the apostles and on
Peter as the leading apostle, there is no way this verse can be used to
justify the papacy. There’s no way these verses can be wrested to mean
that. But actually, I don’t think that Christ was saying he would build
his church on Peter at all.
Jesus says, “You are Peter
and on this rock I will build my Church.” Notice that Christ did not
say, “You are Peter and on you I will build my church.” And the rest of
the New Testament does not give any real support for this either.
Although we have two letters written by Peter in the New Testament, much
more of the New Testament was written by John and especially by the
apostle Paul for example. And far from being the infallible leader that
the Church could be built on, though Peter was transformed by Christ and
was one of the first leaders of the church, he was not perfect. He got
things wrong. In Galatians 2:11, Paul says:
“But when Peter came to Antioch, I opposed him in public, because he was clearly wrong.”
Now
of course “Peter” means rock and so that’s why the Catholic Church have
used this verse to justify the doctrine of papal supremacy and papal
succession. In effect they say that the verse says: “You are rock and on
this rock I will build my Church.” But it’s very interesting when you
look at the actual Greek words of our verse because two different words
are used for “rock” in the sentence. Christ calls Peter “Petros” which
is a masculine word referring to a stone or small rock, but when he says
that he will build his church on “this rock” he uses the different word
“Petra” which is a feminine word, referring to a large mass of rock,
like a cliff or a mountain.
Also, it seems to me that
Peter cannot be the foundation upon which the Church is built, because
of what Paul says in 1 Corinthians 3:11:
“For no one can lay a foundation other than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ.”
I
believe Christ’s meaning is properly conveyed if we translated the
verse as “You are a stone, and on this rock I will build my church.” I
believe what he meant was really “You are Peter – a little rock – but on
the immovable rock of the truth that you have confessed – I will build
my Church.” In other words, I think this verse teaches that Christ
builds his Church on the truth of Peter’s confession, on the doctrine
that Jesus is God’s Messiah and the Son of the Living God. These two
truths lie at the heart of the Christian message, the gospel.
I
agree with J C Ryle: “It was not Peter, the erring, unstable man, but
the mighty truth which the Father had revealed to Peter. It was the
truth concerning Jesus Christ Himself which was the rock. It was
Christ’s mediatorship, and Christ’s Messiahship. It was the blessed
truth that Jesus was the promised Saviour, the true Surety, the real
Intercessor between God and man. This was the rock, and this the
foundation, upon which the Church of Christ was to be built.”
When
read in this light, we see that the rock solid foundation upon which
the Church is built is not any person, not even the apostles personally,
but on the truths concerning Jesus Christ that the apostles taught.
This ties in much better with the rest of the New Testament and with
other parts of Christ’s own teaching. For example in Matthew 7:24:
“Everyone then who hears these words of mine and does them will be like a wise man who built his house on the rock.”
The
gospel message that Christ is God’s chosen King and the Redeemer of his
people is, I believe, the rock, upon which Christ builds his church.
Fourth, there is opposition and danger to this Church. Christ says that “the gates of hell” will try to oppose the Church that Christ builds.
In
Bible times, cities were surrounded by walls. The gates by which they
were entered were the principal places for holding courts, transacting
business, and deliberating on public matters. The gates were where
people made their plans, drew up their designs, negotiated deals and so
on. The “gates of hell” it seems to me, refers to the plans and designs
of Satan and his hellish minions against God and his purposes. The
“gates of hell” are Satan’s evil plans against the Church.
It
seems to me that the expression “the gates of hell” is a way of
describing the spiritual forces in the heavenly realms that Paul
mentions in Ephesians 6:12:
“For we do not wrestle
against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the
authorities, against the cosmic powers over this present darkness,
against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places.”
The Puritan commentator Matthew Henry wrote:
“The
gates of hell are the powers and policies of the devil's kingdom, the
dragon's head and horns, by which he makes war with the Lamb; all that
comes out of hell-gates, as being hatched and contrived there. These
fight against the church by opposing gospel truths, corrupting gospel
ordinances, persecuting good ministers and good Christians; drawing or
driving, persuading by craft or forcing by cruelty, to that which is
inconsistent with the purity of religion; this is the design of the
gates of hell, to root out the name of Christianity.”
History
shows that Christ was correct in his view that the gates of hell – the
powers of darkness – will always keep on trying to destroy his people.
Such has been the case throughout history – both Old and New Testaments,
and throughout this present gospel age. And the opposition and Satanic
persecution of Christ’s people will go on until the end of the age.
The
history of the Church, in all periods of history, is a story of
conflict and war. This war between good and evil, between the Kingdom of
God and the Kingdom of this world, has been going on since the
beginning when Satan rebelled against God. It is one of the central and
recurring threads that runs through the entire Bible. As far back as
Genesis 3:15 we get the first glimpse of the war between Christ and
Satan and between God’s people and Satan’s followers:
“I
will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring
and her offspring; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his
heel."
That was true then and it is true now. The
Church is always under attack by Satan. He hates Christ’s Church more
than anything, except maybe the Holy Trinity. He hates us with an
undying and virulent hatred. He is always stirring up opposition and
trouble for Christians. The Church is the pillar of the truth and the
guardian of the holy gospel that is able to make men wise unto
salvation, and so Satan never tires of seeking to prevent the Church
from spreading the gospel message and witnessing to Son of the living
God to the world.
As J. C. Ryle says:
“Warfare with the powers of hell has been the experience of the whole body of Christ for six thousand years.”
There
is no peace treaty between heaven and hell. The Church is always at
war, never at peace with the world or the Prince of this world. It is
always at war, always militant, always fighting. Its battle never ends.
As Martin Luther said:
“Cain will go on murdering Abel as long as the Church is on the earth.”
Satanic
opposition can come in hundreds of different ways. There can be direct
assaults of course. There can be false teachers, heretics, who are
thrown into the church lives wolves among sheep, to confound and confuse
God’s saints with false doctrine and wrong teaching on how we should
live.
But sometimes Satan’s opposition can be far more subtle. In fact I would say usually Satan’s opposition is far more subtle.
Do
you ever get the feeling that when you try to get close to God or
decide you’re going to do something for God, that you suddenly start to
have problems you never had before? I know I do. It’s no accident that
when I’m getting ready to take a service that’s precisely the time I
seem to get a cold, or get toothache, or have something happen that
distracts me from my purpose. It’s no accident that when a church
decides it’s really going to concentrate on mission and outreach that it
suddenly finds it’s members under attack from illnesses, bereavements,
family problems, trouble in the workplace, falling out with friends.
Satan doesn’t fight clean and fair. He fights dirty. And when Christians
decide they are really going to live committed lives to their Lord and
Saviour, Satan will do anything he can to stop that from happening.
That’s the gates of hell trying to rise up and stop us from being effective, obedient, loyal Christians.
But
far from being surprised or scared when such things happen to us,
actually we should expect it and rejoice when such opposition or
persecution comes our way, for it means we are on the right track in our
Christian lives. A church which faces no opposition or Satanic attack
should be the one that is scared, not a church which does face the gates
of hell rising against it.
Remember Christ’s words when such opposition comes and take heart. This is Matthew 5:10-12, part of the Beatitudes:
“Blessed
are those who are persecuted for righteousness' sake, for theirs is the
kingdom of heaven. Blessed are you when others revile you and persecute
you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account.
Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for so they
persecuted the prophets who were before you.”
And then also think about these words in 1 Peter 4:12-14:
“Beloved,
do not be surprised at the fiery trial when it comes upon you to test
you, as though something strange were happening to you. But rejoice
insofar as you share Christ's sufferings, that you may also rejoice and
be glad when his glory is revealed. If you are insulted for the name of
Christ, you are blessed, because the Spirit of glory and of God rests
upon you.”
Things happen to us in life. Not everything
is plain sailing. We go through hard times of suffering and loss and
pain. Or we go through times of being mistrusted, disliked, mocked, and
even hated because we have faith in Jesus Christ. The gates of hell are
real and I don’t think there’s any Christian who is immune from such
attack. It happens to us all.
Fifth, there is Christ’s
promise of security and safety for his Church. “I will build my Church
and the gates of hell will not prevail against it.”
Take
heart, Christians! Because as well as Christ’s warning about the gates
of hell, there is also a promise that Christ makes to us in this verse, a
promise all of us need to cling to and remember. Yes, the gates of hell
will try to rise up and destroy us, but they cannot and will not
succeed. The forces of evil will do battle with the Church, but they
will never prevail against it. They will fight, but they cannot win.
That is Christ’s promise to each and every Christian believer.
Have
you ever thought about the emblem that came to symbolise the
Presbyterian and Reformed Churches throughout Europe? It’s still the
symbol used on the badge of the Church of Scotland to this day. It’s the
burning bush. The first impression might be that this is a very strange
symbol to choose. But actually it’s highly appropriate, not only
because it symbolises God’s presence with this covenant people, but
because that bush is always in the flames, always under fiery attack,
but not consumed, never destroyed. “I will build my Church and the gates
of hell will not prevail against it.”
Only Christ’s
church receives this promise from its King and Head. Other empires and
earthly kingdoms rise and fall in human history. Think of the once
mighty empires of the Persians, the Egyptians, the Greeks, the Romans,
the Vikings. Think of, in more recent times, the great empires of France
and Britain. None of these earthly powers has stood the test of time.
But Christ’s church stands and grows for ever. “The kingdoms of this
world are become the kingdom of our God and of his Christ” as the Book
of Revelation says.
The promise does not apply to all
visible churches in this world however. In New Testament times there
were churches all over the Middle East and what is now modern day
Turkey. Today, few of those churches remain in existence. In Bridgeton
there used to be six or more churches in the area now covered by this
one parish church. Individual churches can disappear and close. This is
especially true of churches that depart from Christ’s teaching, from the
faith that was once delivered to the saints. Christ warned the seven
churches to whom letters were sent at the start of the Book of
Revelation that if they did not pay heed to what the Spirit was saying
to the churches, Christ would remove their lampstand from its place – in
other words remove his presence and the light of his glory from them –
so they would cease to be churches at all. So, although the promise does
not apply to every individual church, especially churches that are not
faithful to Christ in their teaching and service, the promise does apply
to Christ’s own church, to the great congregation of true believers in
him. Against them, the gates of hell cannot prevail.
Even
if Satan stirs up persecution so that Christians lose their lives, the
gates of hell shall not prevail against this Church, because for
Christian martyrs, death is only a doorway into Christ’s presence and
eternal blessedness in heaven.
No matter what the
enemies of the church do, whether they be worldly rulers, enemies within
the church, or the cosmic forces of evil that work behind our human
enemies, God’s people, God’s church shall never be overthrown. We have
Christ’s own promise for that.
As the apostle Paul says in 2 Corinthians 4:8-10:
“We
are afflicted in every way, but not crushed; perplexed, but not driven
to despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; struck down, but not
destroyed; always carrying in the body the death of Jesus, so that the
life of Jesus may also be manifested in our bodies.”
We
can go through the mill in our sufferings. God sometimes puts us right
into furnace with its blistering heat and searing pain. God puts us
through it, but never without a good reason, there is always a purpose
behind it, even if we cannot begin to imagine what it could be.
Romans
8:28: “And we know that God causes all things to work together for good
to those who love God, to those who are called according to His
purpose.”
In the 19th century, French troops liberated
the prison of the Holy Inquisition in Rome. In one of the cells, a
prisoner – probably a Protestant who had been excommunicated from the
Church of Rome – had scratched some words on the walls. They read:
“Blessed Jesus, they cannot cast me out of Thy true Church.” Not one
single believer can be snatched out of Christ’s hand by the Devil and
all his minions however hard they try.
The question
each of us must consider tonight is whether we are truly members of
Christ’s Church. Not members of the Church of Scotland – for that
membership can save no man or woman. But members of the body of Christ,
part of Christ’s great congregation who trust and follow him and for
whom he died to redeem and save. For membership in that Church
guarantees salvation.
“And on this rock I will build my Church, and the gates of hell will not prevail against it.”
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