THE
CHURCH IN THIS CITY
Chapter 4
AFTER THE NOISE
Two Stages
The embarrassing question is sometimes asked, “If it’s really the
Holy Spirit who inspires all these groups around the city, why is there
so little unity? So little concern for each other? So few kind words?”
If it is the one Holy Spirit of God at work in us, are we not going to
be drawn together in his love? Isn’t he going to bring us into harmony
within our fellowships and across the town?
The power of the Holy Spirit was obviously moving in the church
at Corinth. People were getting healed. Miracles were almost common-
place. Supernatural utterance was breaking out in their meetings with
great force. Yet this very church was divided into factions, torn
apart by strife, polluted by believers living immoral lives. The re-
sult was that, while the power of the Spirit of God was indeed there,
the ministry which the Spirit gave that church was not getting done.
The energy of God pouring into that fellowship was being dissipated by
the uncrucified human ego. They were making a lot of noise, but they
weren’t bearing much fruit.
In his letter to the Corinthians, Paul doesn’t deny that the
Spirit is moving among them. In fact he thanks God for the gifts of
the Spirit they have. But Paul makes clear that for all these things
the Corinthian church is in a carnal state.
“For while there is jealousy and strife among
you, are you not of the flesh and behaving
like ordinary men?”
Until that church in Corinth comes into genuine unity with divisions
healed and strife brought to an end, the redemptive work that church was
created to accomplish will not be done. The believers at Corinth have
to be brought from the stage where they are noisy spiritual children to
the point where they are solid, steadfast, unified, Spirit—led men and
women of God.
Contrast with this the picture that emerges when you read Paul’s
epistle to the Ephesians. In this letter are no references to miracles
or prophetic utterances or gifts of discernment. Yet this letter is
obviously addressed, not to children but to men.
“For this reason, because I have heard of your
faith in the Lord Jesus and your love toward
all the saints, I do not cease to give thanks
for you.... “
The walls of division have come down. The childish ways have been
put aside. Here is a Body of saints which has come into the unity of
Jesus Christ so that the power of God in their midst is able to bear
fruit and get things done.
When we read Corinthians and then Ephesians,
it is like looking
at two stages. The first is childhood, noisy and weak. The second
is adulthood, much stronger, but considerably more quiet. These two
stages appear many times in scripture. When Peter first meets Jesus
and until Calvary, he makes lots of noise but shows very little real
strength. After the resurrection Peter begins to quiet down, but
displays a strength he never had before.
When the
dry bones of Ezekiel’s vision came together there was a
noise, a rattling. They formed bodies but still had no life. Ezekiel
prophesied a second time, this time to the wind. Now the only sound
that could be heard, if any, was the rushing of the Spirit into these
lifeless bodies. And they lived, stood upon their feet, a great army.
Or when Elijah fled to Mount Horeb to escape Jezebel and have things
out with God, there was noise that was doubtless an echo of the noise
within his own soul. A tremendous wind tore the mountains and broke
rocks to pieces. But God was not in the wind. There was an earth-
quake. But God was not in the earthquake. There was a roaring fire.
But God was not in the fire. Then came the voice of a gentle stillness.
And when Elijah heard it, he wrapped his face in his mantle, for he
knew that this was God.
We have in our fellowships these days a certain amount of noise.
Praise God for it! Praise God when a newborn infant begins to cry.
Praise God for the shouts of joy that rise from the lips of a man who
has been healed or from a woman who has found the Lord or been filled
with the Holy Spirit. Praise God even when the joyful noise of his
children becomes a bit excessive or disorderly. How much better this
than the death that was there before! But the power that is needed for
the work God has given us to do is not in the noise we make. It is in
the unity that comes over the Body when we really begin to submit to
the Holy Spirit, And it is that unity that the Spirit is calling for
at this hour.
“...until
we all attain to the unity of the
faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God,
to mature manhood to the measure of the
stature of the fullness of Christ; so that we
may no longer be children tossed to and fro
and carried about with every wind of doctrine,
by the cunning of men, by the craftiness in
deceitful wiles. Rather speaking the truth in
love we are to grow up in every way into him
who is the head, into Christ, from whom the
whole body, joined and knit together by every
joint with which it is supplied, when each part
is working properly, makes bodily growth and
upbuilds itself in love.”
Unity
Each of us needs to understand that unity in the Body begins with
himself. Not with that brother over there or this sister over here or
those slobs who never fit in, but with me. Am I an agent of unity in
the Body of Christ or am I an agent of division? Where is my heart when
it comes to unity in the Body? Where is my tongue? Do I bring peace to
brothers and sisters, or does my raging, disquieted, glory—hungry
spirit
leave a trail of strife everywhere I go? Do I draw near to brothers and
sisters in love, or do I
remain aloof from all except those from whom I
want something?
The Spirit of the Lord is calling us to practice unity in the local
Assembly. These
people with whom we are in closest contact are the most
likely to annoy us, irritate us, disappoint, slight, hurt or
misunderstand
us. But now we are to have the mind of Christ toward them. Every
one of them. We are to do nothing from selfishness or conceit, but in
humility count others better than ourselves. If my brother doesn’t live
this way, before I murmur against him in my heart, or talk about him or
rebuke him to his face; what about me? What about my attitude toward
him? Is he really in my prayers? God set us in the family of the local
congregation to teach us to forgive. How can we tell the world with
any authority about the forgiveness of Jesus Christ on the cross if we
are loaded with hard thoughts toward brothers and sisters? What healing
will flood our fellowships when we yield to the urging of the Spirit to
forgive our brothers and really be one!
We are being called to practice unity with brothers and
sisters
across the city. The church, praise God, does not begin and end with
our fellowship. If our only concern is with our own fellowship and
perhaps a few others that belong to our chain, then it is very likely
that we are caught up in a religious kingdom of our own rather than
the kingdom of God. Do I see believers on the other side of town as
brothers, or as “half-brothers?” Do I really weep
when they weep and
rejoice when they rejoice, or is there a secret tinge of envy in my
heart toward them? The Spirit is becoming exacting with us when he
finds attitudes in our hearts toward other fellowships. Or when he
finds us raising walls, and sowing seeds of mistrust. Or when he un-
covers jealousy or sees us despising them in our hearts. If there is
a problem with brothers on the south side of town, let’s solve it.
If there is a misunderstanding, let’s get it right. If there is a
need to be reconciled, let’s do it. There is only one Body in our
city and it extends far beyond our own little circle.
We are to practice unity with brothers and sisters across the earth.
Believers in Macedonia sent help to believers in Judea. When we hear
about needs in Cleveland or Nairobi or Santiago our natural tendency is
to ignore them. “Nan, we have enough problems around here!” But if
we’re listening to the Spirit, he wipes away the miles and tells us,
“Send them help; they are your brothers.” This is going to be
happening
more and more as the age draws to a close. Brothers and sisters in
China need our prayers; and we need theirs. Brothers and sisters in
Bolivia may need some material help. And we, for our own good as well
as theirs, need to fit in with them.
There has not been a time since the Day of Pentecost when the power
of the Spirit was more evident in the church than it is now. But for
that power to accomplish what it is being sent to do, the saints of God
must be in unity. If we want him to, the Spirit of the Lord will show
us what this means for each of us.
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