Jesus
Is Building His Church!
by Chip Brogden
"...upon
this Rock, I will build My Church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail
against it (Matthew 16:18b)."
What is the "move" of God? What is God doing today? What is God saying
to the Church? Here's what is happening: Jesus is building His Church. There is
no "new" thing to be seen, said, or done: Jesus the Rock is building
His Church upon the foundation of Himself. He is faithfully gathering the living
stones together and is assembling them into a beautiful structure of gold,
silver, and precious stones (I Peter 2:4-9; I Corinthians 3:9-17).
There is nothing wrong with the Church! That is, there is nothing wrong with the
Church that Jesus is building, though there is much to be desired among those
who are following their own building programs and blueprints, and calling it
"church". Jesus is assembling the saints together into a spiritual
house. The problem is that some things we have come to believe to be
"church" are not necessarily the Church. Although there is nothing
wrong with the Church, everything that is called "Church" is not the
"Church". So what is the Church?
Let us look at this statement: "I will build My Church." The first
thing that strikes us about this thing called "Church" is simply that
it is that which Jesus is building upon the foundation of Himself. More
specifically, the word "church" is "ecclesia", the
called-out assembly. It consists of those to whom God has chosen to reveal His
Son. This revelation of who we are in Christ and who Christ is in us is the key.
Without this firm foundation we cannot know, understand or experience being part
of the Church. Quite frankly, our religious head knowledge or credal affirmation
is of virtually no significance. Even the repeating of the so-called
"Sinner's Prayer" means nothing apart from the revelation of Jesus
Christ. May God give us a spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of
Christ (Ephesians 1:17-23). Then, our prayer and confession will be based on
Spirit and Truth revelation, not flesh and blood, second or third generation
"knowing" (Matthew 16:17).
The Church is not built upon the individual Peter, but upon those who have been
given revelation. Jesus builds His Church through revelation to individuals, the
"whosoevers". What revelation? The revelation of Himself. This
revelation is sufficient to secure us as members of the Church that Jesus is
building. When we understand that revelation is the only thing which matters we
will cease trying to grow the Church or gain members through better preaching,
musical entertainment, handsome facilities, demographic studies, and savvy
marketing techniques. Instead, we will simply come to rely upon revelation and
trust the Father to reveal the Son through the Spirit Who brings illumination to
our heart. We are the Temple of God, a habitation for Himself, and this Church
grows as a living thing (Ephesians 2:20-22).
Jesus is not building a denomination or founding a movement. The Church is not a
denomination, but neither is it a non-denomination. It is not a steeple-house or
institutional church, but neither is it a house church. Stated simply, the
Church is a spiritual house of living stones, invisible to the naked eye, but
clearly seen and known in Spirit. It is not an organization, but an organism.
Who are its members? Those who have the revelation of Jesus Christ. Where are
these members to be found? They are scattered in all directions, both inside and
outside of Organized Religion.
Keith Green once said, "Going to church doesn't make you a Christian any
more than going to McDonald's makes you a hamburger." How true this
statement has proved to be through the years. But we hasten to say that going to
a house church won't make you a Christian either. We thank God for the saints
which are meeting in homes and rediscovering what it means to gather together in
simplicity apart from the steeple-house, paid clergy, and denominationalism.
Yet, Jesus did not say, "I will build My HOUSE church." Since the
Church is comprised of individuals who have the revelation of Jesus Christ, how
or where they meet together is of little consequence. In Jerusalem, or in this
mountain? Neither, says the Lord (John 4:20-24). Where we gather doesn't matter
to the Lord, but WHY we gather is of extreme importance to Him. If it is due to
the revelation of Jesus Christ, we will worship in Spirit and Truth because the
revelation of Jesus Christ draws us together. Why? Because our testimony is
other-worldly, peculiar, spiritual. We are the called-out assembly, the ecclesia
of Jesus. We are His particular treasure.
What we have, both within Organized Religion and within the house church
"movement", is a mixture of people. Some of them have the revelation
of Jesus Christ, and some do not. We affirm that this revelation is enough to
establish the Church, regardless of the outward appearances. Where this
revelation exists, THERE is the foundation of the Church that Jesus is building.
Since it is an inward revelation, a spiritual seeing and entering into, we
cannot classify everyone as being the Church merely because they are within a
system of Organized Religion, or even if they have come out of a system. Nor can
we include or disqualify them because of where or how they meet. The meeting
together is only a small part of the total picture. The question is not whether
we are in or out of a human system, or how we meet, or what doctrine we lay
emphasis on. The question is, have we seen the Lord? Do we have the revelation
of Jesus Christ? We may be correct in outward appearance but have no inward
revelation. Hence, not all who say, "Lord! Lord!" will enter the
Kingdom of God (Matthew 7:21-23). Similarly, we may be politically or
spiritually incorrect and offensive outwardly speaking, that is, according to
what man values and esteems as good, acceptable, moral, and religious; yet the
revelation of Christ is sufficient to bring us into the Kingdom with or without
the support and approval of men, even the most spiritual and holy men.
"I will build My Church." We maintain that the Church exists where
individuals have the revelation of Jesus Christ: for when this revelation takes
hold of a person, Jesus Christ will have the preeminence in all things
(Colossians 1:12-19). It is not enough to tell people, "Jesus is the Head
of the Church." We cannot make Him the Head while gathered together and
then expect Him to remain in the background while we live out our lives
individually. Either He is Lord OF all, or He isn't Lord AT all. When we see Him
seated in heavenly places we will gladly and joyfully allow Him to be the Head
over all things, not only in the Church, but in our marriage, family, and work.
We will at once see that the Church does not belong to us. We will discern that
hitherto we have viewed "church" as something that we must attend,
build, or grow. With the knowledge that the Church does not belong to us we will
relinquish our claims to it and begin to co-labor together with the Lord (I
Corinthians 3:9). Then, it is a natural thing to give up our titles and
positions and merely concentrate on building one another up in love. To give up
title and position within a group that has no revelation of Christ is to invite
chaos. This is why man feels the need to have some organization and established
leadership among the saints, running the steeple-house much like a business with
mission statements and top-heavy organizational charts, paving a one-way street
of submission to some earthly head - because there is no vision of Christ. It is
not more organization or leadership training that we need. We only need more
revelation, and no man can give us revelation. It is the gift of God. Once
obtained, we will with much rejoicing and relief fall into place below One Head
and allow Christ to have the preeminence. "The Lord is my Pastor: I shall
not lack (Psalms 23:1)."
Since it is the Lord's Church, and no man's, and since we are the sheep of His
pasture, not man's, we will stop referring to "Pastor Smith's church"
and "Brother John's congregation". The pastor is not the head of the
Church. But then, neither is the teacher, evangelist, prophet, or apostle.
Apostles do not build the Church: Jesus builds the Church, for it is His Church.
All anyone can do is co-labor with Him. Anything done apart from Him will fall
apart, for there is no other foundation but what has been laid, and that
foundation is Christ (I Corinthians 3:11). If the foundation is faulty, it
matters not one whit how beautiful the structure is. The apostles and prophets
lay the foundation of the Church, which is the revelation of Jesus Christ
(Ephesians 2:20), but it is still based upon a revelation that no man can give!
The Spirit of Jesus must make Himself known in you (Galatians 1:11-18). Then
others will build upon that foundation, which is your personal revelation of
Christ in you and you in Christ. But no one at any time may lay claim to the
Church, or any particular fellowship, as his or her own. The Church does not
belong to a denominational office, church board, circle of elders, founding
apostle, or individual pastor. At least, not the Church that Jesus is building.
How do we know if a particular work is the true building of God, part of the
genuine Church? All we have to do is see who has the preeminence there. If an
apostle or pastor is considered the spiritual head then Christ does not have the
preeminence (3 John 9). If the elected deacons are in charge then Christ does
not have the preeminence. We may give Him lip service and acknowledge with our
mouth that it is His Church, but apart from revelation these are empty words.
When the moment of truth comes man will always seize control, demonstrating that
Christ does not have the preeminence there, and indeed, probably never had it to
begin with.
How then do we know who has the preeminence? We need only look to see who gets
the credit for the work. Men talk about "this great denomination" and
glory in the works of their hands. Of course, with their lips they draw near to
God, but their heart is far from Him. They are only trying to build a name to
themselves and reach the heavens. The end result is confusion and vain babbling
(Genesis 11:1-9). They are not co-laboring with Christ in the building of His
Church, they are asking Christ to co-labor with THEM in the building of THEIR
church. "We have done many mighty works in Your Name! Behold what manner of
stones and buildings these are (Mark 13:1)!" And surely, great things have
been accomplished, insofar as organization, wealth, property, and numbers are
concerned. "But Jesus said unto them, Ye are they which justify yourselves
before men; but God knoweth your hearts: for that which is highly esteemed among
men is abomination in the sight of God (Luke 16:15)." If Jesus is building
His Church as His own possession, then we cannot take the credit for it. We can
only marvel at what He does and bow our heads in humble gratitude for allowing
us to be a part of it.
What shall we do about Organized Religion? What shall we do about those who
claim the Church as their own, who intend to build a name to themselves? What
shall we do about the false religious system? We will do nothing at all; for,
those structures not built upon the Foundation of Jesus Christ will fall of
their own accord (I Corinthians 3:12-17; Matthew 7:24-27). How could it be
otherwise? The only safe place to be is within the Church that Jesus is
building. Besides, if we attempt to bring down the huge idol of Organized
Religion we may well crush ourselves and others in the attempt.
What is the Spirit of Antichrist? It is that religious thing that makes war
against Jesus and the Church that He is building. The Spirit of Antichrist is
already gone out in to the world (I John 2:18) and has sown tares among the
wheat. Indeed, in the last days the Spirit of Antichrist will dominate and rule
the world system, attempting to blot out the true Church. Outwardly speaking it
appears to be succeeding. Nevertheless, the Church that Jesus is building cannot
be overcome by the gates of hell. Since it is built upon the revelation of Jesus
Christ, nothing cannot stop it. Why? A man will not die for a tradition or a
doctrine. But he will gladly lay down his life for the revelation of Jesus
Christ. He cannot be disobedient to the heavenly vision (Acts 20:24; 26:19). He
has found his Life (Christ) by giving up his life.
Yes, this world system, including man's religious systems, is passing away: make
no mistake (I John 2:15-17). The nations will be judged and will pass through
the fire (Psalms 2). The earth will decay and finally dissolve altogether,
consumed in the fire; the heaven's will melt with a fervent heat (II Peter
3:7-14). The outward things are fading, perishing, evolving downward in a state
of entropy. Look around you, saint of God. See the steeple-house? It will not
remain for long. See the cathedral? It too shall pass. See the oceans? One day
they will be no more. Look at the mountains - they will all be removed. See the
cities? They will be destroyed. Heaven and earth will pass away.
What is my point? Simply this: the Church that Jesus is building will be the
only thing which remains. The visible will make way for the invisible, the
temporal will give way to the eternal, mortal will put on immortality (I
Corinthians 15). A new heavens and a new earth will be made and the New
Jerusalem, the Bride of Christ, the Church, will be completed (Revelation 21).
We are that Building of God, built upon the revelatory foundation of Jesus
brought by the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the Chief
Cornerstone (Ephesians 2:20). We are the Temple of God, therefore we need no
earthly temple, we seek no earthly kingdom, and we expect no earthly reward (I
Corinthians 3:16,17). We look for a City whose Builder and Maker is God, and we
are that City (Hebrews 11:10). Jesus is building His Church!