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3 - BECAUSE OF
ITS SCRIPTURAL NAME.
We now come to a study of a subject that many people
consider unimportant. In fact, there is a phrase very common in religious
circles that says: "Don't
you know that there is nothing in a name?"
Falsely led by this belief many people fail to understand what the Bible
teaches on this most important subject.
God has always placed significance on names. In
Gen 5:2 we learn of His actions in naming Adam and Eve. He then gave Adam
the authority to name all of the animals. Words and names have always been
important. Because people have a common understanding about words, names
and designations, they are able to communicate and understand each other.
This would be impossible if there were nothing in words and names.
In studying about the church, just what designations are
given by the Bible? Let us notice some of them. First of all, in Matthew
16:18 when Jesus promised to build the church, He referred to it as "My
church." This shows ownership. The church belongs to Christ,
it is His. Again in Acts 8:1 we are told that a persecution arose against "the
church." In this verse we have the expression used most
frequently regarding this institution. It is merely referred to as "the
church." Then, of course, there was just one church. Today,
man has started so many different churches that if you tell people you are
a member of "the church", they think you are
trying to be evasive or comical. Again in I Cor. 1:2 we read, "Unto
the church of God which is at Corinth." Here Paul was
addressing himself to the disciples who constituted the church in Corinth
and calls them the "church of God." Next in
Romans 16:16 Paul says, "the churches of Christ salute
you." Again he is referring to the various local
congregations of the church in that vicinity. The church is also referred
to as "the body of Christ" (Eph. 4:12), and as
the church of the living God" (I Tim. 3:15). Any or
all of these designations are scriptural. They are divine and not human.
They may be found in the word of God. Can this be said of the church to
which you belong? When you go to church next Sunday look at the sign. Is
there a human or divine designation? Is it in the Bible? If not, give
serious thought to the situation.
Again, we find God recognizing the value of a name when
He changed Abram's name to Abraham, and Sarai's name to Sarah, Genesis
17:5-17. Also in Gen. 32:27-28 God changed Jacob's name to Israel. This is
significant because the descendants of this man were known as Israelites,
instead of Jacobites. In Dan. 9:19 it reads, "Thy people are
called by thy name." If in the long, long ago the people of
God wore His name, is it any wonder that today God still insists that we
wear the name of His choosing? Let us notice what Prophecy has to say
concerning the new name:
In Isaiah 56:5, "Even unto them will I give
in mine house and within my walls a place and a name better than of sons
and of daughters: I will give them an everlasting name, that shall not be
cut off."
In Isaiah 65:15, "And ye shall leave your
name for a curse unto my chosen: for the Lord God shall slay thee, and
call His servants by another name."
In Isaiah 62:2, "And the Gentiles shall see
thy righteousness, and all kings thy glory: and thou shalt be called by a
new name, which the mouth of the Lord shall name."
From the above three prophecies the following four
things are evident:
A. A NEW NAME WAS TO BE GIVEN WITHIN GOD'S HOUSE.
B. THE NAME GIVEN WAS TO BE AN EVERLASTING NAME.
C. THE NAME TO BE GIVEN WAS FOR BOTH GENTILES AND JEWS.
D. THE MOUTH OF THE LORD WAS TO GIVE THIS NAME.
Let us now go to the New Testament and see if we can
locate the fulfillment of these prophecies. First of all we read in Acts
9:15, "But the Lord said unto him, Go thy way: for he is a
chosen vessel unto me, to bear my name before the Gentiles, and kings, and
the children of Israel." From this we see that God selected
Paul to be the name bearer. Thus if we can find Paul bearing a name in the
house of God, or church, to Gentiles and Jews alike, we will have located
the name given by God.
In Acts we learn of the conversion of Cornelius and his
family who were the first Gentile converts. Thus, after Acts 10 we have
both Jew and Gentile in the church. Now in Acts 11:25-26 we read: "Then
departed Barnabas to Tarsus, for to seek Saul: (or Paul as later
changed, Acts 13:9). And when he had found him, he brought him
unto Antioch. And it came to pass, that a whole year they assembled
themselves with the church, and taught much people. And the disciples were
called Christians first in Antioch." The divine God-given
name is "Christian." But let us notice further
and see if Paul continued to preach this name. In Acts
26:28 when before king Agrippa Paul tried to convert him to the truth of
the Lord, the king, being aware of the intentions, said to Paul: "...Almost
thou persuadest me to be a Christian." For further proof
that this is the name approved by God, let us go to 1 Peter 4:16, "Yet
if any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed; but let him
glorify God on this behalf." The revised version says,
"let him glorify God in this name." This is the
name in which we are to glorify God. We should wear it with humility and
gratitude. It is the new name selected by God for His people. All other
human designations must be rejected.
Perhaps you would be interested in the following quote
from Charles Spurgeon, the great Baptist preacher, in the Spurgeon
Memorial Library, Vol. 1, page 168, "I
look forward with pleasure to the day when there will not be a Baptist
living. I hope the Baptist name will soon perish, but let Christ's name
last forever." Also, listen to the quote from
the Life of Martin Luther by Stork, page 289, "I
pray you to leave my name alone, and call not yourselves Lutherans, but
Christians. Who is Luther? My doctrine is not mine. I have not been
crucified for anyone. St. Paul would not that any should call themselves
of Paul, nor of Peter, but of Christ? Cease, my dear friends, to cling to
these party names, and distinctions: away with them all, and let us call
ourselves only Christians, after Him from whom our doctrine comes."
Wouldn't you agree that it is better to call ourselves just Christians,
instead of using these human names that come from man? The Bible plainly
tells us what the divine name is, let us use only what the Bible gives.
Next, let us notice some of the designations given to
individual members of the church. In I Cor. 1:2 they are called saints.
In Col. 1:2 they are referred to as brethren. In
Acts 20:7 they are called disciples. And as we have
already noticed in Acts 11:26 they are called Christians. In
1 Peter 2:9 they are called priests. These designations
may be used to refer to all who are in the church. There
is no such thing as a special group who are priests and saints. Every
Christian is a priest and a saint.
We believe you should investigate the church of Christ,
because it uses only scriptural names and designations. Don't be deceived
by the doctrine that there is nothing in a name. There certainly is.
Reason #4 - Because It Accepts The Bible Only
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