The Lost Members of the Church
Baptists are a peculiar
people. We insist that one make a
profession of faith in Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior. We insist that they be baptized before they
can join our church. And, yet, some of
us insist upon nothing else once they're members.
Equally peculiar is the fact that
we Baptists claim to be a "people of the book," putting the Bible
before all else when it comes to defining and defending our faith. Yet, we ignore its teaching on church
membership.
The writer of Hebrews paints a
clear picture of what God expects of His children in His church.
"And let us be concerned one about
another in order to promote love and good works, not staying away from our
meetings, as some habitually do, but encouraging one another, and all the more
as you see the day drawing near" (Hebrews 10:24-25).
Notice the three
privileges/benefits that we enjoy as members of the church.
1) We are to promote love among
ourselves. When we promote love among
ourselves, love flourishes in the church, and we are loved ourselves. Jesus said that it is by our love for one
another that the world would know that we are His disciples.
2) We are to promote good
works. When we do this, the church's
ministries prosper and we may be blessed by someone else's good works. Again, Jesus said you will know His people by
their fruits, that is, their good works.
3) We are to encourage one
another. We are to lift one another up
and to be their support system in a hostile, sinful world. Sometimes we lift others up. Sometimes we are lifted up.
So far, so good. No Baptist would question the value of such
benefits. However, here's where it gets
interesting. To receive the benefits of
church membership, one must not only be on the rolls but also in the pews. We are not to be "staying away from our
meetings, as some habitually do" (Hebrews 10:25 ). Doing so does not just limit our exposure to
those benefits mentioned, it is a sin.
Christians who stay away from
church for any reason other than health or travel are living in outright
rebellion against the revealed will of God.
They are out of communion with each other. They are out of communion with Christ. Worse, their absence may in fact suggest that
they're not really children of God after all.
Rather than accepting the fact that
several million Baptists will be AWOL next Sunday, we ought to be alarmed. We have on our church rolls so-called members
who don't act like members and, as evidenced by this ongoing pattern of sin,
they don't act like believers, either.
Jesus said, "If you love Me,
you will keep my commandments" (John 14:15 ). Those who rebel against the most basic of
commandments concerning church membership reveal a dysfunctional relationship
with Christ. It's time we start treating
those people like lost people, not lost children who've meandered a little too
far into the woods. These people may
never come out of the woods. We need to
stop waiting for them to return, stop treating them like members, and start
treating them like unbelievers. We need
to share something more than good memories with them. We need to share the Gospel.
Join your church leadership in
reaching out to "members" who are living like the world. Share your love and, more importantly, share
your faith.
From Baptist Press (www.baptistpress.org); 10/23/06 : Peter Beck (pastor of Kenwood
Baptist Church
in Louisville , Ky )
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