Wednesday, March 4, 2026

COLOSSIANS #2

 


 New Testament Bible
Story

Chapter Eighty-five:

Epistle of Colossians - Part two

                    
CHAPTER THREE

     In combatting the false philosophers  and teachers of the
commandments and traditions of men that had come among the
Christian Colossians, Paul goes on in chapter three point them to
the SURE way of remaining "on track" as we say - and that way is
to follow Christ. Jesus observed the weekly Sabbath, and the
Festivals of Leviticus 23, as well as agree with the Jews having
authority over the calendar and WHEN those festivals should be
observed. Paul tells the Colossians to seek those things that are
from above, that are of Christ, who now sits on the right hand of
the Father in heaven. They were to set their minds, thoughts,
actions, on the Godly things above, approved and commanded of
God, and not men's commandments. 
     We have many things today in the popular form of
Christianity that are inventions and traditions of men. Christmas
observance did not even come into the large Roman Catholic church
until the FOURTH century A.D. Easter observance was much earlier
but even that did not take full root until well into the SECOND
and THIRD century A.D. Then we have Halloween (yes, even that
open pagan festival is observed by many churches and their
members) which does not hide the fact that it is all about
witches and demons and black-magic, the "other world" of the dark
evil forces of spirit beings. If one reads the book "Christian
Feasts and Customs" by the Catholic writer Francis Weiser
(probably your public library with have it or can obtain it for
you through their inter-loan department), one will clearly see
MANY MORE customs of Christianity that are far from "the things
above" and what is truly ordained and sanctioned by our heavenly
Father above.
     
     We need to be doing the will of Christ and the Father
because that is ONE important reason as to why we died with
Christ through the ritual of water baptism. We covered in some
detail all of the great meaning of water baptism when we studied
Romans chapter six.  We are in SAFE keeping spiritually, if our
life is with Christ. Then God the Father is well pleased with us,
and as Paul says in verse 4, when Jesus shall appear in His
glorious second coming to live on earth, we shall assure
ourselves of being in that resurrection that happens when He does
come again. we shall also be glorified and be like Him (see 1
John 3:1-3).
     Meditating on the mind-bending glory of all that, makes the
effort to do God's will and not man's will, all the easier. It
may sometimes seem hard to serve God in spirit and in truth in
our earthy lives, for we have to buck against so much of the
world's ways, thoughts, attitude, and wrong ways of living and
wrong observances of what man thinks is "religious" - but in the
picture of ALL ETERNITY in glory (that can hardly be imagined
by the human mind), it is well worth the effort to fully obey and
serve our heavenly Father and our elder brother Christ Jesus.

     Starting in verse 5, Paul tells us to kill all the evil
parts of our human nature. The section is so powerful it is worth
the full disclosure as given in the Amplified Bible:

     "So kill (deaden, deprive of power) the evil desire lurking
     in your members (those animal impulses and all that is
     earthly in you that is employed in sin): sexual vice,
     impurity, sensual appetites, unholy desires, and all greed
     and covetousness, for that is idolatry (the deifying of self
     and other created things instead of God). It is on account
     of these (very sins) that the (holy) anger of God is ever
     coming upon the sons of disobedience (those who are
     obstinately opposed to the divine will). Among whom you also
     walked, when you were living in and dedicated to (such
     practices). 
     But now put away and rid yourself (completely) of all these
     things: anger, rage, bad feeling towards others, curses and
     slander, and foulmouthed abuse and shameful utterances from
     your lips! Do not lie to one another, for you have stripped
     off the old (unregenerate) self with its evil practices. And
     have clothed yourselves with the new (spiritual self), which
     is (ever in the process of being) renewed and remolded into
     (fuller and more perfect knowledge upon) knowledge after the
     image (the likeness) of Him Who created it (Gen.1:26). 
     (In this new creation all distinctions vanish). There is no
     room for and there can be neither Greek nor Jew, circumcised
     nor uncircumcised, (nor differences between nations whether
     alien) barbarians or Sythians (who are the most savage of
     all), nor slave or free man; but Christ is all and in all
     (everything and everywhere, to all men, without distinction
     of person).
     Clothe yourselves therefore, as God's own chosen ones (His
     own picked representatives), [who are] purified and holy and
     well-beloved (by God Himself, by putting on behavior marked
     by) tender-hearted pity and mercy, kind feeling, a lowly
     opinion of yourselves, gentle ways, (and) patience (which is
     tireless and longsuffering, and has the power to endure
     whatever comes, with good temper). Be gentle and forbearing
     with one another and, if one has a difference (a grievance
     or complaint) against another, readily pardoning each other;
     even as the Lord has (freely)forgiven you, so must you also
     (forgive).
     And above all these things (put on) love and enfold
     yourselves with the bond of perfectness (which binds
     everything together completely in ideal harmony).
     And let the peace  (soul harmony which comes) from Christ
     rule (act as umpire continually) in your hearts (deciding
     and settling with finality all questions that arise in your
     minds, in that peaceful state) to which as (members of
     Christ's) one body you were also called (to live). And be
     thankful (appreciative), [giving praise to God always].
     Let the word (spoken by) Christ (the Messiah) have its home
     (in your hearts and minds) and dwell in you in (all its)
     richness, as you teach and admonish and train one another in
     all insight and intelligence and wisdom (in spiritual
     things, and as you sing) psalms and hymns and spiritual
     songs, making melody with God with (His) grace in your
     hearts. And whatever you do (no matter what it is) in word
     or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus and in
     (dependence upon) His Person, giving praise to God the
     Father through Him."

     What a pregnant passage of Scripture, in many ways it is the
sum total of what a Christian is all about, or certainly should
be all about in thoughts, words, and actions. 
     We do need to realize that when Paul said there is in Christ
no Jew or Greek, no free or slave, no circumcised or
uncircumcised,  he is speaking of the SPIRITUAL life in
Christ Jesus. Paul did not mean to say that a Greek should run
out and do whatever was needed in a physical way to become
UN-Greek, and so likewise the Jew should not take off as swift as
the eagle and try to become a none Jew in the physical state of
things.
     After all if you are born a Jew how do you become a none
Jew? If you are born as a white or black American, how do you
become a none white or black American? Paul was not talking about
denouncing your citizenship, trying to erase where you were born,
or changing the color of your skin. You cannot really change
where you were born, nor can you become a neutral in the color of
your skin (what would be neutral color anyway?). If you are
circumcised you should not try to become un-circumcised (and
believe it or not there are groups of men who have devised long
and unpleasant ways to try and regain their foreskin on their
penis).

     Paul was simply saying that on the spiritual platform of
God's grace and calling, every person is equal, one color or race
or physical form of mankind, has no extra brownie points with
God, just because they have that physical form or color or were
born into a certain race or nationality. And think of it, what a
blessing it is that way with God. 
     If God took into consideration our looks, form of body,
color of skin, and what part of the world we came from, then
millions would be "out of luck" with God, from a physical point
that is. But fortunately our heavenly Father does not look on
appearance but the heart, our inner being, and with the help of
the Holy Spirit we are constantly being renewed each day, to be
more spiritually mature and ever more like our brother Christ
Jesus.

     From verse 18 through to the end of this chapter three, Paul
speaks about certain types of physical relationships, we all have
some part in, one way or the other.

     From the Amplified Bible:

     "Wives, be subject to your husbands (subordinate and adapt
     yourself to them), AS IS RIGHT and fitting and you proper
     duty IN the Lord."
     
     I give emphasis to certain words. First, it is right and
proper for wives to be under the leadership and guidance of their
husbands. I know this is not the "politically correct" teaching
and mind-set of the present western world's idea in the thoughts
of most of its women. But then the western world has by and large
disregarded God and throw His word and teachings and commandment,
out the window. But here, if you do believe in God and do want to
follow His ways and His instructions, then these words are
straight-for-word enough. It does not take a college degree to
understand them.
     Secondly, you will notice carefully, "as is right" and "in
the Lord." Which simply means a wife obeys God FIRST, you submit
and adapt (I like that word "adapt" - look it up in a dictionary
- meditate on it, think about it all, and think about what ways
you may have to adapt to your husband) AS LONG AS it is correct
and righteous to do so, so you do NOT have to disobey God. That
is the key here. Wives CAN DO many things, in actions, words, and
how to be "in sink" as we say, with their husbands, WITHOUT it
having to be contrary to any command of the Lord, or contrary to
the basics of His way of life. 
     There are times in any couple's marriage where someone has
to make the final decision on something or other that effects
both partners and their whole family, if they have children. I am
not talking about life or death matters, but things in everyday
life, where it may be quite possible to go in two or more
directions, but trying to go in two or more directions would only
being confusion and chaos.
     There are things and times when a woman has the opportunity
to just want to please her husband, like wearing a certain dress
he particularly likes, for a certain special dinner or outing or
event.

     Yes, there will be many times when a wife can be subordinate
and can adapt to her husband, all in the correct manner and all
still being within the law and general way of life that is
pleasing to God. The Lord has given us MANY things that we can be
different upon, yet all still be part of His family. We do not
all have to wear the same type of clothing, or shoes. We do not
all have to play the same type of musical instrument, or enjoy
the same sports, or belong to the same club or associations. Then
we all also know that in some situations (like the members of a
club going away for a week-end together) we adapt to others for a
while, simply to be nice and accommodating, to people we like
or love. It is all a part of at times, being able to get along
with people, and showing we do not always have to be selfish and
have it our way, every time and in all situations.
     So it is then for the wife to learn how to live this way
with her husband. History is full of broken marriages - either
divorced couples or very unhappy couples - because the wife could
not follow this instruction from the Lord. It was God that
invented and created marriages, surely He knows the basic rules
and format to make those marriages happy and successful.

     Then a happy marriage is NOT all ONE-SIDED, a woman cannot
all by herself deliver a marriage that is looked up to by their
children and friends and community. Oh, it may on the outside, on
the surface, look "just fine and respectable" to others (because
the husband puts on a "front" when in public - I'm supposing here
that the wife is indeed doing what God wants her to do) but
inside closed doors and behind four walls, the husband is a mess
and not at all doing the instructions of the Lord in how to be a
good husband and father to his children. Those instructions Paul
immediately speaks concerning in verse 19.

"Husbands, LOVE your wives (be affectionate and sympathetic with
them) and do NOT be HARSH or BITTER or RESENTFUL  towards them."

     Husbands, take some time and look up all those words I've
capitalized, in a dictionary.
     Men are too often taught by parents or society to be
"strong, powerful, and never to cry." There are times to be
strong and even powerful (Jesus was at times as we have
seen from the Gospels) but it is also written "Jesus wept."  A
lot of men need to learn to be affectionate and sympathetic and
loving, towards all people, not just their personal buddy male
friends or the cat or dog. 
     I will say that men are making good strides in the correct
direction on this matter, and more "TV interviews" (for whatever
the subject) are showing men who can cry and shed a tear, and in
some very disastrous situation (from a grave calamity etc.) 
openly WEEP.

     If husbands are courteous, kind, loving, affectionate,
considerate and sympathetic, towards their wives. If they are
acting like Jesus would act, and did act, in word and
thoughts, towards people, as He lived on this earth for nearly 34
years. If wives are following the instructions of verse 18. If
BOTH are serving the Lord with all their hearts, mind, words,
life, then Christian marriages would be an example to all the
world of what God truly desires a marriage to be.

     Paul does not leave out the children. Verse 20, "Children,
OBEY, your parents in everything,  for this is pleasing to the
Lord."

     The rest of the Bible makes this clear that Paul is using a
GENERAL statement here. Children of accountable age, who know the
word of the Lord, righteousness as opposed to unrighteousness,
should not obey their parents IF their parents tell them to
go kill this or that person (as is done in societies where
different ethic groups or racial groups or religious groups hate
one another)  because  they are "evil." 
     The context is also the context of "Christian" marriages -
hence Christian parents would be conducting themselves in a Godly
manner towards their children, and so Paul instructs children to
then obey their parents. All in the proper framework, children
will not to asked to do anything directly against a command of
God, and hence children should have the knowledge and the
encouragement, to be assured that in obeying their parents it
would be a safe and happy way to live.

     The importance of fathers (mother also of course, as God is
no respecter of persons)  being the head and leader in the home,
doing their correct part of child-rearing, is not overlooked by
Paul, as we see from verse 21. 

     "Father, do not provoke or irritate or fret your children 
     (do not be hard on them or harass them), less they become
     discouraged and sullen and morose and feel inferior and
     frustrated. (Do not break their spirit)."

     Nothing can be worse for a child to have a parent or father
who is DOING all that Paul says a parent should NOT do towards
their child. Breathing down the neck of a child with cutting
remarks, constant scolding, belittling, nagging, and plain
negativity, will surely break their spirit. Correcting a child,
when correction is needed, doing it in a right positive way, that
also corrects with encouragement, is not anywhere near the same
as the negative ways that Paul is referring to. It is an art, to
be a good parent. There are some fine Christian books out there
that can help you become the good Christian parent that God wants
you to be. 

     Paul is not through yet. He has some advise for all those
who work for others.

     "Servants, obey in everything those whom are your earthly
     masters, not only when their eyes are on you as pleasers of
     men, but in simplicity of purpose (with all your heart)
     because of your reverence for the Lord and as a sincere
     expression of your devotion to him. Whatever may be your
     task, work at it heartily (from the soul) as (something
     done) for the Lord and not for men. Knowing (with all
     certainty) that it is from the Lord (and not from men) that
     you will receive the inheritance which is your (real)
     reward. (The One Whom) you are actually serving (is) the
     Lord Christ (the Messiah). For he who deals wrongfully, will
     (reap the fruit of his folly and) be punished for his
     wrongdoing. And (with God) there is no partiality (no matter
     what a person's position may be, whether he is the slave or
     the master)."

     Here is another one of those lessons on how to correctly
read and understand the Bible. If this passage is taken out of
context, some could use it to say a servant should do anything
righteous or unrighteous, that he is required to do by his
master. A kind of "Well the servant is not responsible, it all
falls on the head of his master" attitude or theological belief.
The context of the WHOLE Bible teaches NO such idea or theology.
Righteousness, the doing of it, or not doing of it, is ALWAYS the
responsibility of the INDIVIDUAL. You may remember, as we went
through the first chapters of the book of Acts, Peter once said,
"We are to obey God and not man." The ways and directions and
commandments of God MUST ALWAYS come first. Once the righteous
ways of the Lord they are revealed to you, they, observing them,
must come FIRST, before any commandment of men. Never, is a
Christian permitted to DISOBEY the laws and commandments of God,
because some human master over you in some physical work or job,
tells you to obey his command, which could mean that in obeying
that master, you will disobey the way God instructs you to live. 

     Individual responsibility of doing righteousness and not sin
or unrighteousness is always the responsibility of the
individual, as clear shown from Ezekiel 14. 

     So the context that Paul is speaking in is the context of
servants obeying the wishes and directions of masters who are
"hard to work for" (unpleasant masters, hard nosed ones, always
on your back ones) or just trying to do the least you can for
them while getting the most pay you can get from them. The
context has nothing to do with obeying unrighteous orders, but it
has everything to do with being a faithful, giving all you've
got, doing the best work you can do, servant. For as Paul said,
you really are not doing it towards human people per se, but
towards God, who will indeed eventually render just payment to
all people, whether they were servants or masters. It is all to
do with being the best servant you can be or the best master you
can be, as God would want the best servant or master to be. 

     The context and thought of Paul also has nothing to do with
leaving a job, or finding another one, with kinder masters, or
better pay for the abilities or talents you have.
     All those things are well within the laws of God, and well
within being the best you can be in this physical life with what
God has given you. That truth was all brought out by Jesus in
many parables He gave in His Gospel ministry, as we covered those
chapters.

     Paul's context is the PRESENT job you have. If that job does
not conflict with God's laws and commandments (no Christian
should be working for a master who demands he work on the Sabbath
day etc.) you should be the very best servant you can be, doing
the best job you can do, all the time, not just when the "boss"
is next to you. For it is really God you are working for not some
man. And it is God who will reward you in due time.

                ............................

TO BE CONTINUED

March 2005

CHURCH GOVERNMENT continued #6, #7

 

Church Government

What the New Testament teaches on how churches should be governed

                                    
                                                 APPENDIX

                                           Second continuation

      All scripture quotes are from the NKJV unless otherwise
stated.

     Because of certain things written and spoken on this topic
of late, it is needful I write more and give my answers to
arguments not addressed in the body of this work.



                                     APPENDIX   ADDITIONS


ALL THE DOCTRINES OF THE BIBLE by HERBERT LOCKYER

pp. 246-247

1. Internal Management

Each church was left to manage its own business, and deal with
its own offenders.........No directions are given about taking
matters to a higher court. Each church was an independent
organization. There is no warrant in Scripture for the
ecclesiastical grades in the ministry of the churches, and also
for the ascending series of courts which may review a case of
disorder arising in a local church. Each church or assembly was
reckoned competent to perform every faction necessary without
reference to any other source. The inclusion, exclusion and
restoration of members were effected by each church.

2. External Authority

As the churches were not to be dominated by any external
authority, so they were not to be interfered with, in their
church life, by civil government. This at once proves the
untenable position of the so-called State Church. It is only
where the life of the church touches the civic life of the
community that the civil  authorities have any right to
interfere.......

3. Fraternal Relationship

While each local church, according to the New Testament is
independent of every other in the sense that no other has
jurisdiction over it, yet co-operative relations were entered
into, as can be proven by the witness of such passages as
Rom.15:1-27; 2 Cor.8:9; Gal.2:10; 3 John 8........Churches may
properly co-operate in matters of disciple, by seeking and giving
counsel, and by respecting each other's disciplinary measures. In
the great paramount business of evangelizing and teaching the
nations, they may co-operate in a multitude of ways. There is no
sphere of general Christian activity in which they may not
voluntarily and freely co-operate for the betterment of the
world, the salvation of humanity.

4. Exclusions

The early Christian society would not suffer the presence of
those immoral persons referred to in 1 Cor.5:11, nor of the
heretics mentioned frequently in the epistles, e.g., Titus
3:10......."

End quote.


WORD MEANINGS IN THE NEW TESTAMENT by Ralph Earl 

PHILIPPIANS

Bishops (1:1)

The Greek word for "bishop" is episcopos (cf. episcopal). It
occurs five times in the NT.
In Acts 20:28 it is translated "overseers." In 1 Pet. 2:25 it
refers to Christ, "the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls." It is
found twice in the Pastorals (1 Tim. 3:2; Titus 1:7) and is
correctly translated "bishop." ("Office of a bishop" in 1 Tim.
3:1 is another word, episcope.) Critics have sometimes insisted
that the technical use of episcopos for "bishop" in the Pastoral
Epistles reflects a later development in church organization and
so demands a second-century date for these letters. But the same
usage here in Philippians (written about A.D. 61) undercuts that
argument.
The word episcopos comes from scopos, "a watcher." So it means "a
superintendent, guardian, overseer"(A-S). Thayer notes that it
has this same comprehensive sense in Homer's Iliad and Odyssey
and in classical Greek writers from that time on (p. 243). The
large Lexicon of Liddell-Scott-Jones (1940) gives as the first
meaning of episcopos "one who watches over," and lists numerous
examples of this use (p. 657). "This was the name given in Athens
to the men sent into subdued states to conduct their affairs"
(Cremer, p. 527). The word was used 14 times in the Septuagint in
the sense of "overseer," or "inspector." Deissmann notes that in
Rhodes, episcopos was "a technical term for the holder of a
religious office" (in the temple of Apollo), as well an being
used in the plural for "communal officials" (BS, pp. 230-31).

Lightfoot mentions its use at Athens, and adds: "The title
however is not confined to Attic usage; it is the designation for
instance of the inspectors whose business it was to report
to the Indian kings......; of the commissioner appointed by
Mithridates to settle affairs in Ephesus.......; of magistrates
who regulated the sale of provisions under the Romans.......;
and of certain officers in Rhodes whose functions are unknown"
(p. 95).

Beyer writes: " In Greek episcopos is first used....... with a
free understanding of the 'onlooker' as 'watcher,' 'protector,'
'patron.' " Then it came to be used "as a title to denote
various offices" (TDNT, 2:609). He notes that protective care is
"the heart of the activity which men pursue as episcopoi" (TDNT,
2:610). This is its classical usage.

By the end of the second century we read of diocesan bishops.
Early in the second century Ignatius indicates that in each
church there was one bishop, a group of presbyters, and a group
of deacons. But in Paul's Epistles (here and in the Pastorals)
"bishop" and "presbyter" seem to be used synonymously. Lightfoot
observes: "It is a fact now generally recognized by the
theologians of all shade of opinion, that in the language
of the New Testament the same officer in the Church is called
indifferently 'bishop' (episcopos) and 'elder' or 'presbyter'
(presbyteros)" (p. 95). In TDNT, Coenen thinks it "probable that
the terms presbyteros and episcopos (bishop) are interchangeable"
(1:199).

Bishop,  l TIMOTHY 3:1

The first seven verses of chapter 3 are devoted to outlining the
qualifications of a bishop. As a leader in the church he must be
a man of exemplary character.

"The office of a bishop" is all one word in Greek, episcope.
Elsewhere in the NT it is used in this sense only in Acts 1:20,
in a quotation from the Septuagint.

In verse 2 "bishop" is episcopos, from which comes "episcopal."
It occurs only five times in the NT. In Acts 20:28 it is
translated "overseers" and applied to the Ephesian elders
by Paul. He also refers to the "bishops and deacons" at Philippi
(Phil. 1:1). In Titus 1:7 and following, we again find what is
required of a "bishop." Finally, in 1 Pet. 2:25, Christ
is called "the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls."

The word episcopos is made up of epi, "upon" or "over," and
scopes, "watcher." So it literally means "one who watches over."
Thayer defines it thus: "An overseer, a man charged with the duty
of seeing that things to be done by others are done rightly, any
curator, guardian, or superintendent.... specifically, the
superintendent, head or overseer of any Christian church " ( p.
243).

It will be seen that the basic meaning of episcopos is
"overseer." The ancient Greeks thought of their gods as
episcopoi. This usage is found in Homer's Iliad and many later
writings.

Then it came to be used of men in various functions. Beyer says:
"Protective care, however, is still the heart of the activity
which men pursue as episcopoi" (TDNT, 2:610).
Homer applies the term to ships' captains and merchants, who must
be "overseers" of goods.

In the fourth and fifth centuries before Christ episcopos was
used at Athens as a title for state officials. The same thing was
true at Ephesus and in Egypt. But more common was the use of
episcopal (plural) for local officials and officers of societies.
This brings us closer to the Christian eplscopos.

In the Septuagint episcopos is used both for God, who oversees
all things, and for men as supervisors in various fields of
activity. The latter usage is found in the earlier, well as
the later, books of the OT.

Turning to the NT, we discover one fact immediately:
there is no mention of any diocesan bishop. In the one church at
Philippi there were episcopoi, "bishops" (Phil 1:1). The apostles
are never given this title. The bishop was a local official, and
there were several of these in each congregation.

Furthermore, the "elders" (presbyteroi) and "bishops" (episcopoi)
were the same. This is shown clearly in Acts 20. In verse 17 it
says that Paul called for the "elders" (presbyteroi) of the
church at Ephesus. In verse 28 he refers to them as episcopoi -
"overseers" (KJV), "guardians" (RSV). The same people are
designated by both titles. We shall find this same phenomenon
clearly indicated in the Epistle to Titus. In the NT Church each
local congregation was supervised by a group of elders or bishops
and a group of deacons.
It seems likely that the former had oversight of the spiritual
concerns of the congregation and the latter of its material
business. 
When we come to Ignatius early in the second century (about A.D.
115) there is one bishop over each local church, together with
several elders and several deacons. The bishop is supreme in
authority. One of the keynotes of Ignatius' seven letters is,
"Obey your bishop." To the Trallians he wrote: "For when you are
in subjection to the bishop as to Jesus Christ it is clear to me
that you are living not after men, but after Jesus Christ....
Therefore it is necessary (as is your practice) that you should
do nothing without the bishop, but be also in subjection to the
presbytery, as to the Apostles of Jesus Christ....
And they also who are deacons of the mysteries of Jesus Christ
must be in every way pleasing to all men" (The Apostolic Fathers,
"Loeb Classical Library," 1:213-15). Here we see the beginnings
of the episcopal hierarchy that flowered during the second
century.
But "in the beginning it was not so."

Bishop = Elder, Titus 1:5-7

In verses 5 and 6 we find the qualifications of elder in the
church; verse 7 says, "For a bishop must be blameless." This
seems to indicate rather clearly that the same church officials
were called bishops (episcopoi) and elders (presbyteroi). The
name "elders" emphasizes the fact that the leaders of the church
were to be older men, as was the case with the elders of Israel.
The word episcopos (bishop) literally means "overseer." So it
refers to the function and office of an overseer of the church,

That "bishop" and "elder" are used for the same person is even
asserted by Bishop Lightfoot of the Church of England. In his
commentary on the Greek text of the Epistle to the Philippians he
writes: "It is a fact now generally recognized by theologians of
all shades of opinion, that in the language of the New Testament
the same officer in the Church is called indifferently 'bishop'
(episcopos) and 'elder' or 'presbyter' (presbyteros)" (p. 95).

He goes on to show that not only was episcopos used in classical
Greek for various officials, but it is common in the Septuagint.
There it signifies "inspectors, superintendents, taskmasters"
(e.g., 2 Kings 11:19; 2 Chron. 34:12, 17; Isa. 60:17). He
comments: "Thus beyond the fundamental idea of inspection, which
lies at the root of the word 'bishop,' its usage suggests two
subsidiary notions also: (1) Responsibility to a superior power;
(2) The introduction of a new order of things" (p. 96).

Lightfoot gives six evidences that bishop and elder are the same:
(1) In Phil. 1:1, Paul salutes the bishops and deacons. He could
not have omitted mention of the elders unless they were included
in the "bishops." (2) In Acts 20:17, Paul summoned to Miletus the
elders of the church at Ephesus. But then he calls them
"overseers" (episcopoi) of the flock. (3) Peter does a similar
thing (1 Pet. 5:1-2). (4) In 1 Timothy, Paul describes the
qualifications of bishops (3:1-7) and deacons (3:8-13). The fact
that he omits elders here would argue that they were the same as
bishops. (5) Titus 1:5-7). (6) Clement of Rome's First Epistle
(ca. A.D. 95) clearly uses "bishops" and "elders"
interchangeably.

It is not without significance that Jerome, writing near the end
of the fourth century, recognizes this identity of the two. He
says: "Among the ancients, bishops and presbyters are the same,
for the one is a term of dignity, the other of age." Again he
writes: "The Apostle plainly shows that presbyters are the same
as bishops." In a third passage he says: "If any one thinks the
opinion that the bishops and presbyters are the same, to be
not the view of the Scriptures, but my own, let him study the
words of the apostle to the Philippians." Other Church Fathers,
such as Chrysostom, asserted the same thing. Lightfoot goes so
far as to say: "Thus in every one of the extant commentaries on
the epistles containing the crucial passages, whether Greek or
Latin, before the close of the fifth century, this identity is
affirmed" (p. 99).

1 Corinthians, Apostles (12:28)

In this verse Paul mentions eight types of ministry in the
church. The first is that of apostles.
Who were the apostles in the Early Church? Are there still
apostles in the church of today? Neither of these questions is
easy to answer.
The Greek noun apostolos comes from the verb apostello, which
means "send with a commission, or on service." So apostolos is "a
messenger, one sent on a mission." Abbott-Smith continues his
definition by saying: "In NT, an apostle of Christ (a) with
special reference to the Twelve......... equality with whom is
claimed by St. Paul.......(b) in a wider sense of prominent
Christian teachers, as Barnabas, Acts 14:14, apparently
also Silvanus and Timothy, 1 Thess. 2:6, and perhaps Andronicus
and .Junias (Junia?), Rom. 16:7....... of false teachers,
claiming apostleship" (p. 55). It is evident that the word
has a variety of applications in the NT.
In his long article on apostolos in Kittel's Theological
Dictionary of the New Testament, Rengstorf shows that in
classical and early Hellenistic Creek there is no parallel to the
NT use of this word. This is true even of the Septuagint,
Josephus,  and Philo (1:408).
The word is found 79 times in the NT. Paul and Luke (his close
companion) each use it 34 times ((68 out of the 79). It occurs
three times in Revelation, twice in 2 Peter. and once each in
Matthew, Mark, John, Hebrews,, I Peter. and Jude. Paul has it at
the beginning of 9 of his 13 Epistles..

Apostolos is used for messenger, "one sent" in John 13:16. In 2
Cor. 8:23 Paul applies this term to the commissioned
representatives of local church congregations. "Finally,
apostoloi is a comprehensive term for 'bearers of the NT message'
" (TDNT, 1:422). It is used primarily for the 12 apostles chosen
and commissioned by Christ. This is the dominant usage in Luke's
Gospel and Acts.
Then we also find the wider spread suggested by Abbott-Smith.
Paul and Barnabas were first of all apostles of the church at
Antioch. But Paul calls himself at the beginning of his epistles,
"an apostle-of Jesus Christ." Luke does not hesitate to speak of
Paul and Barnabas as apostles (Acts 14:4, 14).
The first apostle was Jesus himself (Heb.- 3:1), sent from God.
Rengstorf comments: "Here the only possible meaning of apostolos
is that in Jesus there has taken place the definitive revelation
of God by God himself(1:2)" (TDNT, 1:423). All other apostles are
direct representatives of Jesus.

Are there apostles today in the Church? In a general, unofficial,
nontechnical sense, yes. But it may well be questioned whether
apostolic authority as found in the first-century Church has
carried over to subsequent centuries. Acts 1::31-29 indicates
that an apostle was to be one who had been in close contact with
Christ during His earthly ministry and who could be a witness of
His resurrection. Paul fulfilled the latter requirement ( 1 Cor.
15:8), but not the former one. However, he was careful to state
that he had "received" the necessary information (1 Cor. 15:3).

Charles H. Spurgeon was perhaps a bit severe when he
characterized apostolic succession as laying empty hands on empty
heads. But many of those who claim apostolic succession today
hardly show themselves to be true representatives of the
Christ of the NT.

Prophets (12:28)

The Greek prophetes comes from the verb prophemi, which means
"speak forth." So it signifies "one who acts as an interpreter or
forth-teller of the Divine will" (A-S, p. 390). Contrary to
popular usage today, the biblical meaning of "prophecy" is not
foretelling, but forth-telling. Put in simplest terms, the
prophet is one who speaks for God.

In Kittel's Theological Dictionary of the New Testament,
Friedrich has a lengthy article on prophetes and its cognate
terms in the New Testament. He notes some differences
between OT and NT prophets. He says that "prophecy is not
restricted to a few men and women in primitive Christianity.
According to Acts 2:4; 4:31, all are filled with the prophetic
Spirit and, according to Acts 2:16ff., it is a specific mark of
the age of fulfilment that the Spirit does not only lay hold of
individuals but that all members of the eschatological
community without distinction are called to prophesy" (6:849)

But our present passage, as well as Eph.4:11, shows that there
was a special gift of prophecy in the Early Church. It is ranked
first, as the best gift after "apostles," in our present passage
as well as 14:1.

Has the gift of prophecy continued? In the second century the
Montanists went to unfortunate extremes in their claims for this
gift. Friedrich writes: "With the repudiation of Montanism
prophecy came to an end in the Church" (6:860). On the other
hand. many Bible scholars believe that the NT prophets were
essentially preachers, and so this gift of the Spirit is present
today.

Helps (12:28)

The Greek word antilempsis (only here in NT) is used in the
Septuagint and papyri in the sense of "help." Abbott-Smith thinks
that here it is used for the "ministrations of deacons"
(p. 41). Cremer says that the word is "taken by the Greek
expositors uniformly as answering to deacons (implying the duties
towards the poor and sick)" (p. 386).


Governments (12:28)

Kybernesis is likewise found only here in the NT. It comes from
the verb meaning to guide or steer. In classical Greek it
referred to the piloting of a boat. Then it was used
metaphorically for "government." Beyer writes that. in view of
its literal meaning and attested usage, "The reference can only
be to the specific gifts which qualify a Christian to be a
helmsman to his congregation, i.e., a true director to its order
and therewith of its life" (3:10:36). The word may be translated
"gifts of administration" (NIV).

Evangelists (4:1 1 ) - Ephesians

The word, which is a transliteration of the (Greek euangelistes,
is found only two other places in the NT. In Acts 21:8 Philip is
referred to as "the evangelist." In 2 Tim.4:5 the  young Timothy
is admonished to "do the work of an evangelist."
The term comes from the verb euangelizo ("evengelize"), which
means "proclaim glad tidings."  An evengelist, then, is one who
preaches the "gospel" (Greek euangelos), the good news that
Christ has died to save men. The evangelists in the Early Church
were probably itinerant preachers.

Pastors and Teachers (4:11)

"Pastor" is the Latin term for "shepherd."  The Greek word poimen
also means "shepherd."  It is used of Christ(John 10:11, 14, 16;
Heb.13:20; 1 Peter 2:25). Here it is used of Christian pastors.
Homer, in his Lliad, refers to "pastors of the people" (poimena
laon). The pastor is to be the shepherd of the flock.
Apparently the pastors and teachers were the same. Vincent
comments: "The omission of the article from teachers seems to
indicate that pastors and teachers are included under one class"
(3:390).

The end of quotes from Ralph Earle


THE WORD "ELDER" AS USED IN THE NT

The Analytical Greek Lexicon(1978 edition) says:

"presbuteros..........elder, senior: older, more advanced in
years, Lu.15:25; Jno.8:9; Ac.2:17; an elder in respect of age,
person advanced in years, 1 Tim.5:1,2; pl. spc. ancients,
ancestors, fathers, Mat.15:2; He.11:2; as an appellation of
dignity, an elder, local dignitary, Lu.7:3; an elder, member of
the Jewish Sanhedrin, Mat.16:21; 21:23; 26:3, 47, 57, 59;  an
elder or presbyter of the Christian church, Ac.11:30; 14:23, et
al.freq.

presbuterion.........a body of older men, an assembly of elders;
the Jewish Sanhedrin, Lu.22:66; Ac.22:5;  a body of elders in the
Christian church, a presbytery, 1 Tim.4:14.

presbutes.........an old man, aged person, Lu.1:18; Tit.2:2;
Phile.9

presbutis........an aged woman, Tit.2:3.


Vine's Complete Expository Dictionary of Old and New Testament
Words, page 195

A. Adjectives

     1. presbuteros......... an adjective, the comparative degree
of presbus, "an old man, an elder," is used (a) of age, whether
of the "elder" of two persons, Luke 15:25, or more, John 8:9,
"the eldest"; or of a person advanced in life, a senior, Acts
2:17; in Heb.11:2, the "elders" are the forefathers in Israel; so
in Matt.15:2; Mark 7:3,5;  the feminine of the adjective is used
of "elder" women in the churches, 1 Tim.5:2, not in respect of
positions but in seniority of age;  (b) of rank or position of
responsibility,  (1) among Gentiles, as in the Sept.of Gen.50:7;
Num.22:7; (2) in the Jewish nation, firstly, those who were the
heads or leaders of the tribes and families, as of the seventy
who assisted Moses, Num.11:16; Deut.27:1, and those assembled by
Solomon; secondly, members of the Sanhedrin, consisting of the
chief priests, "elders" and scribes, learned in Jewish law,
e.g., Matt.16:21; 26:47;  thirdly, those who managed public
affairs in the various cities, Luke 7:3;  (3)  in the Christian
churches, those who, being raised up and qualified by the
work of the Holy Spirit, were appointed to have the spiritual
care of, and to exercise oversight over, the churches.  To these
the term "bishops," episkopoi, or "overseers," is applied (see
Acts 20, v.17 with v.28, and Titus 1:5 and 7), the latter term
indicating the nature of their work,  presbuteroi their maturity
of spiritual experience. The divine arrangement seen throughout
the NT was for a plurality of these to be appointed in each
church, Acts 14:23; 20:17; Phil.1:1; 1Tim.5:17; Titus 1:5. The
duty of "elders" is described by the verb episkopeo. They were
appointed according as they had given evidence of fulfilling the
divine qualifications, Titus 1:6 to 9; cf. 1 Tim.3:1-7 and 1
Pet.5:2; ...........

     2.  sumpresbuteros........"a fellow-elder (sun, "with"), is
used in 1 Pet.5:1.

     3.  meizon......translated "elder" in Rom.9:12, with
reference to Esau and Jacob.

B. Noun

presbuterion........."an assembly of aged men," denotes (a) the
Council or Senate among the Jews, Luke 22:66; Acts 22:5;  (b) the
"elders" or bishops in a local church, 1 Tim.4:14, "the
presbytery."


TODAY'S ARGUMENT

Some in the Church of God of recent date are teaching that ALL
older people(men only, but some will no doubt eventually include
women) can be Elders in the church. They teach people can take
turns in being "elders" for a festival time, or for a month, or a
year etc. They teach a local church can "pick and choose" or
"vote in or vote out" who will serve as Elders and for how long.
They say the word "elder" under the OT just meant any older
person. Sure indeed within some contexts it did mean just that,
but upon an in-depth study of the word, as done above, it was
often used in a more limited sense and as a "leadership" function
and responsibility, not shared with just every older man in the
nation or community.

The use of the word "elder" in the NT also clearly shows a much 
w i d e r and BROADER use as the two works above explained and
demonstrated.  It is used for older men and older women in any
congregation of the church of God. But it is not exclusively to
be understood as meaning that in EVERY passage where it is used.
The context of the passage is most important as to how we are to
understand the use of the word. 

Clearly, this Greek word is an umbrella word.  Something similar
to our English word today of "minister."  That word is an
umbrella word.  For we use it not only when talking about those
men who are pastors of churches, but it is used of various
functions and duties of the nations Government. We today have a
"minister of Finance" or a "minister of Defence" or a "minister
of Health" - "minister of Public Affairs" - "minister of
Agriculture" etc. etc.

It should be clear from all we have studied in the previous
pages, that the NT does use the term "elder" in a specific
limited  context, of men who were appointed by meeting certain
qualifications, to function in duty as overseers, shepherds,
leaders, guides, pastors, teachers, of the flock. 
Such men had to meet specific qualifications. They could not be
new to the faith(no matter how old in age they were) when chosen
to be an overseer. Many other points did Paul lay down in 1 Tim.3
as to who could qualify for eldership.  It should be pretty plain
to the honest searcher for truth, that not ALL older men would
have all the qualifications required to be appointed as church
pastors/overseers/elders. 
Not all older men in the nation are qualified to be part of the
local officials that are to guide and direct the affairs of local
towns and cities. Not all older carpenters, plumbers,
fire-fighter, policemen, have the gifts to be leaders, and
guides, and overseers, of a crew of persons in their chosen
profession. That is just the way it is in this natural life. It
does not mean the leader/guide, of a group of fie-fighters, is
any better man in character or worth. He may very well not be as
good in some areas as a man under his guidance.
It just means that he has proved he has the qualities needed to
oversee that trade well on the whole.  He has proved he is
rounded and balanced enough, has the overall gifts, needed to
take care, watch out for, instruct correctly, guide, help, and
serve, those he is overlooking and overseeing. That's all it
means!  It does not mean he is  "special." 
It means he has been given certain gifts to meet certain
qualifications that are needed to function correctly in the
appointment of overseeing and leading others.

Then depending on how well he does in that function, staying
basically within those qualifications from then on out, will
determine how long he keeps that function. If he falls too many
times from those qualifications, especially if it brings shame
and disgrace upon his company, then his reward is accordingly,
even to the point of loosing his function and being then a part
of the team under other overseers and leaders.

If we teach that EVERYONE can be or have turns in being "elders"
in the church, there are LARGE problems to answer!
If being an elder is just being an "older person" then we have to
determine at what age is older?  Do we become an elder of the
church at age 50? Is that "older"?  Or is it at the age of 55? 
Maybe we become an elder in the church at age 60!  Or is it 65
when we retire? That's the age our nations call us seniors,
unless you live in Florida. There certain stores(to receive
discounts) and certain movie theatres, call you senior at the age
of 55.
Should the age be 70 when you become a church elder?  Some would
think 40 years old is old enough. Or how about 30, that's when
Jesus started to teach and lead and guide.
Then, what if someone comes into the church at age 60. Do they
become an elder right away because of their older age?  If not,
then how long do they have to wait, how many months or years,
before they are counted as an elder of the church?
Who sets all the answers to the above questions?  Where do they
get the authority and Bible answers to answer those questions?

I can see a whole list of problems arising from this teaching of
"everyone can be elders, who are older."  What if someone does
not want to be considered an "elder" when he is older? What does
the church do to "unfrock" him?   How long does an elder remain
an elder in his old age, and who sets the time, by what
authority, and by what set of scriptures?

We have not yet touched on the problem of older women. They too
are "elder" as part of elder means older. Paul said in Christ
there is no male or female, Gentile or Jew, so should not older
women also be "elders of the church"?  If not why not?  
And so we are back to the beginning of the circle. What is the NT
definition of a church "elder"? 

From all that I have presented to you so far in this study, from
all the NT scriptures we can "put together" on the subject, we
should by now KNOW THE ANSWER!  If you do not, then better read
over the last dozen or so pages once more - S  L  O  W  L  Y!    

                          ............


Appendix Additions updated in January 1997


Church Government

What the New Testament teaches on how churches should be governed

                                                 Part Two

                                                       by
                                               Keith Hunt



     
     At the end of part one in this study I questioned if it
would be the last word that I would have to say concerning the
subject at hand. It was not very long after that comment that I
received two more study papers on this topic. For the individuals
who have only recently come out of the church organization known
as the Worldwide Church of God, this topic of Church Government
is very high on the study list.
     It seems thousands are just now beginning to come to the
light,  (their one time church organization had for many decades
departed from the plain truth of the New Testament) as to the
pattern of church government that Jesus and the early apostolic
church taught and practiced.

     The two new papers that have come across my desk in the last
six months (I am writing in the late summer of 1996) are by Norman
Edwards and John Difley.
     The paper by Norman Edwards is called "How Does the Eternal
Govern Through Humans?"  And the paper by John Difley is named
"By What Authority?"
     The former was written in June 1995 (first edition, which I
answer later) while the latter was published in 1996.

     Both of the above study papers (Mr.Edwards now has a new
edition to his paper, which at present, Jan.1999 I have not yet
read, due to lack of time).
Servant's News, PO Box 220, Charlotte, Michigan 48813-0220

     Mr.Edwards and Mr.Difley have come to see many truths
contained in the New Testament (NT forthwith). 
     I fully agree with much of what they have to say, BUT
POLITELY DISAGREE WITH THEM ON CERTAIN POINTS THEY RAISE.
     Below you will find their full words on certain points of
thought, and my reply to their argument.
     I do appreciate their study and work. In the main we have
much in common, and I am hoping that no one will construe that my
rebuttal of some of their thoughts or beliefs is an attack on
their integrity of character.

     I will start my replies to various points with the paper by
John Difley (J.D.) called By What Authority?

     J.D.

     No "Ordination Ceremonies" in the Bible

     ........Ordination, in the religious sense, comes strictly
from pagan origins and customs and is not biblical in
foundation......No place does the Bible command, espouse, or
suggest a service (ceremony) of ordination. Quite to the contrary
the biblical example is for the local congregation or fellowship
to collectively lay hands upon an individual that they have
jointly chosen and together commend that individual to God for
the appointed position......


     MY  ANSWER:

     First, let us look at the word "ordination" or more
specifically - "ordain."  Here in part is what the Reader's
Digest Family Word Finder has to say:

     "....1......confer holy orders upon, name,
invest....consecrate; appoint, commission,
delegate, deputize, elect.  2.....decree, rule,
pronounce....instruct....order,
command....legislate."

     I want you to keep in mind that this word "ordain" can also,
in our English usage, mean in certain contexts - consecrate,
appoint, delegate, commission, and elect.

     Now the World Book Dictionary in part says this about the
word "ordain."
     "....1. to establish as a law; order; fix; decide;
appoint......2. to appoint or consecrate officially as a
clergyman. 3. to appoint (a person, etc.) to a charge, duty, or
office.....Old French ordener, learned, borrowing from the Latin
ordinare, arrange (in Medieval Latin, consecrate; take holy
orders)....."

     Notice point number 3 again!  This word not only means
appoint to a duty or charge, it not only means learned, BUT IT
CAN ALSO MEAN - CONSECRATE!  I am not sure what runs through the
mind of Mr.Difley when he hears the English word "ordain"
but I suspect it may not be the same as how I understand the
word.

     For the word "consecrate" the above mentioned Dictionary
says: "....1. to set apart as sacred; make sacred or
holy......2......3. to devote (to a purpose): A doctor's
life is consecrated to curing sick people.....Syn.v.t. 1.
sanctify. 3. dedicate. See devote."

     AAAHHH! Now we have the word sanctify used in conjunction
with "consecrate."
Again, here is what the World Book Dictionary has to say about
the word sanctify:

     "......1. to make....holy......2. to set apart as sacred;
observe as holy; consecrate: And God blessed the seventh day, and
sanctified it (Genesis 2:3). 3. to make (a person) free from sin.
4. to make right......."

     Do you feel we are going in CIRCLES?   Yes, we are to a
large extent!  Can you see how the words ordain, consecrate, and
sanctify may all be chosen to say the same thing and convey the
same idea and thought to the English speaking mind?  If used in
the context of physical men under the banner of God's truth and
service, then the thought of mind is to certain people who are
called, appointed, set apart, devoted to a purpose.  And
consecrated in learned ability to be a teacher of others in word
and deed to the WAY of the Eternal God.     

     With what we see above about this word "ordain" I just
cannot fathom from a "religious sense" that it has any direct
origin with the pagans. Oh, they also may have had the custom of
electing men and setting them apart to serve in their false
worship of false gods. Does that mean God has not the right to
elect, ordain, consecrate, set apart, men to serve Him and His
children, either by calling them direct(as He did with the
apostle Paul) or through other humans(as we saw in the first part
of this study)?
     The pagans had a special one day a week to worship their
gods on(Sun-day).
Does that mean God has no right to establish the 7th day as
ordained, sanctified, set apart time, to worship Him?
     The pagans had their seasonal festivals. Does that mean God
cannot have seasonal festivals?
     The heathen had their yearly calendar. By so having, did
that mean God could not establish His yearly calendar?
     The pagans had a religious priesthood, therefore was it not
permissable for the Eternal God to have one?
     The pagans established an animal sacrificial system. Was it
wrong for the Lordto also establish such a system with ancient
Israel?

     My answer to the above is of course a resounding - NO!
     
     What the pagans DID or did NOT do, has really no bearing on
what the perfect, holy, righteous God did do,  does do,  will do,
or will not do.

     What in the "religious sense" does the word Ordination
convey to your mind? Is it something "pagan"? Does it convey to
you something "evil" or "dirty" or "false."? Well, I guess if you
think about all the false "wolves in sheeps clothing" clergy in
the world, then it may to you be an offensive word. But if you
put it in the context of those truly called and chosen,
consecrated, set apart, appointed, elected by God. Men who serve
the spiritual needs of the sons and daughters of the
Lord........then I think the word Ordination will take on a
wonderful and inspiring meaning. A meaning that lifts the heart
to praise and thank the Eternal for having His ordained Elders to
lead and guide His called out ones - His ordained children, who
collectively constitute His ordained Church.

     Mr.Difley says Ordination is "not biblical in foundation."
Well, I will now show you where God HIMSELF commanded that there
would be a "consecration ceremony," a "setting apart" ceremony,
an "appointment to religious duty" service, an Ordination service
if you will!  It has been in your Bible for centuries.  It is in
the Old Testament, but the things of old are written for our
admonition, for our edification, for our salvation
(1Cor.10:11-12; 2 Tim.3:15-17).
     Listening to Moses and the prophets(Old Testament) is more
important than any literal physical miracle (Luke 16:31).

     With that said, let's turn to Leviticus chapter eight.  We
shall start to read from verse one.                          

                     "And the Lord spoke to Moses, saying: ' Take
Aaron and his sons with him....the anointing oil....and gather
all the congregation together at the door of the tabernacle of
meeting.' So Moses did as the Lord commanded him.....And Moses
said to the congregation, ' This is what the LORD COMMANDED TO BE
DONE' " (verses 1-5).

     Notice verse 9, more commands from God, as with verse 13,
17, 21, 29, 35, 36. The WHOLE ELABORATE process described in this
chapter was commanded by the Lord!
     Look at verse 12, "And he poured some of the anointing oil
on Aaron's head and anointed him, to CONSECRATE him" (NKJV
throughout unless otherwise stated).  The KJV of 1611 does not
use the word consecrate but the word "sanctify."
     Verse 30 in the old KJV is: "And Moses took of the anointing
oil....and sprinkled it upon Aaron....and upon his sons....and
SANCTIFIED Aaron....and his sons....with him."
     The NKJV does not use the word sanctified but the word
"consecrated."
     But the intent to the English mind is the same - these men
were SET APART, ELECTED, APPOINTED, to the duty of religious
service in a special way among the people of Israel, who formed
the "church in the wilderness"(Acts 7:38).
          All of this specific occurrence took place as the
"congregation" looked on. Read again verses two through to verse
five.  This was in a PUBLIC setting!
     Now, let me ask you: What would you call this special event?

Would you call it a "church prayer meeting"? Would you call it a
"church Bible study"?  Maybe a "church picnic" - I speak in jest.

What words come to your English mind (I am writing as an
Englishman) that convey to your understanding about what was
taking place in this chapter of Leviticus?  Do you think of the
words "church service,"  well some may? It was a "service" of a
type, as we think and use that English word concerning a
religious congregation.  Does the words "sanctification service"
or "consecration service" pop into your mind as you read this
chapter?  I am sure with many they do.
     Yet MANY English readers will think of the words "dedication
service" and/or "Ordination service."  And WHY NOT?  For the
whole context of this chapter, all the basic underlying themes of
this command from the Lord, is what the English mind thinks of as
an ORDINATION SERVICE of men to an elected, called, appointed
function of service in the work of the Eternal, toward humanity
and especially toward the people of the Church of God.
     I do not care what the pagans did or did not do in public
toward their elected priests of their religions. We are here
looking at what GOD COMMANDED!  I feel quite "at home" in calling
this public setting apart of elected men to serving in a
religious function, as an "Ordination service."
     To be frank. I am somewhat puzzled and even a little
disturbed at what presently seems like a "disdain" by some
persons(such as Mr.Difley and Mr.Edwards) for the words
"ordination" or "ordination service" or "ordination of men." 
They seem to want to put forth the teaching that this word is not
to be used in commending men, or that it is connected somehow
with evil or sin.

     John the Baptist conducted his ministry in the wilderness of
Judea. It was a public ministry. He baptized people out in the
open, crowds came to hear him and hundreds went under the water
in baptism by him(Matthew 3:1-12).
     Jesus, already a servant of the Most High, already a
spiritual elder in Israel, already learned and performing the
work of God toward the people of God. This Jesus comes to John
for baptism, not because He needed to repent of sin and be
forgiven of sins, but "to fulfil all righteousness"(verses
13-15).
     Now look what happens when Jesus comes out of the water. The
Spirit of God descends upon Him, a voice from heaven says, "This
is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased"(verses 16,17).
     Did Jesus not have the Spirit of God at this time in His
life?  No!  It is written He had the Spirit without measure from
His conception.  Was Jesus only now "well pleasing" to the
Father?  Of course not!  He had been well pleasing to the Father
from the beginning - for He was sinless.
     The truth is, this was now a SPECIAL TIME in the life of
Jesus. He was now to embark very shortly into the most important
three and one half years of His physical life. He was now too
really "zero in" on serving and dedicating His elected calling to
the children of God. What could be more fitting at this juncture
than the Father openly and publicly performing a "consecration" -
"setting apart" - public acknowledgment of service in the past
and that to come, by His Son?  
     If Aaron was given a public sanctification service of
religious duty and function, he being only a sinful man, surely
the sinless Son of the Eternal God would have no less an
ordination service?  And He did not!
     Turn to Acts chapter six. This is the well-known chapter for
the first choosing of men who would "serve tables."
     Read verses one to seven. I shall come back later to look at
this in detail when I answer another argument, but for now we see
men who met certain requirements as laid down by the apostles.
They, the "multitude of disciples"(verse 2) brought these men
before the apostles, who "when they had prayed, laid their hands
on them"(verse 6).
     This was a public ceremony,where many were witnesses to this
event. Not only the apostles(ministers, elders, spiritual
overseers) but also a "multitude of disciples."
     What if using English words would you call this ceremony? 
Some would say it was a "church service" and I guess it would
come under that  generic phrase. But most religious English born
persons would narrow it down to more specific words than just a
church service, for the context of the verses convey to the mind
a certain type of ceremony here  described.
     Many would instantly say this was a "sanctification service"
or a "consecration ceremony" or an "ordination service to
deaconship."
     There is nothing to the average English mind that smacks at
"evil" or "pagan" in the words ordination service to deaconship.
Most church goers read the first six verses of Acts chapter six,
and understand them as certain men being publicly set apart,
sanctified, consecrated, ordained, appointed, elected, to serve
and function in the duty of physical things within the church -
deacons or servers.
     These men did have to meet certain requirements, they were
elected, they had to be willing to answer that calling, and they
did go through a public ceremony where certain literal things
were performed. The most important, as the ones recorded for
us - prayer and the laying on of hands.
     We in the English language have given that whole process a
name, which immediately conveys to our mind certain specifics
that the generic phrase "church service" cannot. We have named
the process of Acts 6:1-6 as an ORDINATION SERVICE!
     And WHY ON EARTH NOT!  
     
           CONCERNING ORDINATION TO THE ELDERSHIP

     We have seen in part one of this study that God has chosen
two ways to call a man to serve in His spiritual eldership
ministry - 1. He Himself with signs, miracles, visions, angels,
or personal appearance to the man being called. There is no
record that the 12 apostles or the apostle Paul went through some
kind of ordination service by physical men. They were personally
chosen and called by the Lord Himself, and what better or greater
ordination could there be than that!  2. God uses other men to
publicly acknowledge certain individuals have been called by the
Lord to spiritual leadership and overseeing of His children. Does
the service of public consecration or ordination somehow "throw
the switch" and magically "presto" - make that man into a
"minister" from a lay person? Now that would indeed be a miracle
if it did.Of course such a literal ceremony cannot make a man
into a true minister of God. Nor can it guarantee to the end of
his life that he will not go astray or become a false minister if
he started out as a true one(see again Acts 20). 
     The ceremony of baptism by physical persons in a public
setting(most baptisms are usually performed with others around as
witnesses, though it is not a command) does not magically turn
the person being baptized into a true Christian IF the heart and
mind of the individual is not right with God. He can see the
heart, whereas men can be fooled and deceived by the outward
signs and actings and words of others. A person going through
baptism with a true heart and mind has already been living to the
best of his/her ability and knowledge the life of a Christian.
The ceremony of baptism is an outward physical sign that an
inward change of the heart and mind HAS ALREADY TAKEN PLACE.
Which has already led the person to think, to speak, to act, to
conduct themselves in a way that is pleasing to God.
     So similarly is an ordination service of men to the
spiritual eldership in the church. It is a physical act usually
in a public setting(by that I mean members of the congregation
present) to ACKNOWLEDGE that this man or men, have already been
functioning in their lives as spiritual leaders, guides and
overseers, within the body of Christ.
     The ceremony itself will not make that man into a spiritual
leader if he has not already become one. An ordination service
will not make that man into a true minister of God if he is not
already one in heart and mind.  And as the word of the Lord
clearly shows, that "setting apart" service will not, from that
moment on, guarantee that man will remain as a true spiritual
elder of God until his death. Do we stop baptizing people
because some "pull the wool over our eyes" and fool us into
thinking they have the right godly heart and mind when they do
not, or because some later leave the faith and make shipwreck
their Christian walk?  No, of course we do not!  
     Should we then stop performing ordination services because
some men have deceived us into thinking they are true spiritual
elders and overseers when they are not, or because some will turn
themselves into false minister and start "speaking perverse
things to draw away disciples after them"(Acts 20:30)?  No, of
course not!

     I am trying to see, probably looking through a glass darkly,
as to why Mr.Difley/Edwards, have such a "horror" for the word
ordination, or throw out such "end of argument" phrases as: You
cannot find the words "ordination service" in the Bible.
     Big deal. I cannot find the words "baptism service" used in
the Bible either, yet that does not mean people were not baptized
in an open public baptism ceremony, where certain things would
have been said and done in a chosen manner by those
participating. The exact specific pattern of physical action and
words spoken (what is said to the one being baptized by the
person doing the baptizing, how is the one being baptized put
under the water, backwards, frontwards, sideways, squatting,
etc.)  is not given to us, only the example and teaching that
believers are to be baptized in water and have the laying on of
hands. 
     The NT writers conveyed to our minds that people were
baptized with certain words, it got the message across to us,
which is the important thing. So they used other words and not
the words "baptism service" or "baptismal ceremony."  That
combination of words cannot be found in the Bible, so what I say.
Does that prove anything one way or the other? Not really.
Language does change over a period of time, how we use words,
the phrases we use, the combination of words we use to express
the same image on the part of the brain that functions to
understand correctly the truth being promulgated, may change over
time, but the truth never changes. How we use words to express
that truth may change, but the truth itself never does.
     The words "second coming" are not to be found in the Bible.
Most fundamental Christians instantly know the truth of what
those words are meant to convey to the mind. They know that those
words in a nut shell, give the truth of the scriptures that Jesus
will literally, in power and glory, bodily return again to this
earth.
     The NT writers did not use that combination of words to
express this truth. Jesus is recorded to have said, "I will come
again."  We find such phrases as "the coming of the Lord" and
others in the NT, but nowhere can you find the phrase "second
coming." 
     Now is it wrong for us today to use such a phrase among
ourselves as Christians to proclaim the truth of scripture that
Christ will come back to live on this earth again as He once did
before?  No, indeed not!
     It is just a form of English to express among ourselves a
certain biblical truth.

     Our English words ordination service or ordination ceremony 
are a combination of words that speak to our mind in a certain
way, as we have come to customarily use and expect them to be
used within a certain context. The average religious English
-speaking person would immediately associate those words with the
consecration service of Aaron to Israel's high-priesthood, and
the 6 men of Acts chapter six to that of "table
servers" or as commonly called today in most churches - deacons.
     The truth that words convey to the mind is the important
thing, not the sounding of the words, not the language of the
words, not the spelling of the words, not the combination of the
words used, but the truth the words tell you!


                       A CONTRADICTION

     
     Mr.Difley says that nowhere does the Bible command or
suggest a service(ceremony) of ordination. This we have already
shown to be incorrect. But he goes on to say: "Quite to the
contrary the biblical example is for the local congregation
or fellowship to collectively lay their hands upon an individual
that they have jointly chosen and together commend that
individual to God for the appointed position."

     Now how does a group of say 100 or more persons in a
congregation lay hands on an individual "collectively" - all
simultaneously, and "together commend" him to God? How can a
group of 100 all say the same words at the same time?  Maybe I am
not understanding Mr.Difley's words correctly. But surely even in
this setting that he puts forth, any size congregation would have
to delegate this laying on of hands and "commending" to a basic
few. It would just not be literally physically possible to do
this any other way within a large congregation..

     So Mr.Difley IS SAYING that a congregation brings forth an
individual, he stands before them, hands are laid upon him, and
he is commended to the Lord some how and in some way.
     Let us suppose we are one of the members of that
congregation. We want to tell others what has taken place. What
are we going to CALL, what actual WORDS, are we going to name
this process?  Are we going to call it a "chosen one procedure"
or "elected for service program" or "called out ceremony"?  We
are going to have to give it a name, sooner or later, just from
the way things work as we speak a language to each other in
communicating. It will be given a name that will become the norm,
so everyone will immediately understand what our church did to
certain individuals.
     If this is not a "service of ordination" or putting it the
other way, if this is not an ordination service. If the Bible
does not even suggest a service or ceremony of ordination
THEN WHAT ARE WE DOING BRINGING ANYONE FORWARD IN A
CONGREGATIONAL SETTING TO LAY HANDS UPON THEM AND COMMEND THEM
TO THE LORD?
     Are we just playing with words here? We cannot have an
ordination service because the Bible supposedly does not uphold
it(which is not true) yet can have some kind of ceremony,
service, which brings individuals forth to have hands laid upon
them for service.  It still leave us having to come up with words
to describe our new "ordination service" if we cannot call it by
that name.

     Or is this whole matter really to do with some who have
experienced being in an organization that not only had totally
wrong "church government" and were even "cultic" in their
ministerial power over the rank and file membership? Elders of
their church dictatorial in words and manner, ruling with an iron
hand, having SS men reporting to them about ones who were
"rebelling" against headquarters, or "asking too many questions."

Is this whole thing about persons who have seen the total ABUSE 
and  PERVERSION  of the eldership ministry, who have experienced
the false doctrine of a "pecking order" authoritarian "do as we
say or we will disfellowship you"  cult teaching?
     Is it that these people in wanting to be free from such evil
bondage, having seen how men were elected to eldership by other
powerful, power-hungry, loyal no matter what, to the dictates of
the organization run by one human man, having seen how elders
were chosen and turned into clones of existing elders. Now seeing
this to be wrong and evil, have walked away to the other extreme
in rejecting even the words ordination service, and espouse the
other way that seems right unto men, but hidden within it lies
as much sorrow, pain, and deception, as the one they left -
namely, that it is the membership of the congregation that only
and finally decides who will be its spiritual elders.
     Many in so freeing themselves from one tyranny have not seen
the devil coming as an angel of light to catch them in another
net of falsehood and deception, so will end up in being a part of
and fulfilment of the prophetic words of Paul when he said to
Timothy: "For the time will come when they will not endure sound
doctrine; but according to their own desires, because they have
itching ears, they will heap up for themselves teachers; and they
will turn their ears away from the truth, and be turned aside to
fables" (2 Tim. 4:3,4).
     There can be as much danger (with carnality, politics,
personalities, etc.) in a whole congregation believing and
thinking they have the last word on who is to serve them in
the spiritual eldership, as the existing eldership believing they
have all dictatorial authority over everything without any
participation or consideration from the membership. Both are
extremes.  Both will lead to the camp of Satan in the long run,
just give it enough time. As Jesus said, "Wide is the gate that
leads to destruction, and many there be that go in thereat."  The
devil and the demons have cut many paths and highways for many
different types of people to ride upon, all leading to the net of
captivity and death.  Jesus told us, "Straight and narrow is the
path to eternal life and few therebe that find it."

     The key is the plumb line down the middle (Amos 7:7,8).  Get
too far to the right and you are off the mark, get too far to the
left and you are just as far off the mark. The pendulum down the
centre is where it's at - straight and narrow is the path to
life.

     J.D.

     The laying on of hands to commend one to God is very common
throughout the Old and New Testaments. Can this accurately be
called ordination? Certainly not!.......The purpose of laying on
of hands was always the same no matter what the cause, to commend
one to God. The intent was always that God would bless. Never was
the intent that man, through ceremony, could somehow make binding
decisions for God, or commit God to work through an individual
chosen by man......


     MY ANSWER:

     In the main I agree with what is stated above. Yet I believe
you could make a case that the laying on of hands for anything is
an ordination if you understand the context and the meaning of
the word WITHIN that context. We have seen that the words
consecrate, sanctify, ordain, can be used as synonyms within
certain contexts. Was a father's blessing on a particular child
with the laying on of hands a sanctifying, a setting apart, a
consecration, an ordination  for a particular purpose? Well yes
it was. To set that person apart, to appoint that individual, to
elect that person to receive that blessing given by the
father.
     Are the sick who receive anointing and laying on of hands
being consecrated, set apart, sanctified, ordained, to a special
purpose? Why, yes they are. They are being set apart, appointed,
to receive the gift of healing from the Lord.
     So again, it's how you want to think of the word ordain and
the context it's used in. It is I grant mainly used today in the
context of "church ministry." 
     Certainly the purpose of the laying on of hands was to
commend one to God.
     Please note the last sentence of J.D's. in the above
comments. Reading between the lines I feel he is hinting at a
wrong teaching proclaimed by his former church.
     I am very familiar with the teachings of the Worldwide
Church of God, being a member from 1961 to 1972 and keeping a
close watch on them since. Through various sources I could follow
their progressive "cultic" mind set from 1979 to 1986 when their
founder Herbert Armstrong died. The members were taught that HWA
was God's ONLY apostle on earth, directly under Christ Himself in
authority. He was certainly the final authority in the WCG
organization - what he said everyone else was to obey. The
membership was taught that God was fully in charge through the
ministry, all the elders were divinely appointed by the Lord, no
errors no mistakes. The people were to obey them with no
questions asked, in fact if you started to ask questions, doubted
the authority and inspiration of the eldership, questioned the
doctrines of the church, you were discarded, thrown out like a
piece of trash, and told you were cut off from the one true
church and Holy Spirit.
     The membership were told what to think, when to think, how
to think. The people were ruled with a rod of iron. Those
ordained were to be looked upon with trembling awe, as if
infallible. There was to be implicit - even blind - faith, trust,
and obedience to the ministry. HWA was for many the Elijah to
come. He would take them to a place of safety to escape the Great
Tribulation, and live to the return of Christ.
     Being ordained in the WCG during those years would
practically put you on the same level as the Eternal God Himself.
Yes, that is how fanatically wild and outrageously "cultic" THAT
ORGANIZATION BECAME!
     It is then, understandable I guess, that some who have come
through those traumatic years would possibly "cringe" and
"shudder" at the very words ordination service. To them it only
means human men were given by other human men the power
to "make binding decisions for God, or commit God to work through
an individual chosen by man." In other words, telling God what to
do, having the Lord jump to man's tune, and teaching the rest of
the lay membership that it was so.
     Such ordination services are indeed a "sham" and false
doctrine. They turn any group of persons into a fanatical cult.

     Now I ponder, that if Mr.Difley and Mr.Edwards had never
experienced such radical, extremism and bizarre teaching about
being ordained to the eldership, and on the other hand
experienced only the ordained ministry of such church
organizations as the Church of God, Seventh Day - the Seventh Day
Adventist - and even some of the large Protestant churches, then
their outlook and attitude concerning ordination would I believe
be quite different than it seems to be at present.
     Millions of people from the above churches have no problem
with ordaining individuals to the ministry or deaconship. They
may some of them, have personal difficulties with ceratin elders
and deacons at times, as they do with other members of their
congregation, but they work through those troubles in the main
and do not believe that ordinations should be cast away.

     And when it comes down to it, to the bottom line, I do not
think John Difley is against "setting apart" - "consecration" -
ordination services, for he clearly talks about persons having
hands laid upon them by a congregation and being commended to God
for the appointed position.


     J.D.

     .....Please turn to Acts 13:1-4.........In this passage
there are several very important points. First, note that God had
already appointed all those named as either prophets or
teachers......Second, for this special calling in the work, the
Holy Spirit actually made a very direct additional appointment to
service. This was most uncommon!.......The third thing to note is
that even though the Holy Spirit did the actual calling, the
local church still had the responsibility for the necessary
spiritual and physical conduct. The church sought after God's
special commendation for Saul and Barnabas through prayer,
fasting, and the laying on of hands......


     MY ANSWER:

     I have no real problems with J.D's comments till we come to
his "The third thing to note." He says the "local church still
had the responsibility......" and "The church sought after
......"
     But the word does NOT SAY that! Please read again -
carefully - verse one. When we use the word "church" our English
way of thinking about that word is the whole membership -
everyone - elders, deacons, and lay persons - all the saints.
Now, verse one says: "....there were IN the church.....certain
prophets and teachers as....." and the subject of thought goes to
naming those prophets and teachers, at least the ones who are
named, for there could have been others also. The point is, the
subject is the prophets and teachers who were IN the church, not
THE WHOLE CHURCH itself.
     The Greek word for "in" is EN. Please refer to the
Analytical Greek Lexicon or another work for its many uses. It
means besides other things "among" - "before" - "in the presence
of" - "in the sight, estimation of" - "in the case of" - "in
respect of." 
     Once more let me say, the subject of the thought of the
paragraph is NOT the church as a whole but the prophets and
teachers who were IN - PART OF - WITHIN - AMONG - the church!
Verse two says, "As THEY ministered to the Lord...." Who are "the
they"? Why the persons whose names were just given to us above in
verse one. That is the logical structure of the sentence and
thought. It was not the whole church that was ministering and
fasting to the Lord, but the prophets and teachers just
mentioned. So while they were thus doing the Holy Spirit talked
to them, in what exact way is not revealed. It was to the
prophets and teachers named that the Spirit gave instructions to
"Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have
called them."
     Verse three: "And when THEY had fasted and prayed and laid
hands on them...." The subject has not changed, the thought from
verse one and two continues, the THEY is still the individuals
named beforehand - the prophets and teachers. 
     It should be clear, there were several leaders IN the church
at Antioch who were giving themselves "continually to prayer and
to the ministry of the word"(Acts 6:4) as well as fasting in this
case. And the Spirit revealed to THEM the work that Barnabas and
Paul(Saul) had been called to undertake. Those men further fasted
and prayed, laid hands upon the two chosen men and sent them
away.

     There is no indication or teaching here that the prophets
and teachers concerned HAD TO GO TO THE WHOLE CONGREGATION FOR
THE OKAY OR APPROVAL to send these men out on this work. They
made the decision as a group of prophets and teachers, being led
by the Holy Spirit. They had the freedom and the liberty in
Christ to so do!

     We need to get it straight. The freedom and liberty to do
the work of the Lord, as the Spirit of God leads, is VERY WIDE
and BROAD to all the people of the Lord, whoever you are in the
body, when it comes to spreading and teaching the word of truth.
     Stephen, a man ordained to "serving tables" did not think
twice about doing great wonders and miracles among the people,
and preaching the truths of God so powerfully to others including
the Jewish priests, that it cost him his life(Acts 6,7). He did
not have to obtain permission to do this from the apostles!
     When persecution arose against the church at Jerusalem and
all had to flee save but for the apostles, those who were
scattered abroad(elders, deacons, and all the saints) thought
nothing about going everywhere "preaching the word"(Acts 8:1-4).
This was personal Christian work, and no authorization was needed
from the apostles. This was everyones liberty in the Lord.
     Philip, a man called and elected to "serve tables," went to
Samaria and "preached Christ unto them." He also did miracles and
baptized those who believed (Acts 8:5-13). Yes, Peter and John
were sent to give a helping hand, but Philip did not have to get
the "starting orders" from Jerusalem or the apostles. The Spirit
led him to do a work and he just got out there and did it - true
liberty in the Lord.

     I have covered this fully already in part one of this study.
I refer you back there for the details of this particular truth.

     So the liberty for doing the work of the Lord and spreading
the gospel message extends to all the children of God in the body
of Christ, it extends to the so called "lay person" but it also
extends to the eldership of the church. 
     The prophets and teachers at Antioch did not have to obtain
permission from the whole membership to send Paul and Barnabas
out to the work the Holy Spirit had called them to do. And no one
got upset at what they did. Everyone knew this was their liberty.


     J.D.

     Men Choosen By Inspiration of the Holy Spirit

     .......it is time to look at the positions in the church
that God expects to be filled by the choice of men.....The first
such appointments recorded for the early church are in Acts 6:1-
7.......
     Importantly we must note that nowhere in this passage are
the seven referred to as deacons or ministers (diakonos), but the
function to which they were chosen certainly is of the definition
of one who ministers or is a deacon. Of even more importance is
the fact that the very apostles seem not to have had the
necessary authority to do the choosing of the seven, since they
said to the entire congregation, "Select from among you....." 
Can we not assume that if anyone had authority to unilaterally
choose another to serve in the ministry it would have been the
apostles? Yet the apostles told the entire congregation to do the
choosing........
   

     MY ANSWER:

     I have difficulties with the comments in the last paragraph.
It is true that these seven men chosen to "serve tables" were not
called deacons or given any official title by the apostles or the
congregation of disciples. At least the record does not tell us
any official name was given to them, yet we can not be dogmatic
about that because all the details of what transpired in everyday
language after the event, among the elders and saints is not
revealed to us.
     I shall assume the seven were not given the title of deacon
for the sake of argument. 
     The English words I have circled above "serving" and "serve"
is the translation from the Greek that we render as deacon. The
basic spelling of the Greek is diakonos and as Vine's Expository
Dictionary says it "primarily denotes a 'servant' ...."  The word
servant can and does have a BROAD meaning both in Greek and
English languages, and must be understood how it is being used
within each context.
     There are a number of clear points we can derive from this
section of scripture. One is, these men were elected, chosen,
appointed to do something. Another clear point is that they were
to meet certain standards or have specific qualifications. Then
it is also plain to see they were to serve in a physical work -
serving tables - serving the widows. Lastly, the context brings
forth that these men were presented before the elders and a
ceremony, service, or whatever you want to call it, was performed
of praying and laying on of hands.
     These men were "set apart" to function as SERVERS, or as in
the Greek - deacons.
     We do not know if they were called "servers" or "table
servers" or "servers of widows" or "deacons." We do not know if
they were given at that time or after that time ANY OFFICIAL
name, but one thing is certain, they were elected to function in
a particular duty and work. Now I ask you this question: Is it
wrong to give a newly created job and those working in that duty,
a name?
     No, it is not!  Why the business world does it all the time,
the manufacturing companies do it, when offices expand and new
duties are created the department and those in it are usually
given a name. It is just good orderly practice to do so.
     The early NT church(its elders and saints) saw a need to
create a new department, to staff it with persons who had ceratin
qualification, to outline the duties(serving tables, serving
widows) and to set them apart with prayer and the laying on of
hands. They were to serve in a defined function.
     Is it wrong for us today to call that same type of function
and person - a server or DEACON?

     Let me show you something very interesting that I believe
will answer our question. Turn to the gospel of Mark and chapter
three. Please note verse 13 and 14. Jesus calls many to Him into
a mountain region, then He elects, appoints, ordains  a special
circle of twelve.
     Now go over to the gospel of Luke and find a little more
detail revealed to us about this event. Chapter six and read
verses twelve through to sixteen. Ah, ah, do you see it? 
Jesus chose, elected, twelve, and there it is in verse 13, after
His choosing of the twelve HE NAMED THEM APOSTLES!
     The word apostle means "one sent forth" - not any big deal
in the word itself, many people can be sent forth in many
different contexts and circumstances. Yet Jesus saw fit to give
these men who would function as spiritual elders in His church a
particular name or title. They were like all the other disciples
of Christ(see verse 13 again) up to this point - just one of
MANY. Then Jesus saw the need to create a new function of duty
with twelve disciples, and give it(or them) a name - apostles.
     Within the true believers of the true Church of God that
Jesus had around Him at that time, there was no use of the word
"apostles." No one was calling anyone by that name. Jesus
introduced to the church that He was head of, a new function and
a new name for that function. Nobody said: You can not do that
because we have never had it before, Moses never gave it to us.
     Do you see what I am getting at? The Church of the Living
God has always to some extent been adapting within the law and
liberty of the working of the Lord. Jesus did not think twice
about establishing a new function and giving those called to that
function a NAME. And this was all done about 1,500 years after
the "church in the wilderness" was established by God through
Moses.
     The apostles together with the multitude of disciples did
not think it strange to establish a new function of duty within
the church, for qualified and elected persons who were set apart
with a ceremony of prayer and laying on of hands. Perhaps they at
that time did not give a name to that new function of men, BUT WE
TODAY(actually within about 100 years of Acts 6) FOLLOWING THE
EXAMPLE OF JESUS(given above) CALL THEM SERVANTS OR DEACONS!

     It is NOT WRONG for the Church of God to have persons whose
duty it is to function in an appointed and elected capacity
regarding the "serving of tables" - physical things, and to
officially name them deacons!

     Now back to Acts 6 and other important insights.

     There was trouble brewing in the early NT church, some
widows from a certain ethnic group were being neglected during
the daily physical necessities of life, that would have needed to
have been administrated at that time, for, "the number of the
disciples was multiplied"(verse one).
     One thing in strikingly obvious from the first words of
verse two. During the murmuring among the membership as a whole,
the members did not gather themselves together apart from the
elders/apostles and say: Well we have some big time trouble
here, let's form some committees among ourselves, figure out what
needs to be done, and then go tell the apostles what we have
decided to do about this problem.
     Please remember Acts 6 and what we are looking at, was a
LARGE serious problem. We are not talking about "How many seats
shall we set up for this day's church service." 
     On the other hand we need to remember also that we are not
talking about the doctrines of God, or spiritual matters, or
moral/immoral matters.
     We are looking at a large, important administrational
problem that would have included the correct Christian
distribution of physical goods that the widows needed for
daily living.
     Under those circumstances, the membership did not get
together and tell the apostles/elders what to do. They had enough
proper respect for the elders to let their feelings be known, to
let the elders know there was an important and large problem
brewing, and wait on the thoughts of the elders.
     Verse two shows us that up to this time in the history of
the NT church, it would seem the apostles were trying to do
everything in the administration of the spiritual and physical
duties that would be involved in a relatively new organization,
that was increasing by leaps and bounds.
     When the problem was before them, the apostles did listen,
they were approachable, they did come up with a solution. But
look, this passage plainly shows that under those serious
circumstances, it was the eldership that had the responsibility
to solve the difficulty in the church. Again, remember, we are
talking about the physical.
     The problem was of a physical nature. The apostles knew
their calling and main function of duty in life was on the
spiritual  not on doing a whole bunch of physical cares
and activities in the church, though they were important and
needed to be taken seriously also. Yet, they could see the first
priority in the lives of the eldership was prayer and the
word of God(verses 2, 4).
     Concerning this physical problem, the apostles had enough
respect for the membership (knowing the Spirit of God was in them
also) to delegate to them the responsibility of enacting the plan
that the apostles had decided upon, which would defuse the
murmuring and administer the physical goods of the church in an
appropriate way for all concerned.
     It is a true rule and law that every good leader knows the
necessity to delegate responsibilities to trusted and faithful
persons, for the betterment and smooth operation of the whole.
     You will notice from verse 3, it was also the
apostles/elders who handed down the standard of qualifications 
that the seven men whom they - the membership - were delegated to
find and elect. The membership did not come up with these
qualifications and tell the elders "this is how it will be." It
was the elders being led by the Spirit of God as spiritual
overseers of the flock, who put down the basic qualifying
requirements that the men had to have for this new function
within the NT church.
     Even in physical matters the elders are to lead the way. And
surely this should be so. Why have called, elected, elders in the
church (as the apostles were), that others are to respect  and 
look up to for an example in word and deed of true Christianity,
if they are not leading in both the spiritual and the physical.
Anything less just makes the Church of God a laughing stock to
the unconverted world. Oh, when I say the elders should lead
in the physical also, I do not mean in wealth and possessions.
The apostles were not as wealthy as some who came into the
church, that is clear from the Gospels and early chapters of
Acts.
     The whole multitude was pleased with the attitude of the
apostles, there was some team work going on here. No high handed
vanity and pomposity going on here with anyone. The congregation
did what the apostles delegated  them to do. Then did the
congregation run off when they had chosen the qualified men, to
some secret or private location and there by themselves, without
the elders, pray and lay hands upon these men? No! The word of
God says: "WHOM THEY SET BEFORE THE APOSTLES"(verse 6).
     And further we need to ask the question: In all of this who
had the final say about these chosen men?

     Was it the congregation that had final authority in saying
if this or that man was to be elected to serve in this function?
Or was the "last word" or final authority still held by the
apostles?
     Many have missed what is written in the word. You will find
it in verse 3. It is written, the apostles speaking: "......whom
WE MAY APPOINT OVER THIS BUSINESS."
     That is why after the selection had been made by the
congregation of men meeting the qualifications as laid down by
the apostles, for this physical duty, they brought and set them
before the apostles. The "last word" on the matter was still in
the hands and under the authority of the apostles. They could
have discounted any one or more of those men if evidence
warranted it.
     And WHY NOT!  Up to this time in the history of the NT
church, the apostles had been trying to do BOTH the spiritual and
the physical duties(see Acts 4:32-37; 5:1-5). They were now going
to hand over the physical aspects of the church to other persons.
As ones called to be overseers (Acts 20) of the flock of the
Lord, they had the right to lay down the qualifications those
individuals should have, delegate the election to others,
AND ALSO TO HAVE THE LAST WORD.

     Concerning the argument from verse six as to who laid hands
upon whom, was it the apostles laying hands on them, or was it
the congregation that did the honours. My answer to that is: The
subject of the sentence is the apostles, the logical thought and
sequence is concerning the apostles, bringing them to the
apostles for a reason, the reason being as verse three has
stated, ".....that we may appoint over this business." 
The final approval was done by the apostles, backed up with
prayer and the laying on of hands from them.
     If this was not the case, but final authority was in the
hands of the congregation, then there would have been no need to
have brought these men before the apostles. Someone from the
congregation could have at some other time, merely told the
apostles whom they had chosen and whom they(the multitude of
disciples) had laid hands on and prayed over.
     .................................................. 
TO BE CONTINUED