AN INTRODUCTORY PRIMER FOR INVITING PROTESTANTS TO THE CHURCH OF CHRIST
By Brother
Joel V. San Pedro
THE Church Of Christ
continues to expand rapidly all over the world. When Brother Felix Manalo began
preaching about the Iglesia Ni Cristo (Church Of Christ in Filipino), many of
the first converts came from Catholicism. Brother Felix’s answers from the
Bible concerning questions about idol worship, calling the priest “spiritual
father”, and the Catholic claim that Christ is sacrificed in every mass moved
many of the listeners to join the Church Of Christ.
Today, as members of the
Church take part in worldwide intensive propagation, we often invite our
Protestant friends who have a different set of questions about our beliefs.
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HOW DO
PROTESTANT LEADERS
DESCRIBE PROTESTANTISM?
Protestant apologist Martin Marty gave the following description in his book, Protestantism:
“Protestantism …
has been split into churches, sects, denominations, parties, factions, emphasis
groups, and national entities—and at times such a premium was placed on ‘the
right of private judgment’ that the meaning of Protestantism was reduced to
autonomous and private forms of individualism. Lacking a centralized authority,
it is then argued, Protestantism can mean and has meant whatever each
entrepreneur decided it should mean. It lacked a vital center or a definable
border, it is impossible to read extensively in Protestant history or to
experience Protestant church life almost anywhere in the world without coming
soon to the sense that divisiveness belongs to the nature of Protestantism.”
(pp. 77-78)
Because of the divisive
character of Protestantism, one leading evangelical magazine gave the following
description:
“… today’s churches
bear little resemblance to the first century model … Division within the Church
arose from unfaithfulness to Christ … has marred the body of Christ…” (Moody
Monthly, Sept. 1984, p. 28)
Protestantism is difficult to define because of the wide variety of beliefs that fall under its umbrella. That is why even leading evangelicals have admitted that, as Protestantism comprises contradictory or divisive practices, it is not like the Christian Church that is described in the New Testament. With Christ as the head and the Church Of Christ as His body, the only reasonable conclusion for the contradictory beliefs among the diverse sects of Protestantism is that they cannot all be true and there must be unfaithfulness to Christ under Protestantism.
A further danger of having
such divisions or factions when it comes to doctrine and practice was sounded
by Apostle James. He taught that factionalism does not come from God but from
the devil:
“ But if ye have
bitter jealousy and faction in your heart, glory not and lie not against the
truth. This wisdom is not a wisdom that cometh down from above, but is earthly,
sensual, devilish” (James 3:14-15, ASV).
Some Protestant defenders
reason out that, despite the abundance of contradictory beliefs subsumed under
the rubric of Protestantism, nearly ever sect and denomination of Protestantism
agree on at least two principles: (1) “faith alone” for salvation (2) personal
interpretation of Scripture”.
Much has been discussed by the
Church Of Christ in the past concerning the “faith alone” concept that we do
not adhere to. It’s the latter principle that this primer will deal with. When
our Protestant friends see our enthusiasm to listen to the Presiding Elder of
the Church Of Christ, the INC Executive Minister, Brother Eduardo Manalo, some
are a bit puzzled. All the more is their curiosity aroused when we tell them
that our Executive Minister continues the mission begun by the man whom God
sent as His messenger in the modern era, Brother Felix Manalo.
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WHY IS A MESSENGER AND A CHURCH
ADMINISTRATION
NECESSARY?
Because the Bible, through the
teaching of Christ’s apostles, does not agree with the idea of personal or
private interpretation of the Scriptures:
“Knowing this
first, that no prophecy of Scripture is of any private interpretation,” (2
Peter 1:20, NKJV).
In fact, the apostles warned
about the dangers of listening to people who have not been authorized to preach
even if they use the Bible:
“This is what he
says in all his letters when he writes on the subject. There are some difficult
things in his letters which ignorant and unstable people explain falsely, as
they do with other passages of the Scriptures. So they bring on their own
destruction” (2 Peter 3:16, GNB).
The apostles describe the ones who are authorized to preach the message that brings people to God as “messengers” or “sent out”:
“And HOW CAN THE
MESSAGE BE PROCLAIMED IF THE MESSENGERS ARE NOT SENT OUT? As the scripture
says, ‘How wonderful is the coming of messengers who bring good news!’ ”
(Romans 10: 15, GNB, emphasis mine).
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GOD’S MESSAGE
THAT GOD’S MESSENGERS PREACH
As Apostle Paul spoke about
the importance of the preaching of the messengers who are sent, he himself gave
a good example in his own preaching of what God’s messengers teach in the
Christian era:
“Take heed
therefore to yourselves and to all the flock, over which the Holy Spirit has
appointed you overseers, to feed the church of Christ which he has purchased
with his blood.” (Acts 20:28, Lamsa).
When the blood of the Lord
Jesus was shed and He died on the cross, He was redeeming the Church Of Christ.
He gave His life for the Church so that He can be the Church’s Savior. Although
He Himself is sinless, He paid for the sins of all who become members of His
body, His Church, as He becomes their Head. Thus, it is His Church that the
Savior will save:
“For a husband is in charge of
his wife in the same way Christ is in charge of his body the Church. (He gave
his very life to take care of it and be its Savior!)” (Eph. 5:23, TLB).
Since the Church Of Christ is
the one body of Christ, the characteristic of the Church Of Christ preached by
the messengers whom God has sent is its unity; it is only one religious
organization, one Church, with one faith:
“The common
object of their labor was to bring the Christians maturity, to prepare them for
Christian service and the building up of the Church of Christ, until we all
reach the unity of the faith...” (Eph. 4:12-13, NSNT)
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ONCE THE
MESSENGER IS NO LONGER WITH US
Like the prophets of the Old
Testament or the apostles in the New Testament, the man sent to preach in our
time was just a man. Brother Felix Manalo passed away in 1963. As the Bible
tells us, if the time comes that the messenger sent to preach should pass away,
the preaching of the message continues. When the Lord Jesus left this world,
God placed an administration in the Church to make His message fully known:
“Now I rejoice
in my sufferings for you, and I am completing in my flesh what is lacking in
Christ’s afflictions for His body, that is, the church. I have become its
servant, according to GOD’S ADMINISTRATION THAT WAS GIVEN TO ME FOR YOU, TO
MAKE GOD’S MESSAGE FULLY KNOWN,” (Colossians 1:24-25, HCSB, emphasis mine).
Rejecting the ones whom the Lord Jesus sent to preach God’s message about the Church Of Christ is the same as rejecting both the Lord Jesus and God Himself:
“Then he said to
the disciples, ‘Anyone who accepts your message is also accepting me. And
ANYONE WHO REJECTS YOU IS REJECTING ME. AND anyone who rejects me is rejecting
GOD, WHO SENT ME.’ ” (Luke 10:16, NLT, emphasis
mine)
Therefore, it is God Himself
and His Son, the Lord Jesus, who want people to understand the importance of
the men sent and placed to preach the message.
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“I THOUGHT GOD
SHOWS NO FAVORITISM”
Instead of believing that
there are men who have been entrusted the authority of preaching God’s message,
Protestants give as their argument Apostle Peter’s statement about God showing
no favoritism:
“Then Peter
began to speak: ‘I now realize how true it is that God does not show
favoritism’ ” (Acts 10:34, NIV)
It is ironic that the above
verse is often misused by Protestants to justify personal interpretation of the
Scriptures. The very situation in which the Apostle was speaking in the verse
was when Peter was sent as a messenger of God to preach to Cornelius and his
household so they could hear God’s message and have the faith to receive
baptism (Acts 10:3-5,17-22,32-34,44,48).
Cornelius and his household
were not told by the angel of God to read the Scriptures so they could
understand for themselves God’s message. They had to hear it from Apostle
Peter, a man who was sent by God. And the baptism that the people received
after believing in the apostles’ message is baptism into the body of Christ or
His Church (1 Cor. 12:13, Col. 1:18).
So what did Apostle Peter mean
when he said that God does not show favoritism while numerous verses speak of
individuals finding favor in God’s sight (e.g., Gen. 6:9, Exo. 33:12, etc.)? In
verse 35, we can read how God does not show favoritism by accepting all who
fear Him and do what is right:
“but accepts
from every nation the one who fears him and does what is right.”
Therefore, God not showing favoritism means that neither race nor nationality is a hindrance to draw near to God as long as one is ready to do what is right or obey what God commands (Romans 7:12).
Since all are obligated to
obey Him, God does not give a free pass to the close family members of His
beloved servants so that they can disobey; that would be favoritism. Hence,
misfortune befell David’s sons, Absalom and Adonijah, even though David “found
favor with God” (Acts 7:46, NLT). Lot’s wife, when she disobeyed, did not
escape punishment when Lot was rescued from the destruction of Sodom and
Gomorrah (Gen. 19:26). God does not show favoritism. He punishes those who
remain unrepentant in doing wrong, regardless of who they may be related to:
“Anyone who does
wrong will be repaid for his wrong, and there is no favoritism” (Col. 3:25).
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“THE ONES SENT
BRING US CLOSER TO GOD”
One of God’s early messengers,
Moses, preached that God brings people closer to Him before they can help
others come nearer to Him:
“Isn’t it enough
that the God of Israel has selected you specially, out of the entire Israelite
congregation, to allow you to come close to the Eternal in the process of
taking care of His very congregation tent and place of revelation? To be so
distinguished before all of the other Israelites in your service?” (Numbers
16:9, Voice)
In this passage, Moses was correcting the wrong way of thinking of the high ranking Israelite officials who rebelled against his authority. Moses’ statement was in response to their egalitarian complaint that no one is “more important than the rest of the Lord’s people”:
“They came as a
group to speak against Moses and Aaron and said, ‘You have gone too far—you are
wrong! All the Israelites are holy—the LORD still lives among them. You are
making yourselves more important than the rest of the LORD’s people.’ ” (Numbers
16:3, ERV)
God Himself testified how much
closer to him was that same man, Moses, His messenger whom He chose to bring
His commandments to His people (Numbers 12:1-3,
5-8, NLT)
“While they were
at Hazeroth, Miriam and Aaron criticized Moses because he had married a Cushite
woman. They said, “Has the LORD spoken only through Moses? Hasn’t he spoken
through us, too?” But the LORD heard them. (Now Moses was very humble—more
humble than any other person on earth.)
Then the LORD descended in the pillar of cloud and stood at the entrance of the Tabernacle. “Aaron and Miriam!” he called, and they stepped forward. And the LORD said to them, “Now listen to what I say:
“If there were
prophets among you,
I, the LORD,
would reveal myself in visions.
I would speak to
them in dreams.
But not with my
servant Moses.
Of all my house,
he is the one I trust.
I speak to him
face to face,
clearly, and not
in riddles!
He sees the LORD
as he is.
So why were you
not afraid
to criticize my
servant Moses?”
Here, Moses’ older siblings,
Aaron and Miriam, were involved in a private conversation between family
members. Even when the discussion was only between Aaron and Miriam, God heard
them and was angry with them when they questioned whether what Moses had done
was right or wrong. At least Aaron and Miriam were not instigating rebellion
among God’s people against their brother, whom God had appointed as their
leader. Hence, they did not receive the severe punishment that God had enacted
upon Korah and the rebels in chapter 16 of that same Bible book.
Thus, the Bible gives a
guideline on how the ones whom He has placed over His people to instruct us in
the Christian life should be treated:
“We beg you, our
friends, to pay proper respect to those who work among you, who guide and
instruct you in the Christian life. Treat them with the GREATEST RESPECT AND
LOVE because of the work they do. Be at peace among yourselves.” (1 Thess.
5:12-13, GNB, emphasis mine)
Neither should it be
surprising, as we can explain to our Protestant friends, why we join with our
Executive Minister and are one with him, or united with him, as he leads the
entire Church Of Christ all over the world in sharing the Gospel message of
salvation that he leads the Church in preaching:
“We give you
word of all we have seen and everything which has come to our ears, so that you
may be united with us; and we are united with the Father and with his Son Jesus
Christ” (1 John 1:3, BBE).
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