Wednesday, October 27, 2010

The Normal Christian Church Life (#3) - Chapter One

Chapter One: "Apostles"

In this chapter Watchman Nee goes to great lengths to help the reader understand the calling and role of the apostle, both in the New Testament and in post-biblical church life. Although the teaching he gives on apostleship is directed to those who have this commission on their lives, and although many of those reading this may not have this calling, I feel it's important to have a general understanding of the vastly important gift that the "apostle" is to the church, particularly in light of the direction the Lord seems to be taking His people. This blog posting will be a simple overview of Nee's in-depth covering of this topic...

First Nee distinguishes between THE Apostle Jesus, and the twelve apostles who were chosen by Jesus to be with Him in His earthly ministry, and the apostles chosen and sent by the Holy Spirit that have served the Church throughout church history: "The first Apostle is unique; there is only One. The twelve apostles are also in a class by themselves; there are only twelve. But there is another order of apostles, chosen by the Holy Spirit, and as long as the building up of the Church goes on and the Holy Spirit's presence on earth continues, the choosing and sending forth of this order of apostles will continue too."

He then gives the meaning of apostleship pointing out that it means to be sent by God. It isn't a volunteering to go but a divine sending that constitutes apostleship: "'A slave is not greater than his master, nor the apostle (Greek) greater than the one who sends him' (John 13:16). Here we have the definition of the term 'apostle.' It implies being sent out - that is all, and that is everything. However good human intention may be, it can never take the place of divine commission."

Nee goes on to say, "The special position occupied by apostles is obvious to any reader of the New Testament. They were specially commissioned of God to found churches through the preaching of the Gospel, to bring revelation from God to His people, to give decisions in matters pertaining to doctrine and government, and to edify the saints and distribute the gifts." Nee points out that the role of apostle is qualitatively different from the other ministry gifts listed by Paul in Ephesians 4 (apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors/teachers).

What is the evidence of apostleship? From II Corinthians 12:11,12 "we infer that the evidence of apostleship lies in a twofold power - spiritual and miraculous. Endurance is the greatest proof of spiritual power, and it is one of the signs of an apostle...it was also evidenced by the miraculous power he (Paul) possessed...power to change situations in the physical world is a necessary manifestation of our knowledge of God in the spiritual realm...To profess to be sent ones of the omnipotent God and yet stand helpless before situations that challenge His power, is a sad contradiction..."

Nee closes the chapter with his conviction based on Scripture that women as well as men can be called and commissioned as apostles.

In summary, this chapter shows how imperative it is that there be men and women who have had a divine encounter with the living Christ and a divine commissioning for planting churches (house churches) with the qualifications of endurance and miracles in order for the birthing and the explosive and continual growth of the church in all lands.

Frank Viola says the following about apostles: "Apostles were extra-local, traveling, itinerant church planters. They were highly gifted individuals who were sent by the Lord and by a particular church to plant and equip new churches. Apostles enabled the church by giving it birth, raising it up from the ground. They also helped it walk on its own two feet. Apostles grew up in an organic expression of church life as non-leaders before they were sent out to plant churches of the same kind. In other words, they first experienced what they would later establish elsewhere. And they always left the churches they planted on their own without installing a clergy or religious ritual."

"May God give us more people who have had a head-on collision with Jesus, who have caught a glimpse of His radiance, and who, as a result, can meld a group of people together with a living knowledge of their God in the face of Jesus Christ. May He raise up countless servants who can faithfully steward the divine mystery and turn it loose on this world." (F. Viola)

Amen and amen!

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

The Normal Christian Church Life (#2) - Introduction

In the introduction to "The Normal Christian Church Life", Watchman Nee makes the case for how God cares, not only about our inner life with Him (the wine) but also about the expression of our corporate life in Him (the wineskin). He argues that God has not left it up to human ideas and preferences to determine how we are to live and walk together as His people and that the Scriptures show us what God desires related to this. The following are quotes from his book:

"We trust the readers of this book will bear in mind that its messages...were intended exclusively for the inner circle of my most intimate associates in the work, but by request we share our findings with the wider circle of all our brethren. The book is something private made public...so we trust our readers will pardon anything that seems unsuited to the wider public.

...The cross and resurrection, the Christ-life, the lordship of Jesus, the corporate life of the Body, the ground of the Kingdom of God and His eternal purpose...have been the burden of our ministry. But God's wine must have a wineskin to contain it. In the divine pattern, nothing is left for man to decide. God Himself has provided the best wineskin for His wine, which will contain and preserve it without loss, hindrance, or misrepresentation. He has shown us His wine, but His has shown us His wineskin also.

...the practical outworking of those truths (concerning the spiritual life of the believer and the eternal purpose of God) in the Lord's service is by no means unimportant. Without that, everything is in the realm of theory, and spiritual development is impossible. So we would seek, by the grace of God, not only to pass on His good wine, but also the wineskin He has provided for its preservation...

God demands both inward and outward purity. To have the outer without the inner is spiritual death, but to have the inner without the outer is only spiritualized life. And spiritualization is not spirituality.
The leading of the Spirit is precious, but if there is no example in the Word, then it is easy to substitute our fallible thoughts and unfounded feelings for the Spirit's leading...God cannot lead a man one way in Acts and another way today. In externalities the leading may vary, but in principle it is always the same; for God's will is eternal, therefore changeless.

If we would understand the will of God concerning His Church, then we must not look to see how He led His people last year, or ten years ago, or a hundred years ago, but we must return to the beginning, to the 'genesis' of the Church, to see what He said and did then...Acts is the 'genesis' of the Church's history...It is the divine standard and our pattern for all time...

Christianity is built not only upon precepts, but also upon examples. God has revealed His will, not only by giving orders, but by having certain things done in His Church...He knows we learn more easily by example than by precept. Examples have greater value than precepts, because precepts are abstract, while examples are precepts carried into effect.


In closing...this book is intended for those who, having learned something of the cross, know the corruption of human nature, and seek to walk, not after the flesh but after the Spirit...May none of my readers use this book as a basis for external adjustments in their work, without letting the cross deal drastically with their natural life."

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

The Normal Christian Church Life (#1) - Preface

Before going to the Preface of Watchman Nee's book, "The Normal Christian Church Life", I want to write a personal note about the topic of this book.

For most of my walk with the Lord, I have not given attention to church forms and models, thinking that it didn't matter. I was even taught that the book of Acts should not be used as a model for church life.

In the past few years, I've been slowly waking up to how important the way we "do church" is to God and am increasingly aware of how the beauty and power of Jesus is obscured by the way we "do church". So I've been on a journey related to this topic, and in my journey I have made the delightful discovery of this book by one of my favorite authors. Because I didn't have a grid before for this issue, I was not even aware that Watchman Nee had written about it (even though I thought I had read almost every book of his).

I'm sharing this as one who has been steeped in the present model of church life all of my life and as one who is very much in the beginnings of exploring this topic, so my intention is not to debunk what I've known all my life but rather to share a bit of my journey into a different mindset concerning the way we have traditionally practiced Christianity together as God's people. Of course, in the process of exploring the New Testament model of church life, questions about how we have done church for centuries will come up because of how far we have strayed from God's design. My desire is that what I share from Nee's book will help awaken desire to seek the Lord along these lines and to pray for Him to have His way in His Church as we draw near to His appearing.

The Holy Spirit in the Apostle Paul yearned over the Corinthian believers, jealous that nothing seduce them from pure devotion to one Husband (II Cor. 11:1-3). I pray that the same Spirit that burned in Paul will remove all that gets in the way of God's people seeing Jesus clearly in our day.

In this posting I will only cover the short preface. Next week I'll cover the longer Introduction. If you want to read along, this book is available in its entirety online and you can access it by searching in Google Books.

Preface

"This book as it now stands is a greatly abridged and slightly revised edition of the Chinese...Because of the vastness of the subject and the importance of its issues, I have not found it easy either to write or translate the book...

To do the book justice, the reader is asked to finish reading it before passing judgment.
The book is not intended for anyone and everyone. It is for those who bear responsibility in the Lord's service. But more than this, it is for such as honestly and truly mean business with God...The book may test one's sincerity and honesty to no small degree... The whole matter will grow upon the reader and become clearer with relaxed contemplation...

By prayerful openness of heart, the Spirit of Truth should be given a chance, and then what is of Him will cause all our natural reactions to die away.
What is set forth in these pages is no mere theory or teaching, but something we have actually tested out."

Friday, October 08, 2010

The Holy Spirit and Jesus

T. Austin-Sparks says,

"The ministry of the Holy Spirit has ever been to reveal Jesus Christ, and revealing Him, to conform everything to Him. No human genius can do this. We cannot obtain anything in our New Testament as a result of human study, research, or reason. It is all the Holy Spirit revelation of Jesus Christ. Ours is to seek continually to see Him by the Spirit, and we shall know that He - not a paper-pattern - is the Pattern, the Order, the Form. It is all a Person who is the sum of all purpose and ways. Everything (in the early church) then was a free and spontaneous movement of the Holy Spirit, and He did it in full view of the Pattern - God's Son."

Because the revelation of the beauty and power of Jesus is imperative to a whole and holy people of God, it shouldn't surprise us that the enemy works to obscure this revelation by whatever means he can; this includes the forms and patterns that we as His people have used.

In light of this, I want to spend the next few weeks looking at Watchman Nee's book, "The Normal Christian Church Life". If you are interested in the book, it is available at amazon.com or you can find it in its entirety online if you go to Google books.

God bless you this week and may His Spirit increasingly magnify Jesus to you as you seek to know Him!

Thoughts for Lent (9) - On Changing Our Minds

In this reading from Walter Brueggemann's  A Way Other Than Our Own , the author issues an invitation to us as the final week of Lent be...