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New Testament Pattern For Christianity
The New Testament is God's current will for man. The New Testament makes
the internal claim that all things had been given to the first century
Christians that pertain to life and Godliness, (2 Peter 1:3). Paul taught
us that studying the scriptures could make us complete and thoroughly
furnish us toward righteousness, (2 Timothy 3:16-17). From this we can
rightly conclude that the scriptures contain everything required to know
God's will for us and live a pleasing life in His sight. Faith comes by
hearing and hearing by the word of God, (Romans 10:17). There is no other
source we can depend on to provide us with a reliable means of salvation.
In fact,
the New Testament contains scripture which exhorts us not to use
anything but God's word as our rule of faith. When being
confronted by the Pharisees on one occasion, Jesus was asked why His
disciples did not hold to the tradition of the elders of washing their
hands before they ate bread (Mark 7:3). They called Jesus into
question for not observing a tradition that had nothing to do with the
law of Moses. And in answer to this, Jesus referring back to
Isaiah 29:13 said to them, "Well
hath Esaias prophesied of you hypocrites, as it is written, This people
honoureth me with their lips, but their heart is far from me. Howbeit in
vain do they worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of
men."
And then Jesus went on to say,
"For laying aside the commandment of God, ye hold the tradition of men,
as the washing of pots and cups: and many other such like things ye do.
And he said unto them, Full well ye reject the commandment of God, that
ye may keep your own tradition."
Notice that
Jesus immediately called them hypocrites, which wasn't anything unusual,
but why would asking Jesus why He and His disciples did not observe the
traditions of the elders make the Pharisees hypocrites? How is
that being a hypocrite? Because by trying to bind a tradition of
their elders as law on Jesus and His disciples, they were displaying a
religious piety they had no right to by claiming a love for God they did
not have. When the wishes and desires of men supersede the
authority of God, it is because of a lack of love for His authority.
The Pharisees were using a tradition of man to try and elevate
themselves in the sight of men and got accused as hypocrites for it.
The application for us today is that where we make law where there is
none, we ourselves are guilty of the same thing the Pharisees were
guilty of.
After Jesus
labeled these Pharisees as hypocrites he went on to say "in
vain they do worship me, teaching for commandments the doctrines of men".
The application we can make from this is that if the teachings of men
invalidated their worship then, it most certainly does today.
Jesus went on to qualify this a little further. He said "Full
well ye reject the commandment of God, that ye may keep your own
tradition".
The Pharisees set aside the commandment of God so
that they could keep the tradition of their elders. When we look
carefully at the text, the Pharisees did not appear to exclude any
commandments of God by trying to bind the washing of their hands before
meals. However, Jesus condemned them for just that very thing.
Jesus condemned them for laying aside and rejecting the commandment of
God. From this we can rightly make the application that
where the teachings of men are allowed to be taught as commandments of
God, from Jesus' point of view, the real commandments of God have been
set aside, and this carries the
consequences of invalidated worship to God.
So, we
don't want our worship to be vain, then how can we be assured we
are not following the commandments of men? Since there are severe
consequences for this, there has to be a way to be absolutely sure we
are not laying aside the commandments of God in favor of the
commandments of men. There is a way and it is so simplistic that
one would think it should not have to be pointed out.
If laying
aside the commandments of God and embracing the commandments of men
invalidates our worship, then how about we just do the opposite of that.
Let's lay aside the commandments of men and embrace the commandments of
God?
What a novel idea! So how
do we do that? By using the word of God only and only the word of
God. "All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and
is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction
in righteousness: That the man of God may be perfect, throughly
furnished unto all good works" (2 Timothy 3:16-17). The
Greek word for "perfect" means "complete". Throughly
furnished means just that, totally furnished through and through.
If the word of God makes us complete and furnishes us throughly to every
good work, what's missing? What's left out? What do we hold
in our hands when we hold the word of God? Everything we need for
every good work. What's left out? Nothing. So where
does that leave the teachings of Martin Luther, or John Wesley, or
Charles Spurgeon, or John Calvin and many many others where they
conflict with God's word? Remember Jesus' words, "in
vain they do worship me, teaching for commandments the doctrines of men".
That should
be enough to convict anyone of not going beyond what is written in God's
word, but just in case, let's look at 1 Corinthians 4:6 "Now these
things, brethren, I have figuratively transferred to myself and Apollos
for your sakes, that you may learn in us not to think beyond what is
written, that none of you may be puffed up on behalf of one against the
other."
The
Christians in Corinth
had developed into different factions, evaluating the words of men to be
higher than the authority of scripture and were thinking of men more
highly than they should and spurning the meekness and humility taught
throughout the Bible. Men who gave the appearance of being someone
special were elevated in the eyes of the Corinthians, yet the ones who
they really needed to be following were not like this at all. Of
course Paul scolded them for that and this is the preamble leading into
some of the most memorable words the apostle ever wrote: "Even
unto this present hour we both hunger, and thirst, and are naked, and
are buffeted, and have no certain dwelling-place; and we toil, working
with our own hands: being reviled, we bless; being persecuted, we
endure; being defamed, we entreat: we are made as the filth of the
world, the offscouring of all things, even until now. I write not
these things to shame you, but to admonish you as my beloved children.
For though ye have ten thousand tutors in Christ, yet (have ye) not many
fathers; for in Christ Jesus I begat you through the gospel."
And then he went on to say in verse 16, "I beseech you therefore, be
ye imitators of me". Keep that last verse in mind. We
are going to look at it again soon.
Paul told them not to think
beyond what has been written. This was Paul's way of saying do not
think beyond the word of God. The American Standard Version
translates this "that ye may learn no to go beyond what is written".
The application here for us today is that we should not think any man
higher than the word of God. And isn't that what Jesus said when
He said "in
vain they do worship me, teaching for commandments the doctrines of men".
Is There a Pattern We Must
Follow?
Paul taught the Christians at Thessalonica to "stand fast, and hold the
traditions which ye have been taught, whether by word, or our epistle" (2
Thessalonians 2:15). Traditions in this usage is not the same as the
traditions of men which got the Pharisees chastised by Jesus.
Traditions here simply means an established
form of religious guidelines used to determine one's actions. In other
words, there is a pattern within the writings and traditions that Paul
commanded the Thessalonian Christians to follow. Since the written word
thoroughly furnishes us, we know that all of these traditions have been recorded
and preserved for us in the scriptures.
Paul taught Timothy to "Hold fast the form of sound words, which thou
hast heard of me" (2 Timothy 1:13). When we use a form to guide us, we use
it like a mold, thereby making our lives to conform to an established
pattern. In Romans chapter 6 and verse 17, Paul wrote, "But
God be thanked, that ye were the servants of sin, but ye have obeyed
from the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered you."
That form of doctrine. That pattern of doctrine.
We need to associate these three words, "form, mold and pattern"
together in our minds. So does God's word tell us how to follow
these patterns? Indeed it does.
Soon after
Paul told the Thessalonians to "stand fast and hold the traditions
they have been taught", he wrote, "For yourselves know how
ye ought to imitate us: for we behaved not ourselves disorderly among
you; neither did we eat bread for nought at any man's hand, but in labor
and travail, working night and day, that we might not burden any of you:
not because we have not the right, but to make ourselves and ensample
unto you, that ye should imitate us" (2 Thessalonians 3:7-9).
When writing to the Philippians
in chapter 3 and verse 17, Paul said, "Brethren, be ye imitators
together of me, and mark them that so walk even as ye have us for an
ensample". Paul taught
the Philippians to use himself and others like him as an example for how
to pattern their lives. Remember what Paul told the Corinthians,
"I beseech you
therefore, be ye imitators of me". The Hebrews writer
wrote in chapter 6 and verse 12, "that ye be not sluggish, but
imitators of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises".
The 1st century Christians were being told over and over to use the
examples of other faithful Christians as a pattern for their own lives.
And not only their examples either. Peter wrote in his 1st epistle
in chapter 2 and verse 21 that "Christ also suffered for us, leaving
us an example, that ye should follow in His steps". Following
the steps of our savior, stepping in the light. The Christians
were told by the inspired writers to use the examples set by Jesus
Christ, the apostles and other faithful Christians as a pattern for them
to live by.
Paul taught the Ephesians that we are to, "have no fellowship with the
unfruitful works of darkness, but rather even reprove them" (Ephesians
5:11). Paul commanded the Christians in Ephesus to recognize and avoid
fellowshipping those who are in religious error. In order to recognize
when someone is walking in darkness, we must be able to compare them to
some standard of right in order to make this judgment for ourselves.
Earlier when we looked at Paul's teaching in Philippians 3:17 he went on
to say in verse 18 and 19, "For many walk, of whom I have told you
often, and now tell you even weeping, that they are the enemies of the
cross of Christ. Whose end is destruction, whose God is their
belly, and whose glory is in their shame, who mind earthly things.
Those who do not follow the good examples are
"enemies of the cross of Christ." If refusing to follow the example of
Paul makes one an enemy of the cross it is therefore essential that we
diligently follow the patterns of faithful living and teaching as set
forth by Paul and the other inspired writers of scripture.
We have
seen now that the first New Testament Christians were told to be
imitators/followers of the examples of Paul, Jesus and other faithful
Christians around them. Let's look at the Greek word for "example"
or sometimes translated as "ensamples". It is the word "tupos"
which is defined as a die or a stamp; a visible mark left by some
object, the mark left in history or nature by the antitype; a model for
imitation or a warning. So from this definition we gather that the
Greek word "tupos" denotes an exact image to be copied, an exact model
to be imitated, an example that would serve either as a warning or a
pattern to be copied.
This word is translated in
various ways all of which suggest something to be imitated or followed.
-
Example (1 Corinthians 10:6; Philippians 3:17; 1 Timothy 4:12; 1
Peter 5:3)
-
Figure (Romans 5:14).
-
Form (Romans 6:17).
-
Fashion (Acts 7:44).
-
Print (John 20:25). of the
nails in Jesus' hands.
-
Manner (Acts 23:25). of how
Lysias wrote a letter concerning Paul to Felix.
-
Pattern (Hebrews 8:5; Titus 2:7).
Titus 2:7 is an interesting verse for
the use of the word pattern. Let's consider it, "In all things
shewing thyself a pattern of good works: in doctrine shewing
uncorruptness, gravity, sincerity". Paul commanded Timothy to
live his life a pattern for others to follow. Doesn't it stand to
reason that if Timothy was to live his life as a pattern, there must be
one? Doesn't it stand to reason that since Timothy's life was
lived as a pattern for the Ephesian church that it should be followed?
Wasn't it the intent of Paul that the Ephesian church follow the pattern
he told Timothy to live his life by? And now to make an
application for us today, if those in the first century were required to
live their lives as patterns and others were to imitate/follow those
patterns, that it would apply for us today the same way? Where do
we find these patterns? In the teachings of men? Certainly
not. We already know that following the teachings of men over
scripture result in vain worship to God. So then what
if we do the same thing the Christians in the first century were told to
do. Instead of patterning our lives after the teachings of men,
why don't we pattern our lives after the approved examples of the
faithful first century Christians living and working and worshipping?
Another novel idea. There were
faithful Christians in the 1st century, let's follow their examples.
Let's use their lives, their faith, their successes, their failures and
their service to God as a pattern today for us to live by.
Following the approved examples, and avoiding the bad ones we can follow
their footsteps home to heaven.
What are some of the patterns in the New
Testament?
There are some patterns that are obvious.
There are some that require diligent search. We'll not have the
time to go into all of them in detail here, the primary goal of this
lesson being to establish that there is a pattern in scripture by which
the Christian is to order his, or her life by. God has promised us
that He is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him so it stands to
reason that diligent search is required in some areas. This should
not be a cause for alarm, rather, it should be, and is, a call to
action by the diligent who really want to serve God. This is God's
way of sorting out His diligent servants from the ones who don't care
enough to seek, or from those who don't want to live their lives ordered
after the precepts of God.
Those who do not want to live their lives after a
pattern of righteousness are not going to want to accept one, let alone
search for it. They want what I call their "Burger King Religion"
They want God their way. They want God made in their image and
they want to serve God the way they want to serve Him. And to
that, I like to quote what Paul wrote to the Romans about the Jews who
rejected Christ as the messiah, "For I bear them record that they
have a zeal of God, but not according to knowledge. For they being
ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to establish their own
righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of
God" (Romans 10:2-3). Applying this to us, those today who
seek their own righteousness are in no better shape than the Israelites
who rejected Christ. They can be zealous, but still unsubmissive
to God's righteousness. All the zealousness in the world is to no
avail if we have not submitted to God's righteousness. Paul was
zealous in his persecutions of the Christians, did that make him right?
No! Paul had to submit to God's righteousness and so do we today.
The easy patterns to see are the ones
for Elders and Deacons, found in 1 Timothy chapter 3 and Titus chapter
1.
We won't go through all these in detail, but
it can scarcely be denied that the office of the local congregational
leadership is to be patterned after the ones given by inspiration.
What about the pattern for Christian
husbands and wives toward each other? Husbands love your wives as
Christ loved the church and gave His life for it. Wives be in
subjection to your husbands. And while we're on the subject of the
pattern for the home, how about "children obey your parents in the
Lord"? How about "fathers provoke not your children to
anger but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord"?
Is there not a pattern for the home found in scripture that the faithful
Christian can turn to follow? Nobody is going to deny a pattern
exists in scripture for the home. Is this pattern for the home
found in one place? Or do we have to look in multiple places and
assemble it together from numerous sources in scripture?
How about the pattern for the Lord's
supper? Do we not pattern the Lord's supper today after the
examples we have in scripture? Is this pattern found in only one
place or is it found in different places in scripture? Do we not
take all of the scripture pertaining to the Lord's supper and use it all
to follow the Biblical example? Is that not a pattern?
Observed on the first day of every week... unleavened bread for
the loaf and fruit of the vine for the cup... done in remembrance
of the death of Jesus on the cross every time... If that is not a
pattern, then what is it?
The scriptures are filled with patterns
we are to follow: Prayer, singing, worship in general,
benevolence, entry into the kingdom of Christ, and a pattern for the
organization of the local church just to name a few. They are all
over scripture and none of them are ever found complete in one place.
We have to diligently seek throughout the New Testament, correctly
identify and apply them to our lives.
There are those within the Lord's
church today who are denying there is a pattern for the church and for
worship found in scripture. They have labeled this belief
"patternism" and basing it on the fact that there is not an all
inclusive checklist all found within one place in scripture which spells
out the pattern for church organization and worship. What they are
trying to do is to justify their own manmade innovations introduced into
the worship offered to God. They want the freedom to worship God
as they see fit. They want the freedom to decide how God will be
worshipped and to decide what kind of worship God will accept.
What they fail to realize is that if there is not a pattern for worship
in the NT then it is not possible to know how to reject the teachings of
men. If we can't use the approved examples of NT worship as a
pattern for our worship today then there is no mechanism in place for us
to assure ourselves of worshipping in spirit and in truth.
None of the other patterns found within
NT scripture are all organized in one all inclusive checklist, why would
anybody expect the others to be? Those who deny the existence of a
patterns in the NT scriptures need to apply this thinking to the whole
spectrum of the Christian life and observe what the results are.
If there is not a pattern in scriptures
for the home, then wives, husbands and kids have no obligations to one
another. Parents are not responsible to raise the children.
Children are not responsible to obey their parents. Men can have
any number of wives and wives can have any number of husbands.
Family members no longer have any responsibilities to the government
they live under. Each member of the family does what's right in
his own sight.
What about the pattern for the
qualifications of Elders and Deacons for the local church?
If there is no pattern there, no standard, then anybody who wants to can
be an elder or a deacon. We would have the local congregations
being run by members of families who did what's right in their own
sight.
If there were no patterns for NT
worship, then we could use steak and Coke instead of unleavened bread
and fruit of the vine for the emblems. We could cook us up some
steaks and chop them up into little cubes and stick toothpicks in them.
Everybody could just grab one on a stick as the plate went by.
Wouldn't that be yummy? Well done or rare? What kind of
sauce do we want to serve with the steak bits this Sunday? And
instead of fruit of the vine, let's have a selection. Maybe the
servers could carry a tray and pass out different beverages depending on
each person's wants. Tea? Sweet or unsweetened? A
slice of lemon? I'm quite sure God would not look favorably on
that kind of worship. The point here is that if there are no
patterns for worship, then any worship would suffice in the site of God.
Patterns provide a guide for Christians
to order their lives by. Patterns provide order for Christians to
live their lives by. Patterns provide consistency for Christians
to be confident in. Patterns are the only way we can be assured
today we are adhering to God's righteousness instead of man's. Why
would anyone think that God would condemn the commandments and doctrines
of men and then turn around and not leave us a pattern of His
commandments to go by?
It's by
identifying and following the patterns we find in the New Testament that
prevent us from laying aside the commandments of God in order to keep
the traditions of men. The patterns are there, it's up to us to
seek them out, and follow them.
How Do We Determine What Is A
Pattern and What Is Not?
On one hand we have those who deny patterns in the NT and on the other,
we have those who bind things in the scriptures as patterns which are
not. We need to look at some of the general ways of determining
whether something in scripture is part of the pattern or not.
When one thinks of a pattern, they associate it with the imagery of a
design consistently applied throughout. For anything to be identified by
its design, it must have a pattern or a form that is universally applied
and recognized.
In order for a new testament tradition or practice to be a pattern for us
today it must apply to everybody written about in the first century. If it
can be proven from scripture that something done by any New Testament
Christian was not done by all of them, then we cannot bind it on the
church today. For example, in Acts 2:44-45 we read of some Christians who
"had all things common; and sold their possessions and goods, and parted
them to all men, as every man had need." So we have here an example of
Christians selling all their possessions and giving the money to those in
need. We can rightfully conclude from this example that it is perfectly ok
for us today to sell everything we have and give the money to the needy.
But in order for this to be part of the pattern we bind on the church
today, this practice must apply universally to all the Christians of the
first century.
A study of scripture reveals that it was often times the case that the
first century Christians assembled in certain houses belonging to some of
the saints. Aquila and Priscilla owned a house where the church
congregated, (Romans 16:3-5, 1 Corinthians 16:19); Nymphus owned a house
where the church congregated, (Colossians 4:15) and Philemon as well,
(Philemon 2). Philip the evangelist owned a house and provided lodging for
Paul and company while they were in Caesarea, (Acts 21:8). So we see that
there are examples of numerous faithful Christians in the first century
that owned their houses. If it were a requirement to sell everything as
the Christians in Jerusalem did after Pentecost, then these other faithful
first century Christians would not have owned their houses. It is very
easy to see that the selling of all possessions was not part of a pattern
bound upon all the New Testament Christians of the first century.
Any first century religious practice that was not universally bound to all
the Christians then, cannot be rightfully bound to all Christians in this
century. Such a thing would be comparable to a preacher teaching that
everybody on the left side of the congregation had to do something that
nobody on the right side had to do.
Those of us
in the churches of Christ generally do not wash each other's feet.
Jesus washed the feet of His disciples the night He was betrayed.
Upon finishing Jesus said, "If
I then, your Lord and Master, have washed your feet; ye also ought to
wash one another's feet".
Foot washing was a custom of the day. The primary means of
transportation was by foot and they got tired and dirty along the long
roads. There is certainly not anything wrong with washing each
other's feet. However Jesus was teaching a principle to His
disciples who had earlier been arguing over who would be the greatest in
the kingdom. What Jesus was teaching them was that the masters are
not greater than the servants and that they should be willing to serve
their brethren in humbleness and meekness.
Today when we in the body if
Christ tend to the needs of the aged, the sick, help the afflicted and
serve each other, we have done the same thing as Jesus did when He
washed the feet of his disciples. For example, there are a lot of
our members who depend on others to get them to services. When we
help bring these members to services, we have, in the sense that Jesus
taught His disciples, washed their feet. Suppose we just
picked up a bucket of water and scrub brush and went over to one of our
aged sisters houses on Sunday morning, washed her feet and left her
there at home while we went to services? Suppose she was hungry
and without food and a way to go get it and we show up with the bucket
and the scrub brush and leave her hungry and stranded with shiny feet.
Did we learn the lesson Jesus was teaching His disciples that night?
No.
What about raising holy hands
while we pray? "I will therefore that men pray every where,
lifting up holy hands , without wrath and doubting" (1 Timothy 2:8).
Is this a binding posture for prayer? If it is, then it is equally
as binding for us to stand when we pray (Mark 11:25) and with uplifted
eyes (John 17:1), on our faces (Matthew 26:39), all at the same time.
Obviously, a
particular posture in prayer was not a binding pattern. Again, we
cannot bind as part of a pattern what is not universally and
consistently done throughout scripture.
The Patterns to Look For
Paul wrote in Romans 6:17-18;
"But thanks be to God, that, whereas Ye were servants of sin, Ye became
obedient from the heart to that form of teaching whereunto Ye were
delivered; and being made free from sin, Ye became servants of
righteousness."
So what is this "form of teaching" or pattern we must be obedient to?
Scripture teaches that Jesus became the author of eternal salvation unto
all them that obey him (Hebrews 5:9), and that God's wrath abides forever
on the disobedient, (Ephesians 5:6, Colossians 3:6, 2 Thessalonians
1:8-9). It is therefore vital that we diligently seek out the pattern of
obedience the faithful first century Christians lived and conform
ourselves to it and no other.
This pattern of obedience contains within itself all the things a
Christian must do in order to live an acceptable life before God and
receive the promise of eternal life. Within this pattern we can find the
steps the first century Christians followed to be placed within the "body
of Christ". Jesus taught that we "must be born again" to be in the kingdom
of God (John 3:3). So it is important that we determine how the first
century Christians were "born again" and conform ourselves to the same
pattern they followed.
Jesus said to the Samaritan woman at the well, "God is a Spirit: and they
that worship him must worship in spirit and truth" (John 4:24). There are
two commandments here. We must worship God and it must be in spirit and in
truth, meaning from the heart and correctly. The Christians at Corinth
deviated from the pattern and were abusing the Lord's supper. They were
sternly rebuked by Paul for this, (1 Corinthians 11:18-21). We find that
Paul rehearsed the original example for them in order to show them the
right pattern, (1 Corinthians 11:24-29). It is therefore important that we
seek from scripture the pattern of worship that the faithful first century
Christians engaged in and follow that pattern ourselves today.
By studying to show ourselves approved (2 Timothy 2:15), and diligently
seeking (Hebrews 11:6), we can determine how the first faithful Christians
patterned their lives obediently after Christ and the Apostles. And by molding ourselves to that
pattern and that pattern only, we can be assured that we are in every way
living a pleasing life in the sight of God. If we want to be faithful
Christians we have to follow the examples we have of faithful Christians
in the scripture. If we want to receive the blessings they received, then
we have to live like they lived. If we want the forgiveness of sin they
had, we have to follow the pattern they followed to obtain it. If we want
to avoid the pitfalls they encountered, we have to avoid the sin they were
taught to shun. By studying and learning the pattern the first faithful
Christians lived in Christ, and by diligently following that pattern, we
can be assured that we are just what they were; Christians. And that
is really all we want to be.
An example
of a pattern that is bound to all accountable Christians in the first century
and today is that in order to inherit the promise of eternal life they
must:
1)
believe: John 3:16 "For God so loved the
world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in
him should not perish, but have everlasting life."
2) Repent:
Luke 13:3, "I tell you, Nay: but, except ye repent, ye shall all
likewise perish."
3)
Confess Jesus as the Son of God: Matthew 10:32 "Whosoever
therefore shall confess me before men, him will I confess also before my
Father which is in heaven."
4) Be
Baptized: Mark 16:16 "He that believeth and is baptized shall
be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned."
5)
And then live faithfully till death: Revelation 2:10 "be thou
faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown of life."
There is not a single exception to that pattern anywhere in scripture
and if we want to go to heaven, that is the pattern we must follow.
If anyone here tonight wants to become a Christian then the invitation
to do is yours at this time. If anyone needs the prayers of the
congregation then please make that need known as we stand and sing the
invitation song. |