Well of course it is a "sending forth." I never said it wasn't!! The question is, what kind of a sending forth is it? I take it as a sending forth with no authority from the sending agency. For you to prove otherwise, you need to have examples of your position from other usages of apoluo. The word can be taken in the context either your way or my way. Thus, in order to prove your way you need examples from other passages.Pastor Larry said:Acts 13 would be a "just one example" that proves this possibility. I don't have my lexical works here in front of me (out of town). But when you read the context, you see an examination, a prayerful consideration, and a command that "mark them off" for service. How can that not very clearly be a sending forth, a commission from the church of which they were a part to plant churches? And on top of all that, it is said to be the work of the Spirit.
Since this is not an ethical issue, there is no way in the world it can be situation ethics. I guess I should have explained more what I was trying to say.I know you are not suggesting situation ethics, but that's what it sounds like. What about those who say if you preach the gospel of faith and repentance it will never be a church? Just how much can we compromise in the name of pragmatism? (Please John, understand I mean nothing perjorative by that. I have nothing but respect and appreciation in the Lord for your ministry there in Japan.) Do you not have pastors and deacons, called by teh congregation?
In my mind, until the church constitutes, it is a Bible study with the purpose of forming a church.
Since we are sent into every nation by the Great Commission, and I take the Matthew version of the Commission to be the church-planting one, then our church planting model must be valid for every nation. Since Gospel-resistant nations keep churches small (or even underground), it makes it very difficult to fulfill a church-planting model that requires deacons before the church is said to be a church. Frankly, I just don't find that model in Scripture.
It would take too long to explain completely the situation in Japan here, but suffice it to say that it is absolutely nothing like the situation in China.Why not? Is this a discipleship problem? Do we really judge the NT mandates for churches by governmental recognition? I know you would say no, as would I. Which is why I find this paragraph not helpful towards a resolution. Why is that the Chinese house churches have leaders growing and being discipled all over? What is the difference? (I ask sincerely because having worked with some Chinese house church leaders I am amazed at their ministry.)
Japan is just flat out hard. The Japanese hearts are hard, and they have been 180 degrees pointed away from Christianity since the Shogun outlawed it in the early 17th century and massacred many, many thousands of Japanese Catholics.
Add to that two factors since we came to Japan: (1) the society is rapidly aging, so that those open to the Gospel are decreasing in number; (2) the Japanese are having far fewer kids (average 1.26 per couple).
But why in the world have a deacon with only 10-20 people coming (most Japanese churches)? What would be the Biblical purpose? And where would you find someone qualified? Does the average American church have 1 out of 3 men qualified to be deacons?? No way!I think there are simple answers. It seems to me that in most cases, there would be at least one man or two that could be a deacon, and yourself the pastor. You could then carry out all the various functions of the church and constitute as a legitimate church. Then you are under the authority and discipline of a local church.
It would take too long to explain, but the Japanese are very slow spiritually. One experienced missionary estimated that it takes about 7 years to get a Japanese from salvation to full maturity.Isn't this a discipleship issue? I ask because twice in the last six months I was asked that dreaded question by two different people unrelated, about two different issue, and I hated hearing it, and I hated knowing it was true. It wasn't about deacons, but about evangelism and giving.
I am not saying they are not a church. I am merely saying that two or three together is not a church. I have heard people say that two or three people sitting in a coffee shop are a church. That is not necessarily so.
And of course I believe the passage is about people meeting regularly in the name of Jesus as a church, since that is the context. So, one pastor, one deacon? Oops we left out the pastor's wife. Guess we can't have a church unless there are three!? :tonofbricks:
I agree with everything here but the deacons (see below). And everything but the deacons is possible right from the start with only two or three members.Preaching the gospel, organized with pastor(s) and deacons, observing the ordinances, meeting at regular and stated times, carrying out the great commission, etc.
The sending church can revoke his ordination and otherwise practice church discipline: dropping support, deleting from membership, sending a rep to the field to try to deal with the problem (I've seen this done effectively), contacting the supporting churches, etc.The church. All through the NT (and history) you see people who were ordained who defected. That calls for church discipline. What church will carry it out in a church planter whose church has not yet formed.
Let's say a guy goes out to plant a church and falls into immorality. Who will discipline him?
The new church, of course. :thumbs: When I start a church, all baptized believers are the first members, right from the start. Would you have me make them members of my home church in Tennessee? That smacks of colonialism in most countries, is impractical, and opposes the indigenous policy.When a new convert is baptized, what church does he become a member of?
The main stumbling block here is the issue of deacons. Everything else is possible right from the start. If there must be deacons before a church is a church, then:That may be, but that's not the issue. People are sinners and will always cause problems. But I think the biblical model is different than you.
(1) What about the church at Jerusalem before they had deacons?
(2) Why are not deacons mentioned in Titus when Paul is telling Titus how to run a church?
(3) Why are there no Scriptures mandating deacons for a church?
(4) Why, in fact, are deacons mentioned so little in Scripture?
Thanks. We have no plans to quit! :thumbs:But regardless of our differences, I praise God for your ministry in Japan and encourage you to "stay by the stuff." You have probably heard that before (if I recall your background properly.) I heard it many times.
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