THE TWO MINISTRIES
THE TWO MINISTRIES
It is plain, from Colossians 1: 23 - 29, that there are two ministries; the ministry of the gospel, and the ministry of the church. It is most interesting and important to ascertain the scope of each; where the first ends, and where the other begins.
The ministry of the gospel is universal, “proclaimed in the whole creation which is under heaven”. And in Acts 17: 30, the apostle says, “And the times of this ignorance God winked at; but now commandeth all men every where to repent”. The gospel in its aspect is addressed to every one; as we read, “They went forth, and preached every where”. Our Saviour God desires that all should be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth. The more vigour of life there is in any [p. 187] saint, the more, according to the leading of the Spirit, does such an one, man or woman, seek to make known Christ to sinner or saint. And I suppose there could not be any reviving in the church without a very marked energy in evangelistic work. The vitality of the body politic, the church, is declared by the force and effect with which Christ’s deputed messengers, gifted by Him for the purpose, carry each part of the truth suited to every ear. The blessed God is evangelistic. He so loved this world that He sent His Son. Our Lord’s most affecting work on earth was in leading a sinner (the woman of Samaria) into a knowledge of the grace of God. Of this He could say, par excellence, “I have meat to eat that ye know not of”. “My meat is to do the will of him that sent me, and to finish his work”. The angels were the first evangelists; and the apostle of the gentiles, to whom was peculiarly confided the mystery of the gospel, was without question the greatest of evangelists. The prominence of this ministry then is evident enough.
Now the gospel, according to the instructions given to Paul (Acts 26: 18), transfers the believer from one state to another, and the state to which he is transferred has a twofold blessing: one, the remission of sins; and the other, “inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith that is in me”. The Son comes to do the will of God. He dies, “the just for the unjust, that he might bring us to God”. “Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood ... for the remission of sins”, thus to release us from the misery and judgment in which by nature we are plunged; and not this only, but to set us, by the Holy Spirit given to Christ on high, in heavenly joys, in the blessedness of Christ’s life here; so that we have not to wait for those joys, but in the very spot of our misery, we have an earnest of the inheritance which is ours now by faith in Him. The gospel sets the believer free before God, from all that was against him as belonging to Adam, and as to state in this world, as Christ is now in glory. He [p. 188] is as to standing as Christ is — “Because as he is, so are we in this world”, 1 John 4: 17. Nothing less could satisfy the Father’s heart, and nothing less could the Son undertake, in bringing many sons unto glory, but that the believing sinner should be transferred by His work from the misery under which he lay, into a divine contrast in that very spot; not only rescued from misery with a perfectly assured home in heaven, but the joys of the Father’s house made known to him by the Spirit before he gets home, home comforts before he reaches home. This is the fatted calf in Luke 15 before we go home, while in John 14: 3 we have got home. I am through the gospel a child of God, saying, “Abba, Father”, with the Spirit of the Son, and an heir of heaven; tasting while still down here, in the old vessel, of its joys through the Spirit, before I go there; this vile body a temple of the Holy Spirit.
Now, as far as I know, all I have written relates to the gospel, and I believe it may be enjoyed by one who is ignorant of the other ministry — the mystery — or the ministry of the church. I am quite sure he is acquiring untold blessing from it, even though he were ignorant of it; but it is clear much more would be revealed to him; for though his position (for he is a son) cannot be greater, yet, when he understands the ministry of the church, his full portion will be made known to him.
The more attentively we study the epistles, the clearer we shall see that churches or assemblies were formed before they were fully enlightened as to the ministry of the church. It is evident that at Corinth there was an assembly, and yet the apostle writes to them in the most elementary way, respecting the body, and the manner of its formation, and its corporate responsibilities; while to the Ephesians, whom he commends for their faith in the Lord Jesus, and love to all the saints, he prays that their eyes may be enlightened to understand the mystery, or the ministry of the church. And as for the Colossians, though commending them for their faith in Christ, and [p. 189] love to all the saints, he tells them, “I would that ye knew what great conflict I have for you”, in his zeal of heart that they should be in rich possession of the truth of the ministry of the church. In the other epistles it is equally evident that though they were assemblies gathered to the name of the Lord, and in communion with one another, yet they were not in full apprehension of the ministry of the church. They had been gathered to the Lord in the power of the Spirit; and as in the first days before the mystery had been revealed, the assembly at Jerusalem were in full corporate sentiment and service, so were the assemblies among the gentiles planted, and in godly corporate relationship, before the knowledge of the mystery was doctrinally possessed.
In pattern, the Lord qualified His disciples for the assembly in John 20: 19, before there was any revelation of the mystery. The presence of the Holy Spirit and being gathered together to the name of the Lord, ensured a corporate order, though the mystery was not as yet known. This is very important; that the church should be in divine order, and in the unity of the Spirit, before the truth was known which would have made the order still more obligatory (see Acts 2: 46, 47).
In a word, the church as the house of God on earth was known before the body was revealed; and when discipline was necessary the apostle recalls the Corinthians to the ground they were on as the assembly. They were to come together in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, and in the power of our Lord Jesus Christ — “holiness becometh thine house, O Lord, for ever” — yet he afterwards in chapter 12 enforces this responsibility by insisting on their corporate relation to one another. The knowledge of the one body, and that this body is the body of Christ, is the mystery, or the ministry of the church.
In the ministry of the gospel we learn the immeasurable blessedness of all that Christ has done for us, but in the ministry of the church we are taught that we are related [p. 190] to Him to whom we owe so much in the closest way. It is the great mystery. He is Head of the body, the church, and from Him “all the body by joints and bands having nourishment ministered, and knit together, increases with the increase of God”. Christ being rejected in His humiliation while on earth, and being refused when in glory, the great secret was then divulged, that His body was on the earth, and that this body would be the fulness, or complement of Him that filleth all in all. With regard to the church it can be said paramountly, What could have been done for you that I have not done? but to this is added the closest and most intimate relationship; we are united to Christ by the Holy Spirit, and thus brought into participation with Him of His things and glory.
It is not only now a company of christians with Christ in the midst, the Holy Spirit leading each into his proper and appointed allegiance and service, doing His pleasure, as that which is binding on all, and in every place, because it is His will; but that all are members of the body of Christ, each one united to Him, and to one another, and deriving from Him, like each single feather in the plumage of a bird which declares its beauty.
If the Holy Spirit be not seen on earth, there never can be any just or true apprehension of this mystery; but if I accept the truth of the presence of the Holy Spirit, I then can apprehend the baptism by which we are all baptised by one Spirit into one body; and this surely is followed by, “And have been all made to drink into one Spirit”; that is, that the unity of the Spirit is a necessary consequence of this baptism. It could not be otherwise. There can be no leading of the Spirit in one place, but what must be the same in every other. The members have but one Head; and they are His body, united together by the Holy Spirit. Therefore the mind of the Lord is one and the same, with every member of His body who is in simple concert with Him; and all who are in concert with Him are in concert with one another.
[p. 191] The question is, What is the mind of the Spirit? There is but one for the youngest and for the most instructed. It could not be otherwise, if the church be the body of Christ; and hence it is the first duty or work of the heavenly man, of the man invested with the power which is in consequence of his union with Christ, to rise above all the natural influences in his purpose to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.
Whether we dwell on the church as the body of Christ now on the earth, or contemplate it as His fulness, we cannot but be deeply affected by the grace which has set us in so great a relationship to the very One to whom we are so attached already, on account of all He has done for us. How it consolidates everything to our hearts! Blessed be His name! We belong to, we are given to our Saviour; we are His own — His body.