
Who are the churches of Christ?
"The churches of Christ salute you," is a statement
made by the apostle Paul in Romans 16:16. In Paul's day, the
churches of Christ were localized groups of Christians who assembled
themselves together to perform specific duties. They were non-denominational,
had no earthly headquarters, followed the New Testament as their
only standard in religion, and worshipped and worked together
in ways revealed to them by the word of God. Each congregation
operated independently of each other, though they would assist
each other at times of urgent need. Churches of Christ speak
where the Bible speaks and remain silent where it is silent.
They do Bible things in Bible ways, and call Bible things by Bible
names. They love peace, unity, and righteousness. Today,
churches of Christ seek to be the same as their early brothers
and sisters. They love people. They do not want to simply
be different, but they do want to be the same as the churches
approved of by the apostles of Jesus Christ.
How do churches of Christ worship?
Using the pattern of the churches in the Bible, churches of Christ
today worship God "in spirit and in truth" (John 4:24),
which means they have the proper attitude and do the proper things.
They assemble regularly (Hebrews 10:25) on the first day of each
week to eat the Lord's Supper (Acts 20:7). This is God's law
on the eating of the Lord's Supper. Their is no authorization
in the Bible to eat it once a month, once or twice a year, etc.
If so, where? They sing spiritual songs of worship to God to
encourage each other in their faith (Colossians 3:16). Christians
do not use instruments of music to worship God since the early
church did not use them. Instrumental music was a physical form
of worship under the Old Testament that went out with burning
incense, varied sacrifices, physical cleansings, and a physical
temple. The only instrument that New Testament Christians make
melody with is their heart during a capella singing ( Ephesians
5:19). With this agree the greatest voices of the Reformation
(Luther, Calvin, Zwingli, Knox, Wesley, etc.). Their followers
did not follow their warnings since it is fun and entertaining.
The attitude or spirit of Christians is to let God's will be
done, not our own. Christians gave toward the work of the local
church (1 Cor. 16:1,2), not a tithe, but as they prospered (2
Cor. 9:7). They prayed to God in worship and in need, asking
for God's blessing on their lives and in the furtherance of the
gospel of Jesus to save a lost and dying world (Acts 12:12).
They learned the doctrine of the apostles (Acts 2: 42) and heard
the word of God preached to them (Acts 20:7).
What do the churches of Christ emphasize?
The churches of Christ emphasize the importance of the individual
going to Heaven. As simple as this may sound, the Bible teaches
that few will find the way to heaven (Matthew 7:13,14) and that
there will be many who think that they are saved but will find
out that they were never saved (Matthew 7:21-23). This is of
great concern to Christians, so great emphasis is placed upon
making sure that we are doing "the will of the Father who
is in heaven," and not the will of men, organized religion,
or human philosophies. Doctrinal purity, love for each other
and those of the world, and personal morality and ethics are very
important to us. Those who have difficulty with the above are
lovingly cared for and encouraged. All we want is to go to heaven
and see you there too!
How do the churches of Christ view the Bible?
The Bible is the word of God (Heb. 4:12) with power to
work within its hearers (2 Thess. 2:13) and create faith
(Rom. 10:17). It is as good as hearing God's own voice and contains
all that a Christian needs to know to be a mature disciple
(2 Tim. 3:15,16). Writers were guided by the Holy Spirit to
preserve the writings from common human weaknesses in reasoning
and judgment (2 Pet. 1:20-21). It must be properly interpreted
(2 Tim. 2:15). Those who do not know how to interpret it can
cause great spiritual harm on both themselves and others who believed
them (2 Peter 3:16-17). It is divided into two major sections.
The Old Testament contains the records of the beginning of the
earth, fall of man, and early stages of God's redemptive plan.
It contains the Law of Moses given to the Israel of old and many
promises and prophecies of a coming Savior and kingdom. The New
Testament contains the fulfillment of the promises of a Savior,
His church or kingdom, and signals the end of the Law of Moses
and establishment of the New Covenant (Heb. 9:15; 10:9). The
New Testament is the guide for the church in matters of religious
practice. The Old Testament provides examples that we need to
study (1 Cor. 10:11), but since Jesus took it out of the way and
established His New Covenant, the Old Testament no longer can
authorize any religious practice in the church of Christ (Gal.
5:1-4) whether that be a special priesthood, burning incense,
offering sacrifices, being circumcisized, using instrumental music
in worship, or worshipping on the sabbath day (Saturday) over
Sunday, the first day of the week. Christians are strongly encouraged
to interpret the Bible for themselves and study with each other
to gain greater insight into the truth.
Do members of churches of Christ speak in tongues and perform
miracles?
Today, members of churches of Christ do not speak in tongues that
they have not learned and perform miracles for one reason: no
one does or can anymore! The Bible teaches that these special
gifts from God would only be with the churches in the first century
until "the perfect came," then the "parts"
(miraculous gifts) would go away (1 Cor. 13:8-10). "That
which is perfect" is the perfect law of liberty mentioned
in James 1:25, or the Bible. The church needed the special gifts
of the Holy Spirit while the New Testament, the perfect law of
liberty, was being written by the apostles and New Testament prophets.
Once it was finished it would supply the church will all the
guidance needed (2 Peter 1:2-4) including eyewitness
accounts of Jesus' life, miracles, and teaching ( the 4 gospels).
Tongues are "languages in the world" (1 Cor. 14:10).
The gift allowed people to speak in human languages never learned
(Acts 2:4-8). No one today claiming this gift can do this, that
is, never learning French to speak it fluently. And modern day
"faith" healers fail to heal people, though no one with
the gift of healing in the Bible ever failed to heal anyone!
They are "fake" healers today, not "faith"
healers. Remember that those who found out that they were never
saved in Matthew 7:21-23 claimed to be able to perform miracles.
They were deceived.
How are churches of Christ governed?
In the first century, each church of Christ had elders that oversaw
the local church (Acts 20:28). Their oversight was limited to
the church at which they worshipped, and there was no office,
organization, council, conference, or assembly to which local
church elders answered. The headquarters of the church is where
the Head "quarters" or lives, and our Head is in Heaven,
and that is the headquarters of the churches of Christ.
How do you join the churches of Christ?
You do not "join" the churches of Christ like you join
a human denomination. The Lord Himself adds you to his universal
body when you are baptized in His name for the forgiveness of
your sins (Acts 2:38-47). You then join in fellowship with Christians
organized according to the biblical pattern. You should never
join a human denomination! The Bible strictly forbids this (1
Cor. 1:10-13; 3:1-4: 4:6).
Who is welcome in the churches of Christ?
YOU ARE! And everyone who wants to learn the truth, please God,
and GO TO HEAVEN!
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ABOUT THE CHURCHES OF CHRIST
