“The biblical pattern of congregational
independence is clear.”
Kyle Pope
During
the last month, social media has been overflowing
with posts, regarding the 500th Anniversary of the Reformation. To
be sure, every believer has a debt of gratitude to the Reformers who often
risked their lives for the cause of Christ and changed both the Church and
their world.
Yet, Martin Luther nailing his 95 theses
on Wittenberg’s Castle Church on October 31, 1517, wasn’t really the
beginning. The seeds of the Reformation had been sown centuries earlier and
were already growing. Luther watered them and saw them come to full bloom, but
the teachings of John Wycliffe, Jan Hus, Peter Waldo and many others were
already being proliferated across Europe. Movements such as the Anabaptists
were among Luther’s strongest supporters in the early years of the Reformation.
Contemporaries of Luther, Huldrych Zwingli, William Tyndale, fanned the
flames of the Reformation, solidifying its impact.
Yet, it seems that we forget that the
Reformers were sinful men and women just like us. They lived in the light that
they had. But we’re dishonest when we rationalize away some of their failures. For
example, Luther said horrible things about Jews and turned on his early
supporters because they believed in immersion after conversion, even declaring
that they should be drowned. John Calvin oversaw the death sentences of dozens
of teachers he disagreed with, not because they did anything wrong, but because
they taught differently from him. Yes, times were different and medieval Europe
was a bloody landscape. But culture does not give believers a free pass to
ignore the teachings of Scripture, yet often the Reformers joined in some of
the cultural depravity.
One vital church doctrine the Reformers were oblivious
of but one that we as a church hold precious is local church autonomy. The word “autonomy” is derived from Greek
words auto meaning
“self, or same” and nomos for
“law.” The idea is a church is “a law unto themselves” or self-governing. This
term can give us the wrong impression and lead us to think that each
congregation is left to govern themselves. Autonomy doesn’t mean that
each congregation may decide for itself what it should teach or how it should
function. That’s determined by the Head of the Church, Jesus Christ, who leads
His church through what’s revealed in Scripture. Jesus described this as He
talked about vital church procedures in Matthew 18 and in that context declared,
“whatever you bind on earth will have
been bound in Heaven” (Matthew 18:18). What it does mean though is that no
diocese or denomination dictates to a local body of believers. There is no “federal
ecclesiastical government” dictating to the local church on what they can or
cannot do. They are both in control and responsible for their ministry. But while
no human or group has the right to tell a local church what it should do, Jesus
Christ does have that authority. Our efforts to seek truth must lead us to
conform to His will.
As
we read through the pages of Scripture, we find that though local churches
cooperated with one another, each was independent. There’s no reference to
committees, boards, or denominations dictating to them. Even the Apostles did
not dictate to local churches (1 Peter 5:1-3; Acts 14:23). There was a specific
structure. Each church had its own leaders but they were not leaders of
others churches or appointed over a city, district, or diocea, but in every local
church.
Consequently,
each local church is equal to the other. Church leaders in one church were
not to rule over the affairs of other churches. Biblical leaders were to be
appointed in “every church” and each was to oversee the affairs of those that
are “among” them. Since each congregation should be under the oversight
and rule of its own leaders, each is absolutely independent of other churches
or organizations. And because a local church is autonomous, it has the
authority and the ability to solve the problems of its own members.
(Matt. 18:15-17; 1 Cor. 6:1-8). It has the authority and responsibility to
appoint its own leaders, pastors and deacons (Acts 6:1-7). It has the
authority and responsibility to commission missionaries, choosing who it
desires to support (Acts 13:1-3). It has the authority and obligation
to regulate its own membership (1 Cor. 5:1-5).
Practically, this means that the local church collects and disperses its
own funds and can choose to incur debt. It conducts its own business and
business meetings. It buys and owns its own property and can also choose to
sell that property. This is very important because many churches in a
denomination do not own their own property, the denomination owns the property.
If the church should determine that the denomination has veered from the
teaching of Scripture and desires to leave it, though they’ve paid for the
property and buildings, they’ll lose the property to the denomination, if they
leave the denomination.
Independence though
is not isolation. Being children of God is to mean something. Scripture teaches
that those who are in fellowship with God the Father are in
fellowship with others in fellowship with Him (I John 1:3). In other
words, in Christ we are family. It’s a big family. Congregational independence
doesn’t mean we ignore the needs or spiritual well-being of our brothers and
sisters in church or in other places.
Autonomy is biblical and vital. The local church is responsible only to God. All decisions and choices must be done in the light of the coming day when every believer and each local church will give an account to our loving Head, the Lord Jesus Christ.
Autonomy is biblical and vital. The local church is responsible only to God. All decisions and choices must be done in the light of the coming day when every believer and each local church will give an account to our loving Head, the Lord Jesus Christ.
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