THE 
			GOSPEL TRUTH ABOUT THE CHURCH OF CHRIST
			
			
			The introductory text for our lesson today is Matthew 
			16:13-19.  While those who wish to follow along are turning to 
			this text, let's consider that when we look out at the religious 
			landscape today, we can see a whole multitude of organizations that 
			claim Jesus Christ as their savior, each one having its own unique 
			beliefs on what one must do in order to become a Christian and live 
			the life of faith God expects.   The issue with this is 
			that in the gospel, there is only one institution which is referred 
			to in English as the church.  That being said, for the purpose 
			of this lesson, we are going make a detailed examination of the one 
			church we read of in the gospel/good news of the new covenant. 
			
			
			During Jesus' earthly ministry at a time when He was on the coast of 
			ancient Caesarea Philippi, which today is in Lebanon on the eastern 
			coast of the Mediterranean Sea, he asked His traveling companions a 
			question recorded for us in Matthew 16:13, "Whom do men say that 
			I the Son of man am?"  A number of His disciples gave 
			various answers to this question and then Simon Peter joins in and 
			nails it.  In verse 16 of this account Peter is recorded as 
			saying, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God."  
			The Greek word for 'Christ' is pronounced 'Christos' and means the 
			anointed.  Peter declared that Jesus was the anointed, or 
			chosen one, the Son of the living God.  That's a pretty 
			emphatic declaration and it was obviously the answer Jesus was 
			looking for because in verses 17-19 we have recorded for us Jesus' 
			approval of Peter's declaration, "Blessed are you, Simon Barjona, 
			because flesh and blood did not reveal this to you, but My Father 
			who is in heaven. 18 "I also say to you that you are Peter, and upon 
			this rock I will build My church; and the gates of Hades will not 
			overpower it. 19 "I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; 
			and whatever you bind on earth shall have been bound in heaven, and 
			whatever you loose on earth shall have been loosed in heaven." (NASU). 
			
			
			 
			
			Now within this account, there is a lot of 
			information we can use in order to help us lay the ground work for 
			properly understanding the gospel truth about the church Jesus 
			promised to build.  
			
			
			Jesus said, I will build my church.  Three points we need to 
			observe which are significant to understanding the gospel truth 
			about the church is that Jesus said, 
			
			 
			
			"I will build"
			
				
				Jesus says He will build this church.  No 
				mere man is in view here at all.  The church that is being 
				built is the product of divine construction through and through.  
				John 1:1 says that in the beginning was the word and the word 
				was with God and the word was God.  In verse 14 of the same 
				context, we learn that the word which was God became flesh and 
				dwelt among men on earth.  Jesus Christ, who was also known 
				as Emmanuel was literally God with us.   In Acts 20:28 
				we read these words of Paul as recorded by Luke, "Take heed 
				therefore unto yourselves, and to all the flock, over the which 
				the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed the church of 
				God, which HE [God] hath purchased with his own 
				blood."  We all know that Jesus was the one who 
				shed His blood on the cross at Calvary.  Paul said God 
				purchased the church with His own blood.  Jesus was truly 
				Emmanuel meaning God with us.  The church Jesus said He was 
				going to build was built and purchased by God, the Son of God in the Flesh.  
 
				
				God said He was going to build His church.  
				No mere man can improve on it.  No mere man can take away 
				from it.  It would be the epitome of gross presumption to 
				even think any mortal man would dare alter the design of the 
				church that God built.  
			
			
			"My church"
			
				
				The church Jesus promised to build would be His 
				own possession.  It belongs to Him and we saw in Acts 20:28 
				that the purchase price for it was His own blood.  
				Ephesians 5:25 reads, "Husbands, love your wives, even as 
				Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it."  
				The church Jesus promised to build literally cost Him His life.  
				Jesus Christ, the Son of God purchased the church He promised to 
				build with His life.  The purchase price for it was His 
				life blood.   It therefore indeed belongs to Him.  
			
			
			"church"  
			
				
				This is an English word that was used to 
				translate the Greek word Ekklesia.  This Greek word carries two 
				meanings depending on the context in which it is used.  And 
				this is so important in our understanding of the church we read 
				of in the gospel.  The literal meaning of this word is 'the 
				called'.   If we were to organize a birthday party and 
				invite several of our friends to it the people who show up for 
				the party would be the Ekklesia.  An Ekklesia is an 
				assembly of people who were called together for a purpose.   
				 
				
				This word is used in the new testament in 
				reference to a mob of people who were upset because Paul 
				preached against the pagan god Diana of the Ephesians.   
				This account is found in Acts 19.  In verse 32 we read, "Some 
				therefore cried one thing, and some another: for the assembly 
				[Ekklesia] was confused; and the more part knew not 
				wherefore they were come together."  The word 
				'assembly' in this verse in the original language is 'Ekklesia' 
				which is the exact same word Jesus used for 'church'.  This 
				is by no means an isolated instance.  The word Ekklesia in 
				the original language is found in Acts 19:39, "But if ye 
				inquire any thing concerning other matters, it shall be 
				determined in a lawful assembly [Ekklesia] ."  
				And then again in Acts 19:41 which reads, "And when he had 
				thus spoken, he dismissed the assembly [Ekklesia]."  
				This was a mob of people who were intent on killing someone over 
				the preaching of the truth.  That wasn't a church as we 
				know it by any means.  The translators didn't translate 
				this word as church in these instances because the context did 
				not warrant it.  It would have been an incorrect 
				translation to refer to this Ekklesia as a church.  It 
				wasn't a church, it was an assembly of angry people so the 
				translators used the word assembly instead of church. 
				
				
				 
				
				Other uses of the word Ekklesia in the original 
				language refer to individual assemblies of Christians in local 
				areas.  One example of this is found in Romans 16:16 which 
				reads "Salute one another with an holy kiss. The churches of 
				Christ salute you."  Paul referred to local assemblies 
				when he addressed a letter to the churches of Galatia in 
				Galatians 1:2.  John recorded Jesus addressing the churches 
				of Asia in Revelation 1:4.  Paul similarly referenced the 
				churches of Asia in 1 Corinthians 16:19.  All of these were 
				assemblies of Christians.  So we learn from this that a 
				local assembly of Christians is referred to as Ekklesia in the 
				original language.   The translators used the English 
				word "church" when the assembly was in reference to Christians.  
				
				 
				
				The other use of this word is used like the one 
				we saw in Matthew 16:18 in our introductory text to represent 
				the church or Ekklesia that Jesus promised to build which was 
				the one universal worldwide assembly or collection of followers.  
				When Jesus promised to build His church, He was saying He was 
				going to build His assembly of followers.  
				 
				
				What we need to take from this is that never in 
				the new testament is the word Ekklesia ever used for anything 
				other than an assembly or group of people.  It is never 
				used in reference to a temple, or a synagogue or any other 
				place, physical building or structure of any kind.  It is 
				always used in reference to a collection of people assembled for 
				some specific purpose.  
			
			
			Now let's go back to Matthew 16:19 and we'll look at 
			something else Jesus said in response to Peter's declaration of 
			Jesus as the Son of the living God...  Matthew 16:19, "And I 
			will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven".  
			Jesus makes a reference here to a kingdom.  Jesus had just 
			promised to build His assembly of followers and now in the same 
			breath He tells Peter He's going to give Him what he needs to unlock 
			the doors or open the entrance to a kingdom.  Obviously there 
			is a direct connection between the assembly of followers that Jesus 
			promised to build and the kingdom Jesus was going to open the 
			entrance to.  This is not the first time Jesus ever mentioned a 
			kingdom and it certainly is not the last.  We don't have near 
			enough time to look at them all, but we are going to mention a few 
			key things that will positively establish just what the connection 
			there is between the assembly of followers Jesus promised to build 
			and the kingdom He was going to grant access to.  
			
			In Luke 17:20-21, read, "And when he was demanded of the 
			Pharisees, when the kingdom of God should come, he answered them and 
			said, The kingdom of God cometh not with observation:
			21 Neither shall they say, Lo here! or, lo there! for, behold, the 
			kingdom of God is within you."
			 
			
			Jesus told them His kingdom was not something you 
			could see coming.  You can see an earthly kingdom such as the 
			Roman Empire or the Israelite nation.  You could see Rome and 
			you could see Jerusalem which was where these earthly kingdoms were 
			ruled from.  Jesus told the Pharisees that the kingdom of God 
			was not like the earthly kingdoms they were familiar with.  
			This kingdom of God is something different.  Then He went on to 
			say this kingdom resided "within you".   This kingdom 
			Jesus was preaching was not a physical kingdom with an earthly 
			headquarters at all.  With it residing within the hearts of the 
			people, it was spiritual in nature.  
			 
			
			Jesus promised to build His church, His one assembly 
			of followers.  The church was intended to be Jesus Christ's 
			assembly of saved souls from the beginning.  This church was 
			going to be a non physical collection of followers who were called 
			together.   The assembly of followers Jesus promised to 
			build is the kingdom He said He was going to grant access to.  
			In other words, Jesus told Peter and the others in Matthew 16:18, 
			"I'm going to build my assembly of believers and I'm going to give 
			you the way to unlock or reveal the entrance to it for everyone.  
			Both the church and the kingdom are non physical assemblies or 
			collections of people.  
			 
			
			So what we see from Matthew 16:18-19 so far is that 
			Jesus promised to build His assembly or calling of people.  It 
			would be His assembly and He only promised to build one.  This 
			assembly would be a kingdom made entirely up of people and the 
			Apostles were going to open the doors to it for everyone.  We 
			see now that the church and the kingdom are the same thing referred 
			to by different terms.  There are other terms used in scripture 
			in reference to this assembly or kingdom of Christ followers.  
			Before we go in to a few of those, let's consider that each one of 
			these terms is used in a descriptive sense.  These different 
			terms are used to illustrate key aspects of this assembly of Christ 
			followers in order to help us better understand its nature. 
			
			 
			
			This assembly of Christ followers is a kingdom.  
			Jesus is the king of His kingdom.  In Ephesians 1:20-23 we 
			read, "Which he [meaning God] wrought in Christ, when he 
			raised him from the dead, and set him at his own right hand in the 
			heavenly places,
			21 Far above all principality, and power, and might, and 
			dominion, and every name that is named, not only in this world, but 
			also in that which is to come:  [Jesus is the king reigning 
			over His kingdom from heaven]
			22 And hath put all things under his feet, and gave him to 
			be the head over all things to the church,
			23 Which is his body, the fulness of him that filleth all 
			in all.
			 
			
			Here's another one of those words used as a 
			descriptive term for the assembly of Christ followers.  The 
			church is also the body of Christ.  We see this repeated in 
			Ephesians 5:23 and then in Colossians 1:18 which reads, "And he 
			is the head of the body, the church: who is the beginning, the 
			firstborn from the dead; that in all things he might have the 
			preeminence."  Jesus is in charge.  He is the king 
			over all things.   
			 
			
			The term Ekklesia or church as it is translated in 
			English is descriptive of a people who are called out.  
			The term Kingdom is descriptive of a realm of people with a king who 
			rules over them.    
			
			The term body is a descriptive of unity of the whole 
			with different parts having different functions but all of the same 
			entity.  A body has fingers, toes, arms, legs, etc, etc,  
			One body, with many parts serving different functions for one 
			purpose.  A complete and functional body also has a head which 
			directs the toes, arms, legs, feet etc, etc.   
			 
			
			In Eph 1:22 we saw that Jesus is indeed the head over 
			the body.  He rules over it.  He directs it and the body 
			obeys and follows His lead.  Jesus is the king over His kingdom 
			and the head over His body.  We have two different descriptive 
			terms in reference to the same thing.  Paul described the 
			concept in detail of the many functional parts of the body of Christ 
			in 1 Corinthians 12:12-27.  I would encourage everyone to look 
			that up and study that in its entirety.  Verse 12 starts this 
			wonderful illustration with  "For as the body is one, and 
			hath many members, and all the members of that one body, being many, 
			are one body: so also is Christ." Paul goes on to describe the 
			different essential functions of the human body and comparing those 
			with the various activities of those within the body of Christ.   
			In verse 27, Paul concluded this illustration of the body of Christ 
			with "Now ye are the body of Christ, and members in particular."  
			In Colossians 2:17, Paul wrote, "...the body is of Christ."
 
			
			So the church of the gospel, the church Jesus 
			promised to build in Matthew 16:18 is the kingdom of Christ, the 
			body of Christ, and the called out assembly of Christians who follow 
			Christ.  It is not a physical thing like a building or a thing.  
			It is a people who make up the spiritual kingdom and the spiritual 
			body of followers of Christ.  
			
			The church, the kingdom and the body of Christ are the same thing 
			and is populated by Christians.  All Christians are in the 
			church, the kingdom and the body of Christ.  If you are a 
			Christian, you are in the church. If you are a Christian you are in 
			the body of Christ.  And if you are a Christian, you are in the 
			kingdom.   So when we see references in the word of God to 
			any of these three things, we can be confident that it is applicable 
			to Christians only.  
			 
			
			Jesus Christ is intimately associated with His 
			church.  he built it and He owns it, Matthew 16:18.  He 
			heads or rules over it, Colossians 1:18, "And he is the head of 
			the body, the church: who is the beginning, the firstborn from the 
			dead; that in all things he might have the preeminence." 
			
			 
			
			And then in Ephesians 5:23, "For the husband is 
			the head of the wife, even as Christ is the head of the church: and 
			he is the saviour of the body."  Jesus is the savior of the 
			body which means He is also the savior of the kingdom and the 
			church.  
			 
			
			We saw earlier in Acts 20:28 that Jesus purchased the 
			church with His own blood.  Jesus gave Himself for the church, 
			Ephesians 5:25-27, "Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ 
			also loved the church, and gave himself for it; 26 That he might 
			sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word,
			27 That he might present it to himself a glorious church, not having 
			spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing; but that it should be holy and 
			without blemish."  So we see that the church/body of 
			Christ, kingdom of Christ came at a great personal cost to Jesus.  
			Indeed, He gave His life as a sacrifice for it, for all Christians 
			everywhere.  
			 
			
			And then in Ephesians 4:4-6, we read, "There is 
			one body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your 
			calling; 5 One Lord, one faith, one baptism, 6 One God and Father of 
			all, who is above all, and through all, and in you all."   
			There is only one body, kingdom and church of Christ.  
			
			 
			
			Jesus built one church.  Jesus owns one church.  
			Jesus bled for one church.  Jesus died for one church.  
			Jesus reigns over His kingdom which is the church; the one body of 
			Christ.  Jesus is the savior of one church.  In the Gospel 
			there was only one church in reference to the universal world wide 
			body of Christians.  When we open the pages of the Bible, we 
			see that there was only one body or kingdom or church of Christ.   
			The church of Christ was united under one hope.  The church of 
			Christ followed one Lord.  The church of Christ practiced one 
			unified faith.  The church of Christ administered only one 
			baptism.  This one church was built, bought, possessed, bled 
			for, died for, ruled, loved and saved by Jesus Christ.  In Acts 
			2:47 we learn that after baptism, one is added to this church by God 
			Himself...   Acts 2:47, "Praising God, and having 
			favour with all the people. And the Lord added to the church daily 
			such as should be saved."
 
			
			Now since Jesus only built, bought, possessed, bled 
			for, died for, ruled, loved, adds to and saves one church, then that 
			better be the one we are members of.  That church must be the 
			one we are part of and no other.  
			 
			
			How do we make sure in this world of religious 
			division we live in today that God added us to the church He built, 
			bought, possessed, bled for, died for, ruled, loved, adds to and 
			saves?  The answer to that question is found in 1 Thessalonians 
			2:14 which reads, "For you, brethren, became imitators of the 
			churches of God which are in Judea in Christ Jesus."   
			The Christians in Thessalonica patterned their faith after the 
			churches in Judea which were in Christ.   They used the 
			churches in Judea as their pattern and they did what those churches 
			did.  
			 
			
			So let's apply what they did then to what we do 
			today.  If it worked for them, why would it not work for us 
			today?  If we study the individual churches in Christ that we 
			read of in the new testament and we do what they did to become 
			Christians would we not be added to the one church by the Lord like 
			they were?  Of course we would.  
			 
			
			After we are added to the church and we worship how 
			they worshipped and we obey God's will like they did and we live 
			faithfully like they did and we die in Christ like they did, would 
			we not be today what they were then?  Of course we would.   
			There were faithful Christians living in the first century when the 
			gospel was given.  The Bible records the lives of Christians 
			that we can study and learn about.  These Christians were saved 
			and added to the church Jesus built, bought, possessed, bled for, 
			died for, ruled, loved, adds to and saves.  Just like the 
			Christians in Thessalonica did with the churches in Judea; if we 
			will apply that to ourselves and do the same things; if we believe 
			what the faithful first century Christians in the gospel age 
			believed and do what they did, and are saved like they were and if 
			we live faithfully like they lived and worship how they worshipped, 
			adding nothing to nor taking anything away from what they did, we 
			will be today, just what they were then.  Christians, added to 
			the one church that Jesus built, bought, possessed, bled for, died 
			for, ruled, loved, adds to and saves.  
			 
			
			In Matthew 16:18 Jesus said upon this rock I will 
			build my church.  The Lord's church was built on rock. It's 
			Immovable, Indestructible, unconquerable even by death.  We 
			today can be added to that church if we will simply do today what 
			they did then.