Sunday, we finish our series on the church. I hope you have found this study informative and helpful in understanding why we, as a church of Jesus, organize and function the way we do. We have examined Scripture’s teaching on the church’s nature, purpose, governance, offices, and ordinances. As we examined the church’s structure and the authority of the congregation, we made reference to Christ giving the "keys of the kingdom" to the local gathered body (Matt. 16:13-20; Matt. 18:15-20). We also showed that Christ has given authority and responsibility to the congregation to protect its doctrine and membership. In those passages (Along with Paul’s application in 1 Corinthians 5) we showed the congregation’s authority regarding what has historically been called church discipline. When many hear that term, they immediately think of formal proceedings to remove someone from church membership, but that is only a small (and usually rare) part of true "church discipline," which is happening all the time between believers. I prefer the term biblical accountability, most of which happens in private between Christians. The commands of Christ are clear in Matthew 18, however "how" and "when" to exercise this accountability are questions often left unanswered. We cannot ignore the clear commands of Jesus in this area, but we also cannot use Jesus’ command as a sledgehammer to break the bruised reed and harm the struggling believer. There are significant guardrails given in these commands to prevent wrong application. So, we must not only know "what" to do regarding biblical accountability, but also "how" and "when" to do it. Biblical accountability is a grace given to the body of Christ. All of us, at one time or another, need brothers and sisters to pull our hearts away from the deceitfulness of sin. None of us is immune and we need each other. This past year, the world has seen three or four high profile pastors disqualified from ministry because of unrepentant, ongoing sin. If biblical accountability had been in place around them, the devastation to those churches may have been prevented.
19 My brothers, if anyone among you wanders from the truth and someone brings him back, 20 let him know that whoever brings back a sinner from his wandering will save his soul from death and will cover a multitude of sins. (James 5:19-20)
Proverbs 12:1
I. The Practice of Church Discipline (Matt. 18:15-20)
II. The Process of Restoration (1 Co. 5:1-13; 2 Co. 2:5-8)
III. The Purpose of Church Discipline (James 5:19-20)
1 Co. 11:30-32
Rev. 2:20-22
Rev. 2:14-16
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