In his latest book, An Eyewitness Remembers the Century of the Holy Spirit, Pentecostal-Charismatic leader/historian, Dr. Vinson Synan, tells of his involvement in the 1990s with certain pastors and Christian leaders who were talking about restoring the office of the apostle and apostolic church order. It was during this time that he received an invitation to join the newly formed Int’l Coalition of Apostles, founded by C. Peter Wagner. New apostles could join this association and maintain their membership by paying a monthly fee of $69.00 per month. Having deep concerns about the direction of the movement, Synan wrote a letter declining the invitation and wryly added, “Besides, at $69.00 per month I cannot afford to be an apostle.”
In this book, Synan also expresses concern for what he calls "outlandish" claims that have been made, such as the one that apostolic government is now in the Church for the first time in 1800 years. Not wanting to condemn the movement outright because he considers many of the leaders to be good and sincere people, he, nonetheless, was so concerned that he convinced his own denomination, the Int'l Pentecostal Holiness Church, not to adopt the contemporary model of apostolic church order.
I agree with Synan that there are good and sincere people in the contemporary apostolic movement. That, however, is not the issue for there are good and sincere people to be found in all denominations and religious persuasions. Our concern must be for truth and we are commanded in Scripture to test the spirits, whether they are of God; because many false prophets have gone out into the world (I Jn. 4:1). We must be at least as diligent, in this regard, as the believers in Ephesus who were commended by Jesus because, You have tested those who say they are apostles and are not, and have found them liars.
My concern is that the teachings that are central to this movement cannot be collaborated with Scripture. Delineated below are 5 reasons that I have not aligned myself with the contemporary apostolic movement. The 5 reasons are 5 misconceptions about apostles and apostolic ministry that are promoted in the movement today. In the final paragraph I offer my view of what it means to be “apostolic.”
In this book, Synan also expresses concern for what he calls "outlandish" claims that have been made, such as the one that apostolic government is now in the Church for the first time in 1800 years. Not wanting to condemn the movement outright because he considers many of the leaders to be good and sincere people, he, nonetheless, was so concerned that he convinced his own denomination, the Int'l Pentecostal Holiness Church, not to adopt the contemporary model of apostolic church order.
I agree with Synan that there are good and sincere people in the contemporary apostolic movement. That, however, is not the issue for there are good and sincere people to be found in all denominations and religious persuasions. Our concern must be for truth and we are commanded in Scripture to test the spirits, whether they are of God; because many false prophets have gone out into the world (I Jn. 4:1). We must be at least as diligent, in this regard, as the believers in Ephesus who were commended by Jesus because, You have tested those who say they are apostles and are not, and have found them liars.
My concern is that the teachings that are central to this movement cannot be collaborated with Scripture. Delineated below are 5 reasons that I have not aligned myself with the contemporary apostolic movement. The 5 reasons are 5 misconceptions about apostles and apostolic ministry that are promoted in the movement today. In the final paragraph I offer my view of what it means to be “apostolic.”
Misconception #1
God is Restoring Apostolic Government to the Church
No such order or government is either delineated or prescribed in the
New Testament. The New Testament writers, in fact, show very little concern for
church offices and organizational structure. This is why New Testament
specialist, Dr. Gordon Fee, says that the New Testament is full of surprises,
“but none is so surprising as its generally relaxed attitude toward church
structures and leadership.” He and others point out that, excepting Phil. 1:1,
Paul never addresses himself to a leader or group of leaders in any of his
letters to the churches (Fee, 120). Even in Corinth where there are so many
problems, Paul appeals to the entire congregation rather than to a specific
leader.
John Wesley, who as an Anglican minister initially held to the
episcopal form of church government, found his views refined in the fires of
the 18th century Methodist revival, which he spearheaded. Through
his diligent study of the New Testament and after observing the Holy Spirit
raise up powerful ministries from the ranks of the common people outside the
Anglican Church hierarchy, he declared that ”neither Christ nor his apostles
prescribed any form of church government” (Wesleyan
Theological Journal, 116). In his classic work, The Primitive Church, Professor Burnett Streeter asserts,
Whatever else is
disputable, there is, I submit, one result from which there is no escape. In
the Primitive Church there was no single system of church order laid down by
the Apostles. During the first hundred years of Christianity, the Church was an
organism alive and growing—changing its organization to meet changing needs.
Uniformity was a later development (Streeter, 267-68).
Streeter is
correct as is borne out by the fact that the New Testament itself bears witness
to a variety of church forms and order. The order of the church in Jerusalem is
different from the order of the church in Antioch. The order of the church in
Corinth is different from either Jerusalem or Antioch, and the order of the
churches of the Pastoral Epistles are different still. Commenting on the
diverse forms of order and ministry in the New Testament, Michael Harper says
it only makes sense, “If you view them as the ad hoc promptings of the Holy Spirit amidst the most taxing
circumstances.” David Scholer, late professor of New Testament at Fuller
Theological Seminary, wrote,
The patterns of
authority in the early church are varied and fluid. There are no fixed
patterns, terms or offices. No single church structure and/or pattern of
authority or office is validated by the New Testament. The patterns of
authority in the early church are determined and described primarily by the
functions they served within the church (Scholer,
28).
Why does the New
Testament reflect such diversity in outward form and order? The answer seems
clear. The New Testament writers are obviously more concerned with the inward life
of the Church than with the outward form through which that life is expressed.
After all, Jesus came to bring us life, not a particular
ecclesiastical system (John 10:10).
We might also recall the words of the angel to the New Testament apostles when,
in Acts 5:20, he freed them from jail and instructed them to, Go, stand in the temple and speak to the people
all the words of this life.
If life rather
than order was the emphasis of the New Testament Church, should it not be the
emphasis of the Church today? Should not the churches today, therefore, be
seeking a revival of New Testament life rather than an elusive apostolic order
that cannot be found in Scripture? And if, in the first century, this life of
the Spirit was expressed through a variety of outward forms, should we not
expect it to be expressed through a variety of forms today?
The insistence
on a particular church order may, in fact, be the major hindrance to the life
of God being expressed through genuine revival in the Church today. Professor
James L. Ash, Jr. says that virtually all historians of early Christianity
agree that the institutionalization of early Christianity (the implementation
of a rigid order) was accompanied by the loss of Spiritual gifts and power.
Both the New Testament and church history indicate
that the key for the church in the 21st century will not be found in
an outward order or form, but in an inner attitude of faith in Christ and an
openness to the wind of the Spirit that blows, not where He must, but where He
wills. Commenting on the fact that early Christianity was not tied to a
particular outward form for its expression, Professor Streeter says:
It is permissible to
hint that the first Christians achieved what they did because the spirit with
which they were inspired was one favorable to experiment. In this—and perhaps
in some other respects—it may be that the line of advance for the Church of
today is not to imitate the forms, but to recapture the Spirit of the Primitive
Church (Streeter, 267-68).
Misconception #2
Apostles
are to Govern the Church.
According to Matt.
20:25-26, apostles are not governors of God’s people, but servants of God’s
people. Jesus, in this passage, used the word diakonos to describe the primary characteristic of leaders in His
kingdom; a word which referred to a household servant and carried no
connotations of status or authority. Jesus presented this new and radical model
of leadership to the Twelve when they were vying for, what they thought would
be, positions of authority in the kingdom. Jesus clearly explained that in His
kingdom, leadership would be characterized, not by governing, but by serving—by
diakonoi. John G. Lake, a modern
apostle to South Africa, said,
The modern conception of an apostle is
usually that he is a big church boss, but that was not the conception Jesus
left. An apostle was not to be a big boss; he was to be like his Lord--a
servant of all.
Interestingly, the word “office,” with its
inherent connotations of permanence and authority, is never used in the Greek New
Testament. Although 1 Tim. 3:1 has the English word "office," it is not in the Greek and has
been added by the translators. In the New Testament, the apostle’s authority
was not derived from an “office,” but was directly related to his/her
commission. For example, in his letters to the churches he founded, Paul speaks
with authority, albeit an authority that appeals rather than commands. But when
he visits the church in Jerusalem and when he writes to churches he has not founded
or visited, such as his letter to the church at Rome, there are no such
expressions of authority. This shows that Paul’s authority was relational and
functional rather than official, and related to his commission. He even
admitted, in 1 Cor. 9:2, that there were those to whom he was not an apostle. If I am not an apostle to others, yet
doubtless I am to you.
In his book mentioned above, Vinson Synan tells how, from the beginning, his greatest concern was the authority that the modern apostles
claim for themselves. He writes,
From the outset, I was concerned about any
movement that claims to restore apostolic offices that exercise ultimate and
unchecked authority in churches. The potential for abuse is enormous.
Throughout church history, attempts to restore apostle as an office in the
church have often ended up in heresy and caused incredible pain (Synan, 184).
Synan is absolutely right. The emphasis in the New Testament is not
about authority—even for apostles—but service. This is why the Catholic
reformer and expert in New Testament Greek, Hans Kung, says,
In the New Testament,
not only is the word “hierarchy” consistently and deliberately avoided, but so
too are all secular words for ‘office’ in connection with church functions, as
they express a relationship of power. Instead of this, an all-encompassing
term, diakonia, service (really ‘serving at table’), is used, which can
nowhere evoke associations with any authority, control or position of dignity
and power. (Kung, 321-22).
The idea that an apostle has some sort of inherent, boundless authority
does not come from the New Testament. Henry Nouwen got it right when, in his
little book, In the Name of Jesus, he
wrote, “Much Christian leadership is
exercised by people who do not know how to develop healthy, intimate
relationships and have opted for power and control instead.” Those who
are preoccupied with governing, rather than serving, are not apostles of
Christ.
Misconception #3
“Apostle”
is a Title to be Worn in Front of One’s Name
At no place in the
New Testament is “apostle” placed in front of someone’s name as a title.
Although Paul, at times, identified himself as an apostle in the introductory
part of his letters, in normal conversation he was never known as “Apostle
Paul.” Paul refers to himself numerous times in his letters and always by his
name, “Paul.” When he refers to other apostles, such as Peter, James or John,
he does so by merely mentioning their name, and never with any title in front.
Paul’s favorite word for describing himself and his ministry is diakonos, a word that referred to a
servant and had no associations of authority, dignity, or honor.
In Acts, Luke
mentions Paul by name more than 120 times and not once does he say “Apostle
Paul,” but merely “Paul.” In 2 Peter 3:14, Peter refers to our beloved brother Paul. In Rev. 1:9, John the apostle, in his
letter to the churches, refers to himself as your brother and companion in tribulation.
This obvious
avoidance of titles is understandable in light of the words of Jesus in Matt.
23:6-12 where He warned his disciples about adopting titles that would set
themselves apart from other believers.
But you are not to be
called “Rabbi,” for you have only one Master and you are all brothers. And do
not call anyone on earth “father,” for you have one Father, and He is in
heaven. Nor are you to be called “teacher,” for you have one Teacher, the
Christ.
A title may be
appropriate if it serves some practical purpose such as helping those in an
organization understand a leader’s role and responsibility within that
organization; but the handing out and the adopting of honorific titles that
serve no purpose except to give status and prestige flies in the face of the
spirit of the New Testament and the words of Jesus Himself.
Misconception
#4
A Second Apostolic Age Began in
2001
This claim is made on a prominent apostolic website. The Bible,
however, says nothing about a Second Apostolic Age or, for that matter, a First
Apostolic Age. As I point out in the “Conclusion” below, the word “apostolic” is
not even found in the Bible. Although the New Testament speaks of the “age to
come,” this new era is inaugurated by the coming of Christ, not by an elite
company of apostles.
This sort of grandiose pronouncement is disturbingly similar to claims
of past individuals and movements and is indicative of an unhealthy elitism. Throughout
church history, there have been individuals who declared the dawning of new
eras and dispensations, but none proved to be true. I am reminded, in particular,
of a 16th century apostolic movement in Europe that had many similarities
with the modern movement, including the claim that it represented the dawning
of a new age.
During the Reformation, particularly the period of 1517-1537, individuals
began to arise proclaiming themselves to be special end-time apostles and
prophets endowed by God with miraculous power to usher in His kingdom upon the
earth. Dissatisfied with the supposed limited reforms of major reformers such
as Martin Luther and Ulrich Zwingli, they launched forth with misguided zeal to
bring about the restoration of their vision of New Testament Apostolic Christianity.
One of the most prominent of these “apostles” was Melchoir Hoffman, a
powerful preacher and teacher who gained a large following. His status was
further enhanced when a prophetess announced a vision she had seen in which many swan were swimming in a lake, with one large, beautiful white swan that stood out from all the
rest. She said it was revealed to her that the large, beautiful swan
represented Hoffman and that he was the fulfillment of Malachi 4:5 where God said,
Behold I will send you Elijah the prophet
before the great and dreadful day of the Lord.
Emboldened by such prophecies, Hoffman began ordaining others to the
apostolic office, including Obe Philips, and commissioned them to ordain others
as well to the apostolic office. Later, after this movement disintegrated with much
agony, suffering, and death, Philips wrote a very moving account in which he
clearly delineated how pride and arrogance opened himself and others to be
deceived by the sensational prophecies that came forth predicting great success
and world-wide dominion for them and their movement.
In the meantime, Hoffman moved to the city of Strassburg based on
prophecies that said he would be imprisoned for preaching in that city. The
prophecies also said that after six months he would be released and would
depart Srassburg with 144,000 true apostles endowed with such miraculous power
that no one would be able to resist them, and that their ministry would spread
over the whole earth and usher in a new age of the kingdom.
The first part of the prophecy was fulfilled when Hoffman was arrested
and imprisoned for preaching in Strassburg. However, the second part of the
prophecies never came to pass and he died in prison a very disillusioned man. In
his account of these events, Philips said, “Everything that he so boldly
professed from the prophets and prophetesses, he, in the end, found it all
falsehood and deception” (Philips, 221).
In spite of Hoffman’s experience, another
group of apostles set off another tangent--seeking to set up the New Jerusalem
in the city of Munster (Germany). Spurred on by dreams, visions, and
prophecies, these apostles led a group of armed men and took the Catholic city
of Munster by force. They renamed it the New Jerusalem and declared that from here
the kingdom of God would spread over the whole earth.
Their time in the New Jerusalem, however, was
short lived for the Catholics quickly regrouped, overpowered the apostles and
their followers, and regained control of the city. They wasted no time
executing the apostles (of which two claimed to be Enoch and Elijah) and slaughtering
the people who had followed them. Philips tells of walking in the midst of
these friends and acquaintances, whose bodies lay scattered and dismembered on
the hillside. He wrote, “See, dear friends, how we have here the beginning and
end of both Elijah and Enoch with their commissions, visions, prophecies,
dreams, and revelations.”
In his very moving account of this 16th
century apostolic movement, Philips bares his heart and tells how he and others
were so distressed and disillusioned at the annihilation of their utopian
dreams, and at the suffering and deaths of their companions. He obviously took
personal responsibility for the disaster, and wrote,
And
when I still think of the resigned suffering which occurred among the brethren my
soul is troubled and terrified before it. At the time I took leave of these
brethren I had warned Menno and Dietrich and declared my [apostolic] commission
unlawful and that I was therein deceived. I wanted to free my soul in
confession of this before God, acknowledging my guilt and deception. I thank
the blessed, gracious, and merciful God with all His mercy, who opened my eyes,
humbled my soul, transformed my heart, captured my spirit and my downcast mind
and soul, and who gave me to know my sins. I shall be silent about all the
false commissions, prophecies, visions, dreams, revelations, and unspeakable
spiritual pride which immediately from the first hour stole in among the
brethren (Philips, 224).
It has been said that “one thing we learn from history is that we do
not learn from history,” because we keep repeating the same mistakes. This 16th century prophetic movement highlights the need to
"test the spirits" and to judge prophetic utterances according to the
Scriptures. For the most part, these were sincere, seeking people who suffered
much pain, grief and even death because they neglected this Biblical
admonition. It also highlights the need to nurture the attitude of a diakonos (servant) and to avoid the
temptation to think too highly of ourselves when God chooses to bless us and
use us. May we learn from their example and not repeat their mistakes.
Misconception #5
Apostles
(along with prophets) are the Foundation of the Church
This may be the most
serious misconception and is based on a faulty reading of Eph. 2:20 where Paul
tells the Ephesian believers that they are being
built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets . . .. In the Greek,
“apostles and prophets” is in the genitive case, the case which shows
possession. It is like saying “the car of John Doe.” Although the car and John
Doe are related, it does not follow that the car is John Doe or that John Doe
is the car.
In the same way, it
does not follow that the foundation is identical with the apostles and prophets
or that the apostles and prophets are identical with the foundation. Paul is
actually referring to the foundation which is laid by the apostles and prophets
as is borne out in his 1st letter to the Corinthian Church; a church that he,
as an apostle, had founded. In my article, “The Church’s One Foundation,” I
show why Paul, in this passage, is most likely referring to the Old and New
Testaments and their testimony of Jesus Christ (http://www.eddiehyatt.com/article12.html).
In 1 Cor. 3:10-11,
Paul refers to his founding of the church at Corinth and says, I have laid the foundation and another
builds on it. What foundation did Paul lay for the church in Corinth? It
was certainly not himself, for he says in vs. 11, For no other foundation can anyone lay than that which is laid which is
Jesus Christ. The foundation of Paul the apostle in Corinth was Jesus
Christ.
This coincides with Jesus’
response to Peter’s revelation of Him as the
Christ, the Son of the Living God in Matt. 16:13-18. The Greek word for
Peter is petros and, with a play on
words, Matthew has Jesus saying to Peter, You
are petros (a small rock or pebble),
and on this petra (a large massive stone) I will build my Church. The foundation on which Jesus said he
would build His Church was not a little rock like Peter, but the massive
foundation stone which is the revelation of who He is, i.e., Himself.
There is an old hymn entitled
“The Church’s One Foundation” The first stanza begins, “The Church’s one
foundation is Jesus Christ her Lord . . ..” Those who would claim a foundation
for the Church other than Jesus Christ are in serious error.
Conclusion:
Finding
the True Meaning of “Apostolic”
The word “apostolic,”
meaning “of” or “like” the apostles, is not found in the Bible. No one in the
New Testament described their ministry as “apostolic.” None of the apostles set
themselves up as examples and encouraged the people to be like them. In fact,
it was the very opposite. When Peter and John ministered healing to the cripple
man in Acts 3 and a crowd gathered looking upon Peter and John in amazement and
awe, Peter answered, Why look so intently
at us as though by our own power or godliness we had made this man walk? He
then proceeded to point the people’s attention away from themselves to Christ. This
is typical of the New Testament, which is Christ-centered from beginning to
end.
The disciples of
the Lord were first called Christians by unbelievers in Antioch (Acts 11:26) because
their lives and their message were so centered on Christ. “Christian,” meaning “of”
or “like” Christ seemed an appropriate designation for those earliest followers
of Jesus. Yes, Paul in I Corinthians 11:1, said Imitate me, just as I also imitate Christ; but we must remember
that Paul did not have New Testaments, books, or DVDs to leave with people in
the places where he preached. He could only leave them a memory of how he had
conducted himself in their midst. The example he left for them was that he was
a follower, or imitator, of Christ. To the Colossians, who had lost their focus
on Christ and were being led astray by the pursuit of esoteric experiences and
knowledge, Paul calls them back to a focus on Christ, reminding them that they
are complete in Christ and that in Him are
hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge (Colossians 2:3, 9-10). This
centrality of Christ was also highlighted in the vision John saw of Jesus
standing in the midst of seven golden lampstands, which represented the
churches, declaring, I am the First and
the Last. I am He who lives, and was dead, and behold I am alive forevermore.
Amen. And I have the keys of death and hell. (Revelation 1:17-18).
I am convinced
that what the Church needs in the 21st century is not an “Apostolic Reformation” but a “Jesus Revolution.” We must cease drawing attention to
ourselves and return to the Christocentric mission and message of the New
Testament Church. This is what C. S. Lewis was referring to when he said,
The Church exists
for nothing else but to draw men to Christ, to make them little christs. If
they are not doing that, all the cathedrals, clergy, missions, sermons, even
the Bible itself, are simply a waste of time” (Lewis, 167).
As we commit
ourselves anew to the mission and message of the New Testament that is centered
in Jesus Christ, we will find His Holy Spirit empowering us in ways we never dreamed;
for the Holy Spirit is here to lift up Jesus (John 16:13). We will find that
church is not defined by a particular structure or order, but by the words of
Jesus Himself who, in Matthew 18:20, said, For
where two or three are gathered together in My name, I am there in the midst of
them. This gathering might be in a cathedral, but it might be in a home, a
coffee shop, or an open field. What determines its validity as a church is not
the kind of order they practice or the kind of building in which they meet, but
the fact that they have been led together by the Holy Spirit to worship and
honor the name of Christ. As the Church in the 21st century lives
out this reality, only then will she be like those apostles of old and only
then will she truly be “apostolic.”
Works Cited
Fee, Gordon D. Gospel and Spirit: Issues in New Testament
Hermeneutics. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1991.
Harper, Michael. Let My People Grow: Ministry and Leadership
in the Church. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1977.
Kung, Hans. Christianity: Essence, History, and Future.
New York: Continuum, 1996.
Lewis, C. S. Mere Christianity. Glasgow,
England: Fount Paperbacks, 1977.
Philips, Obe. “A Confession,” Spiritual and Anabaptist Writers, George H. Williams, Ed. (London:
SCM Press, 1957), 206-225.
Scholer, David. “Patterns of Authority in the Early
Church.” Vol. 1. Servant Leadership:
Authority and Governance in the Evangelical Covenant Church. n.p.: Covenant
Publ., 1993.
Streeter, B. H. The
Primitive Church. New York: MacMillan, 1929.
Synan, Vinson. An Eyewitness Remembers
the Century of the Holy Spirit. Grand Rapids, Chosen, 2010.
Wesleyan
Theological Journal, Spring-Fall,
1988.
Dear Sir,
ReplyDeleteI have pasted this article in teh blog section of www.preachingpeter.com
If this is not acceptable kindly let me know by emailing me at preachingpeter@gmail.com
Thanks and regards,
Peter
Dear Eddie,
ReplyDeleteOnce again you write an article that make me question if you really hear from the Holy Spirit or not.
Although I don't belong to an Apostolic Movement and don't plan to,
your theology is very questionable from my point of view as a Pentecostal believer>
Why not build up the body of Christ instead of divide it?
However, I am your brother and co laborer in the Gospel,
Happy new Year!!
Joe Zeyak ( Jim Hamiltons friend)
"your theology is very questionable from my point of view as a Pentecostal believer"
ReplyDeleteCare to elaborate? This seems to be a blanket statement without any support...