Most professing Christians do not realize that the central concepts and practices
associated with what we call 'church' are not rooted in the New Testament, but in patterns
established in the post-apostolic age. While there are a legion of disagreements among
serious students of church history concerning various issues and details during the period
of 50 A.D. to 325 A.D., they all speak as one voice in affirming the four undeniable
shifts that will be examined in this article. Church historians of all theological and
ecclesiastical backgrounds observe in their writings the following four shifts:
1. The church portrayed in the New Testament was a dynamic organism, a living body with
many parts. The church from around 180 A.D. onwards became an increasingly hardened
institution with a fixed and complex hierarchy.
2. The early church was marked by; the manifestation of a polyform ministry by which
edification and the meeting of needs were accomplished through the gifts of all the
brethren. The post-apostolic church moved more and more toward a uniform conception of
church offices which separated ministry from the 'laity' and limited significant ministry
to the 'clergy'.
3. The church of the first and most of the second centuries was characterized by cycles
of intense difficulty and persecution - it was a suffering body. With the advent of
Constantine the church became protected, favored and ultimately sanctioned as the state
religion by the Roman state, and thus became an institution at ease.
4. In the New Testament the church, with no small measure of vulnerability, depended on
the Holy Spirit to hold the brethren together and to lead them in ministry. Later, the
church trusted in itself as a very powerful institution, along with its many rules, rites
and offices to secure visible unity among its adherents.
These four shifts are indisputable. They did not come about in a day. They were the
result of many factors working together as time elapsed. There are many implications to
ponder in light of these significant changes that occurred. I would like to explore each
of these shifts in order to highlight certain key issues that each of us needs to face.
We claim to take Christ's revelation about the church in the New Testament seriously,
yet the reality is that too often we are more attached to the 'received order' which is
based on human traditions. What does it mean to be faithful to the New Testament's
teaching about the church? In what sense are the examples of the church life 'binding' on
us?
For instance, some assert that since the early church met primarily in homes, we are
obliged to emulate this example. I think the primary theological point of the New
Testament in this regard is that under the New Covenant there are no holy places.
Contemporary Christianity has almost no grasp of this significant point. Taking the cue
from the Old Covenant, people are still led to believe that a church building is 'the
house of God'. Believers are free to meet, anywhere in which they can foster, cultivate
and attain the goals set before them by Christ. The problem today is that many church
structures neither promote nor accomplish Christ's desires for His body. Homes are a
natural place for believers to meet, and the early church flourished well into the first
and second centuries without erecting any temple-like edifices. In places around the world
where persecution reigns, house-church movements have flourished. Someday in America, if
our religious infrastructure falls as a result of economic and political turmoil, true
believers will be forced to meet outside of traditional church buildings. But the issue
still is not what type of place believers gather, but what shape their committed life
together takes as they wrestle with the many duties and privileges flowing out of the
priesthood of all believers.
I believe that it is far more important to capture the spirit of church life as we see
it unfolded in the New Testament, than it is to try and woodenly replicate cultural
particulars of the first century. We do not live in the first century, but the concepts
and principles in the New Testament endure and will come to expression in any culture. The
four tragic shifts about to be examined will give us all plenty to reflect and act upon as
we seek to take our discipleship earnestly. Christians must take their stand and devote
their precious energies to building up the body of Christ in ways that return to the
original patterns of the New Testament.
1 The Shift From the Body of Christ as a Dynamic Organism to a Settled Institution
In 1 Corinthians 12, Paul goes into some detail concerning the implications of the
church being a living organism, a body with many parts. In the early chapters of Acts we
see a vibrant, caring, sharing and witnessing body of believers created by the power of
the Spirit who was poured out by the risen Christ. This corporate 'new man' created by
Jesus was not without leadership and organization, but there is no evidence of desire by
the leaders to create a tightly-knit religious institution, with an elaborate hierarchy
and intricate chain-of-command. The leaders above all were to be servants to feed and
build up the flock; the organization that came to expression was for the purpose of
meeting people's needs, not to create a religious bureaucracy.
The church Christ purposed to build is always described in terms of 'koinonia', a
common sharing of life together in the bonds of Jesus Christ. However, the reality is that
as time went on after the apostles' death, the church gravitated increasingly toward
finding its essential definition, not in a dynamic organism, but in a visible institution
with a hierarchy of officers. The church came to be no longer identified as a body of
believers bonded by love as members one of another, but as a religious organization whose
officers gave it significance. Ultimately it was asserted that without the officers, there
was no church. Organization usurped vital life as the hallmark of the church.
This legacy still remains with us today. The needs of people are subordinated to the
maintenance of religious bureaucracy. Patterns of church government often have nothing to
do with the ethos of the New Testament. Many define the 'true' church in terms of outward
marks such as "the proper preaching of the Word, administration of the sacraments,
and practice of discipline". But these characteristics have been outwardly present in
dead churches. The New Testament defines the church dynamically in terms of functioning
together as a body. If church was defined, for example, in the organic terminology of Acts
2:42-47, how many churches would you find? Why is it that even today when somebody asks
"What church do you attend?:, the next query after you tell them is usually,
"Who is the pastor there?" We still tend to define church in terms of leadership
instead of by loving relationships among the brethren.
2 The Shift From Polyform Ministry to Uniform Ministry
In the early church ministry was conceived of in terms of Ephesians 4:16, "From
Him the whole body, joined and held together by every supporting ligament, grows and
builds itself up in love, as each part does its work." Ministry was seen as committed
to the whole body by Christ its Lord. As Paul put it, "Now the body is not made up of
one part but of many ... As it is, there are many parts, but one body" (1 Cor.
12:14,20). To every person in the body of Christ is given a manifestation of the Spirit
for the benefit of all (1 Cor. 12:7). Universal giftedness in the church, which is secured
by the resurrected Christ leading captivity captive (Eph. 4:7-8), included such important
leadership gifts as apostles and administration.
The great tragedy is that from about 180 A. D. onwards the increasingly
institutionalized church began to assign ministry more and more to the officers (the
"clergy"), and less and less to the common people (the "laity").
George W. Forell astutely summarizes the shift from body-ministry to bishop-ministry:
Ethical guidance for people recently converted to Christianity and likely to bring a
pervasive pagan attitude to his new life was offered at first by a polyform ministry of
grace, reflected in the New Testament. But, as time went by, moral authority was
increasingly focused on an ordered ministry of bishops and deacons ...The institution most
effective in containing the threats to the unity of the nascent Christian movement was the
gradually evolving office of the bishop ...Through the office of the bishop the shape of
the Christian life is determined and the masses recently brought into the Christian
movement are conformed to Christ.1
No emphasis on one person who occupies the office of bishop (pastor) can be found in
the New Testament. While it certainly contemplates a plurality of leaders as part of life
in Christ's body, the overwhelming emphasis falls upon exhortations that involve all the
members of the body. At least 58 times in the New Testament believers are commanded to
fulfill responsibilities relating to "one another". We have turned the tables
and viewed ministry as essentially resting upon "the minister", and forgotten
that ministry as unfolded in the New Testament is spread around to everyone.
If ministry is not seen as focused in one office in the New Testament, where was
precedent for a separate caste found? It was found in the exclusive priesthood under the
Old Covenant. William Bausch observes:
Our survey has shown us that no cultic priesthood is to be found in the New Testament.
Yet we wound up importing Old Testament Levitical forms and imposing them on Christian
ministry.2
The negative implications that arose from the shift from polyform to uniform ministry
are myriad. The mutual care so basic to the fabric of early church life was virtually
lost. Why? Because mutuality - "you are all brethren" - was buried underneath
the superstructure of institutionalized officers. William Bausch crystallizes this point
by saying,
Nevertheless in practice there is no denying that there has historically been a
gathering into one person and his office what were formerly the gifts of many. ...[This
practice] goes astray, of course, when it translates to mean that only ordination gives
competence, authority, and the right of professional governance. It goes further astray
when eventually all jurisdictional and administrative powers in the church come to be seen
as an extension of the sacramental powers conferred at ordination. In short, there is a
movement here away from the more pristine collaborative and mutual ministries of the New
Testament.3
We must face the fact that the traditions regarding church government and order which
we have inherited are cast in very suspicious garb. They are clergy-centered and generally
stifle and suppress the "one another" perspectives of the New Testament. Servant
leadership should be a natural part of body-life by which the people of God are encouraged
toward, facilitated in and equipped for various ministries. Unfortunately, however, the
shift from polyform to uniform ministry has created the deplorable situation in which the
church forever remains as a dependent, helpless, non-maturing infant for the sake of the
officers who watch over the crib. We have inherited traditions in which the tail wags the
dog. It is my conviction that because of the deep-seated nature of this awful shift in
perspective, the greatest practical need facing the church today is the reincarnation of
"a polyform ministry of grace".
3 The Shift from a Suffering Church to an Institution of Ease
The early church grew and prospered incredibly without having church buildings or being
protected by the state. In fact, from apostolic times to the ascension of Constantine the
church went through cycles of intense persecution spearheaded by the ruling powers. These
times of persecution are well documented in such books as Persecution in the Early Church
by H. B. Workman and Martyrdom and Persecution in the Early Church by W. H. C. Friend.5
However, the advent of the emperor Constantine in 312 A.D. brought great changes, most
of them for the worse. Money from state funds was used to erect Christian church buildings
and support Christian clergy. Ultimately, Christianity was declared to be the state
religion. From Constantine onwards the visible church became enmeshed in political
intrigue, and the state mingled in the determination of church affairs. As Louis Berkhof
notes regarding the Council of Nicaea in 325 A.D. [which Constantine convened and presided
over]:
A settlement forced upon the Church by the strong hand of the emperor could not satisfy
and was also of uncertain duration. It made the determination of the Christian faith
dependent on imperial caprice and even on court intrigues. ...The sequel clearly probed
that, as it was, a change in emperor, and altered mood, or even a bribe, might alter the
whole aspect of the controversy. This is exactly what happened repeatedly in subsequent
history.6
Constantine set in motion the ideal of a territorial state religion with Christianity
at the helm. This ideal was the death knell of all that the Gospel stood for. It signaled
the end of believers gathering separately from the pagan culture as a counter-culture
where the way of Christ was displayed in simplicity. Now the church was conceived of as
all the people in a nation who were born as citizens of the state and constituted as part
of the visible church by infant baptism. Church and politics were fused together, creating
immense confusion. Ron VanOverloop notes this phenomenon operation from the post-apostolic
church to the Reformation:
As was the case in the early church when emperors called the great ecumenical councils
together, so was the progress of the Reformation to a great extent determined by the
political maneuvering taking place in each country.7
In the early church the disciples banded together in homes and other places as
communities "called out" from the world; but Constantinianism erased this
distinction and defined "church" as all citizens in a given territory. This had
the practical effect of watering down true discipleship and creating a worthless nominal
Christianity. Werner Elert contrasts the early days with the rise of Constantinianism:
[In the early church] the strength of their ties with one another is matched by the
strength of the boundary they draw to the outside. In business dealings with one another
they do not choose an unbeliever to arbitrate; they transact their business "before
the saints" and between "brother and brother" (1 Cor. 6:1.5). One is to
throw in one's lot with those who fear the Lord, consider their common good, and daily
visit the saints face to face ...After Constantine things changed radically with the
influx of the masses. This did not prosper the Christian brotherhood. If we can believe
only half of what Salvian says, there was not much left of it a hundred years later in
many parts of western Christendom.8
The shift from a suffering church to an institution sanctioned and promoted by the
state forces us to face a crucial question: Was the Constantinian change the rise or fall
of the church? How you answer that question will greatly define your whole view of the
church and its mission. In light of New Testament revelation about the church Christ
purposed to build, I submit that Constantinianism was a wretched stone thrown into the sea
of church history, the ripples of which still lap on our shores today.
We must make a choice. Are we going to cast our lot in with the New Testament vision
for the body of Christ [simplicity, suffering, servanthood], or in with the Constantinian
model [powerful institution, clergy dominance, rule by political maneuvering]? Are we
going to devote the energies of our short life-span to perpetuating the post-apostolic
shifts that moved away from the simplicity of Christ, or to restoring the spirit of the
New Testament vision?
4 The Shift from a Spirit-Dependent Church to a Letter-Dependent Institution
Twice in his epistles Paul refers to the fact that the church serves Christ "in
[the] newness of the Spirit and not in [the] oldness of the letter" (Rom. 7:6; 2 Cor.
3:6). The church was a community of the Spirit from the Day of Pentecost. In light of this
reality the early church did not trust in fixed forms to maintain and guard her existence.
There was an openness of the body to be led by the Spirit in light of Christ's
Gospel-word.
This can be seen, for example, in the glimpse of an early church service revealed in 1
Cor. 14. Edification was the goal which was to be reached by the Spirit-led participation
of the body. The balance Paul desired can perhaps be summed up like this: no form of order
in the service must be allowed to stifle the free expression of edifying gifts in the
body; no expression of spontaneity in the body must be allowed to blossom into
unprofitable disorder. William Barclay isolates these important points from 1 Cor. 14:
[Paul] is determined that anyone who possesses a gift should receive every chance to
exercise that gift, but he is equally determined that the services of the Church should
not thereby become a kind of competitive disorder. ...There must be liberty but there must
be no disorder. ...There was obviously a freedom and an informality about [this service]
which is completely strange to our ideas. ...Clearly the church had no professional
ministry. ...It was open to anyone who had a gift to use that gift. ...There was obviously
a flexibility about the order of service in the early church which is now totally lacking.
There was clearly no settled order at all. Everything was informal enough to allow any man
who felt that he had a message ...to give it. ...The really notable thing about an early
Church service must have been that almost everyone came feeling that he had both the
privilege and the obligation of contribution something to it.9
Unfortunately, as time went on this Spirit-dependence gave way to more and more fixed
forms of worship, which phased out body participation and committed ministry only to an
ever-growing web of ecclesiastical hierarchy. By 250 A.D. church order was set in concrete
with one bishop ruling over various territories. The momentum of this church bureaucracy
was accelerated when Constantine and his successors sanctioned the church and contributed
moneys and resources to this increasingly powerful institution. What began as a Spirit-led
organism ended up as a letter-dependent institution. The leaders no longer trusted in the
Spirit to hold the body together; instead they leaned on intricate human contrivances and
rules to feign outward unity.
One of the saddest features of this shift to letter-dependence, combined with the
church's new collusion with the state, was the employment of coercion both to gain and
maintain adherents. Simply trusting in the Spirit would have resulted in a spiritual
reality too vulnerable to be controlled by human contrivances; the use of raw power backed
by the weapons of the state seemed to promise greater stability. Eric Hoffer makes this
tragic observation which church history, unfortunately, verifies:
There is hardly an example of a mass movement achieving vast proportions and a durable
organization solely by persuasion ...It was the temporal sword that made Christianity a
world religion. Conquest and conversion went hand in hand. ...Where Christianity failed to
gain or retain the backing of state power, it achieved neither a wide nor permanent hold.
...It also seems that, where a mass movement can either persuade or coerce, it usually
chooses the letter. Persuasion is clumsy and its results uncertain.10
Again we must ask ourselves, "Are we going to be a part of perpetuating this shift
to trusting in outward carnal hedges to hold the church together, or are we going to
purpose to contribute to a return of child-like trust in the Spirit of Christ to build and
sustain His body?'
Concluding Remarks...
We have examined four clear shifts in early church history. These shifts are
acknowledged by church historians of all theological persuasions. James D. G. Dunn, one of
the foremost New Testament scholars of our time, summarizes the essence of these four
shifts like this:
Increasing institutionalism is the clearest mark of early Catholicism - when church
becomes increasingly identified with institution, when authority becomes increasingly
coterminous with office, when a basic distinction between clergy and laity becomes
increasingly self-evident, when grace becomes increasingly narrowed to well-defined ritual
acts. We saw above that such features were absent from first generation Christianity,
though in the second generation the picture was beginning to change.11
'Such features were absent from first generation Christianity,' that is, they are not
found in the New Testament. Does this concern you? Is your heart burdened by the chasm
between the original work of the Spirit and the hardened institution that quickly emerged
in the post-apostolic days? Does it bother you that most of what we associate with
'church' has little to do with the New Testament, and more to do with patterns that
reflect a drift away from it?
Further, and this is the key question, were the shifts we have studied a faithful
extension of New Testament ideals, or a tacit denial of all that they stand for? If the
answer is the latter, then it is incumbent upon believers to work for the recovery of
Christ's ways and to stop contributing to the perpetuation of non-edifying ecclesiastical
patterns.
The following articles contain excerpts from various sources relating to early church
history. I commend my thoughts on the four shifts and the upcoming collaborating materials
to your discerning conscience. May the Lord guide you into appropriate responses as 'the
worthy walk' is set before us in the Gospel.
1. History of Christian Ethics, Vol. 1, Augsburg Pub. House, 1979, pp. 39-40
2. Traditions, Tensions, Transitions in Ministry, Twenty-Third Publications, 1982, p.
54j
3. Traditions, Tensions, Transitions in Ministry, p.30
4. Cincinnati: Jenning & Graham, 1906, 382pp.
5. New York: Anchor Doubleday, 1967, 577pp.
6. The History of Christian Doctrines, Banner of Truth, 1978, p.87
7. 'The Westminster Confession of Faith', The Standard Bearer, Oct. 1, 1979, p.17
8. Eucharist and Church Fellowship in the First Four Centuries, Concordia Pub. House,
1966, pp. 66-67
9. The Letters to the Corinthians, Revised Edition, Westminster Press, 1975, pp.
133-134
10. The True Believer, Mentor Books, 1964, pp.100-101
11. Unity and Diversity in the New Testament, Westminster Press, 1977, p.351
This article was lovingly typed and proofread
by Micheal & Marci Blubaugh, Deland, FL.
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Prairie/6778