Saturday, November 23, 2019

ONE HOLY CATHOLIC AND APOSTOLIC CHURCH

Audio for the following may be found here. You may also listen to podcast episodes here.



ONE HOLY CATHOLIC AND APOSTOLIC CHURCH 

            Christianity has faced nearly two millenniums of a faith which has been tested, persecuted, tried, and yet blessed; a commonality in Jesus Christ exists among global believers of diverse backgrounds, traditions, and cultures; and further, believers throughout the centuries are a part of the same adopted family. This collective group of people from disparate cultures, backgrounds, and even eras is called the church. All three major creeds of the Christian faith (the Apostles’ Creed, the Nicene Creed, and the Athanasian Creed) refer to the body of Christ as and affirms Christian belief in one holy catholic and apostolic church. This affirmation dismays many readers and hearers who do not possess an appropriate understanding of the church universal. The term, catholic (not the denomination), equates to universal or all-encompassing, i.e. the church is a single body of many believers and even denominations. It is, therefore, appropriate to affirm one’s Christian belief in such a doctrine and rejoice in the body which Christ has redeemed. Within the text of the three major creeds, four essentials exist which are primary to a right belief of the church.

The Church Is One

            Imbedded in the doctrine of one holy catholic and apostolic church, first, upholds the biblical doctrine of one faith, one God, and one redeemed people (1 Cor 12:12-27). A mystery of the gospel is the fact that God joins a plurality of vast people as one body. A common tendency is seemingly and perhaps subconsciously to consider the church as one’s local church alone; yet, local churches are but a part of the body. The church is one and should be regarded as such. By way of application, this means that Christians must not compete with one another. Local churches are of the same body and must strive to serve that body, not their own needs. To serve only the needs of one local church is to effectively act in a way that is contrary to the health of the church. The church is one and should live as such irrespective of differences. It is certainly good and acceptable to worship with a local body of believers with which one identifies and may serve well. Nonetheless, no one should neglect the truth that the church is one.

The Church Is Holy

            Second, the church is holy. To be holy is to be set apart. God calls the church to holiness because he is holy (Lev 19:2, 20:7, 20:26, 21:8, Exod 19:6, 1 Pet 1:16, 1 Thess 4:7). The primary end of salvation is not heaven but conformity to the image of Christ (Rom 8:29). Therefore, in Christ Jesus, the church is holy, i.e. set apart and like Jesus. All three major creeds affirm this Christian truth of who God’s people are in Christ. The vast implications of the church’s holiness begin with a different perspective. While Christians are not yet in their glorified state, they are positionally righteous in Christ and one day will be made actually righteous. Nevertheless, the Father beholds the complete and total righteousness of the Son when he sees the church. To confess that the church is holy is to confess that the church’s new nature requires a new way of living: namely like Christ. Christians are no longer evil and no longer live as the world lives, for the church is holy.

The Church Is Catholic

            The church, thirdly (and perhaps most importantly here), is catholic. The three primary Christian creeds do not speak of the Catholic denomination but rather the universal nature of the church. Brothers and sisters from around the globe, from the most diverse backgrounds, from centuries of history, and from varying degrees of past sin are found as one body called the bride of Christ. The church then is universal, despite the many local churches and denominations which exist. Consider the church as a body. When a human body has medical needs, one consults a physician and often a specialized physician, i.e. a cardiologist, a pediatrist, an ophthalmologist, etc. because each part of the body has different needs. In a similar manner, local churches and denominations might be considered different parts of the same body while Jesus, the Great Physician, meets his people where they are. In the variations of Christian subculture, however, believers must not forget the universal nature of the body, for the church is a catholic body.

The Church Is Apostolic

            Finally, the church is apostolic. Like the term, catholic, apostolic is often misunderstood because it is usually related to Pentecostal traditions. Apostolic, however, refers to the derivation of the Apostles. Said another way, the church’s roots are firmly secured in the Apostles and Pentecost. The church began at Pentecost. While not all denominations employ practices of speaking in tongues or gifts of the Spirit, all stem from the beginnings of the church in Acts 2. The same Spirit who worked miraculously in the early church is the same Spirit who works miraculously today and changes believers by his power. No matter the belief in gifts of the Spirit, all true believers are a part of one church, which is apostolic.

The Vital Application

            In these thoughts, there exists one vital application: the unity of the church should be exhibited. Tertullian taught that the unity of the church is a perpetual fact and not something to be reached (for it has already been achieved) but exhibited. While the three major ecclesiastical creeds differ slightly in text, a primary source of commonality is the ecumenical and yet unified nature of the church. To understand the church as one holy catholic and apostolic is to live life in such a way that views all believers, regardless of differences, secondary beliefs, or secondary opinions, as people who are brothers and sisters in Christ. Brothers and sisters by blood often disagree; yet, they are a part of the same family. The church’s universal nature in Christ demands a brotherly love which supersedes secondary issues and realizes all believers as the church: one holy catholic and apostolic.

Sunday, November 17, 2019

BOOK REVIEW OF GLENN PACKIAM'S BLESSED, BROKEN, GIVEN

Audio for the following may be found here. You may also listen to podcast episodes here.


BOOK REVIEW: BLESSED, BROKEN, GIVEN BY GLENN PACKIAM

Packiam, Glenn. Blessed, Broken, Given: How Your Story Becomes Sacred in the Hands of Jesus. Colorado Springs, CO: Multnomah, 2019.

            Of the term, sacramental, a variety of thoughts enter the minds of believers. While, for some, sacramental might be linked to salvific grace, the nature of the word’s Latin roots suggests sacredness. Glenn Packiam’s 2019 publication, Blessed, Broken, Given, illuminates the concept of sacramental life in Christ. In Jesus’ hands, frail people become blessed; in Jesus’ hands, brokenness allows Christians to become open to the grace of God; and in Jesus’ hands, believers realize that sacred life is not for selfish gains but rather for the glory of the one who has redeemed.[1] Bread is used in the Lord’s Table as a deep reality of Christ and his body on earth: the church, i.e. while the element of bread is surely imagery, what it symbolizes, sacramental life, is reality. Discussing sacramental life as a work in three primary movements (blessed, broken, given), Glenn Packiam contends for the participation of those redeemed by Christ.

Prelude

Packiam begins his work with a prelude to his three movements. The book centers around the element of bread; thus, the prelude discusses bread not solely as a metaphor but as a visible display of spiritual reality. The author alludes to the societal problem of not seeing the sacramental nature of life. “One of the reasons we have such trouble seeing–truly seeing–is that we’ve been shaped by centuries of cultural tides that have taught us not to see, in fact, not to even look for anything beyond,” writes Packiam.[2] While many (including Christians) observe miracles as God overriding the laws of the universe, Packiam contends that they are examples of God working within his own world.[3] Life then should be considered sacramental in nature and his people the bread of his making. As bread is made by the baker for his or her intended use, Christian life and all aspects thereof are meant for use in God’s design.

Movement One

            Packiam continues his work with the first movement: blessed. Beginning with a shift in paradigm of what it means to be blessed, God’s grand design includes humankind made in his image. From the creation of humankind to the fall and to redemption through Christ, God’s plan in the lives of his people is sacred. Christian life is bread; Packiam beckons his readers to place their lives in the hands of Jesus to return to the sacred origin.[4]

            Blessed, Broken, Given discusses issues of pain, hurt, and brokenness in a cyclic manner. Without an understanding of these realities, one may not understand the sacredness of redeemed life. Continuing the first movement, Packiam invites his readers to further realize their new name in Christ despite the plurality of broken backgrounds from which the church arrives. Further, Packiam argues for the broadness of God’s blessing, i.e. God “desires all to be swept up in his saving and redeeming love.”[5] To illustrate his point, the author references God’s blessing to Hagar, which was originally given to Abraham (Gen 16:10): “I will surely multiply your offspring so that they cannot be numbered for multitude.” Believers have been given a new name and new identity in Christ and one that is meant for a plurality of people, i.e. the scope of God’s love is broad.

            Maintaining that life is sacramental in nature, Packiam continues his first movement by linking the Lord’s Table to eternal reality. Disparate from the days of old covenants, God is now perpetually available to his people because of Christ’s mediation. “God pours out his glory on this new people when they gather together,”[6] writes Packiam.[7] Packiam, moreover, discusses the connection between the Table and the family of which all Christians are a part. God has redeemed his people and returned them to his sacred purpose; therefore, as one body, the church subsists around the Table of the Lord as one with him. In this manner, believers are blessed.

Movement Two

            Packiam’s second movement, broken, centers around the breaking of bread. Human nature is broken and radically depraved; yet, Jesus blesses brokenness. Despite humanity’s dreadful sin and shame, “Jesus has brought…peace.”[8] Packiam even shifts the paradigm of how believers commonly view suffering and pain. Human nature is to desire prevention; yet, in sacramental life, God opts for redemption.[9] Packiam excellently connects blessing and brokenness.

Furthermore, brokenness takes a communal aspect, for the body is Christ is one which has one Lord and one Savior. Communal brokenness, therefore, requires communal confession. Packiam writes, “We need a community of people who know us, who love us even in our brokenness, and who will call us to repentance for our failures, for the things we have done and for the things we have left undone.”[10]

There is a purpose, however, in Christian brokenness: sharing. Without breaking bread, the sharing of bread is not possible; yet, the sharing is the responsibility of God. “He will do the multiplication, but he wants our participation.”[11] The focal point of movement two is brokenness. Nonetheless, there is a stalwart connection to blessedness. Packiam’s trajectory begins with blessedness, moves to brokenness, and concludes with giving. Without brokenness, however, bread may not be given.

Movement Three

            Sacramental life requires participation. “God intends for us to be more than recipients of the kingdom; we are to be participants in this arriving reign of God.”[12] Once there is a realization of blessedness and brokenness, Christians should understand the call to give. As bread is broken to be given and as Christ was broken to be given, Christians are also broken to be given. One’s perspective, however, must be that of bread rather than beggar. Packiam suggests that while most people would likely not admit to see themselves as beggars, their lives infer the opposite.[13]

            Sacramentally, the church should exist as one body of Christ, which implies healing inclusivity,[14] i.e. God’s gift is meant to be shared. Additionally, as God’s people give, in a cyclic way, “giving begets more giving.”[15] As God has given, the church is also to give. Giving, however, must not occur only between other members of the body of Christ but also by giving to the world. Christians are called to welcome the stranger. After his resurrection, in Luke’s account, Jesus appeared to his disciples as a supposed stranger; yet, they welcomed him. He then sat with them and “started acting like the host.”[16] Packiam reveals a beautiful miracle in the fact that the disciples’ eyes were opened after he took the bread, blessed it, and gave it. “…it was the breaking of bread that opened their eyes.”[17]

Sacramental life bids participants to share what has been given, i.e. Christians have been blessed and broken to give. A Christian who does not give is one who does not complete the trajectory of sacramental life. Packiam’s third movement completes the journey with a vivid argument of Christian purpose: giving.

Postlude and Conclusions

            The postlude of the work, to Packiam, is the King’s feast. Such is the feast to which God’s people are invited. Packiam writes, “God has prepared a Table for us with his own body and blood as our bread and cup. And the world sets a table before us, offering its delights.”[18] Christ gives an invitation to abandon an empty and selfish life and participate in his sacred life. The author sets the stage for the reader to make a choice: a choice to neglect or participate in sacramental life.

            Glenn Packiam’s Blessed, Broken, Given offers readers a vital but (unfortunately) rare connection between sacrament and life. A trajectory of sacred life is portrayed in three movements. Therefore, the author does a superb job of providing a track, which readers may follow in a succinct way. Where the term, sacrament, is often linked to Communion or Baptism alone, Packiam conveys a gospel message of sacramental life, to which the church is called as a single body. The three-movement form greatly aids in presenting this shift in thought. Skillfully, after unfolding the three movements, Packiam offers his readers an invitation from God himself: an invitation to participate in the sacramental life of Christ. The book helps to tear down preconceived thoughts of sacrament and holds to a foundation of the church’s union with Christ. In a mystical manner, therefore, God’s people are called to participation in the life of Christ, for they have been blessed and broken and are called to be given in the church’s sacramental life.




[1] Glenn Packiam, Blessed, Broken, Given: How Your Story Becomes Sacred in the Hands of Jesus (Colorado Springs, CO: Multnomah, 2019), 21.
[2] Ibid., 16-17.
[3] Ibid., 19.
[4] Ibid., 40.
[5] Ibid., 49.
[6] Ibid., 61.
[7] The sacramental nature of this book assumes a strong link here to the Lord’s Table.
[8] Ibid., 92.
[9] Ibid., 105.
[10] Ibid., 112.
[11] Ibid., 121.
[12] Ibid., 135.
[13] Ibid., 141.
[14] Ibid., 156.
[15] Ibid., 160.
[16] Ibid., 172.
[17] Ibid., 173.
[18] Ibid., 191.