Scriptural Principles of Gathering - Complete

Scriptural Principles of Gathering

OR

Why I Meet Among Those Known as Brethren

by Alfred P. Gibbs


Foreword

by John Bloore Plainfield, N. J.

February, 1935.

As the years pass and the Lord calls home those who have been used to
bring out the essential teachings of God's word as to the truth of the
gospel and the scriptural order of the assembly, and as a new generation
of believers grows up, many of whom are children of the Lord's people who
come into the assemblies under circumstances quite different from their
fathers, it is very needful that the fundamental principles relating to
the fellowship of believers as taught in Scripture should be freshly presented
for their help and guidance.

This, too, may serve to enlighten others who may be exercised about
the disorder, confusion and apostasy of Christendom, as these features
are found in its existing religious organizations.

In the following pages this twofold service has been rendered in a worthy
manner.

The reader will find that this pamphlet gives him, in simple language,
a clear, concise and pointed statement of the teaching of Scripture as
to the manner in which the Lord's people are to gather together; and in
this connection the order it lays down as to reception, worship and ministry.
In doing this, the author also makes plain the reasons for separation from
the existing unscriptural sects and denominations of Christendom. Such
a separation is indeed needful so that the will of God for His people may
be carried out--a thing not possible in the religious systems of men with
their humanly devised names, offices of service, ministry and ritual; along
with which, in the main, gross indifference is found as to the faith and
manner of life of those composing their organizations; and, as might be
expected under such circumstances, they give shelter to the active propagators
of evil doctrines by which the foundations of Christianity are attacked
and efforts made to destroy the faith once delivered to the saints (Jude
3, 4).

May all of us who know something of the spiritual liberty, godly care
and soundness of doctrine found in the assemblies of God's people who gather
together as described in this pamphlet, be stirred to a fuller appreciation
of the association in which we are found; and, along with increasing gospel
activity for the salvation of precious souls, seek to help and deliver
our fellow believers that they may enjoy the same privileges.




Author's Preface to New Editions



The kindly reception accorded to the previous editions of
this pamphlet, which have had a wide circulation in this country and other
English speaking lands, has been an encouragement to issue this revised
edition with larger type. May the great Head of the Church be pleased to
bless this simple setting forth of these "Scriptural Principles of
Gathering!"

A. P. G.



Introduction

This subject was selected by those responsible for the convening of
this conference, and was chosen for the purpose of helping young believers
of the various assemblies of the Lord's people to a better understanding
of assembly, or church truth. By "assembly truth" we mean, first,
the scriptural warrant for the mode of gathering or assembling as believers;
second, the Christian's position in that gathering; and third, the privileges
and responsibilities of being so scripturally gathered.

God's word thus enjoins the believer: "Sanctify the Lord God in
your hearts, and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh
you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear" (I
Peter 3:15). Supposing the question that forms our topic were to be put
to each believer associated with those known as "brethren," what
would be the response? To the query: "Why do you meet with believers
in this manner?" How many here could give a scriptural reason for
his position amongst believers so termed? It is to be feared that many
young believers, and old ones too, who could give a scriptural reason for
their assurance of eternal salvation, could not give a similar reason for
their assembly, or church association. Surely one ought to be as necessary
as the other. The One who has assured us of our salvation by His inspired
word has left us in no doubt, by that same Word, as to how and with whom
we should gather in church fellowship.

It has been felt by many that teaching along this line has been somewhat
neglected of late, with the result we have a large number of young believers
in our assemblies who do not know why they are where they are. They have
little or no assured convictions as to the Divine principles of gathering
and, in many cases, are drifting hither and thither at the mercy of every
vagary of men. Unlike the early disciples, they seem to have no definite
link with a company which can be designated as "their own company"
(Acts 4:23). In some quarters this line of ministry has been so over-emphasized
to the exclusion of all else, that a spirit of sectarianism has been fostered
which, of course, is equally to be deplored.

The first question that naturally arises after one is saved is: "Where
shall I go, and with whom shall I meet for church fellowship"? There
will be plenty of voices to advise. Some will reply: "Go where you
can get spiritual food, no matter by what name they call themselves."
Others will say: "Go to those with whom you will feel most at home
socially, where there are plenty of young folks and lots doing." Still
others will respond: "Join the church of your preference, and be guided
by your own tastes." The sincere believer, however, will not be guided
by any such advice, but will rightly enquire: "Has the One who has
saved me by His grace and assured me of my blessedness by His word given
me no guidance, from the Bible, as to how and with whom I should meet?"
He will then begin to search the Scriptures to discover what God has to
say about this most important matter. It should be the solemn responsibility
of each believer in this audience to so study the word of God for himself,
that he is made absolutely certain, from it, that he is among those with
whom the Lord would have him associate in assembly fellowship.

This introduces the subject of scriptural principles of gathering. Inasmuch
as we shall use this expression quite frequently during this talk, let
us define its meaning. By the word "principles" we mean that
which is inherent in anything, determining its nature. It is a settled
law or rule of action, especially of right action, consciously or resolutely
adopted. It is the essential character of a thing, and the source from
which a cause proceeds. We speak of "a man of principle," and
by this we mean that this person's life is governed by certain definite
and right laws which motivate and control all his actions. A right principle
is always right, whatever the circumstances surrounding the case may be.
Neither time, place nor circumstances affects the correctness of a right
principle.

By the word "scriptural" we mean that which has the general
teaching of the word of God, both by precept and practice, to support it.
Note the phrase, "the general teaching of the word of God." Most
heresies can point to a verse of Scripture which apparently supports their
contention, but when a heresy, or wrong doctrine, is examined in the light
of all Scripture, its falsity is at once apparent. "No ... scripture
is of any private interpretation" (II Peter 1:20). This simply means
that each statement of Scripture must be interpreted in the light of all
the other scriptures bearing on that subject. This is a most important
thing to remember when studying the word of God.

By the word "gathering," we mean the coming together of believers
for a distinct purpose, such as worship, prayer, or the ministry of the
word. We trust that the meaning of the term, "scriptural principles
of gathering," has thus been made clear.

It may be good at this juncture to state that I was saved among those
known as "brethren." This will probably be true of many here.
I never heard the clear unadulterated gospel of the grace of God until,
at the age of twenty-one, I heard it through those known as "brethren."
It may be of interest to state that, scattered throughout the world, there
are many hundreds of companies of believers who meet simply as Christians
to carry out those principles of gathering so clearly revealed in the word
of God. Wherever such a company gathers, a gospel testimony is maintained.
By this means, thousands of precious souls have been led to a saving knowledge
of the Son of God, Whom to know is eternal life. These companies, assemblies
or gatherings of believers, because of their refusal to accept any name
that is not common to and inclusive of all believers, have been called
"brethren." (The use of the term, "brethren," throughout
this booklet, must never be understood as a sectarian title that distinguishes
certain believers from other Christians. This title is true of all genuine
believers everywhere, by whatever other name they may call themselves.)
After I was saved I naturally desired to associate myself with those who
had been instrumental, under God, in bringing me to a knowledge of the
Lord Jesus Christ as my own personal Savior.

This fact, however, is not in itself a sufficient reason for linking
oneself with and remaining amongst a company of believers. As I began to
study the Scriptures for myself, it became clear to me that those believers
who had been used to lead me to Christ were also maintaining scriptural
principles in their gatherings.

The fact that one has been saved through the preaching of the gospel
on the part of a certain company of people does not, in itself, justify
a person remaining within the borders of that company, for there may be
unscriptural things taught or practiced in that assembly that would prevent
the young believer from growing in grace and in the knowledge of his Lord
and Savior, Jesus Christ.

Luther was saved while in the fold of the Roman Catholic Church. Should
he therefore have remained in that ecclesiastical circle which both ignored
and denied certain truths revealed in God's word? Had all the Christians
who were saved, while in the Roman Catholic church, remained therein, there
would have been, humanly speaking, no Reformation, no Bible for the common
people, no clear gospel and no liberty of scriptural thought and action
such as we enjoy today. These men, for whom we should never cease to thank
God, were not content to remain where God had saved them, but they searched
the Scriptures for themselves. When they discovered the unscripturalness
of their assembly position, they separated themselves from that which did
not conform to the truth of God's word.

It would be well if every believer here were to give himself no rest
until he has been assured, by the infallible Book, that the principles
governing the assembly with whom he meets can stand the test of the general
teaching of the Scriptures. Once this has been settled, he will never be
happy or contented anywhere else. Young believers, get established, by
a diligent study of the word of God, in these scriptural principles of
gathering! They will prove to be an anchor to your soul in these troublous
days of declension, denial, doubt and apostasy!

Now we come to the question before us, and it has been made a personal
one: "Why do I meet with those known as 'brethren'?" We shall
try to answer it in as clear, simple and orderly a manner as possible,
so as to leave no uncertainty in the minds of anyone present. We shall
state eight distinct reasons for being so gathered.


First: because they accept no name but what is common to and inclusive
of all believers, and therefore refuse to recognize man-made and man-named
sects and parties.



We shall search our Bibles in vain to discover the "Baptist"
denomination, or the "Presbyterian" or the "Episcopalian"
or the "Congregational" or the "Methodist," or a host
of others we might name. Within each of these denominations there are very
many genuine believers in our Lord Jesus Christ and, as such, we love them
and gladly own them as members of the body of Christ; but we cannot love
or own these denominations, for they are unscriptural in their formation,
excluding as they do, many people of God. Is every believer in Christ a
Baptist? an Episcopalian? a Lutheran? a Methodist? a Presbyterian? a Congregationalist?
Of course not. These man-formed divisions separate the people of God into
various distinct companies. With some it is an ordinance that distinguishes
them, as with the "Baptists"; with others it is a form of Church
government, as "Presbyterian," or "Congregational."
Others bear the name of the founder of that particular sect, as "Lutherans"
and "Wesleyans," but all such divisions are unscriptural.



When we open the pages of the New Testament we find that the
people of God are called "Christians," "disciples,"
"saints," "believers," "brethren," etc. Are
these titles true of all believers? Yes. Every child of God is a "Christian,"
a "saint," a "believer," a "disciple," and
one of the "brethren." "One is your Master, even Christ,
and all ye are brethren" said the Lord Jesus (Matt. 23:8). By the
term "brethren," therefore, every true believer in Christ is
included, and so with each of the other scriptural titles of God's people.
The moment a person is saved, he is included among "the brethren,"
by whatever other man-made name he may be called, or call himself, later
on.

Scripture unsparingly condemns denominationalism, or the dividing of
the people of God into sects, parties and systems that exclude many Christians,
who are sound in doctrine and life, from their fellowship. This spirit
of sectarianism early manifested itself in the assembly at Corinth. Paul,
by the Spirit of God, rebuked it and said: "Ye are yet carnal, for
whereas there is among you envying and strife and divisions (or factions),
are ye not carnal and walk as men? For wile one saith,'I am of Paul'; and
another 'I am of Apollos'; are ye not carnal? Who then is Paul, and who
is Apollos, but ministers by whom ye believed?" (I Cor. 3:3-5). In
the first chapter of that epistle he asks: "Is Christ divided? Was
Paul crucified for you, or were ye baptized in the name of Paul? (I Cor
1:13).

If Paul had been crucified for them, or had saved them, or they had
been baptized in his name; then only had they the right to adopt his name
as the founder of a party. Think of the hundreds of different denominations
into which Christendom has been divided! Is this of God? We reply emphatically,
"No, ten thousand times, no!" It is the work of man and the result,
not of spirituality, but of carnality, which has scattered the people of
God instead of uniting them! In that wonderful prayer, just before He went
to the cross, our Savior prayed that His people "might be one; that
the world may believe that Thou hast sent Me" (John 17:21). The multiplicity
of denominations certainly does not combine to present a spectacle of unity
to the world, but rather of division and of confusion worse confounded.

Many believers excuse their denominational affiliation by saying: "What's
in a name? We're all out for the same thing. We'll all go to the same place!"
These same believers would change their tune if someone forged their name
to a check for a large amount and cashed it at their bank! What would be
the reaction of these people if their wives suddenly decided to change
their names and take another more suited to their poetic fancy? These husbands
would rightly argue: "I gave you my name at our marriage, and you
cannot change that name to suit yourself!" Why, then, should we alter
the name that Christ has given to His own blood-bought people, and substitute
for it another of our own making?

Many have sought to liken the various denominations of Christendom to
so many different regiments of an army, each separate from the other, but
all united for the common purpose of defending the country' from invasion,
or attacking the enemy, as the head of the army orders. Such an illustration
surely cannot apply in this case, for denominationalism is not content
with the marching orders of the Commander-in-chief, as found in His word;
but has substituted for them their own rules and regulations, and has thus
virtually denied His supreme authority for faith and practice. The exhibition
of rival denominations, each under a different flag, each commanded by
a general of its own choosing, and each striving for the preeminence, is
not calculated to suggest the unity of an army under the absolute control
of a commander-in-chief!

Saturday night has often witnessed a large congregation of believers
singing heartily the beautiful words: "We are not divided, all one
body we; one in hope and doctrine, one in charity." The dawn of Sunday,
however, witnesses a sad contradiction to this blessed truth as each believer
wends his way to his own particular denominational church building. To
many, the words of that hymn were but the expression of a lovely theory
to be sung, rather than a blessed reality to be practiced and enjoyed!
The great truth, emphasized by the Spirit of God through Paul, needs to
be proclaimed far and wide: "Ye are all one in Christ Jesus"
(Gal. 3: 28) .

The story is told of two Christians who met for the first time in a
railroad coach. After some pleasant conversation about the thingsof God,
one inquired: "To what denomination do you belong?" The other
replied: "That's just my difficulty, and I wish you would help me.
Supposing you had only the word of God to guide you, what denomination
would you advise me to join?" His fellow Christian thought for a while
and then said: "Why, if I had only the word of God as my authority,
I couldn't advise you to join any!" "That is exactly my position,"
responded the other, " and I therefore meet with those who act upon
what they find written in the word of God, and who seek to assemble in
the name of the Lord Jesus Christ alone, apart from all the confusion that
denominationalism has wrought." This is the position that those known
as "brethren" occupy. They refuse to accept any name that is
not inclusive of every believer, and firmly repudiate these man-made divisions
and names that are not common to all the people of God.

It may be argued by some that these companies of so-called "brethren"
are as much a sect as any other, but this is not true. The mere fact that
a company of believers is called a sect does not make it so. Everything
must be tested by the word of God. Naturally, those in a sect will seek
to justify themselves by calling others, who do not see eye to eye with
them, a sect also.

Let us define the meaning of the word, "sect." A sect is a
body of people who make church claims, yet in principle and practice violate
the essential principles of the Church of God as described in the New Testament
scriptures. In other words, a sect cannot stand the test of all Scripture.
A sect usually adopts as its distinguishing features, some distinct form
of ecclesiastical government, or some ordinance or ordinances, or some
particular doctrine, or the peculiar teaching of some person. Its conditions
of membership cannot bear the light of the New Testament. It often allows
unsaved people to enter its fold, and excludes many Christians who do not
see their way to subscribe to its particular creeds. It depends principally
for its functioning on its own rules and regulations, or "book of
discipline," and usually has a humanly ordained ministry and its own
self-appointed oversight.

Those known as "brethren" unhesitatingly repudiate such pretensions,
and seek to gather in accordance with the pattern described in the New
Testament. Naturally they are thus distinguished from denominations, but
they are not a sect, for they have no gathering center but Christ; no name
but what is common to and inclusive of all believers; no authority but
the word of God, and no conditions of reception to the local assembly but
those found in the Scriptures, namely: the person must be regenerated,
be sound in the fundamental doctrines of Scripture, and be living a clean
moral life before the world that commends the gospel.



It has been well pointed out that in the early days of Christianity
there were congregations of believers, but no "Congregationalists!"
There were baptized believers, but no "Baptists!" There were
presbyters in the assembly, but no "Presbyterians!" They had
method in their meeting, but there were no "Methodists!" They
had bishops in the church, but there were no "Episcopalians!"
They trembled at the word, but there were no "Quakers!" They
all shared in the blessings of Pentecost, but there were no "Pentecostalist!"
The brethren had all been united to Christ, but there were no "United
Brethren!" They met simply as Christians, in the name of the Lord
Jesus Christ, and were obedient to His precious word.

Second: They recognize and act upon the scriptural truth of the unity
of the Church of God, which is the Body of Christ, of which Christ is the
Head, and every believer a member.

Notice those words, "recognize and act upon." Every intelligent
believer, whatever his denominational affiliation may be, would be willing
to recognize and concede that Scripture reveals the existence of but one
Church, with Christ as its Head and every believer as a member. But comparative
few seem prepared to follow this revelation to its logical conclusion,
and act upon this truth, cost what it may and lead where it will. It is
one thing for a person to hold a truth, and another for that truth to so
hold him that it causes him to regulate his conduct by it.

The Scriptures make plain that there is but one Church, which is called
"the body of Christ," of which He is the Head, and every believer
a member. The word of God is very definite as to this. Listen to these
quotations from the Bible: "So we (believers), being many, are one
body in Christ, and every one members ones of another" (Rom. 12:5).
"For as the body is one, and hath many members and all the members
of that one body, being many, are one body, so is Christ" (I Cor.
12: 12). "There is one body and one Spirit" (Eph. 4:4). "Now
ye (believers) are the body of Christ and members in particular" (I
Cor. 12: 27).

Each regenerated person is described, in Scripture, as having been joined,
by the Spirit of God, to the body of Christ, the Church. "By one Spirit
are we all baptized into one body" (I Cor. 12:13). Each believer is
not only united by the Holy Spirit to the Head in heaven, but is also united
to every other believer on earth, in whom the Spirit of God dwells. This
is the great truth of the unity of the body. Christ is thus linked eternally
with His Own, and they, in turn, are described as being "all one in
Christ Jesus" (Gal. 3:28).

Since there is but one body, of which Christ is the Head, then there
is obviously no room in the world for many bodies with many heads, as exemplified
by denominationalism today. Seeing there is but one body, of which every
believer is a member, with Christ as the Head, what necessity is there
for forming other bodies with men at their head? No one can "join"
the church, which is the body of Christ, any more than one's finger can
"join" his body. As the finger was joined to the body at physical
birth, so the believer is said to be joined to the body by the Spirit of
God at spiritual birth. (I Cor. 6: 17; Eph. 4: 16; Col. 2: 19). Thus it
is clearly seen that the Church is not an organization to' be joined, but
an organism (the body of Christ) to which every believer has been joined.
Let us underline this fact in our minds.

Since, therefore, there is but one Church, to which every believer has
been joined, why try to join oneself to another? Is not what God has joined
together good enough? Is not the Headship of Christ sufficient for the
Church? Is not the word of God of sufficient authority? Those who are called
"brethren" recognize and act upon the scriptural truth of the
one body; and seek, not to form another body, but to own, as sufficient,
what God has already formed. They therefore meet together as members of
the body of Christ, in subjection to the authority of the Head, and in
accordance with the principles He has laid down in His own word. Could
anything be simpler, or more scriptural than this? We are nowhere told
to make a unity but, on the contrary, we are enjoined to "keep the
unity of the Spirit (which God has already made) in the bond of peace"
(Eph. 4: 3). How anyone, who has really grasped the truth of the one body
and the one Head, can continue in a denominational affiliation, is a problem
that only the judgment seat of Christ must solve.

It is one thing to be ignorant of the true character of sectarianism,
which virtually denies the truth of the one body; and another to remain
in such association after one has been enlightened as to its unscriptural
character. When a Christian is unaware of the fact that a denomination
is contrary to God's word, his conscience is undefiled and God can use
him; but the fact that God uses such an one must not be interpreted as
proof that God approves of his denominational position. As long as a man
walks according to the light he has, he will be blest; but woe betide the
man who sees the evils and unscripturalness of denominationalism, and yet
remains in it! "Light accepted bringeth light; but light rejected
bringeth night,"--and how great is the darkness of wilful ignorance!

Each local church, or assembly of believers, represents and expresses,
or should represent and express, the church as a whole, even as a tiny
dewdrop reflects, in miniature, the same sky as the mighty ocean. Each
local assembly therefore should have Christ as its Head, believers only
as its members, the word of God as its guide, the Holy Spirit for its power,
and the glory of Christ as its aim.

Does the company with whom you meet thus recognize and act upon the
truth of the oneness of all believers in Christ; or does it create artificial
barriers that shut out regenerated believers who are sound in doctrine
and moral in their lives? Such a company is not contemplated in the New
Testament, and therefore has no scriptural authority for its constitution,
existence and perpetuation. The "brethren" seek to hold and practice
this truth so clearly revealed in the Book of books, and therefore have
scriptural authority for their position.

Third: They own no authority but the word of God for their manner
of meeting, and the maintenance of godly order in those meetings.

Like the Bereans of old they have "received the word with all readiness
of mind, and searched the Scriptures daily whether those things were so"
(Acts 17: 11). They believe that they have no more right to make a new
mode of meeting for the Lord's people than they have to make a new way
of salvation. Since the way of salvation, given by Divine inspiration nearly
two thousand years ago, is good and sufficient for today; then God's principles
of gathering, revealed in the same book, are just as necessary for our
guidance in assembly fellowship as they were in the days of old. We cannot
improve on the pattern God has given His people in the New Testament. Do
you believe this? The "brethren" do and act on it.



We shall search the New Testament in vain to discover anything
described therein that approximates a denomination of today, which selects
one man as its minister to do all its preaching, teaching, praying and
the leading of its worship; which calls itself by some man-given title;
which is regulated by its own by-laws and books of discipline; which has
its own creed, to which all must subscribe ere they can join; which, in
many cases, has added rites and ordinances and ceremonies the word of God
knows nothing about, and which often allows unsaved people to join and
remain in its fellowship. This is not a distortion of facts, as a visit
to and examination of many denominational organizations will soon convince
the sincere inquirer.

A reading of the New Testament, especially the Acts, will reveal the
fact that believers, and believers only, gathered together in the name
of the Lord Jesus Christ (Matt. 18: 20); for remembrance of the Lord in
the breaking of bread (Acts 20:7; I Cor. 11:23-24); for edification (Acts
2: 41-47; I Cor. 12th to 14th chapters); and for prayer, etc. (Matt. 18:20;
Acts 4:23-30). These companies, whether large or small, are called "churches"
or "assemblies." We find the expression, "Churches of the
saints" (I Cor. 14:33); "Churches of God" (I Thess. 2: 14):
"Churches" (Acts 9:31; 15:41; 16:5); "Churches of Christ"
(Rom. 16: 16).

In these churches, or assemblies of believers, there is no mention of
"the minister," or "the book of discipline," or "the
creed," or any special name such as "Baptist," "Presbyterian,"
etc., by which these assemblies were distinguished from each other. It
was merely their location that distinguished them. We find "The church
of God which is at Corinth" (I Cor. 1: 2), "The churches of Galatia"
(Gal. 1: 2), etc. The church which was at Corinth included all the believers
in Christ in that city. A letter addressed "To the church of God in
Chicago," or any other city you wish to name, could apply to and include
every regenerated person in that city; for that term includes all who,
by the Spirit of God, have been joined to the body of Christ.

In the Church, which is His body, Christ the Head has given certain
gifts for the edification, or building up, of the whole body of believers.
These gifts are evangelists, pastors and teachers (Eph. 4':8-16). These
are recognized in and discharge their ministry in and with the fellowship
of the local assemblies. Then also there are bishops, or elders, and deacons
in these churches, as for example in Philippi (Phil. 1:1). There is no
mention whatsoever of one man in charge, to whom the assembly delegated
the task of teaching, preaching and shepherding. There is no such term
as "the pastor of a church" or "the teacher, or preacher
of a church." The word is always in the plural, except where the requirements
and responsibility of their work is described. In the same assembly there
were pastors, evangelists, teachers, bishops and deacons. How does this
fit in with what is seen in modern denominationalism?

If a person were to examine the New Testament to discover how to get
rid of "the pastor of a church," he would discover that there
was no such person described, or even contemplated therein. There are two
kinds of troubles from which a company of believers may suffer: scriptural
and un-scriptural. The former can be dealt with according to the directions
of the Bible; but the latter must be decided by the by-laws and discipline
books of men. Scripturally gathered companies of God's people have their
troubles (for the flesh is within them as it is amongst all the other "brethren
in Christ"),but these troubles are anticipated in, and the remedy
provided by the word of God.

For example: here is a company of believers who have failed in acting
toward one another in love. Jealousy and strife have been allowed to remain
unjudged in the assembly; the Holy Spirit is grieved and quenched, and
confusion and barrenness follows. What is the remedy? There are two methods.
One is for every believer in that assembly to so humble himself before
God in confession of his sin and restitution to his brethren, that God
will be pleased to come in and revive the assembly of believers with the
conscious sense of His presence, and the liberty and power of the Holy
Spirit. The other method is to appoint one man as the head of that assembly,
and allow him to have the management of the meeting, the responsibility
for the ministry of the word, the dispensing of the Lord's supper, the
conducting of the prayer meeting and the preaching of the gospel, so that
all confusion will be brought to an end.

Which is the right method of restoration, the first or the last? Such
a question has only one reply. Every child of God will agree that the first
method is honoring to God and is the scriptural remedy. The other method
is seen in denominationalism with its attendant evils of clerisy, hierarchies,
synods, councils, books of discipline, etc.

It cannot be emphasized sufficiently that scriptural principles of gathering
require scriptural power -- the Holy Spirit--for their operation. When
that power is absent, confusion follows; but it is not the principles that
have failed, but the people. Once the people of God are restored in heart,
the power will once more be apparent. The principles, being scriptural,
are always true and right. Let us not adjust the principles of God's word
to our form of gathering but our form of gathering to the principles found
in the good Book. Is this clear? So long as the flesh remains in the people
of God, there will be manifestations of it which will make painful history;
but the principles of Scripture remain unchanged and unchangeable. The
apostle Paul, in I Cor. 14, rebuked the Corinthian believers for their
shameful behavior in the assembly, which had resulted in disorder and disgrace;
but never, for one moment, did he suggest that those scriptural principles,
which he had delivered to them, should be revised to suit their carnal
ideas and backslidden condition of soul.

Fourth: They are uncompromisingly loyal to the Person and work of
the Lord Jesus Christ.



In other words, they seek to hold, or acknowledge the supreme authority
and Headship of Christ. (Col. 1: 18; 2: 19). Nothing derogatory to the
Person and work of Christ would be allowed to remain unchallenged and unjudged
for one moment in their assemblies, and this is true the world over, wherever
these scripturally constituted gatherings are to be found. The essential
Deity of the Son of God, as coequal and coeternal with the Father and the
Holy Spirit; and the necessity for, and the efficacy of the substitutionary
sacrifice of Christ as the only ground for the believer's acceptance before
God, is emphasized constantly in their assemblies.

Those who meet among those known as "brethren" may not be
noted for their oratorical gifts, but one thing is certain: wherever one
stands up to preach the gospel, Christ's Person is exalted, His eternal
Deity is confessed and the all-sufficiency of the work of redemption, which
He accomplished by the shedding of His precious blood, is proclaimed with
no uncertain sound.

It would be good if this were true of all denominational gatherings,
but alas, it is more often the exception than the rule! Men are allowed
in the pulpits of many church buildings who deny the Deity of Christ, scoff
at the doctrine of redemption through His blood, and belittle or refuse
to accept the Bible as the Divinely inspired and therefore absolutely inerrant
and authoritative word of God. The tragedy is that many professing Christians
seem to see no inconsistency in listening to this denial of their Lord
and travesty of the gospel. By their very membership, presence and financial
support of such an organization, they thus help to perpetuate this disgraceful
thing! The Deity of Christ is the foundation stone of Christianity. The
person who denies Christ's Deity is not a Christian, and therefore has
no place whatever in a professedly Christian pulpit. Any company of people
that tolerates a preacher who denies Christ's Deity and His redemptive
work, is no place for a true and faithful child of God. If Christ is not
God, we do not need Him. Since Christ is God, we cannot do without Him!

To continue in a company of professed believers that permits doctrinal
evil to be preached and remain unjudged, is disloyalty to the Person and
work of the Lord Jesus Christ. To continue in such an association is to
give one's support to it. The word of. God is clear as to the attitude
of a believer in such a case. "What part hath he that believeth with
an unbeliever? ... Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate,
saith the Lord and touch not the unclean thing; and I will receive you,
and will be a Father unto you, and ye shall be My sons and daughters saith
the Lord almighty." (II Cor. 6:15-18). "Evil communications corrupt
good manners," declares the Bible. (2 Cor. 15: 33). A man is known
by the company he keeps. It is far better for a person to stand alone for
what he knows to be the truth of Holy Scripture and the honor of God's
Son, than to be linked, by membership, with the enemies and blasphemers
of his blessed Lord.

Loyalty to the commander-in-chief is essential to the united attack
of an army against a common enemy. What would you think of those in an
army who were afraid to face the foe lest some of their own number should
plunge a bayonet into their backs? This is the situation in many denominations,
where loose and blasphemous views of the Person and work of the Son of
God are tolerated. A member of such an organization never knows when the
Deity of his Lord will be attacked from behind the pulpit, the efficacy
of His precious blood ridiculed and denied, and the truth and authority
of God's word questioned. Thank God, such is not true amongst the thousands
of assemblies of believers known as "brethren" scattered throughout
the whole world.


Fifth: They welcome into their assemblies all whom Christ has received,
to the glory of God.



That is, all regenerated persons who are sound in doctrine and godly
in their walk before the world. To make any other conditions for welcoming
a person to the Lord's supper and the privileges of the assembly, is to
act in a sectarian manner that has no scriptural warrant, and which only
serves to bring confusion and dishonor to a company of believers.

A reading of the book of Acts and the Epistles will indicate that the
early churches were composed of professed believers only, and were not
a mixture of saved and unsaved. With these assemblies each believer associated
himself upon his conversion. There was no need for a person to ask in that
day: "What denomination shall I join?" There was only one place
for the child of God to go, and that was where believers met together in
the name of the Lord Jesus, either for prayer, praise, worship, or the
ministry of the word.

On the day of Pentecost, those who gladly received the word were baptized
and added to the assembly that had already been formed by the Spirit of
God (Acts 2:41). Peter and John, after their arrest and acquittal, "went
to their own company" (Acts 4: 23) . We are told: "And of the
rest (the unsaved) durst no man join himself to them" (Acts 5: 13).
Simon, a false professor, was told by Peter that he had "no part nor
lot in this matter" (Acts 8: 18-23). Saul of Tarsus, after his conversion,
"was with the disciples certain days" (Acts 9: 19). When he "assayed
to join himself to the disciples" at Jerusalem, the believers were
afraid to receive him because he had been such an enemy of Christians.
Barnabas, however, vouched for the reality of his Christian profession
and character, and he was then gladly welcomed (Acts 9: 26) . This is the
story all through the Acts. The apostle Paul was greatly used of God, through
the preaching of the gospel and teaching of the word, in establishing little
assemblies of believers who met together in the name of the Lord Jesus
Christ. To these local assemblies every Christian, doctrinally and morally
sound was gladly welcomed.

In the early days of Christianity, it was the custom for a believer,
who left one town to go to another, to take with him a letter from his
home assembly, commending him to the love and care of the assembly in the
town to which he was going (II Cor. 3:1). By this means it was made reasonably
certain that believers and believers only met at the Lord's supper to show
forth the Lord's death. While a letter of commendation serves a good and
useful purpose; it must not be allowed to become a rigid rule, or made
an essential condition ere a believer can be welcomed to the Lord's supper.
This is mere formalism. It is with principles and not rules that the New
Testament concerns itself in this matter. The spectacle of saved and unsaved,
linked together by a common membership of church fellowship, such as we
see around us in Christendom, has no counterpart in the New Testament.
We read there that "all that believed were together" (Acts 2:
44) .

The "brethren" have sought to return to these New Testament
principles of gathering, and no unsaved person is knowingly permitted to
partake of the Lord's supper, or allowed to associate with them in their
assembly fellowship. Neither is any person who is unsound in the fundamentals
of God's word, or who is morally wrong in his life permitted to continue
with them in church fellowship. If any person in their assemblies is proven,
after careful and unbiased examination, to hold and teach wrong doctrine,
or is immoral in his life, or guilty of the sins enumerated in I Cor 5:
11, he is put away from that assembly until such time as it is quite clear
he has been restored in heart to the Lord (I Cor. 5: 11-13; II Cor. 2:
6-8) .

The "brethren" rightly argue that as the Lord's supper belongs
to the Lord, it is for the Lord's people only. The Lord only invites His
own blood-bought people to thus remember Him. An assembly of believers
simply welcomes the Christian who is sound in life and doctrine, and who
has seen from the word of God his privilege and responsibility to be there.
If, from what you have seen and heard from God's word, you have been brought
to realize that your place is amongst those who meet thus in the name of
the Lord Jesus Christ alone, in scriptural simplicity, and apart from the
ecclesiastical forms invented by men: make known this desire to an assembly
of believers. They, in turn, will interview you to see whether you can
give a reason for the hope that is within you, and whether you are sound
in life and doctrine. Once this is established they will gladly welcome
you to share with them the Christian fellowship and assembly privileges
that is the birthright of every true believer in Christ.


Sixth: They observe the ordinances, given to the Church by the Lord
Jesus Christ, in a scriptural manner.

These ordinances are two in number, Baptism and the Lord's Supper; the
first is administered to the believer once, the second observed by the
believer often.

BAPTISM is the God-ordained figure, symbol or picture of the
believer's death, burial and resurrection with Christ. By his baptism with
water the Christian confesses his identification with the Lord Jesus Christ
in His death, and his determination to walk in newness of life to the glory
of Him who went under the waves and billows of God's wrath to deliver him
from the penalty and power of sin, and from this present evil world. (Psalm
22: 1-21; 88: 1-18; Rom. 6: 1-14; Gal. 1: 4).

The Savior's commission to His disciples was: "Go ye therefore
and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit; teaching them to observe all things
whatsoever I have commanded you ,and lo, I am with you alway, even unto
the end of the world." (age). (Matt. 28: 19, 20). In obedience to
this commission, those known as "brethren" have gone forth with
the gospel. When souls have been won for Christ, the truth of baptism has
been placed before them, and the believers have been baptized, or immersed
in water, symbol of their burial with Christ. There is no such thing taught
in the New Testament as baptism before profession of faith on the part
of the individual. The scriptural order of Christian baptism is: "He
that believeth and is baptized." (Mark 16: 16). Search the history
of the Church as found in the Acts of the Apostles, and you will not find
one case of infant baptism recorded. Baptism is conditioned upon believing,
which comes through an intelligent hearing of the gospel (Rom. 10:6-17).
Surely this cannot be true of a helpless babe in arms!

Of the theory of so-called "Household Baptism," (which teaches
that each member of the household of a believer, including the infants
of the home, should be baptized), we cannot do better than quote C. H.
Macintosh, author of the world famed and greatly used C. H. M.'s "Notes
on the Pentateuch," who wrote: (Dec. 22, 1871) "I believe the
course of some of our friends in urging this question of (household) baptism
will, unless God in His mercy interpose, lead to most disastrous results.
For my own part, seeing the question has been thus forced upon me, I can
only say I have, for thirty-two years, been asking in vain for a single
line of Scripture for baptizing any save believers, or those who profess
to believe. I have had inferences, conclusions and deductions; but of direct
Scripture authority, not a tittle."

Many Christians seem to regard water baptism as a "non-essential,"
and treat it with indifference by saying: "Well, it doesn't affect
one's salvation, so why worry?" But surely the distinct command of
the Lord Jesus is not a non-essential for a believer. It is true that baptism
does not secure the soul's eternal salvation and acceptance before God,
but surely it is necessary to complete obedience to the Lord Jesus Christ
if He declared it should be done. Though the Lord puts the responsibility
to carry out His command to baptize directly upon those who preach the
gospel (Matt. 28: 18; Mark 16: 15, 16), it is fitting that the believer
should be prayerfully exercised about having this Divinely-appointed ordinance
carried out in the way that Scripture teaches, especially in view of the
deep spiritual significance attached to it by the apostle Paul. Read carefully
Romans 6: 1-14.

While maintaining firmly that baptism by immersion, subsequent to profession
of faith in Christ, is the plain teaching of the New Testament, we should
be careful not to make this ordinance the door of admittance to and participation
in the Lord's supper. Nor should we make it the basis of our fellowship
with other Christians, who have not yet been brought to see, from God's
word, the distinctive truths of believer's baptism, or the privilege of
gathering in scriptural simplicity.

We must ever keep in mind the fact that we are living today in the midst
of something the New Testament does not contemplate: namely, a baptized
mass of humanity. Practically every genuine Christian we meet has passed
through some form of baptism, so-called. In a great number of cases he
was sprinkled with water as an infant. When, in later years, he was saved
by the grace of God, he imagined that this christening was the equivalent
of believer's baptism, and his denomination encourages him in this belief.

By all means, let us place before such, in a kindly, courteous and Christian
way, the teaching of God's word as to these things; but, at the same time,
let us never forget that every believer is a child of God and a fellow
member of the body of Christ. May it be ours to extend to all those who
"belong to Christ" (Mark 9:41) that Christian love, care and
forbearance that the Head of the body declared were the marks of true discipleship
(John 13: 34, 35; cp. I John 3: 14, 16; 4: 20; 5: 1) .

Many a godly Christian has been stumbled because of the harsh, hyper-critical,
uncharitable and contemptuous attitude adopted towards him by a better
taught believer, or company of believers, who failed utterly to take into
consideration his spiritual environment. Let us ponder carefully and prayerfully
the words of the inspired apostle: "Owe no man anything, but to love
one another" (Rom. 13: 8) , and: "Wherefore receive ye one another,
as Christ also received us, to the glory of God" (Rom. 15: 7) .

THE LORD'S SUPPER, as we have already seen, is for all the Lord's
people who are sound in life and doctrine. An examination of the practice
of the early Church, as seen in the book of Acts, seems to indicate that
brethren of a given community came together each Lord's day to show forth
the Lord's death in the breaking of bread (Acts 20:7). They came primarily,
not to hear preaching, but to break the bread, symbolic of the body of
their Lord and Savior; and drink the cup, symbolic of His precious blood.

For this ordinance also we have abundant Scripture testimony. The very
night in which Christ was betrayed, He gathered His disciples together
and instituted this feast of remembrance. (See Luke 221 19, 20; Matt. 26:2628;
Mark 14: 22-25). From John 13, It seems certain that .Judas left after
the Passover feast, and before the Lord's supper was instituted. In I Cor.
11:23-34 this ordinance of the Lord's supper is given, by the glorified
Lord, as a distinct revelation to Paul the apostle. It is introduced because
the brethren in Corinth had abused the privilege of the Lord's supper by
turning it into a feast in which every man satisfied his own appetite for
food and drink. The purpose and propriety of this blessed ordinance is
there stated as a direct revelation from the ascended Lord in glory, and
every Christian should read and re-read this whole passage carefully and
prayerfully.

Some think that in the primitive Church this feast was celebrated each
day (Acts 2:46); but by the time assemblies were spread throughout Asia
it became the established custom for the disciples to come together the
first day of the week to break bread. (Acts 20:7). Notice the expression
used. It was not the first Sunday of the month, or the first Sunday of
the quarter, or the first Sunday of the half-year, or the year; but the
first day of the week. The same term is used again in I Cor. 16: 1, 2 where
Paul, speaking of the collection for the saints says: "Upon the first
day of the week, let each of you lay by him in store as the Lord has prospered
him." The primary purpose of these believers, in assembling themselves
together on the first day of the week, in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ,
was to remember Him in His own Divinely appointed way, and thus "proclaim
the Lord's death until He come."

This is what those called "brethren" still seek to do. Throughout
the world, at a time most convenient to the majority of the believers,
Christians, and Christians only, gather together in the Lord's name alone.
In their midst is a table upon which is placed a loaf of bread and a cup
containing the fruit of the vine. Inasmuch as it is the Lord's supper,
there is no one present who attempts to usurp the Lordship and authority
of Christ by attempting to take His place, or arrange its program. One
after another of the brethren arise as the Spirit leads--one with a hymn,
another voicing the worship of the assembly, another with some Scripture
exposition in keeping with the feast of remembrance. One rises to give
thanks for the bread, and it is broken and passed so that all may break
it and eat. Perhaps another rises to give thanks for the cup and it, in
turn, is passed from one to the other.

Thus, in scriptural simplicity, this feast, instituted by the Savior,
is kept. There is no visible head at this feast of remembrance, for none
such is contemplated in Scripture. Christ, however, is there according
to His promise: "Where two or three are gathered together in My name,
there am I in the midst of them," and who would dare to take His place?
This is what clerisy has done and, whether consciously or unconsciously,
Christ's place of preeminence in the assembly of His saints for worship
has been superseded by the so-called "minister," who has been
humanly ordained, who "dispenses the elements" and, apart from
whose presence, the Lord's supper cannot be partaken and enjoyed! From
such a travesty of the pattern given in the New Testament we turn with
abhorrence. Scripture makes clear that Christ is the Host at His own table,
and each believer is His greatly privileged and highly honored guest.

There is no greener spot on the face of this wilderness of a world in
which the believer's lot is cast, than when believers meet around the Lord,
each Lord's day, to remember the Lord Jesus Christ in the Lord's own appointed
way, proclaiming the Lord's death until the Lord comes back again. Is this
your happy privilege, fellow believer? Rest not until it is, and you can
truthfully sing:

              "Lord Jesus, in Thy precious name,
              And, in that name alone;
              At Thy request we gladly meet,
              Thy Lordship here would own.


              As on that dark betrayal night,
              Thou didst this feast ordain;
              We too, the bread and cup would take,
              Thy death, Lord, thus proclaim.
              The bread, Thy body doth portray;
              The cup, Thy precious blood;
              By which our sin was put away.
              Our peace was made with God.
              The Host art Thou, O blessed Lord,
              Thy honored guests are we;
              With grateful and adoring hearts,
              We would remember Thee!
              Lord Jesus, Whom, unseen we love,
              As thus we muse on Thee;
              We none would see, save Thee alone,
              Thou Man of Calvary!"

Seventh: They give liberty for the exercise of the priesthood of
all believers, and have room for the development of all the gifts given
by the risen Head to His Church.

The abominable heresy that divides the church of God into two classes,
called the "clergy" and the "laity," is utterly unknown
in the New Testament. This did not come into existence until the latter
part of the second century, as a perusal of any reliable 'Church History"
will prove. This innovation was undoubtedly the work of the Devil, and
it has wrought untold havoc in the church of God. The word "clergy"
comes from the word "
kleeros," which is translated,
"heritage." In I Peter 5:3 the Spirit of God declares that all
believers are God's "
kleeros," or heritage. The
term "laity" comes from the word "
laos,"
which means "the common people."

In Christendom today we hear of "clergymen and laymen," or
the "
kleeros and the

laos."
The clergyman
belongs to a particular class in the Church who, by reason of education
along certain religious lines, plus human ordination, has authority conferred
upon him to preach, baptize, administer the elements in the Lord's supper,
and also lead the congregation in public worship, prayer and ministry,
as well as shepherd the flock. The layman, not being so educated and ordained,
has no such privileges, and must be content to occupy a subordinate place.
This detestable heresy finds its fullest expression in the Roman Catholic
Church, but Protestantism also, is greatly corrupted by it.

There is not the slightest ground for this division of Christians in
the New Testament. You will search therein in vain for it. It is foreign
to the whole language of Scripture in which every believer is viewed as
a "priest" (I Peter 2: 5-9). As such he is exhorted to "offer
up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ" (I Peter
2: 5) . All God's people are described as being constituted a kingdom of
priests unto God (Rev. 1: 5, 6; 5: 10) . All are invited to draw near with
a true heart, in full assurance of faith, through "the great high
Priest of their confession," whose blood has opened up the new and
living way into God's presence and favor (Heb. 10: 19-22).

The elaborate ritual of Judaism, with its special priesthood, was done
away in Christ! The veil has been rent, and every regenerated person has
been constituted a priest unto God. All enlightened Christians will acknowledge
this, yet many continue to maintain their membership in a system which
both recognizes and supports this multitude of unscriptural "reverends,"
"right reverends," etc., etc. Inasmuch as the church of God is
likened to a human body, each part being necessary for the proper functioning
of the whole; there can therefore be no division of the body into two separate
bodies or classes, such as is practiced in most circles of denominationalism.

Among those known as "brethren," no such distinctions are
tolerated for one moment. As they meet as an assembly for worship or prayer,
all the believers occupy the same common ground of priesthood, and liberty
is given to the Spirit of God to express Himself audibly through any of
the men so gathered, the women being expressly enjoined to be "silent
in the churches" (I Cor. 14: 34, 35).

In such gatherings, worship is given its proper place. Christendom has
practically eliminated the place of the worship meeting, where believers
gather for the purpose of giving God that which He is seeking from His
people, the worship of their hearts. Worship is not prayer for one's needs,
or praise for one's blessings, but the overflow of the soul in adoration
to God for what He is in Himself, as revealed by the Lord Jesus Christ.
Prayer is the occupation of the heart with its needs; praise, the occupation
of the heart with its blessings; but worship is the occupation of the heart
with God Himself. (See Author's book on "Worship, the Christian's
Highest Occupation." Same publisher.) How little of this is found
in Christendom and denominationalism, and God is consequently robbed of
His portion from His people!

While it is quite true that all believers are priests, yet it is also
true that not all are evangelists, pastors, or teachers. These are gifts,
given to the church by the ascended Head. But the fact that one of the
believers exercises either of these gifts does not place him in a superior
class above his brethren: he merely exercises the gift he has been given
as part of the body of Christ, and thus the whole assembly is edified or
built up. In the assembly, as a whole, there are evangelists, pastors and
teachers. As such they are not limited to any one church. There is no such
thing as the evangelist of a church, or the pastor of a church, or the
teacher of a church. Bishops and deacons are local in their sphere. As
regards the bishop, he is a very different person from what we know of
that high ecclesiastical office as found in the sects of Christendom. The
acceptance of this truth would greatly upset some of the highly organized
denominations of today.

The "brethren" seek to recognize and give liberty for the
exercise of these gifts in the assembly. They believe that God meant what
He said when He declared: "As every man hath received the gift, even
so minister the same one to another, as good stewards of the manifold grace
of God" (I Peter 4:10, 11). Gift will make room for itself, and it
will soon become apparent to the assembly whether this person or that has
really the gift of an evangelist, a teacher, or a pastor. The saints are
exhorted to "know, or recognize, them that labor among them"
(I Thess. 5: 12) ; but are never asked to elect, choose, or appoint them.
With the business affairs of an assembly, however, this is different (Acts
6:1-4).

Christendom presents the spectacle of one man being elected and appointed
by a congregation, for a certain stipulated salary, to do all the evangelism,
teaching and shepherding of the flock; but seldom indeed is there a person
who has all these gifts combined in himself. Furthermore, Scripture does
not contemplate a stipulated salaried ministry. The New Testament knows
nothing of a minister hired to preach at so much per annum. It is foreign
to New Testament principles, which describes the evangelist, teacher, or
pastor, who is devoting his whole time to such ministry, as looking alone
to the Lord for his support. (I Cor. 9:14). We need not be surprised by
attacks on the part of so-called "ministers" of denominations
against the "brethren." These men realize that if they accepted
what the "brethren" practice along this line, both their position
and salary would be lost. Their opposition is simply a gesture of self-defense
to defend a system from which they derive a livelihood. (III John 7).

The idea of taking collections of money from a mixed audience of saved
and unsaved has also no scriptural warrant. "Freely ye have received,
freely give," was our Savior's exhortation (Matt. 10: 8). There is
not the slightest suggestion in the New Testament of money being solicited
from unsaved people to "help the cause," or to "pay the
minister's salary," or to "pay off the mortgage on the house
of God." The collections of money were to be taken from the Lord's
people only (I Cor. 16: 1, 2). What shame and disgrace Christendom has
brought to the name of Christianity, by using worldly means to extract
money from the reluctant pockets of unsaved people to support what is professedly
of God!

To sum up: We have seen that an assembly of believers, according to
the New Testament, gives room for the manifestation of all the gifts given
by the Head of the Church for the edification of the assembly. In the fourth
chapter of Ephesians, the Spirit of God, after describing the gifts given
by Christ to His mystical body, reveals the purpose for which they were
given (v. 12), and then describes the effect of these gifts in the assembly.
We read: "From Whom the whole body, fitly joined together and compacted
by that which every joint supplieth, according to the effectual working
in the measure of every part, maketh increase of the body unto the edifying
of itself in love" (Eph. 4: 16) .

Thus the evangelists in a local church should be busily engaged in preaching
the gospel to the unsaved. The teachers should be faithfully seeking to
instruct the believers. The pastors should be lovingly shepherding the
flock among which the Holy Spirit has made them overseers (I Peter 5: 1-4).
The bishops or elders and deacons should be sincerely fulfilling their
God-given functions. Is this possible in the assembly of which you form
a part; or are you associated with a humanly conceived, humanly organized
and humanly directed assembly, that allows no liberty for the exercise
and development of the gifts given to the Church to function within the
local assembly?


Eighth: Their gospel activity is governed by the principles laid
down in God's word.

From the assemblies of those known as "brethren" more than
a thousand have gone forth to preach the gospel in the foreign mission
fields, looking alone to the Lord for their support. As many more are busily
engaged in the homelands opening up new places where little or no clear
gospel is heard, and where these scriptural principles of gathering are
not known or practiced. Besides those who spend all their time in the Lord's
work, there is a large army of business and professional men and tradesmen
who devote their spare time to preaching the gospel, distributing tracts,
visiting the sick and teaching the word of God.

The only difference between these and the other workers is that they
are part-time, and the others are whole-time laborers in the same harvest
field. In every place where any of them are scheduled to preach the gospel,
you may be absolutely certain of hearing nothing but the clear statement
of man's need and God's remedy, and the proclamation of a full and free
salvation, conditioned through faith in Christ's finished work, acceptance
of Him as Savior, and confession of Him as Lord of the life. (Rom. 10:9-10).

Go where you will in this world, and you will be certain of this: wherever
these companies of Christians known as "brethren" are found,
you will hear a scriptural presentation of the gospel that is honoring
to God and glorifying to Christ. They are prepared, as individuals, to
go anywhere, providing they can take the whole Bible with them, and are
given liberty to declare the whole counsel of God. Wherever they go, they
preach the word without fear, or favor, or charge. Eternity alone will
reveal the countless thousands who have been led to own their need as sinners
and trust the Savior who has been presented to them through the gospel
as preached by them.

Of course, each servant of the Lord is responsible, to his own Master
alone, as to his sphere and methods of service (Rom. 14:4). While he should
welcome advice from godly brethren, he should not allow himself to be dictated
to regarding these things, for he is not "the servant of man"
(Gal. 1: 10). An ever increasing number of assemblies, from which goes
forth the Word with no uncertain sound, bears eloquent testimony to the
fact that God's principles of gathering are as workable today as when they
were laid down many years ago; providing God's people will bow to the authority
of Scripture, and allow the Lord to have His rightful place as Head of
the assembly, which is His body.

Being thus on scriptural ground, and acting upon scriptural principles
of gathering, those that are added to an assembly thus gathered have freedom
to develop their gift, and also to grow in grace and in the knowledge of
their Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. One-man ministry tends to stifle this
development of gift, as also does narrow sectarianism and unscriptural
principles.

A friend of mine once spoke to a very well known teacher amongst the
denominations. During the conversation he asked him why it was that the
average young Christian in an assembly of believers known as "brethren,"
could give a good scriptural definition and a clear exposition of the great
doctrines of the Bible, while the average young Christian amongst the denominations
could not. The worthy doctor of divinity, since gone home to be with Christ,
though agreeing with the fact of the statement, could not furnish any explanation
of its truth. My friend then pointed out that the explanation lay in the
fact that those who met on scriptural lines were able to function according
to scriptural principles, and a scriptural atmosphere was thus created
that made possible the recognition, exercise and development of God-given
ability.

On another occasion in Johannesburg, South Africa, an elderly clergyman,
a true and godly Christian, came to the meeting for the breaking of bread
and, of course, was received as a believer. After the bread had been broken
and the cup passed, he arose and, among other things, said: "Brethren,
value the liberty you have in meeting thus, and let no one bring you into
ecclesiastical bondage." Personally, the more I read and study the
Bible; the longer I remain associated with those known as "brethren";
and the more I see of denominations and meet those who are linked to them;
the clearer do I see the scripturalness of the position of those who meet
as believers only, and thank God that He ever, in His grace, led me to
gather among them.

As companies of believers we freely admit to having failed in many respects,
and bemoan the oft manifestations of the flesh amongst us, which has grieved
the Holy Spirit and brought shame to the testimony of our Lord. We have
to confess our lack of love ofttimes to those of our brethren with whom
we have not seen eye to eye; but, in spite of all the failure, those known
as "brethren" are seeking humbly and consistently to put into
practice those principles of gathering found in the New Testament scriptures.
Because of this fact, I do not want to be anywhere else but among those
who seek to gather in the alone and sufficient name of the Lord Jesus Christ,
and who accept the word of God as the sole authority for faith and practice.



Conclusion

The foregoing eight reasons for my being associated with those known
as "brethren" really represent the privileges of being so gathered,
but privilege always carries with it a corresponding responsibility. Since
these principles of gathering are scriptural, it develops upon each Christian
to act as before the Lord in the light of them. I would suggest that each
believer give his earnest and undivided attention to the four statements
which follow.

First. That each genuine believer, who is sound in life and doctrine,
and who realizes, from the Scriptures, the unscriptural character of denominationalism
and all that it involves, will not rest until he or she is meeting with
those who hold and practice these scriptural principles of gathering. Remember,
it is not a case of "joining the brethren." If you are saved,
the Spirit of God has already joined you to the body of Christ. It simply
consists of intelligently and deliberately associating oneself with those
who have seen and are acting upon the truth of the one body of which Christ
is the Head, and every believer a member. The person who really apprehends
this truth will never rest content until he has gladly gone forth from
that which, in practice, denies Christ the place of preeminence in the
assembly, and the Spirit of God the liberty to minister through whomsoever
He will in the assembly. The scriptural assembly of believers, to whom
vou make known your decision, will gladly welcome you and extend to you
the right hand of fellowship after a godly sort.

Second. It will mean that he who has seen his privilege and has
taken his place thus will surely desire to support the assembly by his
presence at all its meetings whenever possible. He will earnestly cooperate
with his fellow believers in the assembly and, by his wholehearted support
financially, and his sacrificial efforts individually, will seek to encourage,
strengthen and edify the company of believers with whom he meets.

There is a noticeable lack of this on the part of some who apparently
imagine that their responsibility to an assembly ends with their being
present at the meeting for the breaking of bread on Lord's day. It needs
to be emphasized that the prayer meeting, the Bible reading, the gospel
meeting, and special meetings are just as much meetings of the assembly
for the purposes named, as the feast of remembrance.

How can an assembly hope to develop spiritually if the prayer meeting
is neglected? How can it be edified if a mere handful attend the Bible
reading? What will the unsaved think, if only a few of the believers gather
to support, by their presence and prayers, the one who is to deliver the
gospel message? Only an excuse that can stand the light of the judgment
seat of Christ should be made for not attending these meetings; yet the
most trivial excuses are often put forth by those whose lack of heart,
or ignorance of these principles, causes them to absent themselves from
these meetings.

A Christian man whom I know, used to put it thus: "What kind of
an assembly would this one be, if everybody in it was just like me?"
Would there be a prayer meeting? a Bible reading? a gospel meeting? An
assembly is formed by a number of believers, and the spiritual tone of
the assembly is determined by the spirituality, or otherwise, of each individual
composing that assembly. When a person avoids the prayer meeting, it is
a sure sign he needs that meeting more than anything else. Many a discouraged
believer has been tempted to stay home on a prayer meeting night because
he was tired in mind and body; but when he went, he discovered how true
was the promise: "They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength."
(Isa. 40:31). Perhaps the very word of comfort or rebuke that we so much
need is waiting for us at the Bible reading, but we must be there to get
it, or it will do us no good.

If I would emphasize one thing above another to young believers in assemblies,
it would be this: Be loyal to the assembly of which you form a part. Do
not be a liability, be an asset. Do not go visiting around here and there
on your own meeting night, or get so involved in Christian work outside
the assembly that you have no time to be present at its regular meetings
and fulfill your obligations to your own home assembly. Concentration is
a splendid thing. I have known an assembly to die because those composing
it assumed no responsibility to it, and devoted their energies in this
work and that effort, in many cases under denominational auspices, which
were opposed to the very scriptural principles they professed to hold.

If the assembly with which you are connected is scriptural in its principles,
back it up by all the means in your power, and concentrate your energies
on edifying, or building up that which is according to the pattern revealed
in the New Testament. It is a case of either concentration, or dissipation
of energy. Do not develop into a "sermon taster," or become a
"floater," or a "thrill hunter," following this or
that man around, to the neglecting of your own responsibilities in your
home assembly. The story is told of a man who saw a boy about to drown
a dog. On being asked why he was going to drown the dog, the boy replied:
"Well, it's like this. This dog follows everybody, and a dog that
follows everybody is good to nobody!" The moral is obvious.

Third. The Christian who seeks to gather according to these scriptural
principles will need to have a big heart for all the children of God, by
whatever name they may call themselves. He will have to continually challenge
himself to distinguish between personalities and principles. He may not
be able, in loyalty to the word of God, to have any fellowship with the
system or sect with which this or that Christian is connected; but he ought
to show that believer, as an individual, all the love and care that is
his due as one of "the brethren." It is sadly possible for an
individual or an assembly who professes to have seen these scriptural principles,
to become very sectarian in heart. Let us remember that all who "belong
to Christ" are dear to His heart, and are in the Church which is His
body. As such they should be the objects of our love. Our Lord's words
should be deeply pondered in the heart: "By this shall all men know
that ye are My disciples, by your love one for another" (John 13:35).

Any true Christian, who is morally clean as to his walk and sound in
the fundamentals of God's word should be gladly welcomed to the Lord's
supper, on no other condition than that he "belongs to Christ."
To impose any other conditions of reception to an assembly is to form a
sect with all its attendant evils. There is no such thing in Scripture
as the sect of "The Brethren;" but there is such a thing in Scripture
as brethren being assembled together on the common ground of the Headship
of Christ and the unity of all believers as members of the body of Christ.

Any assembly that knowingly refuses a believer, who is sound in life
and doctrine, a place at the Lord's supper becomes, by that very act, a
sect, however strenuously those composing it may deny the fact. Let us
beware of sectarianism in any form! What mischief--and worse--has been
wrought by a narrow, bigoted attitude adopted towards the Lord's people!
If they belong to Christ, and are walking as becomes believers, count it
the greatest privilege to welcome such, and so "keep the unity of
the Spirit in the bond of peace" (Eph. 4: 3). All snobbery is detestable,
but religious snobbery is the most nauseating of all. May the Lord give
us to realize what a hateful thing it is to Him who "loved the church
and gave Himself for it"! A well known teacher once wrote: "If
you fail to provide an amount of fellowship for every known child of God,
that moment you deserve to go out of existence." J. N. D.) .

Fourth. The believer who meets on scriptural lines should so
study his Bible that he will be able to help other Christians who are not
similarly placed as to their church association. One has no need to apologize
for his position amongst the so-called "brethren." Since it is
of God, and according to His word, let us boldly affirm it, and seek to
deliver our fellow believers from the evils of sectarianism, with its ordained
clergy and all the confusion that goes with it. Plenty of good literature
has been published on this subject by able teachers, so that there is no
excuse for not knowing the certainty of the things we stand for. While
careful to make no claims for perfection in our behavior whilst so meeting,
let us, however, boldly maintain the scripturalness of the principles that
we seek to hold and practice.

A well-known teacher amongst the denominations once confided to me:
"I'll come amongst you when you brethren cease your quarrels."
At the time he said this, his own denomination was in the midst of a fearful
row over the question as to who should govern its church policy, the modernists
or the fundamentalists! Apparently this quarrel did not enter into his
thoughts, or cause him to leave his denomination!

As "brethren," we have differences of opinion but, thank God,
they are not over fundamental truths that question the inspiration of God's
word, or the Deity of Christ, etc. We do not have to dispute about the
pastor's salary being raised or lowered, or whether a modernist preacher
shall be allowed to speak on our platform or not, or how we shall get rid
of an unsaved "minister." All our differences can be solved by
submitting to Scripture and manifesting that love, forbearance and humility
the word of God enjoins upon all the brethren. Let us then heed the injunction
of Paul to Timothy: "The things that thou hast heard of me amongst
many witnesses, the same commit thou to faithful men who shall be able
to teach others also" (II Tim. 2: 2) .




May we so study and obey God's word, that we shall each be found in
the place where our Lord would have us to be, gathering in His name alone
with those whom it has pleased Him to call "His brethren"; owning
the alone authority of His word; welcoming all true believers sound in
doctrine and life; and allowing the Holy Spirit liberty to minister through
whomsoever He will, to the glory of God and the edification of the assembly!