Zach Nielsen posted this and I couldn’t agree more.
One of our chief evangelical blind spots has been to overlook the central importance of the church. We tend to proclaim individual salvation without moving on to the saved community. We emphasize that Christ died for us ‘to redeem us from all iniquity’ rather than ‘to purify for himself a people of his own’. We think of ourselves more as ‘Christians’ than as ‘churchmen’, and our message is more good news of a new life than of a new society.
Nobody can emerge from a careful reading of Paul’s letter to the Ephesians with a privatized gospel. For Ephesians is the gospel of the church. It sets forth God’s eternal purpose to create through Jesus Christ a new society which stands out in bright relief against the sombre background of the old world. For God’s new society is characterized by life in place of death, by unity and reconciliation in place of division and alienation, by the wholesome standards of righteousness in place of the corruption of wickedness, by love and peace in place of hatred and strife, and by unremitting conflict with evil in place of a flabby compromise with it.
– John Stott, The Message of Ephesians, 9,10
HT: Z
Great quote. How different the church would be and Christians too if we lived this out.
Hey Chris, I listened to a great message on Church by Kevin DeYoung if you haven’t already heard it. It’s a real encouragement to pastors and people. Here’s the link.
http://sgm.edgeboss.net/download/sgm/next/2010/next2010.6-deyoung.mp3