Sunday, 28 February 2010

We are born priests in Christ.

When we are found in Christ through new birth we are born priests in Christ, we are in His priestly body - that is the Church. This requires no special performance or test to join this priesthood, but rather faith and hope in Christ. The ability to minister comes from the Holy Spirit as we are under a new and better priesthood, one lived under grace and mercy, one that can accept those who are physically and even mentally handicapped to participate in 'ministry'. Where the children, youth, and women can also enter, and the older generation do not need to retire but all are able to continue in the capacity given to them by the Lord who gives to each a measure of His grace to minister.
All is made new in Jesus, His coming into the world is a moment of the transformation of the religious ministry, a way of life that reaches for the best of people has now come...how we often turn back to the lesser forms of ministry rather than living in the better. Jesus began His public ministry at the age of thirty, but does this mean all should wait until they are thirty years old until there can be a participation in the ministry of the Holy Spirit. This would seem presumptuous and ill conceived. The Church is to be a model of the ministry of the Holy Spirit; it is to be a priesthood of all believers; an ability to participate through God's gracious gifting and calling rather than just human effort and intelligence; a place of witnessing the way of Jesus, but lived out in a group of people saved by grace and continuing to live by that grace (1Peter 2:4-5, 9-10). Ministry in the church is not for just the educated and the popular, it is for those who have received something from Jesus - the head of the Church - something to share with the others in the community of faith.
The New Testament speaks of a church where there is a participation (1Corinthians 14:26), so that every part can give and share in the responsibilty of growing spiritually. In giving and sharing what God has given to you personally - the Lord gives back more abundantly, this is a wonderfully simple spiritual principle. "What can I give?" you might say, well you can give your-self, time, prayers, thoughts, hopes, spiritual gifts, help, administration, songs... the church should be a sharing community where fellowship is based in the grace that God has given each member. When I speak of 'member', I mean a member of the spiritual body of Christ into which we are born spiritually 'members'. This is not by a written or signed document, not by passing a spiritual test, but by entering into Christ by inward working of the Holy Spirit.

Matthew Armstrong
Issue 14, 26th Feb 2010
Blantyre.

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