P
PC_Master
Guest
Obviously there needs to be some minimal organization to such meetings, but such organization need not have created an authority who could render a decision without the congregation.This is much as a moderator speaks in various sorts of meetings, but has no supreme control over the group himself.
- The church has a voice (" if he doesn’t listen even to the church…".). Now, let’s ask ourselves: has an unstructured assembly a voice ? How can I say: now the assembly has spoken, and I will listen. If you imagine an unstructured
assembly, you will agree that it has no voice as such. There are many voices ( the members’) and no voice of the assembly as such. The oneness of the voice I have to listen to implies organization, roles, rules. Am I wrong ?
I simply see no evidence that shows there to have been an earthly organization. There were many believers, who were spread out through numerous congregations (based on their geographic location). There were those who held positions of leadership among those groups, but these were ordinary men who were thought to have greater spiritual understanding (much like Paul), and thus were entrusted with positions of authority.So you do state that. Founding the statement on what ?
But why must one assume that this necessitates an earthly organization with a head apostle to which all others were subject? I don’t see this view anywhere in the texts I’ve read.
How were the people able to select upstanding men to serve as deacons? How were congregations able to select men to send as messengers? Indeed, this is part of why the holy spirit is present – to help us discern godly wisdom and understanding.We have to decide whether the requested submission is to authority or to understanding. For, authority we could acknowledge, and we then should know whom to obey.
In the latter case, I should not know how to follow this scriptural command. Because …I am given no ranking of my brothers
according to the spiritual understanding. And so, again, as for Matthew 18:17, without organization, here too I simply do not know whom to listen to.
Paul writes of spiritual gifts which are to be used. Paul doesn’t write of authority, except that of God himself. Where does he say that those with the gift of teaching are to be leaders? No – Paul seems to say they should indeed teach, but he doesn’t mention that any are given the gift of leadership, or the episcopate. An odd omission, if the church was as structured as you claim.As for the existence of offices, or ministries in the Church, Paul does tell us explicitly about that. See Ephesians 4:11
Let’s clarify one thing real quick – I’m not saying that there was no organization in the church. Rather, I’m saying there was no central leadership in Rome (or elsewhere). The church consisted of a collection of congregations of believers, and men were brought forth by God to impart godly wisdom to them.*1Clem 44:2He was asked to write by the Corinthians. Maybe in Greece they knew that precisely in Rome there was greater spiritual understanding.Anyway, chapters 42 to 44 speak just about ministries and appointments. Hard to fit into an unstructured church.
For this cause therefore, having received complete foreknowledge, they appointed the aforesaid persons, and afterwards they provided a continuance, that if these should fall asleep, other approved men should succeed to their ministration. Those therefore who were appointed by them, or afterward by other men of repute with the consent of the whole Church, and have ministered unblamably to the flock of Christ in lowliness of mind, peacefully and with all modesty, and for long time have borne a good report with all these men we consider to be unjustly thrust out from their ministration.
*Notice a few things:
- Clement does not speak of any one leader in the passages you mentioned. He does not speak of his office as overseer of the whole church. He speaks of multiple persons, as would fit if there were leaders, not of the church at large, but of each congregation.
- These are to be upstanding men, appointed with the consent of the whole church (that means all the people within the church, I think).
- Clement qualifies that it is those who have ministered blamelessly. Apparently he considered the corruption of these leaders to be a possibility.
No. But I do believe it must be a primary source in evaluating such. There are some issues not completely specified in scripture, but it does speak to many things. It must take precedence over any subsequent tradition or teaching.*A) Do you state we can judge the orthodoxy or etherodoxy of the sub-apostolic Church *leadership, their faithfulness to the deposit they directly received from the Apostles, by the Bible ( the Bible alone) ?
Continued…