COMMUNION OF THE
SAINTS
Hebrews
12: 1 - “Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses,
let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles,
and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.”
In 1979 John Bass interviewed Ronald Reagan as he
was preparing to run for president against Jimmy Carter. An excerpt follows:
John Bass: Governor
Reagan, do you feel there is a need for spiritual renewal in America? Ronald
Reagan: Yes. The time has come to turn to God and reassert our trust in Him
for the healing of America. We need to join forces to reclaim the great
principles embodied in the Judeo-Christian tradition and in Holy Scripture. As
a Christian I commit myself to do my share in this joint venture. Our country
is in need of and ready for spiritual renewal that is based on spiritual
reconciliation—first man with God, then man with man.
John Bass: Do you
have a favorite Bible verse? Ronald Reagan: Yes, I do. John 3: 16, “For God so loved the world that He gave his
only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have
everlasting life.”
John Bass: What does
this Bible verse mean to you personally? Ronald Reagan: It means that,
having accepted Jesus Christ as my Savior, I have God’s promise of eternal life
in Heaven, as well as the abundant life here on earth that He promises to each
of us in John 10: 10.
John Bass: Do you
think the Bible is of divine origin? Ronald Reagan: I never had any
doubt about it. How can you write off the Old Testament prophecies that
hundreds of years before the birth of Christ predicted every single facet of
His life, His death, and that He was the Messiah? (Source: Ronald Reagan: A Man
of Faith, quotes taken from Internet website)
Ronald Reagan died on the eve of the 60th
anniversary of D-Day, 12 years ago, with his family at his side. Though harshly
attacked by his critics, the American people loved him. He grew up in Dixon, Illinois, and he never
forgot his humble beginnings. Speaking of his mother, he recalled, “I remember
a small woman with auburn hair and unquenchable optimism.
Her name was Nelly Reagan and she believed with
all her heart that there was no such thing as accidents in this life.
Everything was part of God’s plan.” He talked about the town where he grew up:
“Our neighbors were never ashamed to kneel in prayer to their Maker nor were
they ever embarrassed to feel a lump in their throat when Old Glory passed by.
No one in Dixon, Illinois ever burned a flag and no one in Dixon would have
tolerated it.”
When he informed the nation in 1994 that he had
Alzheimer’s Disease, he closed his statement with these words: “When the Lord
calls me home, whenever that day may be, I will leave with the greatest love
for this country of ours and eternal optimism for its future. I now begin the
journey that will lead me into the sunset of my life. I know that for America
there will always be a bright dawn ahead.”
He was a Christian and a statesman and he was one
of the greatest presidents of the 20th Century. He embodied all that was good
about America. He restored our national confidence and helped us feel good
about our nation once again. I do not doubt that he is in heaven today.
I say that not because of his politics, and not
because of his accomplishments, but because of his faith in Jesus Christ. He
may have been the most powerful man in the world, but when he came to the end
of his long battle with Alzheimer’s, it was not as a powerful man, but as a
sinner saved by grace. One of the millions of saints who do so every day.
The Church Transcends Time: The
Apostles’ Creed says, “I believe in the communion of saints.” Because these
words come near the end of the creed, we may tend to overlook them, but we
shouldn’t because they teach us something important about the Christian church.
Last week I emphasized that the church is not a
building or a denomination; the church is the people. You can find churches
more or less like us in every nation of the world. There is also a sense in
which “the church” refers to all true believers scattered everywhere in every
nation.
In studying for this sermon, I was surprised to
discover that the phrase “the communion of saints” was a late addition to the
Apostles’ Creed. It was added several centuries after “the holy catholic
church.” It’s worth finding out exactly what this phrase was supposed to add
that wasn’t already covered.
We can put it this way: The Holy catholic Church
teaches us that that the church spans the world while The Communion of Saints teaches
us that the church transcends time. So what exactly does the phrase “communion
of saints” mean? Let me break it down for you.
The word “communion” translates the Greek word
koinonia. That’s a very common word in the New Testament that means fellowship
or partnership. It means to share together in a close relationship.
In secular Greek it was used for a marriage, a
business partnership, a community, or a nation bound together by common goals.
Preeminently the word applies to friendship. Acts 2: 42 uses this word to
describe the intimate closeness of the early Christians who lived together, ate
their meals together, and shared all things in common.
The word “saint” simply means “holy one.” In the
New Testament the word “saint” is a synonym for “Christian” or “believer.”
The Apostle Paul used the word “saint” in several
of his letters to describe ordinary believers. He wrote to the saints in Rome
and to the saints in Corinth and to the saints in Ephesus and to the saints in
Philippi.
To many in the church “saint” refers to an
extraordinary Christian, one who has been canonized by the Church of Rome. But
the New Testament never uses the word that way. It always applies to all
believers.
We are all saints of God. It is perfectly proper
to speak of “Saint Don” or “Saint Butch” or “Saint Roxann” or “Saint Mark” or
“Saint Becky.” If you know Jesus, you are a true saint of God. (And we don’t
have to verify miracles either!)
To say that we believe in the communion of saints
means that we believe there exists an intimate connection between all true
believers in Jesus. We can say it this way: Everyone who belongs to Jesus
belongs to me, and I belong to them.
I draw a simple conclusion from this: Our
fellowship ought to be as wide as the whole body of Christ because anywhere God
is served and Jesus worshipped you have something in common.
The Gospel is for Everyone: Romans
1: 16 is very helpful in this regard: “For
I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God for
salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.”
The last phrase introduces the universal dimension of the gospel. The Jews were
God’s chosen people.
Although most of the Jews have not become
followers of Christ, the gospel still has the power to save them if they will
only believe. The “Greeks” were the Gentiles, that is, all non-Jews. No wonder
Paul was not ashamed. The gospel has the power to save people without regard to
the distinctions that divide us. It has the power to save without regard to:
>Race
>Education >Age >Income >Skin
Color >Family Background
>Religious Preference >Moral Degradation.
The gospel of Jesus has the power to build a
bridge over the chasm of race, education, age, social status, skin color,
family background, language, culture, and all the things that divide the human
race.
This used to be true about our patriotism and
nationalism around our feelings of American Exceptionalism, but that has been
hacked away due to political correctness and individual identities separated by
hyphenation.
Sometimes we are tempted to “soften” the gospel
in order to broaden our feel good fellowship, but the reverse is closer to the
truth. When we are firm on the gospel, we can have joyful fellowship with God’s
people from many different backgrounds.
We have communion with Christ. We see this clearly in I John 1: 1-4:
“That which was from the beginning, which we have heard,
which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked at and our hands have
touched—this we proclaim concerning the Word of life. The life appeared; we
have seen it and testify to it, and we proclaim to you the eternal life, which
was with the Father and has appeared to us. We proclaim to you what we have
seen and heard, so that you also may have fellowship with us. And our
fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus Christ.”
That’s the whole point of the Lord’s Supper. We
call it “communion” because it represents our fellowship with Christ through
his broken body and his shed blood. As we receive the elements, we enter into
personal communion with our Lord. And we share that communion with other
believers in Christ.
II. We have communion with the saints on earth. Back to I John 1 for a moment.
In verse 7 he adds an important dimension to what
he has already said: “But if we walk in
the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the
blood of Jesus, his Son, purifies us from all sin.”
I take it that the “one another” refers both to
God and to other believers. Walking in the light allows us to have fellowship
with God and with other believers. Because God is light, and we are the
children of light, when we walk in that light, we are where God is and where
his children are. We’re no longer alone in the darkness of sin and rebellion.
Once we begin to grasp this, all our
relationships will be radically changed. We may be sinners, but we are sinners
saved by God’s grace. That changes how we treat our spouse and our children.
And that changes the way we relate to our friends and relatives. Once we
understand what God has done for us, we realize, “It’s not about me because I’m
not the center of the universe. It’s about reaching out to other people in
Jesus’ name.”
We have communion with the saints in heaven. Hebrews 12: 1 speaks of this when it says we are surrounded
by a great cloud of witnesses.
Several of our hymns speak of this aspect of our
communion with the saints in heaven. The last verse of “The Church’s One
Foundation” mentions it quite clearly:
Yet she on earth hath union
With God the Three in One,
And mystic sweet communion
With those whose rest is won.
O happy ones and holy!
Lord, give us grace that we
Like them, the meek and lowly,
On high may dwell with Thee:
The great hymn “For All the Saints” contains a verse
that speaks to this truth:
And when the strife is fierce, the warfare long,
Steals on the ear the distant triumph song,
And hearts are brave, again, and arms are strong.
Alleluia, Alleluia!
What does this mean? Death cannot destroy our
fellowship with the saints of God.
We are one with them and they are one with us. I
DO NOT mean that we can talk or communicate with them. The Bible specifically
forbids that. When you see that man on the TV show “Crossing Over” claiming to
receive messages from the dead, he is deceiving himself and others.
We are not talking about ghosts or visions or
dreams or anything like that. We mean that the saints of God are alive in
heaven while we are alive on earth. And they are not that far away from us. One
day we will be reunited with them. They are gone from our sight but they are
not gone from God. And they aren’t really gone from us either. As we praise God
this morning on earth, they join us in praising God in heaven. That is the
“mystic sweet communion” the hymn writer had in mind.
Theologians sometimes speak of the Church
Militant and the Church Triumphant. We are the church militant because the
battle rages around us every day and we are called to fight the good fight and
to take up the whole armor of God. But one day we’ll lay our weapons down, our
battles will be over, and the victory will be won. In that happy day we’ll join
the Church Triumphant in heaven. But whether we are on earth today or in heaven
tomorrow, we are still part of the church of Jesus Christ.
There is another verse of “For All the Saints”
that brings all the strands of truth together:
O blest communion, fellowship divine!
We feebly struggle, they in glory shine;
All are one in Thee, for all are Thine.
Alleluia, Alleluia!
In 1981 when President Reagan was nearly
assassinated, his pastor from California came to see him in the hospital in
Washington, D.C. Pastor Don Moomaw took the president’s hand and asked him,
“How is it with you and the Lord?” “Everything is fine with me and the Lord,”
replied Mr. Reagan. “How do you know?” The answer was simple and profound: “I
have a Savior.”
That’s the difference that Jesus Christ makes.
When you have a Savior, you can face your own death with courage and grace. Do
you have a Savior? If you don’t, or if you aren’t sure, I urge you to place
your life in the hands of Jesus Christ right now. Run to the cross. Lay hold of
Jesus Christ. Trust him as Lord and Savior. Ask him to take away your sins and
to give you new life. Come to Christ now and your life will never be the same
again. Amen.





No comments:
Post a Comment