Text: Colossians 1:18; Ephesians 4:7-16
On the occasion of our Church’s 53rd
anniversary this morning, I think it would be most appropriate for
us to focus our thoughts on the headship of the Lord Jesus
Christ in the church. Colossians 1:18 tells us: “And
He is the head of the body, the church…” This headship is
mentioned again in Ephesians 4:15 - “…that we may grow up into
Him in all things, which is the head, even Christ”. Let us study
this concept of Christ’s headship of the Church in detail.
This concept must be understood and applied accurately if the church
is to fulfill its role. Christ is not merely a figurehead, receiving
all kinds of honour, but doing nothing! The Scriptures reveal that
Christ is actively involved in the Church as her head. There are at
least six important functions of His headship. The first one
is very comforting to all of us. The headship of Christ means
that:
I. Christ
Ensures the Security of the Church.
This is
highlighted in Ephesians 1:20-23 which says that the Father has –
“… raised Him from the dead, and set Him at His own right hand in
the heavenly places, Far above all principality, and power, and
might, and dominion, and every name that is named, not only in this
world, but also in that which is to come: And hath put all things
under His feet, and gave Him to be the head over all things to
the church, Which is His body, the fulness of Him that filleth
all in all.”
II. Christ
Ensures The Salvation of the Church
How does He doe
this? As the Head of the Church, Christ becomes the
representative of all His people. In Covenant Theology, Christ
is called the federal head of the Church, just as Adam
was the federal head of the whole human race. God made the Covenant
of Works with Adam. That covenant expired when Adam sinned and
brought all His descendants under the terrible curse of sin, by the
representative principle. Then God instituted another Covenant, the
Covenant of Grace. Those who are in this covenant are not
represented anymore by Adam, but by Christ. Christ is the ‘second
Adam’ because He was a man like us. And so, by the same
representative principle that had brought us into death, we are
now brought by Christ into life. 1 Corinthians 15:22 – “For as
in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made
alive.”
There are other
designations of Christ that bring out this wonderful role of Christ
over us: In Hebrews 2:10 He is called the Captain of our
salvation, a captain who partakes of the same flesh and blood that
we have. In Hebrews 6:20 He is called the Forerunner who has
entered within the veil right into to God’s presence, doing it all
for us. As our Captain or Forerunner, Jesus, died on our behalf, He
was raised from the dead and ascended up to heaven. Like one who
leads his people through uncharted territory, He has blazed the path
that leads to heaven for us. This means that like our captain, we
too will take the same path He took and be raised from the
dead and ascend up to heaven.
Having seen how the
headship of Christ ensures the security and the salvation of the
church, let us go on now to the next function of His headship:
III. Christ
Exercises Authority to Rule the Church
As the head of the
Church, Christ has every right to rule over the church, and
to demand full submission from it. This truth is highlighted
in Ephesians 5:23,24, where it is used as an analogy for the
husband’s headship over the wife: “For the husband is the head of
the wife, even as Christ is the head of the church: and He is
the saviour of the body. Therefore as the church is subject unto
Christ, so let the wives be to their own husbands in every
thing.”
What this means
for us is that the Church must always submit herself to the
authority of Christ at all times. Christ is like the CEO
– the one who issues out orders and expects full compliance from us.
Submission to the authority of Christ will result in commendation
and reward from the Head. But rebellion against the authority of
Christ will result in receiving a stern comdemnation from the Head!
So we must serve the Head of the Church with a sense of holy
reverence for His great authority and with godly fear, seeking
to do what He want at all times. But how do we know what He wants us
to do? Through the next function of Headship that Christ has over
the Church:
IV. Christ
Provides Guidance and Direction for The Church
As the Head of the
church, the Lord Jesus guides and directs His Church to accomplish
all the goals that He has set for the church. The church must
follow His guidance and direction closely, and not go astray
from Him. When a church stops following Christ, it will lose its
direction and stray away quickly into false doctrines.
Let us turn our
Bibles to Colossians 2:16-19a – “Let no man therefore judge you
in meat, or in drink, or in respect of an holyday, or of the new
moon, or of the sabbath days: Which are a shadow of things to come;
but the body is of Christ. Let no man beguile you of
your reward in a voluntary humility and worshipping of angels,
intruding into those things which he hath not seen, vainly puffed up
by his fleshly mind, And not holding the Head…” Here the
Apostle Paul warns the Colossians against following certain teachers
who would lead them astray. What we want to notice here is that
these false teachers are not holding the Head. This means
that they are not connected to Christ. To follow them is to
cut oneself off from the Head of the Church.
One example of
this is the Roman Church – It started off as a true church of
Christ, but when the Bishop of Rome replaced Christ as its head, and
the popes and church councils began issuing their own directives and
decrees that mixed truth with error, the Roman Church lost
its direction and veered away to become an apostate church.
It stands today as the most prominent example of what can happen
when the headship of Christ is no longer maintained in a church! Let
this be a warning to us so that we will keep ourselves constantly
under the guidance and directorship of Christ, our Head. How do we
do this? We do it by following His Word closely, without adding to
it or subtracting from it. We do it by corporate praying, like the
apostolic church that sought God’s will and direction together.
V. Christ
Provides Life and Power to the Church
Now, the headship
of Christ over the church also implies that He is the source of
life and power for the church. He is the one who infuses the
church with life so that it may grow and multiply, just like the
account of the amazing growth of the early church in the Book of
Acts. There were some remarkable men that were used of God to bring
about the increase. The apostle Paul is a notable example of one who
laboured tirelessly to build up the church of God. In the early
church there was also a powerful preacher from Alexandria by the
name of Apollos, who edified the church with his excellent preaching
and teaching. But the perspective we should have on them is the one
written by Paul in 1 Corinthians 3:6,7 – “I have planted, Apollos
watered; but God gave the increase. So then neither is he
that planteth any thing, neither he that watereth; but God that
giveth the increase.” We must never forget that any
increase in the church actually comes from no one but the Head.
Christ is the one who provides the sustenance and energy that
transforms the church into a dynamic growing movement.
The same truth is
mentioned in Ephesians 4:15,16 – “But speaking the truth in love,
may grow up into Him in all things, which is the head, even Christ:
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.”
VI. Christ
Provides Various Spiritual Gifts To Edify the Church
A. Who Receives These Gifts?
This wonderful provision is described in detail
in Ephesians 4:7-16. In order for the church to function
efficiently as a body, every member of the body has to play its
part. That truth is brought out in v.7 – “But unto every one of
us is given grace according to the measure of the
gift of Christ.” Christ, who is the Head, has given special
spiritual gifts to every member in the church. He alone
decides what gifts each of us receive, and we who receive them must
commit ourselves to use them to serve Him in the body of
Christ. The Church is meant to function as one body, and
every member has been equipped by Christ to play a part in it. These
spiritual gifts came into existence only when the Church was born.
That took place at Pentecost which was eight days after Jesus
ascended up to Heaven.
Some of the spiritual gifts are listed in
v.11: The gift of apostleship, the gift of prophecy, the gift of an
evangelist, and the gift of pastoring and of teaching. This list is
not a comprehensive one, as there are other passages that
provide list with other gifts (Romans 12:6-8,28; 1 Corinthians
12:8-10; 1 Peter 4:9-11. There are at least 19 different spiritual
gifts that Christ has bestowed on His church, and not all of them
apply today. Those like the gifts of apostleship, healing, and
miracles were only meant for the early church at a time when the New
Testament was not completed yet. It is not our purpose this morning
to study these spiritual gifts in detail, but to look at:
B. Who Apportions These Gifts?
This is described in vv.8 – “Wherefore He
saith, When He ascended up on high, He led captivity captive,
and gave gifts unto men.” The expression, “He
led captivity captive” which is quoted from Psalm 68, portrays
Christ in His ascension as a mighty Military General
returning to His home country in a grand victory procession,
leading all his prisoners of war, and the spoils of war which He now
distributes freely to all His people.
And we must be
thankful to our ascended Lord for giving these spiritual gifts to
us, for without them we would not be able to serve Him or build His
kingdom. Like the spoils of war given by a
victorious general to His people, these gift are bestowed upon us by
Christ so that we can have a share in His victory. The
spiritual gifts then can be understood as all the equipment that the
church needs now in order to emerge victorious from her
mission on earth, as Christ was in His mission on earth. The
mission that these gifts are designed to help the church fulfill is
stated in v.12 “For the perfecting of the saints, for the
work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of
Christ”.
C. The Results of Using the Spiritual Gifts
Dearly beloved, if we faithfully seek to discover, cultivate and use
our spiritual gifts, then we will have the wonderful satisfaction of
seeing the glorious results of it in the body of Christ, which are
described in vv. 13-15 of our passage. These verses
show what Christ, the Head of our Church ultimately wants us to
become – a body of mature believers who are likeminded. Such
maturity is marked by two things: Firstly, it will be marked by
stability – the mature church will not be easily swayed by false
doctrines, but will always remain firm and stedfast in the faith. In
contrast to that, immaturity brings instability – the church
will be moved easily, tossed to and fro like a piece of
driftwood floating on the ocean waves, blown about constantly by
every wind of doctrine.
Besides stability, the mature church will be marked by an
effective witness – It will be speaking the truth in love
(v.15). It is important that our witness for Christ should be
characterised by both truth and love. To have love alone without
truth will result in being tossed to and fro by every wind of
doctrine, as we have already seen. But to have the truth alone
without love will result in a self-righteous ministry
that may turn many away from the truth. The lack of love is as much
a sign of immaturity in a church as the lack of truth.
Let us be convinced that through the use of all the spiritual gifts
that Christ has bestowed on each member, the church will grow in
maturity to speak the truth in love and to have an effective witness
that will go forth far and wide, reaching the lost of Christ with
God’s Word, and making an impact upon the world! Let is be our
vision to fulfil the mission of the church to shine as lights in the
world.
Thus we have seen the glorious results of using the spiritual
gifts, which Christ has provided for the church so that it may be
built up. We should therefore give praise and thanks to the Lord
Jesus Christ for granting us all these spiritual gifts. We should
also thank Him for exercising all the functions of His headship that
we have seen earlier on: As our Head, Christ ensures both the
security and salvation of the church. As our head, He
exercises authority to rule the church and provides
guidance and direction, as well as life and
power to the church. We therefore end this anniversary message
in wonder and praise for the Head of the Church. May the Lord Jesus
Christ always have the pre-eminence that He should have here
in Life Church!