Reforming the church

Some parts of the modern-day church are called “Reformed.” One may wonder why. Should the church need reforming? May she have gone off course? Is she infallibly held in the truth or may she become corrupted? If so, what authority is competent to reform her? Is it even thinkable that anyone may be able to reform the church? The church is a global phenomenon of believers in Jesus, divided into innumerable groups, some large, some small. It is so huge that no-one can grasp the whole with a view to reforming it, not even the Pope.

So while some want a progressive or reforming Pope and others insist on a traditional Pope, there are already two dividing tendencies within the Roman Church, quite apart from the many other kinds of churches. And if one wants to “reform” the church, by what criteria might it be reformed?

The 16th century saw what came to be called “the Reformation”. The moral quality of the church and its leadership had suffered a sad decline over the previous century. Even Roman Catholic historians admit the immoral behaviour of some Popes left a lot to be desired. Their conduct was unworthy of the Lord Jesus Christ whom they professed to serve.

Apart from that moral decline, the reformers discerned theological errors that had been adopted in the church’s teaching and practice. How did they know there were errors? By a return to studying the Bible.

Martin Luther was a monk whose task was to teach theology. He therefore studied the Scriptures that he had to teach. As he did so, he struggled to understand some key concepts that were fundamental to the Gospel message, notably those of righteousness and justification. He had his own personal struggle to become righteous, being very conscious of his inner faults, spending a lot of time in confession. He was at the same time puzzling over St Paul’s teaching on the theme of justification, notably in the epistle to the Romans chapters 1-5.

After a lot of soul-searching and Bible study, he finally found the key that he had never grasped before: how God “justified” (i.e. declared legally just and acceptable in the judgment) those who believe in Jesus, the Saviour who died and rose again for their salvation. None of his confessors or colleagues at university had been able to share this good news with him, for they neither taught it nor understood it themselves. But there it was in the New Testament!

It was this rediscovery of the Bible’s message of “justification by faith in Christ” that led to the reformation and birthed the “reformed church”. While official church leaders condemned Luther, many were glad to receive the message of salvation by faith in Christ. They studied the Bible to find the truth of God, and by that truth they sought to reform the church’s moral laxity and its inadequate teaching on justification.

When challenged as to why they held their doctrines, their answer was simply, “Because the Bible says so.” The Bible was henceforth to be the sole authority to which Christians should absolutely adhere. In any dispute, the way to resolve it was always by a return to studying what the Bible actually says. This remains the principle of the reformed church.

Unfortunately, the temptation to allow passing philosophical trends to influence theologians has led parts of the church to drift from biblical faithfulness. Wisely did the Reformers insist that the church should be “semper reformanda” – continuously reforming itself by Holy Scripture, maintaining the purity of both its holiness and its biblical doctrine.

Clive Every-Clayton

God’s radical, total forgiveness

In one of his stories – that we call parables – Jesus used a powerful word to speak of God’s forgiveness. In the temple, a self-righteous worshipper was praying, thanking God as he enumerated the good things he did, comparing himself favourably with those he considered worse than himself. In a corner of the same temple, a broken-hearted outsider beat his breast as he pleaded with God for mercy for his sinful behaviour. This second man, said Jesus, was heard rather than the proud religionist, and he returned home “justified” (Luke 18.9-14).

To be “justified” is to be more than merely forgiven. It means he obtained the status of a man right with God, considered righteous in God’s eyes so as to be accepted as guiltless in the final judgment. This is God’s radical, total forgiveness and it assures the penitent that he has “no condemnation” to fear on the Day of Judgment.

In 1517 AD, Martin Luther hit on this glorious revelation, famously revalorising how God justifies sinners. In his day, religion taught that you had to earn your way to heaven. He had tried his best to do that but ended in despair because sin was deep in his psyche, even as a religious monk. Then he discovered in the New Testament that God was so kind and gracious that he promised to “justify” the sinner who turned away from all wrong and trusted Christ, the Saviour of sinners, to forgive him totally. Luther had grasped the biblical revelation that we are “justified by faith apart from the deeds of the law” (Romans 3.28). By a radical faith commitment, a person could be totally forgiven and made clean in God’s sight. And this was possible only because Jesus, on the cross, had borne the sinners’ punishment in our place, out of love for us. This work of atonement satisfied the demands of Justice, allowing the righteous Father to grant full and free forgiveness to those who came to trust in Jesus as Lord and Saviour.

That radical faith commitment is referred to in the Bible as “conversion”, or being “called” by God, or also being “born again”. It is a double decision: first, to abandon all evil conduct, turning away from all that God calls sin so as to start a new life in obedience to God. Secondly, to ask the Lord Jesus Christ, in faith, both to forgive and to clean up one’s life and to enter in, to dwell within, by his Holy Spirit, to enable that radical transformation to take place.

Now this step of commitment is how a person enters into the harmonious relationship with God, for the Father gladly accepts the repentant sinner and grants both his full forgiveness and the status of being justified.

Those who make that commitment can affirm with Luther and the apostle Paul: “We have believed in Christ Jesus, that we might be justified by faith in Christ, and not by the works of the Law” (Galatians 2.16). And “being justified by faith, we have peace with God by our Lord Jesus Christ” (Romans 5.1).

Clive Every-Clayton

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