A Passion for Faithfulness: Wisdom From the Book of Nehemiah
By J. I. Packer
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About this ebook
Indeed, his Old Testament book reads like the memoirs of a pastoral leader and politician par excellence. In it Nehemiah tells how, with God's help and blessing, he went about rebuilding the city of Jerusalem and renewing her people. It is a spirited, first-person account of spiritual renewal. Yet Nehemiah can equally be read as a testimony to God's involvement with man. Using a Bible-study approach J. I. Packer looks at how Nehemiah led the people and how God led Nehemiah—all to ultimately build up His Kingdom. Through this book you will discover a model for revival in your own church.
A Passion for Faithfulness should be read by church and business leaders for its in-depth look at Nehemiah's example in these particular arenas. But anyone who thirsts for God and a sense of His presence in their everyday responsibilities will also be inspired by this book. Whether you're a stay-at-home mom trying to raise godly children or an employee who longs for God to make Himself real in even the most mundane task, this book will be a trusted help and a welcome reminder of God's desire to be involved in every facet of your life.
J. I. Packer
J. I. Packer (1926–2020) served as the Board of Governors’ Professor of Theology at Regent College. He authored numerous books, including the classic bestseller Knowing God. Packer also served as general editor for the English Standard Version Bible and as theological editor for the ESV Study Bible.
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A Passion for Faithfulness - J. I. Packer
Prologue:
Church-Building
For me to celebrate Nehemiah as a church builder and to urge this supremely as how Christians should regard him may raise some eyebrows. But that is what I shall do in this book, and I want to begin by explaining why. So now I glance back fifty years.
Christ Loves the Church
He was an odd little man, lean, intense, and jerky, with a face that seemed to light up as he spoke. His dress was odd, too, by my undergraduate standards, for he wore a brown monastic habit, the uniform of an Anglican Franciscan. I was there out of loyalty to the college chapel, not expecting to be impressed; but he captured my attention telling us how in his teens he had experienced a personal conversion to Jesus Christ, like that which I had just undergone myself. And then,
he said, I got excited about the church. You could say, I fell in love with it.
Never had I heard anyone talk quite like that before, and his words stuck in my memory. Fifty years later, I can still hear him saying them. He then hammered home the point that all who love Jesus Christ the Lord ought to care deeply about the church, just because the church is the object of Jesus’ own love. Church-centeredness is thus one way in which Christ-centeredness ought to find expression. Was he right? Yes, he was: no question about that.
For listen to Paul, instructing the Ephesians and others (there is good reason to regard Ephesians as a circular letter): Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her to make her holy, cleansing her by the washing with water through the word, and to present her to himself as a radiant church, without stain or wrinkle or any other blemish, but holy and blameless
(Eph. 5:25-27). Now weigh the words of the hymn as it echoes this and other New Testament passages:
The church’s one foundation
Is Jesus Christ her Lord;
She is his new creation
By water and the word:
From heaven he came and sought her
To be his holy bride;
With his own blood he bought her,
And for her life he died.
Next, observe that the glory, present and future, that God gives to the bride, the wife of the Lamb
(Rev. 21:9), as the issue and end-product of his own great grace, is from one standpoint the central focus of the New Testament, reaching its climax in the envisionings of the true Mount Zion in Hebrews 12:22-24 and of the new Jerusalem (Rev. 21:1–22:5; see also Rev. 7, a further depiction of the church’s destiny). And link with that the fact that glory [here meaning, doxology and praise] in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever!
(Eph. 3:21) is the climactic focus of Christian religion—in the church and in Christ Jesus
being two complementary phrases explaining and reinforcing each other. So the church that Christ loves and sustains is the key feature of God’s plan for both time and eternity, and care for the church’s welfare, which is what love for the church means, is an aspect of Christlikeness that Christians must ever seek to cultivate. We are right to take the church on our hearts; we should be wrong not to. For as proverbially we say to each other, Love me, love my dog,
so our Lord Jesus says to us all, Love me, love my church.
It was clear from the way the little man expressed himself that he expected evangelical Christians to be concerned only about their own societies and fellowships, and to lack interest in what the early Fathers called the great church and the Westminster divines the catholic visible church—namely, the worldwide Christian community in its countless congregational outcrops. This expectation is still very common outside evangelical circles, and there have certainly been individuals whose sayings and doings have kept it in place. No doubt lack of concern about the church as such is the occupational temptation of any who seek to foster experiential personal faith in Christ in a minority situation, where most church leaders are not on the evangelical wavelength— a state of things that has unhappily been common in the Western world during the past hundred years. But half a century’s observation has shown me that evangelical leaders and opinion-makers are not as a body marked by unconcern about the catholic visible church; rather the reverse. To pray and plan and pray again for the reforming and revitalizing of the church has been part of the mainstream evangelical way since the sixteenth century, and is so still—as indeed it ought to be. For the little man was right: something is wrong with professed Christians who do not identify with the church, and love it, and invest themselves in it, and carry its needs on their hearts. Evangelicals, the Bible-and-gospel, Christ-and-Spirit people spread through the denominations worldwide (and, incidentally, multiplying at a phenomenal rate just at present), must continue to model love for the church.
But how should such love be focused and expressed? Here, unhappily, the ways divide. For those many who equate the church with its institutional form, love for the church means enthusing over its liturgy, ceremony, bureaucracy, and the labor that keeps its wheels revolving. Being more interested in maintenance and nurture than in mission and evangelism, folk of this kind are constantly indifferent, indeed often opposed, to any active concern for conversions and for non-institutionalized expressions of faith, in a way that evangelicals find distressing. For evangelicals think of the church in terms of the communal life that the institutional forms exist to canalize. They see the church as the Lord’s people getting together on a regular basis to do the things that the church does—praise and pray, with preaching and teaching; practice fellowship and pastoral care, with mutual encouragement and accountability; exalt and honor Jesus Christ, specifically by word, song, and sacrament; and reach out, locally and cross-culturally, in order to share Christ with people who need him. Here love for the church finds expression in a constant quest for faithfulness, holiness, and vitality—ardor animating order—in the corporate life of communing with the Father and the Son through the Spirit that is the church’s real essence. I had better come clean here and say straight out that the evangelical understanding seems to me to accord with the New Testament and will be assumed in all that follows.
Christ Builds the Church
Jesus Christ’s own church-centeredness came out clearly on the first occasion when we hear of him using the word. It was at a turning-point in his ministry, when Peter as spokesman for the disciples had just answered Jesus’ question, Who do you say I am?
by declaring, You are the Christ,
God’s appointed and anointed King, the true center of world history. Jesus’ response was: Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah, for this was not revealed to you by man, but by my Father in heaven. And I tell you that you are Peter [the name means
rock], and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it
(Mt. 16:15-18). We can bypass the disputes about Jesus’ exact meaning, whether the church’s rock-foundation is to be Peter’s confession of faith as distinct from Peter himself, or Peter himself, the confessor, in the power of his faith, and whether the gates of Hades
(some form of the power of death) should be thought of as attacking the church or as resisting attacks by the church or as both together. What matters for us is Jesus’ statement that he, in person, will build a church that is his, and it will triumph over all the forms and powers of death. Let us try to see what that means.
When today we in the West speak of our church,
we are normally referring either to the building (a roofed meeting hall, auditorium, or worship space, sometimes towered or steepled, sometimes not) or to the denomination (a federation, loose or tight, of like-minded or at least like-mannered congregations for some form of mutual help). We call these entities ours
because we have chosen to link up with them; ours
signifies identification, not possession. But when at Caesarea Philippi, nearly two millennia ago, Jesus spoke of my church,
possession was central to his meaning. For what he had in view was a community unified and identified by a shared allegiance to himself—a common acknowledgment of his claim upon them and his Lordship over them, and a common bond of love, loyalty, and devotion to him.
Church
in Matthew’s text is ekklesia, the regular Greek word for a public gathering, which Matthew’s Greek Old Testament, the Septuagint, regularly uses for the Hebrew qahal, congregation.
Qahal signified the Israelites met together in their official character as Yahweh’s covenant people. Yahweh had formed Old Testament Israel by redeeming the people from Egyptian bondage and revealing to them the reality of his covenant. Jesus’ thought clearly was that he himself would form a community bonded together by a common grasp of the reality that Simon Peter had just con-fessed—namely, that Jesus was the appointed and anointed Christ, the Son of God both officially and personally, the maker and master of all things, the Lord of all life, the determiner of all destinies, and the Saviour of all his servants. From him and his messianic ministry his church would derive its identity; to him in his messianic glory it would give its loyalty. It would be his church in every sense.
Nor would the founding of it be in any sense a breakaway from the past. On the contrary, Christ’s church was to be, and now is, nothing more nor less than the Old Testament covenant community itself, in a new and fulfilled form that God had planned for it from the start. It is Israel internationalized and globally extended in, through, and under the unifying dominion of Jesus, the divine Saviour who is its King. It is God the Father’s family, as appears from the fact that Jesus taught his followers to think and speak of his Heavenly Father as theirs too. It is the risen Christ’s body and bride, destined for the ultimate in intimacy with him and the sharing of his life. It is the fellowship of the Holy Spirit, the unseen but potent divine facilitator who shows us that Jesus the Christ is real today, who sustains our trust in him and our love for him, who shapes and reconstructs our character in his likeness, and who supplies us with abilities for the mutual ministry that we sometimes call body-life.
(Fellowship of the Holy Spirit
in 2 Corinthians 13:14 appears to mean both partnership with the Spirit
and partnership with others that is brought about by the Spirit.
)
In a word, the church is the community that lives in and by covenant communion between the triune God and itself. As the royal High Priest in God’s kingdom of salvation and sanctity, Jesus laid the foundation for this relationship by his atoning death; now he actually mediates covenant communion to the community corporately, and to each participant individually, through the Holy Spirit and in the power of his own ongoing risen life. Such, then, was the reality Jesus had in mind when he spoke of my church.
It is not likely that Simon Peter understood much of this when he confessed Jesus to be the Christ. Jewish exegetes at that time did not perceive that the Old Testament prophecies concerning the Christ coalesce in a figure in whom royal priesthood, suffering servanthood, and death leading to resurrection and enthronement all combine, and none of Jesus’ disciples seem to have grasped this till after he rose from the dead. But Jesus, reading Simon’s heart while listening to his words, discerned true trust and commitment—true faith, that is—going along with Simon’s insight into Jesus’ official role. It was as if Simon had said: You, Jesus, are the one who is to bring world history to its final goal, whatever that may be; you are also the one who is to bring my personal history to its final goal, whatever that may be; I know that this is who you are, even though I don’t know all that you may do; so I acknowledge you as the Christ and bind myself to you accordingly.
To which Jesus responded by declaring that on this foundation of faith he would build his church.
What did he mean?
When we speak of building a church, our minds are usually on the bricks and mortar out of which the new structure will be constructed, and we say that it is being built by the architect who designed it, or the congregation or denomination or benefactor that financed it, or the construction firm that is putting it up. But when Jesus spoke of building his church, he was not thinking in those terms. He was thinking, rather, of the complex process whereby the truth about himself is received, the recipients respond to it (or, better, respond to him in terms of it, as Peter was doing), and the responders are conformed increasingly to him as they share in the things that the church does in obedience to Jesus’ word, under his leadership, and in dependence on his power. As the church consists of individuals who by coming to faith and associating as believers have become the Lord’s people (his vine, his flock, his temple, his nation), so Christ’s building of the church is a matter of his so changing people on the inside—in their hearts, as we say—that repentance, faith, and obedience become more and more the pattern of their lives. Thus increasingly they exhibit the humility, purity, love, and zeal for God that we see in Jesus, and fulfill Jesus’ call to worship, work, and witness in his name. And this they do, not as isolated individuals (lone-rangerism!), but as fellow-siblings in God’s family, helping and encouraging each other in the openness and mutual care that are the hallmarks of brotherly love
(philadelphia: see Rom. 12:10; 1 Thess. 4:9; Heb. 13:1; 1 Pet. 1:22; 2 Pet. 1:7). Hereby they enter increasingly into the life that constitutes authentic Christianity, the life of fellowship with their Heavenly Father, their risen Saviour, and each other; and in so doing they are built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ
(1 Pet. 2:5).
So "I will build my church is a metaphor, just as Jesus’ earlier promise to Simon,
from now on you will be catching people (Lk. 5:10, NRSV) was a metaphor. In the latter case, Jesus was comparing Simon’s forthcoming work as a disciple-maker with his use of his current skill as a fisherman. In the present case, he is telling Peter that his own gracious work of new-community-building would be comparable to that of a contractor putting up a house by bonding together raw materials (stone, bricks, planks, logs) that had been gathered for that purpose. His immediate point in the sentence where the metaphor occurs is that the rock-foundation on which the community is to stand—that is, the basic commitment that each person bonded into the church must share—is the faith in himself as divine Messiah that Peter had just verbalized:
on this rock I will build my church." The building process itself, however, is what concerns us now.
The Word and the Spirit
By what means does the Saviour build his church? That is, how does he bring about the changes in people that weld them in this ever-deepening way into the worship-and-service team of active believers for which church
is the biblical name? The answer is: through his Word (in the broadest sense, the Bible; in sharper focus, the gospel), and by his Spirit, whose role in this connection is to make the meaning and application of the Word clear and personal. Word and Spirit together, the Spirit interpreting and evoking response, are the means whereby Christ’s church-building work (edification, as English versions of the Bible usually render it) is carried forward.
Paul in Ephesians pictures this process as church growth. Having explained that Christ gives gifted servants to the church "to equip the saints for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ, until all of us come to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, he affirms that by this means we are to
grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ, from whom the whole body, joined and knit together by every ligament with which it is equipped, as each part is working properly, promotes the body’s growth in building itself up in love (Eph. 4:1216, NRSV). Thus Christ
holds the whole building together and makes it grow into a sacred temple dedicated to the Lord. In union with him you too are being built together with all the others into a place where God lives through his Spirit" (Eph. 2:20-21, GNV).
In light of Paul’s picture of the church growing as a body grows and as a building grows through the process of its erection, it seems regrettable that the phrase church growth
should nowadays be used exclusively, as it seems to be, of numerical expansion, when the New Testament idea expressed by this phrase is not of quantitative but of qualitative advance. It is always wisest to use biblical phraseology in its biblical sense, and these texts make clear that the growth of the church in Paul’s mind is not a matter of recruits being added to the community (he had other words for that), but of the community being fitted for its destiny through the transforming power of Spirit-taught truth.
Paul’s Word-and-Spirit perspective with regard to the church’s destiny appears also in his parting speech to the Ephesian elders, as Luke records it in Acts 20:17-35. A glance at this passage will confirm what we have been saying.
Paul speaks first of his ministry of the Word. I have declared to both Jews and Greeks that they must turn to God in repentance and have faith in our Lord Jesus
(verse 21). I have gone about preaching the kingdom
(verse 25). I have not hesitated to proclaim to you the whole will (purpose, NRSV) of God
(verse 27). He then speaks of the church, and does so in a way which shows that for him the church is central in God’s purpose. It is the church of God, which he bought with his own blood
(verse 28); it is God’s flock, threatened by wolves (teachers of error), and needing therefore the maximum of watchful fidelity from its stated guardians. He refers, strikingly, to the Holy Spirit as having made the elders overseers
to shepherd the church (verse 28); what he means is that the Holy Spirit himself oversaw the process of their selection and appointment, and the implication is that if they now seek his help for discharging their responsibilities they will receive it. And he concludes: "Now I commit you to God and to the word of his grace, which can build you up and give you an inheritance among all those who are sanctified" (verse 32).
Build up
(or, simply, build
: there is no up
in the Greek) is the same word as in Matthew 16:18, and here too, as indeed throughout the New Testament, it has a corporate frame of reference. "I will build my church, says Jesus; and
the word of his grace . . . can build you up and give you an inheritance among all those who are sanctified," says Paul. The building up of individuals is the winding down