Table of Contents
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HARVEST HOUSE PUBLISHERS
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God vs. Government
Copyright 2022 by Nathan Busenitz & James Coates
Published by Harvest House Publishers
Eugene, Oregon 97408
www.harvesthousepublishers.com
ISBN 978-0-7369-8632-8 (pbk)
ISBN 978-0-7369-8633-5 (eBook)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2021947103
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To the dear members of our respective church families at
Grace Community Church, Los Angeles
and
GraceLife Church, Edmonton
CONTENTS
I n view of recent events, three basic biblical truths must be emphasized. First, the church is essential. Second, the church must gather regularly and corporately. Third, the church is duty-bound to obey Christ even when doing so violates governmental regulations and restrictions. Given the fundamental nature of these New Testament priorities, its hard to believe they would prove controversial, especially among evangelicals. But here we are. There has been a great deal of both controversy and compromise, which is why the message of this book is so necessary.
A company of believers is not a church if they dont gather. The word for church in the original New Testament manuscripts is ekklesia . Even before the founding of the New Testament church, that word signified an assembly, a gathering of people. It is comprised of two Greek roots that literally mean called out, and more specifically, it refers to a body of people called out from their homes (or summoned out of a larger group) in order to muster together. Like the English word congregation , the concept of a group coming together is built right into the term.
The church specifically comes together for worship , but the vital benefits of the assembly include fellowship, instruction, mutual encouragement, and accountability. Believers are commanded not to forsake the assembly (Hebrews 10:25), and that command comes immediately before the New Testaments most somber warning about apostasy. Fellowship and corporate worship are therefore absolutely essential aspects of spiritual health for individual Christians, and they are also (obviously) vital for the very life of the church.
Believers may be forced by illness, imprisonment, warfare, natural disaster, necessary travel, or some other significant emergency to abstain from the corporate gathering temporarily . But there is no justification for the entire church to suspend congregational worship on a prolonged basis. Plagues, pandemics, and persecution have frequently (if not constantly) threatened the people of God since that first Pentecost. Never have faithful churches responded to such obstacles by simply shutting their doors for months at a time and declaring distance-learning technologies a sufficient substitute for corporate worship.
Christians in America and other Western democracies have been blessed and privileged to thrive for more than two centuries under governments that formally affirm and have seldom challenged the right of worshippers to assemble freely. But COVID is a wakeup call and a reminder to believers of how tenuous that liberty is. Pastors in supposedly free countries were literally jailed for weeks because they led worship services during the 2020 lockdowns. The example of James Coates, in that regard, serves as a compelling testimony of pastoral courage and unwavering conviction.
Despite court decisions favorable to churches, a strong current of public opinion favors giving governments more power to force churches to comply with restrictions inhibiting attendance, fellowship, and congregational singing. But the worlds opposition to the church and her teaching should not catch believers off guard. Do not be surprised, brethren, if the world hates you (1 John 3:13). Jesus said, Because you are not of the worldthe world hates you (John 15:19). We are citizens of heavenmere sojourners and aliens here in this world (Philippians 3:20). And even the world sees the church that way when we are faithful to our calling.
That is one of the main reasons why the people of God need to come together regularly for mutual encouragement and instruction. Times of crisis and hardship dont make the church assembly expendable; thats when it is most essential for believers to congregate. We must obey God rather than men (Acts 5:29).
Faithful churches must assemble even if they have to go underground to do it. Thats how churches in the first three centuries survived and flourished despite intense opposition from Caesar. Its how the church in Eastern Europe overcame communist persecution in the twentieth century. Its how many churches in China and elsewhere meet today.
Scripture gives us several examples of godly people who resisted the ungodly tyranny of rulers who hated biblical truth. Under a despotic Pharaoh, the Hebrew midwives feared God, and did not do as the king of Egypt had commanded them (Exodus 1:17). Elijah opposed Ahab and was labeled troubler of Israel because of the stance he took (1 Kings 18:17). John the Baptist rebuked Herod to his face and ultimately was killed for it (Mark 6:18-29).
Western evangelicals now need to have that same resolve. We need to prepare ourselves for more pressure from the government and more persecution from the rest of society. When COVID has run its course (if it ever does), other crises are already lined up for government officials to exploit, claiming emergency powers to assert more and more regulatory authority over the church.
Now is not the time to forsake our own assembling together. The church must be the churcha pillar and buttress for the truth. We cannot cower in fear. We cannot hide our light under a bushel. We are not called to feed the fears of a world that is perishing. We have been commissioned to go into all the world and preach the gospel to all creation (Mark 16:15), and we are soldiers in a spiritual war. The weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh, but divinely powerful for the destruction of fortresses. We are destroying speculations and every lofty thing raised up against the knowledge of God, and we are taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ (2 Corinthians 10:4-5).