The various forms of organization and church government
existing in the several religious bodies of our time, is evidence that
church organization and discipline are subjects upon which great and good
men have differed. The testimony of the Bible, therefore especially of the
New Testament, must be allowed to decide these subjects of vast importance
to the prosperity of the church. In no one chapter of the books of the New
Testament, has Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Paul, Peter, James, or Jude
written out a complete system of Christian discipline, giving the
positions and duties of the several officers of the church.
But that there should be order in the church is
evident, not only from the declarations of the apostles, and the record of
what they did, given in the Acts of the Apostles but also from the great
facts relative to organization and order found in the Old Testament. The
Jewish church was disciplined by a thorough system of organization. God is
the same in all ages. The freedom of the gospel of the Son of God does not
consist in laxity and confusion.
The epistles of Paul and of Peter distinctly speak of
officers of the church, and their duties. The New Testament clearly
defines the relation which Christ sustains to the ministry and to the
church, and also the proper relation of the ministry to the church and to
one another. But the system of Christian organization is not given as
fully in the New Testament as the system of Jewish organization was given
in the Old Testament. Having, however, the benefit of both the record of
the system of the former and the declarations and acts of the first
apostles of the latter, we have all that Infinite Wisdom saw necessary for
the Christian church.
The relation which Christ sustains to the ministry and
to the church, is stated in the following words of our Lord and of Paul:
"One is your Master, even Christ, and all ye are brethren." Matt. 23:8.
"But I would have you to know that the head of every man is Christ" 1 Cor.
11:3. Christ is the great Shepherd of all, while His ministers are
under-shepherds.
And Paul would impress the church with her duty to the
ministry in these words: "Remember them which have the rule over you, who
have spoken unto you the word of God." Heb. 13:7. "Obey them that have the
rule over you, and submit yourselves; for they watch for your souls as
they that must give account." Verse 17. And yet it was not the design of
God that any system of organization should exist in the Christian church
that would take the leadership from Christ
Organization was designed to secure unity of action,
and as a protection from imposture. It was never intended as a scourge to
compel obedience, but, rather, for the protection of the people of God.
Christ does not drive His people. He calls them. "My sheep hear my voice,
and I know them, and they follow me." Our living Head leads the way, and
calls His people to follow.
Human creeds cannot produce unity. Church force cannot
press the church into one body. Christ never designed that human minds
should be molded for Heaven by the influence merely of other human minds.
"The head of every man is Christ." His part is to lead, and to mold, and
to stamp His own image upon the heirs of eternal glory. However important
organization may be for the protection of the church, and to secure
harmony of action, it must not come in to take the disciple away from the
hands of the Master.
All true ministers are Christ's ambassadors. "Now then
we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God did beseech you by us; we
pray you in Christ's stead, be ye reconciled to God." 2 Cor. 5:20. In
their ministry they are to represent the doctrine of Christ, and the
interests of His cause in this world. They surrender their own judgment
and will to Him who has sent them. No man can be Christ's ambassador,
until he has made a complete surrender of his right of private judgment to
Christ. Neither can any man properly represent Christ who surrenders his
judgment to his fellow-man.
But the subject must not be left here, with the truth
partly expressed. The words of Christ and His apostles relative to unity
and the ordained means to sure it, and proper discipline, must have a
qualifying bearing upon the subject, lest unsanctified men, who do not
submit their will and judgment either to Christ or to church authority,
assume the gospel ministry, and divide and scatter the flock of God.
But here we wish it distinctly understood that officers
were not ordained in the Christian church to order or to command the
church, or to "lord it over God's heritage." In the case of difference of
opinion that arose in some of the primitive churches relative to
circumcision and the keeping of the law of Moses, recorded in the
fifteenth chapter of Acts, the apostles and elders at Jerusalem acted as
counselors, in a manner to give room for the Holy Ghost to sit as Judge.
The report of that meeting at Jerusalem to settle a festering difficulty,
commences on this wise: "For it seemed good to the Holy Ghost and to us."
And the brethren which were from among the Gentiles in Antioch, and Syria,
and Celicia, "rejoiced for the consolation." Differences settled in this
way frequently seem more than settled, and generally remain settled; while
those disposed of by the exercise of mere church authority are seldom
really settled at all.
Between the two extremes we find the grand secret of
unity and efficiency in the ministry and in the church of God. Our
attention is called to this in a most solemn appeal from the venerable
apostle Peter to the elders of his time. "The elders which are among you I
exhort, who am also an elder and a witness of the sufferings of Christ,
and also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed. Feed the flock of
God which is among you, taking the oversight thereof, not by constraint,
but willingly; not for filthy lucre, but of a ready mind. Neither as being
lords over God's heritage, but being ensamples to the flock. And when the
chief Shepherd shall appear, ye shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth
not away. Likewise, ye younger, submit yourselves unto the elder. Yea, all
of you be subject one to another, and be clothed with humility: for God
resisteth the proud, and giveth grace to the humble. Humble yourselves,
therefore, under the mighty hand of God, that he may exalt you in due
time." 1 Pet. 5:1-6
Those who drafted the form of organization by S. D.
Adventists labored to incorporate into it, as far as possible, the
simplicity of expression and form found in the New Testament. The more of
the spirit of the gospel manifested, and the more simple, the more
efficient the system.
The General Conference takes the general supervision of
the work in all its branches, including the State Conferences. The State
Conference takes the supervision of all branches of the work in the State,
including the churches in that State. And the church is a body of
Christians associated together with the simple covenant to keep the
commandments of God and the faith of Jesus.
The officers of a local church are servants of that
church, and not lords to rule over it with church force. "He that is
greatest among you shall be your servant." Matt. 23:11. These officers
should set examples of patience, watchfulness, prayer, kindness, and
liberality, to the members of the church, and should manifest a good
degree of that love to those they serve exhibited in the life and
teachings of our Lord.
Our State Conference Committees should be men of God,
with liberality and breadth of views and feelings that will lead them to
have a fatherly care of all branches of the work in the Conference. It is
their duty to counsel together in the fear and love of God, and regard
themselves as a board of counselors to all the ministers and churches
under their supervision, and not a board of directors. Our great leader
and director is Christ.
The labors and duties of the General Conference
Committee are still more extensive and important than those of the State
Conference Committee. They should be men of experience, of breadth of
views, and divested of sectional feelings, whose minds and hearts of love
can take in the best good of the cause in all its branches, and in all
parts of the field. They should be regarded as a board of fathers to the
cause in the highest sense.
In the fulfillment of the duties of their office, in
taking the general supervision of the entire work, their strength is in so
counseling their brethren in the spirit of tenderness and love, to bind
the hearts, of all the laborers to their hearts, and give room for the
voice of the Holy Ghost, as was manifested in the days of the apostles.
They should ever bear in mind that the head of every man is Christ
They may counsel with the State Conference Committee in
reference to ministers laboring here or there, but should never direct.
"The head of every man [every minister] is Christ." The minister who
throws himself on any Conference Committee for direction, takes himself
out of the hands of Christ And that Committee that takes into its own
hands the work of directing the ambassadors for Christ, takes a fearful
responsibility. "One is your Master [Leader], even Christ, and all ye are
brethren." Matt. 23:8. May God preserve to us our organization and form of
church discipline in its original simplicity and efficiency. (Review and
Herald, January 4,1881.)