When we left off last week, I was laying out for you the plan for fellowship that we find in the Bible. Our purpose was to get a clear sense of what God is aiming at in creating the church, and how we are to respond to that vision. A key element of this was the Christian response to guilt. We noted that Christians are uniquely vulnerable to the recognition of sin in human nature, including their own, but they aren’t to wallow in misery and self-abasement as a result, but rather to use their realization of their own fallibility as an incentive for humility, obedience, compassion, restoration, gratitude and new unity — a “repentance without regret”, remember?
Chapter 5: A Higher Vision (continued)
A Healthy Reminder
Am I only telling you what you already know? Surely you’ve read these passages, no? But it’s still good
for us to remind ourselves of who we are and what we’re aiming for, because we
can forget; especially since the world is so busy trying to produce its own
kind of unity, but without Christ. The calls for unity from the world cannot
fail to penetrate the ears of the church; and if we are going to be fortified
against those false doctrines, as Paul hoped, then we are going to have to keep
the biblical pattern before us with perfect clarity. As we wade into some of
the more sordid details of the world’s errors and illusions (as we shall do
later in this chapter), it is going to prove positive, encouraging and healthy
for us to take a firm mental grip on God’s pattern for unity.
The contrasts will prove stark.