People pray for Christian unity but what kind of unity?
Jesus giving the Farewell discourse to his eleven remaining disciples, from the Maesta by Duccio, 1308-1311. (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
John 17 “Holy Father, keep them in your name, which you have given me, that they may be one, even as we are one” (v. 11b).
Our study of Matthew 18 now complete, we have seen how the church is to exhibit pastoral concern, guard the church’s holiness, and readmit to communion all those who, though they have broken fellowship, turn from their sins and seek restoration. Before returning to Matthew’s gospel, however, we need to look at the nature of the church in order to understand why discipline
and forgiveness are needed to preserve the purity of the church.
John 17, which records the longest prayer in the New Testament, provides some of the most important teaching on the church. As we can see in this chapter, Jesus is concerned with the unity of His people, praying for His disciples and all those who come after them to be one in purpose and mission even as He and His Father are one (vv. 11b, 22–23). It is therefore regrettable that the church of Jesus Christ in our day evidences little visible unity. In the
United States alone, there are hundreds of different Protestant denominations, including dozens of varieties each of Presbyterians, Baptists, Lutherans, and so on.
Faced with this scandalous reality, there has been a tendency in the twentieth
century and now, in the twenty-first century, to try and correct this problem.
As a result of the ecumenical movement, many new denominations have formed through the mergers of old ones, and there has been a push for believers to affirm what unites them over and against what divides them. This is laudable when those professing unity agree on the fundamental tenets of the Christian faith, but such is not often the case. Many times those seeking “unity” are those who are most eager to jettison any real adherence to the confessional standards of the church. Such unity is merely visible, and cracks begin to show when Bible-believers in the church begin to rightly protest the excesses of the liberal wings of their denominations.
If unity is to mean anything, Jesus also affirms in John 17, it must be a
unity grounded in the truth (vv. 17–19). Unity is meaningless when church
members do not confess the same Lord and Savior.
Consider today the importance of true Christian unity, one that is a unity of
faith and not only an organizational unity. What type of unity is your
particular church concerned to promote? What type of unity is your passion?
Take time today to pray for your particular church and denomination that they
would seek to be one with other Christians, but not at the expense of the
faith once given to the saints. Do what you can to promote such unity with
other believers.