Keeping the Faith
Is this physical realm all that we can know? We see with our
eyes, feel with our hands, hear with our ears, smell with our noses
and taste with our mouth that which has substance, that which is
real to us. Men struggle with the spiritual realm because they can
not see, hear, handle, taste or smell it.
Faith is what transcends beyond the realm of the physical and
into the spiritual. “Now faith is the substance of things hoped
for, the evidence of things not seen.” Hebrews 11:1 Faith is
necessary to see spiritual things that cannot be observed by the
human senses. This saving faith is produced only by the word of
God. Romans 10:17
In II Timothy 4 we have two very different men. First we
have the apostle Paul who near the end of his life Paul proclaimed
“I have kept the faith” (7) He was ready to receive his crown of
life because he had fought a good fight and finished his course.
Demas on the other-hand had forsaken the Lord “having loved
this present world” (10) He went back to the world. He lost his
fight and he failed to finish what he had started. He had not kept
“the faith” and he would not receive his crown of life.
What we see now is just temporal. It truly can be here
today, but gone tomorrow. (I John 2:15-17) Let us all keep the
faith.
Stacy
Crim
"They Watch For
Your Souls"
Irvin
Himmel
A responsibility may be both awesome and joyful, at times
painful yet rewarding. This is the case with the weighty charge for
which overseers in the church are accountable.
The Hebrew writers expresses the thought in this way:
Obey them that have the rule over you, and submit yourselves:
for they watch for your souls, as they that must give account, that
they may do it with joy, and not with grief: for that is
unprofitable for you (13:17).
In the local church, according to the arrangement outlined in
the New Testament, elders or bishops are the shepherds that have the
rule or oversight of the flock. Paul said, "Let the elders that rule
well be counted worthy of double honor, especially they who labor in
the word and doctrine" (1 Tim. 5:17). The same apostle admonished
the elders of the church at Ephesus, "Take heed therefore unto
yourselves, and to all the flock, over the which the Holy Ghost hath
made you overseers, to feed the church of God, which he hath
purchased with his own blood" (Acts 20:28). The pastors of the flock
must not rule in a manner that is dictatorial, domineering, and
dogmatic. Peter warned elders not to be "lords over God's heritage"
(1 Pet 5:3). "They watch for your souls" is a statement which needs
to be pondered, studied, and put into practice.
1. Watching for souls requires leading people in the way of
the truth and right. Elders are not to make laws of their own but
are to lead disciples in submitting to God's will. They are to
inform and instruct, applying the word of the Lord to specific
cases, and helping the flock to follow Him who is the chief
Shepherd. They are to be "ensamples" to the flock (1 Pet. 5:3).
Their lives should exemplify humility, sincerity, wisdom, faith,
love, and deeds of righteousness.
2. Watching for souls necessitates keen spiritual interest.
In some churches of Christ it appears that elders have more interest
in watching the finances than in watching for souls. They meet
regularly to discuss the contributions, the budget, monetary support
for preachers, building costs, etc., but show precious little
concern in talking about how to win more souls to the Lord, what to
do about sheep that have gone astray or jumped the fence, ways to
devote more attention to souls that are in jeopardy, or why
discipline is neglected in the church. Elders need to do more than
watch the money; they watch for the souls committed to their charge.
3. Watching for souls takes times: Some men are chosen as
overseers who either do not have the time or else are unwilling to
take the time to do the work for which they are responsible. I am
impressed with elders who take time to call on the weak,
backsliders, or members who have been overtaken in a fault. Rather
than acting disinterested, God-fearing shepherds go after the sheep
which axe in trouble. Elders that have time to go to ball games;
political rallies, picnics, school programs, etc. but no time to
spend warning the unruly, admonishing the weak, and encouraging the
fainthearted, should remember that they must give account before God
4. Watching for souls demands alertness. Shepherds need to
know the flock. There needs to be an awareness of the spiritual.
condition of the sheep. If a sheep shows signs of spiritual sickness
or an inclination to waywardness, the shepherds ought to detect it
and work on the problem. If grievous wolves are stalking about,
faithful shepherds will demonstrate vigilance over the flock. Paul
warned the Ephesian elders about grievous wolves which enter, not
sparing the flock (Acts 20:29). Wide-awake elders are the kind that
really watch for souls.
5. Watching for souls reflects faithfulness. Perhaps some
overseers have forgotten that the most serious charge given to
elders is to watch for souls. One is not faithful as an elder merely
because he attends all the services of the church, or all the
business meetings, or all the elders' meetings. He is not faithful
because he is a good husband and father, nor because he makes an
honest living, nor because he teaches a Bible class. An elder who is
truly faithful in his oversight of the church must watch for souls.
H.E. Phillips observes in his book Scriptural Elders And Deacons,
"This is the real purpose for which God ordained that elders be in
every church: that each member would be watched and matured in such
a way as to bring him into the judgment as a faithful child of God"
(p. 211).
Elders have a solemn charge. It is no trifling matter to
watch over the souls that make up the flock
of Christ. One's soul is his most priceless possession. To
lose the soul is to lose everything. Soul-watching sums up the work
of spiritual shepherds. No member of the flock should be annoyed if
the elders speak to him about his conduct. Good and faithful bishops
feel strongly the responsibility that they have to watch for our
souls.
Truth Magazine XXIII: 31, p. 498
August 9, 1979