Elder Oscar B.
Mink
Now In His
Eternal
Rest With The Saviour He Loves So Dearly
(May 3, 1924 -
August 25, 2004)
The Baptist Bride!! What an awesome truth. The Bride of Christ is a Baptist Bride, chosen, prepared, arrayed, and made ready for this role, and fitted to this prescribed end and the consequent glory that shall be experienced.
Surely, those who are Baptists should be aware of this great future, and they should be properly and submissively conducting themselves as befits the Bride that is soon to be wedded to God’s Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. Imagine the consummation of this stupendous event, when Christ shall take unto Himself His Bride, whom He has chosen, purchased, ransomed, and prepared. Could any other be found to be suitable to be married to Him, Who is the Perfection of all that is called God?
In this brief work, Elder Mink has done a masterful job of presenting The Baptist Bride. With much humility, he has reached into the Scriptures and has literally plucked for our reading joy these many jewels of truth. His style is, as usual, an in-depth searching of the numerous “thus saith the Lord”. His frequent use of these precious Scriptures has authenticated his writing, thus diminishing the ability of the many and varied gainsayers of the world to find legitimate fault with the thesis that is set forth. Scripturally, I see little room for fault-finding, for who among men can stand against God and His Word?
There is, to be sure, much controversy among professing Christendom concerning this subject. But I would ask those who hold opposing views to read this book with a willingness to measure every precept by the final authority, the Bible. When God has established a precept, He faithfully and consistently maintains that position, and in this matter, it is evident that God does not change, nor does He modify His plans. God is not a pragmatist. He operates on principle. Absolute principle.
Clearly, those who may disagree with the position that Elder Mink holds on this subject do so because they are, generally speaking, not Baptists themselves. Many claim to be Baptists who, in reality, are simply Protestants in disguise. Thus, the exclusivity that God exercises in the choice of a Bride for His Son is not well received by non-Baptists. And this, humanly speaking, is understandable. To such, the idea of a Baptist Bride is not pleasant, for it excludes them from participation in the “Brideship”. It leaves them out.
A careful, prayerful, yearning for truth attitude should be exhibited by all who claim to be Christian. If this be the case, then one must either submit to the Bible and all that it teaches on this subject, or be found to be in rebellion against God. Again, a careful, prayerful yearning for truth will produce an attitude of acquiescence, and the truth will prevail.
May God, in His abundant grace, be pleased to lead every reader of this work to study it carefully and prayerfully. To do so, we believe, will yield the peaceable fruit that manifests proper relationship and proper fellowship with God and with His Word.
All
four of the Gospels and the Apostle Paul agree that God chose and sent
John the Baptist to prepare the way for Israel’s Messiah, Who would, by
the sacrifice of Himself, prepare the way of the Gentiles (Isaiah
42:6,
7;
John
was
God, the Creator of heaven and earth, has determined that His beloved and nail scarred Son have a supremely magnificent wedding, and heaven’s marriage hall is gloriously decorated, and there is nothing lacking in this infinitely superb arrangement. But how about the Bride? Is she fully prepared for this awesome event? Affirmed. “The marriage of the Lamb is come, and His wife hath made herself ready” (Revelation 19:7).
New
Testament Baptist churches are not bibliolatrists; they do not worship
the Bible, but they worship the infallible Author of the Bible, that is
GOD. And they honor His counsel with the utmost sincerity. Their
blessed
Head and Groom has admonished them, saying: “Prove
all things: hold fast that which is good; ... Speak thou the
things
which become sound doctrine; ... Try
the spirits whether they are of God: because many false prophets are
gone
out into the world” (I Thessalonians
The Lord’s Bridal church appreciates intellectual acumen, but New Testament Baptists know the natural intellect is restricted in its perception to carnal matters. Official Conventions, Associations, and Councils are not a stay against error, but are, in fact, promoters of compromises that are insidious and hurtful to the cause of God and truth. The primary purpose of the Lord’s Bridal church in this world is to glorify her Groom, and in order to achieve this exalted end, her autonomy must NEVER be compromised. Therefore, the church must take the strictest heed to the Word of God, and be ready to give any and all men that asketh a reason of the hope that God has given it.
The
Romanists’, Protestants’, and Bapto-protestants’ distortion of the
facts
of ecclesiastical history, wherein the origin and perpetuity of the
Lord’s
Bridal church(es) are not merely obscured, but obliterated, has not
made
scriptural Baptists obdurate or deficient in love for depraved mankind.
However, New Testament Baptists know it is not their incessant
perpetuity,
nor their countless martyrdoms, nor their evangelicalism, nor their
commendable
confessions and creeds that merits God’s approbation. But it is their
tenacious
adherence to His infallible word, and the rejection of the
ecclesiastical
inventions of men, that has won for them the glorious “Well done”
of their loving and faithful Groom.
The words of the text were spoken by the first Baptist, whose name was John, and I call your attention to the textual terms “Bride” and “Bridegroom”, for the thrust of this message will be a consideration of the ecclesiastical Bride and her Bridegroom. There cannot be a fully orbed study of Christology without giving a large place to ecclesiology. Hence, the text necessitates a study of the Lord’s church and her glorious head, Jesus Christ.
Ecclesiastical scholarship so-called, in the majority part, agree that the terms “Bride” and “Bridegroom” used in our text are metaphoric references to Christ and His church. But in conceding this, they have bought no favor with God, for their notion as to what the Lord’s church is, and what the Bible teaches it to be, is as far apart as the east is from the west, and is, therefore, a great detriment to church truth.
Scholarship, no matter the science, must be anchored in truth. If not, it is scholarship falsely so-called. Many allow that Augustine, Luther, and Calvin were scholars in the science of soteriology, that is, in the way God saves His people. This I disallow, and to support my variance, I ask one question: “Why did they sprinkle infants and call it baptism?” The simple answer is: They believed in sacramental salvation, and sacramentalism is antithetical to the scriptural doctrine of salvation by the free and unmerited favor of God.
The Lord’s church and the Bride of Christ are one and the same. But in saying this, I haven’t said very much, for all of professing Christendom gives unreserved credence to that contention. However, if you or I say: “The Bride of Christ is a Baptist Bride”, we had better be equal to the test, for the ecclesiastics of the contrary part will turn on us with verbal slander, inspired of Satan.
The Baptist contention that each local church was (is) an autonomous entity, and that scriptural baptism demanded immersion, brought the fury of the papal church upon them, and millions of them during the dark ages were viciously tortured and burned at the stake. When the so-called reformation came in the early 16th century, the Roman church was joined by Protestants in her effort to annihilate all Baptists. Both Romanism and Protestantism were permeated with the spirit of legalism, and Baptists suffered the two-pronged brunt of their unyielding intolerance.
The
riots in the German city of
To
quell the riots in
“Zwingli
drowned Anabaptists at
The
Baptist Bride doctrine has its root or origin in the New Testament.
Romanism,
Protestantism, and Protestants with a Baptist name laughingly object to
that statement, saying: “There was no such thing as a Baptist church
before
the fifteenth century. Moreover, the church is universal and
invisible.”
I am caused to wonder how
There is an adage that says: “You do not change the nature of a thing by calling it something other than what it is.” Example: How many legs would a horse have if you or I called the horse’s tail a leg? It would still have only four legs, because calling it something that it is not does not change the thing. Another example: Sprinkling is sprinkling, no matter how many people call it baptism. It is still what it was, and that is sprinkling. Rantizio will never become baptizio in any language.
Baptist churches went by various names through the first fourteen centuries of their history, and most of these names were given them by their enemies, the purpose being to deride them. They have been called Montanists, Novationists, etc. The name that prevailed for the longest period was “Waldenses” but none of the names ever changed the fact that all the while they were Baptist churches.
There are no five-legged horses, and there are no invisible brides. When the Lord comes for His Bride, He will find that she has persevered through time, and she is joyously ready for the consummation of her age-long espousal to her loving Head and Bridegroom. I do not mean to imply that the rapture is split, but I do emphatically say: The Bride will be the first to welcome His coming, for she shares an intimacy with Christ that no other people can ever experience.
While
the heavenly Bride and Groom are not one and the same, there will not
be
a greater oneness in eternity, other than the tri-unity of the Godhead.
So it is, the Bride of Christ is going to live closer to the throne of
God in glory than any other people. James and John, the sons of Zebedee
(Matthew
The
Bridalship of the Lord’s church has no expiration date, for her
heavenly
Spouse has promised her that the gates of hell would not deter their
betrothal,
much less destroy it (Matthew
The
common vow which is most usually a part of marriage ceremonies in this
world reads: “Til death do us part”, but this vow cannot apply to the
Bride
and Groom of our text (John 3:29); for the Groom (Christ) is “alive
forevermore” (Revelation 1:18), and speaking of His Bride
and
the wedding in heaven, He says: “His wife hath made herself ready”
(Revelation 19:7). There is nothing that can in any degree
inhibit
the marriage of the Bride and Groom of our text. And in spite of
Satan’s
efforts to adulterate the Bride, the Lord is going to present His Bride
to Himself “not having spot or wrinkle, or any such thing” (Ephesians
“Unto
Him beglory
in the church by Christ Jesus throughout all ages, world without end.
Amen”
(Ephesians
1. Christ glorifies God by being the Head of the church.
2. The church is edified by the unceasing presence of Christ with it.
3. God’s glory in the church is eternal, “Throughout all ages, world without end.”
4. The Bride of Christ is given a written guarantee from the pen of Divine inspiration, of an endless perpetuity, for Christ the Groom is ever-present with her, and He has made the church the primary medium of God’s glory in the world.
CHAPTER
TWO - AN OLD TESTAMENT PICTURE
OF THE NEW
TESTAMENT
BRIDE AND GROOM
The
Old Testament is replete with types of the ecclesiastical Bride and
Groom
of the New Testament. However, for the sake of brevity and space, I
will
mention only one at this time, and that is the marriage of Abraham’s
son,
Isaac, to Rebekah. The whole chapter of
In this marriage arrangement, Abraham is a type of God the Father. Isaac is a type of Christ. Eliezer, Abraham’s faithful servant, is a type of the Holy Spirit (Genesis 15:2). And Rebekah is a type of the spotless and blemishless Bride of Christ. This is the greatest love story in the Old Testament, and it should never be overlooked or passed by in any study of the New Testament church.
Abraham’s faithful servant, Eliezer, is sent by Abraham to find a particular bride for Isaac. The aspect of this particularism is seen in the words of Abraham to his servant, wherein he said: “Thou shalt not take a wife unto my son of the daughters of the Canaanites, among whom I dwell: But thou shalt go unto my country, and to my kindred, and take a wife unto my son Isaac” (Genesis 24:3, 4).
Abraham’s servant was given means whereby to identify the bride of Isaac (Genesis 24:43, 44), and Rebekah passed every detail of the identification test, including being a member of Abraham’s family, for she was the granddaughter of Abraham’s brother (Genesis 24:15). Abraham, the type of God the Father, did not choose his whole family to be the bride of his son, but he chose one from his family, the beautiful Rebekah, and she became the bride and wife of Isaac.
Baptism is the first ordinance of the church, and it is the paramount identification of a New Testament church. Paul admonished the Corinthian church, saying: “Keep the ordinances, as I delivered them unto you” (I Corinthians 11:2). If a church does not pass this first and all important ID test, she is a false bride, a harlot, an enemy of the blood bought and virgin Bride of Christ. When a person professes faith in Christ, and petitions one of the Lord’s churches for baptism, the church does not ask the petitioner: “Have you been immersed?” But she asks the would-be member: “Do you have New Testament Baptist baptism?” The question may be asked in a more direct manner, but to ask it in a less straightforward way may allow membership without scriptural baptism. BAPTISTS BEWARE!
There
is not the least inference in Scripture which teaches that regeneration
brings one into a Bridal relationship with Christ, but it does
experientially
make the subject a member of the family of God (Ephesians 3:15;
All
who contend the church did not exist prior to the day of Pentecost (Acts
2) must do away with a lot of Old Testament typology that vividly
pictures
Christ and His church. Boaz and Ruth are beautiful and striking types
of
Christ and His church, but this shining representation of the New
Testament
church must be relegated to oblivion if Christ did not have His
ecclesiastical
Bride before Pentecost (Ruth 4:10-13).
However, there is abundant and indisputable evidence in the four
Gospels
attesting to the fact that Christ not only had His church before
Pentecost,
but that it was a faithful and functioning church.
In
Luke’s gospel, we are given the account whereby Christ called Peter,
James,
and John from their fishing business. The Lord encourages them, saying:
“Fear not, from henceforth thou shalt catch men” (Luke
No doubt, there is some variance of thought among pre-Pentecostal Baptists as to how many of the original twelve disciples the Lord called before He actually had His church. However, while I am convinced the church had its birth with the first three disciples of our Lord, it is not a question of great import. All New Testament Baptists know that the church existed during the early ministry of Christ, for the church was witnessing and baptizing in the beginning of Christ’s ministry (John 1:45; 4:1,2).
The
contention that the New Testament church existed prior to the Pentecost
of
What
happened on the day of Pentecost was not the incorporation of the
church,
but the empowering of the church for its worldwide and age-long mission
(Acts 1:8). The baptism that John the Baptist and Christ spoke
of
(Matthew
Prior
to Pentecost, He had given His church disciplinary authority (Matthew
Isaac DID NOT marry Rebekah and all of her family. And that ecclesiastical marriage which God the Father has planned for His Son in glory will soon be consummated, and the church which Jesus bought with His own blood will, after these long and many years of betrothal, become the married Bride of her faithful, loving, and nail scarred Groom. At this glorious occasion, the ecstasy of the family of God will be second only to that of the Bride, and the family of God will shout, saying: “Alleluia: for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth. Let us rejoice, and give honor to Him: for the marriage of the Lamb is come, and His Wife hath made herself ready” (Revelation 19:6, 7).
The Song of Solomon (Canticles) gives great typological emphasis to the doctrine of Baptist Brideship, but we must leave the Old Testament picture album with all of its beautiful portraits of Christ and His virgin church and take up the theme with its literalness in the New Testament.
Just
recently, a Campbellite said to me: “The name of your church is not in
the Bible.” I have read the Bible with scrutiny and at great length,
and
as yet, I have not come across the name of the founder of the church
commonly
known as Campbellites; that is, Alexander Campbell. I found “John
the
Baptist”, but not “John the Methodist.” In my reply to the
Campbellite,
I said: “I am a Baptist, and everybody who knows me knows that I am a
Baptist.
When I baptize a person, every observer knows that person comes out of
the water a Baptist.” Jesus knew that Baptist baptism was not merely
important,
but essential, to the ecclesiastical honor of God. So, He went to the
first
Baptist preacher, John the Baptist, and He was baptized by him in the
river
Jesus
was a Baptist preacher, and the Sovereign and exclusive Head of His
church.
Being a Baptist, He would not be satisfied with just any Bride. So it
was,
Jesus established His church, the first Bridal church, from, or out of,
the disciples of John the Baptist. John the Baptist was sent from God,
and his mission was to preach repentance, and to prepare the human
building
blocks from which Jesus would build His first church. The life of John
the Baptist on earth was brief, but the powers of darkness could not
terminate
him before his mission was complete; which mission was to baptize
Christ
and make disciples for Him (Matthew 3:13-15;
“He
that hath the Bride is the Bridegroom.” There has not been a
day, no, not an hour, since the constitution of the first Baptist
church,
that Christ has been Brideless; nor shall the heavenly made betrothal
ever
be in danger of being terminated. Notwithstanding, the devil and his
bride
(Revelation 17:1, 15, 16;
19:2)
have incessantly tried to bring it to a bloody climax. But the all
glorious
and Sovereign Head of His Bride made a promise to her before He went
away,
wherein He said: “The flood tides of hell shall not prevail against my
beloved and faithful church” (Matthew
Christ has a threefold ownership of the New Testament church.
(1)
He created it (I Corinthians
(2)
He bought it with His own blood (Acts
(3) It is His Bride and Wife to be (Revelation 19:7).
Paul, speaking to one of the Lord’s churches, said: “But God, Who is rich in mercy, for His great love wherewith He loved us … hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus” (Ephesians 2:4, 6). In this text, Paul is speaking of a present tense experience of the Lord’s churches.
The
gospel commission which the Lord gave His church before He left the
earth
is clearly delineated by Him in four different books of the New
Testament,
i.e.,
The
most heavenly place on this earth a person can be is in an assembly of
one of the Lord’s churches, for the omnipresent Lord has promised to be
with His churches every time they assemble for worship. And worship of
their blessed Head should be the supreme purpose of each and every
meeting
of the church. This is why I could never understand why any member of
one
of the Lord’s churches would ignore the scriptural admonition not to
forsake
the assembly (Hebrews
Christ
said to His virgin Bride: “I go to prepare a place for you”
(John 14:2).
And while I am gone, “Go ye into all the world,
and preach the gospel to every creature” (Mark
A. The first characteristic of the Bridal church I call your attention to, is:
Her origin and Founder.
The
Bride of Christ, that is the New Testament church, although amply
revealed
in Old Testament types and shadows, had her material and earthly origin
in the days of Christ and John the Baptist. John said: “He that hath
(present tense) the Bride is the Bridegroom” (John
B. The second characteristic of the Bridal church:
Every member of the New Testament church made a verbal profession of faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.
Therefore,
there are no infants in the membership of the church (Acts
Salvational
competence is not in the power of the church, nor shall it ever be, for
salvation belongs to the exclusive
Romanism and Protestantism are in error as to the way God saves His people, for they give saviourhood to the ordinances, and they have, by this grievous error, deceived multiplied millions of people. Conversely, Baptists hold fast to the truth that God is the solitary Communicator of saving grace, and they steadfastly contend that every effort of man to mix creature works with redemptive grace is a blasphemous exercise; and it aggravates man’s condemnation, rather than atoning for it.
C. The third characteristic of the church:
All members of the New Testament church were baptized upon the profession of their faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.
Sprinkling and affusion (pouring) are religious inventions of men, and they came along centuries after the Lord established HIS church.
D. The fourth characteristic of the church:
The New Testament church, or Bride of Christ, consists only of believers who have been baptized by church authority.
Having one’s name on the church Roll Book does not necessarily make that person a member of the Bride of Christ. A marriage license does not make a marriage, and neither does a baptismal certificate make the holder thereof betrothed to Christ.
Baptists
have never taught that an unbaptized Christian cannot please God; but
what
they have, and yet teach is, that every saved person is commanded to be
baptized (Acts
It has been said: “Baptists have a lot of churchianity, and they have it at the expense of Christianity.” Nothing could be further from the truth, for Baptists, more so than others, if not exclusively, contend without deviation that a person first must be a Christian before he can be a church member. And New Testament churches require of their members a deportment that emulates Christ. The imperative order with Baptists, and it has always been, first Christology, and then ecclesiology.
E. The fifth characteristic of the church:
New Testament Baptist churches practice membership discipline.
Baptist
churches know the Lord has given them disciplinary authority, so as to
keep their churches pure. And they further know, if they do not
discipline
their wayward members, the Lord will discipline the church for its
indifference.
Baptists know, it is either discipline or decay. So it is, their two
thousand-year
history is proof positive of their perpetual discipline of their erring
members (Matthew
The
term “excluded member” is a misnomer, for it is actually a
contradiction
of terms. When a person is excluded from the membership of a Baptist
church,
his or her membership in the excluding church has been eliminated.
Exclusion
does not mean the subject is no longer saved; but the awesome fact is,
the excluded person is no longer a member of the Bridal
It is possible for a New Testament Baptist church to err in its practice of membership discipline, for Baptists, as individuals and as churches, know they are far from being infallible and may unjustly exclude a person from church membership. Such action is exceedingly rare, and when the church discovers it has erred in this regard, immediate and expeditious measures should be taken by the excluding church to correct the matter, making null and void the action whereby the person was excluded. The person wrongfully disciplined by the church is not reinstated to membership, for, in actuality, his membership has never been otherwise than intact. In forty years as a Baptist, I have only known of two cases in which a person’s name was unjustly deleted from the membership roll of the church. And in both cases, the erring church discovered its mistake and, with eagerness, corrected it; and the tarnish on the names of the two people was joyously eradicated.
The problem is not so much with the excluding church and the person excluded, as it is with sister churches taking into their membership a person or persons whom they know has been justly excluded from the membership of a New Testament Baptist church. Such a practice, if persisted in, cannot help but bring painful discord between the churches involved. Furthermore, such disrespectful action on the part of the receiving church goes a long way in negating the autonomy of both the excluding and receiving church, for it gives the excluded person an undue liberty, which, in turn, gives him some measure of advantage over his membership church. The baneful philosophy of some pastors claiming to be New Testament Baptists, is: “No circumstances should bar the receiving of any person who applies for membership, for if a person cannot worship with one church, he should be able to worship with another.” This is a glaring contradiction of the Bible doctrine of church discipline, and the transgressing church will, in due season, find her way is extremely hard.
F. The sixth characteristic of the church:
The Lord’s Bridal church recognizes the authority of the local or immediate New Testament Baptist church as the highest ecclesiastical authority on earth, and that there are no courts of appeal beyond its God ordained jurisdiction. The God-given autonomy of the church is unquestionable.
To
emphasize the authority which the Lord had vested in His church, He
verbally
reiterated it, saying unto her: “Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth
shall
be bound in heaven: and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be
loosed
in heaven” (Matthew
By the third century, many false churches, who usurped and denounced the authority of the churches of Christ, had come into existence. And it was of these counterfeit churches the first ecclesiastical hierarchy was formed (AD 251). The Papal office, with its decretive power, was instituted in the year 606 AD and Boniface III became the first Pope. For the next nine hundred years, the Papal office of the Roman church assumed ecclesiastical Governorship of the earth. And any and all churches who would not recognize the Papal Headship must be, by any means necessary, brought to submission, the one alternative being extinction. Many of the Lord’s churches were violently erased from the earth during this dark and fearful time, but the powers of darkness failed to eradicate the Lord’s betrothed. And there was a remnant of God’s elect churches providentially preserved during these cruel and bloody centuries, and the offsprings of these churches are known today as New Testament Baptist churches.
Calvin
believed that Divine authority had been given the church to establish
the
It
is God that presents the Kingdom to His Son, Who is the Head and
Bridegroom
of His church, and His Bridal church shall share His throne with Him (Daniel
7:13, 14;
The
Amillennialist and Postmillennialist theories of the parousia of Christ
will reach its absolute terminus with the premillennial “shout”
of the Groom from mid-air (I Thessalonians
The marriage supper of the Sovereign Groom and His virgin Bride (Revelation 19:9) is the primary event that initiates the Millennium; and it gives universal recognition and honor to the Brideship of the Lord’s church, which has gone by the name “Baptist” for the last five hundred years. The rank and power of the Bride is eternally subordinate to her beloved Groom. Yet it will be ineffably glorious, for her binding and loosening faithfulness during her bitter tenure on earth will be recognized and, henceforth, made perfect.
G. The seventh characteristic of the church:
The New Testament church, through her two thousand-year history has kept, and yet keeps, the ordinances of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper as was delivered unto her by the Head of the church, which is her Bridegroom.
The keeping and observance of these two ordinances is, and was, infrangibly given to the Lord’s Bridal church; and NO deviations in the observance of the ordinances are allowed. Baptism and the Lord’s Supper are, in their every aspect, restricted to the local church.
H. The eighth characteristic of the church:
The New Testament church, which is unmistakably the Bride of Christ, had only one mission. And that was to be faithful to her Redeemer and loving Head, the faithfulness of which included the carrying out of the Great commission (Matthew 28:18-20).
I. The ninth characteristic of the church:
“By
love serve one another” (Galatians
This
is the last characteristic that I will mention at this time, and it is,
by far, not the least. Christ said to His church: “A new commandment
I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye
also love one another” (John
The New Testament church was originally, and is today, local and visible in nature. It is a functioning organization, whose Divinely given authority is age-long and cannot be successfully breached.
“The marriage is come!” The betrothal period has expired. Joyous anticipation has become reality, and all sorrows have faded into everlasting obscurity. The Bridal chamber is made ready, and every detail has, in perfect minuteness, been taken care of. Beloved little flocks, your troubles and trials are eternally behind you, and the joy of that royal day will erase all negative remembrances from your mind.
The Bride knew that this most glorious of all days had been approaching since her Groom left the earth, and this bright prospect enlivened her patience and comforted her in suffering. All of her earthly adversities and afflictions were preparing her for this great day, and now she is ready, dressed in fine linen, clean and white (Revelation 19:8).
The
Bridegroom, ere He left the scenes of time, gave His Bride many “I
will”
promises, one of which was: “I will come again and receive you unto
Myself” (John 14:3). I call your attention to the term “unto
Myself” in the text. It is a term which denotes special endearment
and designed exclusiveness. It is not addressed to Abraham, nor to
Moses
or David, nor to an archangel, but it applies solely to Jesus Christ,
the
Bridegroom. It is to Him the Bride is to be gathered. And with Him, she
shall eternally experience an intimacy that is infinite and cannot in
so
great a degree be experienced by any other. Nay, not
As Deity, or the God-man, Christ is going to present His meek and faithful Bride to Himself in the marriage chamber of glory, and her radiance will be second only to that of her glorious and incomparable Groom. By this heavenly marriage, the Bridal church is elevated to the very highest and solitary place that shall ever be accorded any of God’s creatures. But let us note, the Scripture says: “Blessed are they which are called unto the marriage supper of the Lamb” (Revelation 19:9). It is the universal consensus that a Bride does not need an invitation to her own wedding, but she has much to do with preparing the guest list.
Now, I ask: “If every saved person is in the Bride, where does this great host of guests come from?” Regeneration does not put one into the church, but it does, experientially, put the regenerated person into the family of God. Jesus said, speaking of His elect people: “I am the door of the sheep” (John 10:7), and there is no other door into the family of God. But the door into Brideship, that is, the church, is scriptural baptism.
A
sarcastic critic of the Baptist doctrine of Landmarkism, asks: “Seeing
that your churches have only one door into the church, that is,
baptism,
when a person is excluded from a Baptist church, what door does he go
out?
Do you unbaptize him?” It is true, there is only one door of entrance
into
a New Testament Baptist church. But the Omniscient Architect, Who
designed
the ecclesiastical building, put an exit door in it, over which is
written:
DEFIANCE OF CHURCH AUTHORITY. “But if he (any infractor) shall
neglect to hear the church, let him be unto thee as an heathen man and
a publican” (Matthew
Now, let us return to our consideration of the marriage in heaven. The rapture of the saints and the sealing of the 144,000 Israelites are, in proximity of time, very close, if not simultaneous (Revelation 7). The message of these Jewish witnesses during the seven-year tribulation period will be the means of turning a numberless host unto Christ. But their tribulation ministry does not add one person to the church, for the church, at this very time, is attending her wedding in heaven. The tribulational saints are apart of the family of God, but they are not in the Bridal church, nor on the wedding guest list.
The Lord speaks to the tribulational earth, saying: “And the light of the candle (i.e., the church) (Revelation 1:20) shall shine no more in thee; and the voice of the Bridegroom and of the Bride shall be heard no more at all in thee: for thy merchants (religious entrepreneurs permeating the earth with the harlotry of the ecumenical church) were the great men of the earth; for by their sorceries were all nations deceived” (Revelation 18:23). The voice of the Bride is not heard during the seven-year tribulation period, for the simple reason that she is at the time getting married to her beloved Groom in heaven.
The ecclesiology of the tribulation period will be Catholicism ‘writ large’, for the Protestant daughters of mother Rome have reunited with her; and she has united with the Dictator of the one world government, the personal antichrist. The Romanistic doctrine of a universal, visible church will, at that time, cover the earth, as waters cover the sea. But this doctrine will be, as it has always been, a rogue, for it robs the faithful and shining Bride of Christ of her precious family and beloved wedding guests. But this can never be, for her Sovereign and protective Groom has ordained otherwise, and she shall be blessed with family and guests.
Baptists
should give a priority to their church membership, second only to their
personal and private relationship to Christ; for without a faithful
relationship
to the Lord’s church, all other relationships suffer. The question may
be asked: “How about a Baptist church member’s relationship to his
family,
should not that relationship come first?” The bond and ties of family
members
should be exceedingly strong and carefully preserved. A husband’s love
for his wife should equal that of Christ’s love for His church (Ephesians
In
the above and foregoing statements, I am not equating the church with
Christ
but the church is His blood bought Bride; and He has, with His
relationship
to her, elevated her above that of His family. The person who is saved
by the free and unmerited grace of God, and then added to His church by
scriptural baptism, should, if the need arises, forsake all (family,
friends,
etc.) to be faithful to the Lord’s blood bought and precious church (Matthew
10:38;
Let us notice the phrase in the text which reads: “The general assembly and church of the firstborn”. The advocates of the universal church doctrine read this statement on this wise: “The general assembly; the church of the firstborn”. But that is not what this text says, for they omit the word “and”, which is a conjunction. And things which are the same do not need a conjunction to unite them, for they have never been separated. So, let us not evade or avoid the compound and intrinsic nature of the inspired separating element –“and”-, much less cast it asunder.
The “general assembly” and “the church of the firstborn” are two distinct and separate bodies. The Lord is not betrothed to the “general assembly”, but He has entered into a marriage contract with His church, and this contract will, in due season (which appears to be short), be consummated. The “general assembly” is the family of God, which He has, in great part, begotten through and by His Bride. The Lord said to His Bride, while He was as yet on the earth: “In My Father’s house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto Myself: that where I am, there ye may be also” (John 14:2, 3). There would be no need for “many mansions” if all the saved were in the Bride, for one city is sufficient for His Bride; and Christ went away to prepare the Bridal city, a city of incomparable splendor. This city is the home of the “living God”, the throne city, and the capital city of all the ages to come. This all glorious city will be the institutional home of the consummate Bride.
Every Baptist church departing this God hating earth with faith in the promise of the Groom (John 14:2, 3) will realize their eternal citizenship in the Bridal city, and they will, through the unending millenniums, sing the nuptial song which expresses the devotion and dedication of the Bride and Groom to each other (Hebrews 2:12, 13). Every faithful husband and father loves his family, and his children are more precious to him than life. However, the husband has a peculiar love, a love which belongs exclusively to his wife. It is not a question of more or less love, but of kind and manifestation. The manifestation and variance in the husband’s or father’s love is of equal quality in both directions, and is the basis, or guarantee, of mutual respect in the whole family, even though this respect is different in kind (Ephesians 5:28).
The Groom’s respect for His Bride is made inviolable by oath, and in the sense of love and duty, they become one flesh and share an intimacy that is special and peculiar to a faithful marriage. Love and attention will be given by the father unto his whole family, but the time and attention he gives to his faithful and loving bride is conspicuously more than what is shown to his family in general.
Baptists have been accused of being too churchly. Some people have gone as far as to say: “Baptists worship the church, rather than God.” These charges are utterly groundless, for Baptists are not churcholatrists, but like Paul, they are jealous over the church. This great Apostle said to one of the Lord’s churches: “I am jealous over you with godly jealousy: for I have espoused you to one husband, that I may presentyou as a chaste virgin to Christ” (II Corinthians 11:2). Generally speaking, the fault with Baptists is not loving the church too much, but loving it too little.
At this juncture, I will mention a few other things which the Bride of Christ knows about the city which is her future and eternal home.
1.
Jesus the Groom is the light of the city (Revelation
2.
The kings of the earth bring their glory and honor into the Bridal city
(Revelation
3.
The wall of the city has the names of twelve Baptist preachers engraved
thereon (Revelation
The baptism of Jesus superseded that of John the Baptist, for John’s baptism reached its terminus with his death. But the baptismal ordinance which Jesus gave unto His church is age-long, and it is to be administered by local church authority, and in the name of the sovereign and holy Trinity. Baptists have been accused of churlishness concerning their stand on baptism, but Baptists are not churlish in defense of any of their doctrine. And their courtesy and humility is an incontestable part of their glorious history. However, Baptists are unapologetically dogmatic in contending for the faith which was delivered unto them by their Head and Groom (Jude 3).
The problem stems from lack on our critics’ part to distinguish between churlishness and dogmatism. It is not audacious or churlish to be dogmatic about that which is clearly and irrefutably spelled out in Scripture. New Testament Baptists will not compromise the doctrine which they believe, without doubt, that God has commissioned them to preach. But at the same time, no Holy Spirit led Baptist will, by his own design, make his God-given doctrine repulsive to others. Then, too, Baptist hearers need to know and remember that dogmatism and cocksureness are two different things, for cocksureness is permeated with pride and arrogance. Dogmatism, when warranted by the Scriptures, brings gratitude toward God and humbleness in the heart of the saint.
Another
question which our antagonists ask, is: “Will Christ marry each local
Baptist
church that ever existed?” I will answer the question with a question:
“Will all the redeemed families of the earth (thank God, there will be
many) be in heaven as they were on earth, or will there be only one
family
in heaven, that is, the family of God?” Marriage, family ties, and
distinction
is good for this corrupted earth, but not so in heaven (Matthew
Baptists have never taught that Christ loves His Bride more than He loves His family, for they know God’s love is infinite, eternal, and immutable. However, they have correctly and consistently taught that Christ, while on earth, spent the far greater part of His time with His beloved church. And they know with absolute certainty that He has been faithful to the promise of His age-long presence with His churches during their earthly pilgrimage (Matthew 28:20). This may not be a prototype of the relationship of Christ to His church in the eternal ages, but, seeing that Christ and His church are going to live without any prolonged hiatus in the Bridal city, the inevitable conclusion is: He, as when on earth, will be with His Bride more than with the family of God. Nevertheless, perfect and eternal harmony will prevail, for jealousy shall never enter heaven’s boundless and eternal domain.
The
“mystery” which Paul refers to in the above Scripture is
something
other than a revelation that Gentiles would be saved and share in the
blessings
of the immortal state. The declaration of Gentile salvation is many
times
stated in the Old Testament, and Paul quotes a number of these
references
in his epistle to the Romans (Romans 15:9-12).
While there are numerous references in the Old Testament which speak of
Gentile salvation, it was through
The
law which God gave
The
far greater part of Bible commentators give synonymy to the church and
the family of God; not mere equation, but sameness. These same
commentators
compound their erroneous concept of the church by giving it a mystical
nature, which simply means that the church is not apparent to the
senses
nor obvious to the intelligence. And it is not merely obscure, but it
is
impossible to recognize. It is true, the Lord’s churches fled from the
face of
In
a detailed study of the history of Baptist churches, from our present
time
unto the church which Jesus established in
Redemptive sufficiency has never been in the power of man, neither is it in the power of any church, for “Salvationis of the LORD”, (Jonah 2:9) and that, exclusively. Human volition, be it ever so sincere, is utterly destitute of saving virtue, and, in its every exercise, is anti-God. “They that are in the flesh cannot please God” (Romans 8:8). The Lord has given exclusive custody of the ordinances to His church(es), and they are fully responsible for the purity and perpetuity of the ordinances. But as glorious and important as the ordinances are, they are utterly impotent in the conveyance of spiritual life, for they are totally lacking in regenerative grace.
There is NO room for apathy or indifference in New Testament Baptist churches concerning the ordinances of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper. For the Lord has annexed to the other duties of the church an awesome responsibility, which is plainly spelled out in the words of the Apostle Paul, wherewith he admonished the Corinthian church, saying: “Keep the ordinances, as I delivered them to you” (I Corinthians 11:2). No deviations!
It was the defense of believer’s baptism that sent millions of our Baptist forebears to the martyrs’ stake to be burned, and to other means of death too cruel to describe. And for contemporary Baptists to be less strict in their handling of the ordinances, is to cast aspersion on our glorious heritage, vouchsafed to us by our faithful ancestors.
Every New Testament church is a Baptist church, but every church going by the name “Baptist” is not a New Testament church. These are something else, and it behooves every Baptist church to know the difference. Bible knowledge is attained by Divine revelation, and Baptists should, with great consistency, seek the wisdom of God. But we also need intellectual wisdom, or education, so as to manage our earthly affairs prudently. In both areas of wisdom, Baptists should never be guilty of belonging to a KNOW NOTHING CLUB. But they should know what it takes to constitute a Baptist church, so as to know one when he sees one.
In writing this message, I have tried to avoid abrasiveness; but in our day, Baptist doctrine is, on a large-scale, offensive. Nevertheless, every Baptist must hold to the truth with an unbreakable tenacity, for to do otherwise, he would offend God and be rebuked by Him. This rebuke I must at any cost avoid. There is an old adage that says: “It is better to be divided by truth than to be united by error.” I was comforted by this adage at the outset of this message, and I am, yet at the conclusion of the message, solaced by it.
All the churches of the New Testament were local, autonomous, and visible entities. They were not mystical or invisible, being shut up to the Bible for all spiritual truth, including ecclesiology. I must ask: “When did the Lord’s churches lose their CORPOREALITY and become mystical and invisible?” I ask this question in light of the fact that two truths can never be contradictory to each other.
“And
the Spirit and the Bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come.
And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take of
the
water of life freely” (Revelation
All who would accuse Baptists of bigotry for their tenacious adherence to the Baptist Bride doctrine need to be aware of the fact that the Roman Catholic church, with inflexible rigidity, contends that she is the exclusive Bride of Christ. ”The Catholic church rises as the Bride of Christ, ever fresh and fair ... The church is the Bride of Christ” (MY CATHOLIC FAITH, Pages 111, 149). Baptists are devoted to their own churches, but they are not bigots, for they are not intolerant of other churches.
That which is true of Catholicism concerning the doctrine of the Bride of Christ is also true of Protestantism. For Protestant churches have no reservation whatsoever in claiming ecclesiastical Brideship for themselves, and they are stringent in their claim. All that a concerned reader need do to be convinced of the Protestant claim of Brideship is to read any of their Bible commentators on the subject of the Bride of Christ. Albert Barnes, whom Protestants esteem very highly as a Bible expositor, says: “The church is the Bride of the Messiah.” Barnes, in using the term “Bride” refers to the whole body of Protestantism, and that to the exclusion of Roman Catholicism and Baptists, for Baptists have never been, in a denominational sense, Protestants. (Barnes’ NOTES ON THE NEW TESTAMENT, Page 280) (See Matthew Henry on the same subject, Volume 5, Page 894.)
The
Lord’s church is “The pillar and ground of the truth” (I
Timothy
The
Baptist Bride preaches that God is absolutely sovereign, and that the
only
kind of grace proceeding from His August throne is Sovereign grace.
God’s
grace never leaves His throne begging or limping, as the false churches
claim. But He doeth according to His will in all of His creation, and
every
thought to the contrary is a heinous sin. It was to His Baptist Bride
the
Lord gave His work, and for this cause, he says: “The world hath
hated
them” (John
Soon, O’ so very soon, The Holy Spirit will say to the Lord’s virgin churches: “Behold, the Bridegroom cometh; go ye out to meet Him” (Matthew 25:6). Then, the exceeding bitter trials will be forever over, and the long and patient waiting of the Bride will be climaxed by the loving voice of her Groom, saying: “Rise up, My love, My fair one, and come away” (Song of Solomon 2:10)
“ALLELUIA:
FOR THE LORD GOD OMNIPOTENT REIGNETH; …
AND THE SPIRIT AND THE BRIDE
SAY, COME” (Revelation 19:6;