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RESTORING
THE APOSTOLIC FAITH

Lecture Objectives:
Many sincere efforts
to reform the apostate church resulted in the starting of new churches, called
denominations. These fell short of going back to the original standard of the
Bible, the word of God. Then, in many lands there arose efforts to RESTORE the
pattern of the New Testament.
References:
A fountain may give
forth pure water. As it divides into streams, they may become contaminated.
The nearer to the source, the purer the stream will be. So, the New Testament
is the fountain of truth, coming from Jesus who said, "I am the way, the
truth and the life" (John 16.6).
Questions for Focus:
Many Old Testament
examples show us how restoration was needed and how it was accomplished. God
gave them the law, God's people sinned. They began to worship idols, and were
taken away from the home land into captivity more than one time. Each time
they needed to be restored to the pattern God had given them, His holy word.

- JOSIAH - AN
OUTSTANDING EXAMPLE OF RESTORATION
- Among Old
Testament examples of restoration we find the work of Josiah to be
notable. When Josiah became king, the law of God was found. It was found
in the house of God, which had fallen into decay because of the way
God's people had perverted the worship. As Josiah read, he saw that his
people, Israel, had not kept the word of God. Learning what God wanted
in worship, here are things he did to restore the worship God desired.
- He broke down
all idols and images - see 2 Chronicles 34.1-7.
- He purified the
land and the temple - see Chronicles 34.8,10.
- He renewed the
covenant to follow the true God - see 2 Chronicles 34.31.
- He restored the
Passover feast - see 2 Chronicles 25.1.
- He provided
pure priests and Levites - see 2 Chronicles 15.2-3.
- He had the Ark
of the Covenant restored to its place in the temple - 2 Chronicles 35.3.
- He restored the
sacrifices which the Law of Moses required - 2 Chronicles 35.16-20.
- KING HEZEKIAH -
ANOTHER RESTORER
- Even before the
time of Josiah, also a period when Israel had left the ways of the Lord,
King Hezekiah began to reign. The details of the restoration he brought
about are given in 2 Chronicles, Chapters 29-31. Here is a summary:
"And thus did Hezekiah throughout all Judah; and he wrought that
which was good and right and faithful before Jehovah his God, and in
every work that he began in the service of the house of God, and in the
law, and in the commandments, to seek his God, he did it with all his
heart, and prospered" (2 Chronicles 31.20-21).
- Restoration of
the music God wanted in worship. Since all the evils brought in by
wicked kings before him had caused God's appointed worship to fall into
disuse, Hezekiah restored all the aspects of worship the Lord had
prescribed. One of those is spelled out for us in these words: "And
he set the Levites in the house of Jehovah with cymbals, with
psalteries, and with harps, according to the command of David, and of
Gad the king's seer, and of Nathan the prophet; for the commandment was
of Jehovah by his prophets" (2 Chronicles 29.25).
- Music in New
Testament worship is quite different. There could not be acceptable
worship under the Law of Moses with the instruments of music which God
commanded through his prophets. What music does God want in worship in
the New Testament? His commands through his apostles are also plain:
"And be not drunken with wine, wherein is riot, but be filled with
the Spirit speaking one to another in psalms, hymns and spiritual songs,
singing and making melody with your heart to the Lord" (Ephesians
5.19-20). About fourteen passages in the New Testament talk of singing
in worship. None speaks of instrumental music in the worship of the
church. Examples, when Jesus and the apostles "had sung an hymn,
they went out unto the mount of Olives" (Matthew 26.30). "...I
will sing with the understanding also" (1 Corinthians 14.15). The
Old Testament required animal sacrifices; the New Covenant points out
our sacrifice, "Christ the Lamb of God." The Old Testament
required many feasts; the feast of the tabernacles; the feast of the
Passover. In the New Testament we find the Lord's supper. In a similar
way, the instruments of music under the Law of Moses give to such
teachings as "Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, in all
wisdom teaching and admonishing one another with psalms and hymns and
spiritual songs, SINGING with grace in your hearts to the Lord"
(Colossians 3.16).
- As Josiah
did, we must remove all idols and images that corrupt the worship of
God. Our Lord Jesus said, "God is a spirit and they that
worship His must worship in spirit and in truth" (John 4.23).
- To purify
the temple of God now his own worshippers must return to the New
Testament pattern for our instruction and examples. Paul said to the
church in Corinth, "For this cause I have sent unto you
Timothy, who is my beloved and faithful child in the Lord, who shall
put you in remembrance of my ways which are in Christ, even as I
teach everywhere in every church" (1 Corinthian 4.17). This
shows that the doctrines taught and the practices followed were
meant to be the same in every local congregation of believers. When
different denominations were begun long after the days of the
apostles, each denomination would adopt its own creed and its own
forms of worship. Peter said this about the writings of Paul:
"And account that the long-suffering of our Lord is
salvation." He added that Paul had written the same things in
all his letters. Some of those writings were wrested (twisted) by
those who were unlearned and unstable, who also misused the
"other scriptures" - not only those of Paul. This is
explained in 2 Peter 3.15-17. The second chapter of 2 Peter warned
against false teachers who had arisen within the church and led many
astray. The last part of his letter warns his readers, "Ye,
therefore, beloved, knowing these things beforehand, beware lest
being carried away with the error of the wicked, ye fall your own
steadfastness" (2 Peter 3.17).
- CONCLUSION
- What have we
learned in this lesson:
- That the
reformation failed. It did not restore the apostate church to the
New Testament standard.
- That many
sincere efforts to restore the church resulted only in beginning new
denominational churches.
- That many
Old Testament examples show how Israel was restored when it went
away from the law of God.
- That
restoration is appropriate today, and is done by going back to the
New Testament, "The perfect law of liberty" (James 1.25).
- May the
Father give His blessing in many cities and many lands where those
who love the Word are working to restore New Testament worship.
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