The Christian, the Church and the Church Service

Rom. 12:2 reads, “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.” The Phillips translation reads, “Don’t allow the world around you squeeze you into its mold.” Our culture is extremely active in catechizing each of us, wanting us to think a certain way, independent of God and contrary to His word. Its important to always be aware of this.

DISCIPLES ARE FOLLOWERS OF CHRIST: In considering what it means to be a follower of Christ, what immediately comes to mind?

Certainly, to follow Christ means to love Him and obey His commandments. The Bible has much to say about this, of course.  

When we ask questions such as this one, where does the concept of “Church” fit in to the equation? What has the Church got to do you and me as followers of Christ?  

I’m convinced that many professing Christians have a far too low view of the Church. Molded not by Scripture but by the culture around us, some have the false view that we can have a “personal” relationship with Christ without a “corporate” relationship with the Church. That is not good at all. It’s not good because it is not correct.

The very air we breathe in America (so to speak) is very individualistic, and that’s something we need to be aware of. The New Testament is clear in calling individual Christians to gather together for corporate worship and it is Jesus Himself who is behind that call.

Take for example, the Apostle Paul. Paul was not self-appointed but was an apostle of Christ. Christ Himself hand picked, appointed and commissioned Paul for the task of Apostleship. As Christ’s Apostle, Paul was given his marching orders personally by Christ Himself. Part of that mandate is revealed to us by the following words Paul wrote in Titus 1. He writes, “This is why I left you in Crete, so that you might put what remained into order, and appoint elders in every town as I directed you…” (Titus 1:5)

Paul went into pioneer situations where no man had gone before – preaching the gospel. As he preached, people were converted to Christ. In seeing this, Paul could simply have thought that his task was over and moved on to the next town or city. But he didn’t. Before he moved on, he raised up elders, or else, made sure elders were set in place to care for the disciples of Christ. Read again his words to Titus, “This is why I left you in Crete, so that you might put what remained into order, and appoint elders in every town as I directed you…”

THE UNIVERSAL CHURCH AND LOCAL CHURCH DISTINCTION

Each individual Christian is a part of Christ’s Universal Church. The Church is made up of all true, genuine Christians. Yet, these individual Christians are not to exist separately and alone. Each individual Christian is to be cared for by God appointed Elders in a local Church family. Read that sentence again. Its important to grasp this.

Elders are shepherds/overseers – under-shepherds of Christ – commissioned by Christ to care for and protect Christ’s flock and answerable to Him. Sheep have a great Shepherd (the Lord Jesus Christ) and also have need of under-shepherds (local Church Elders) to watch and care for their souls. Heb. 13:17 reads, “Obey your leaders and submit to them, for they are keeping watch over your souls, as those who will have to give an account. Let them do this with joy and not with groaning, for that would be of no advantage to you.” The people are to know who their personal leaders are and submit to them, and the elders are to know who they are accountable to Christ for. 

Three quotes in this regard (readers alert – strong words follow):

“‘I don’t need church. I study the Bible for myself.’ That is proof that you don’t actually study the Bible for yourself.” – J. C. Ryle 

“It’s foreign to the New Testament to have someone professing faith in Christ and not be a member of a local church.” – Dr. Kim Riddlebarger 

“Joining a local church isn’t one aspect of your Christian life. The local church is the primary context where you live out your Christian discipleship.” – Sam Emadi

These quotes are highly charged. They present a very high view of the local Church. I believe they portray the Biblical view – Christ’s view of the Church. The local Church is precious to Christ and is meant to be central in the life of every follower of Christ.

With that said let’s go a little further today and talk about what it is supposed to take place when we (under-shepherds and sheep) gather together as the local Church. Let’s talk about the Divine Worship Service…

Here’s a helpful article on this written by Jacob Crouch:

Did you know that your church has a liturgy during the Sunday gathering? A liturgy is simply the order of a public worship service. No matter how relaxed or formal your Sunday service is, you have some sort of weekly routine that your people have come to expect. A liturgy, when done well, regulates the worship of God in the way that God prescribes. There may be a variety of forms and circumstances, but the elements will be the same across various churches all over the world. Assuming the best of your church, each week God’s word is read, prayed, sung, preached, and seen. And insofar as this is true of your church, that means that every part of the service matters. And if every part matters, then missing part of the service matters too.

At our church, we begin each Sunday with a call to worship from God’s word. The people of God are addressed by God Himself and called into the joyful duty of worship. “Oh, magnify the LORD with me, and let us exalt his name together!” (Psalm 34:3). Then we sing a song of praise to God, followed by a pastoral prayer. We sing more songs of praise and then the word of God is preached. After the preaching, we sing in response to God’s word, take communion, and leave with a word of God’s blessing. Simple. Glorious. Purposeful.

Bits and Pieces

But what if our people routinely miss this first part of the service? They will miss vital parts of what we think is critical to the gathering of the saints. The call to worship is not just a placeholder to get people to settle in and be quiet. This is purposeful! It focuses the heart on God and His word and settles our minds to focus on Him. The first song is not to be viewed like a preschool class getting the wiggles out. We are beginning with praise. The prayer is a time of speaking with the living God, not just a chance for the musicians to retune and get settled.

Wrong Thinking

Missing this time communicates that you don’t really think these parts are important. There are some who are only interested in the preaching. “I’m not really into singing. I just want the theology.” Or maybe there are some who couldn’t care less about the preaching and just want to sing, sing, sing. These are not just incorrect ways of thinking, they are sinful. To dismiss one over the other is to ignore the good meal that God has prepared, and instead choose the buffet model. “I’ll take a little singing, a little preaching, but I don’t really like all that other stuff.” But “all that other stuff” is what God says is good for the church. Each part of the service is part of the normal means of God’s grace to you, and you neglect it at the peril of your soul.

I hope you think every part of the Sunday service matters. I pray your churches are ordered according to God’s word. I hope your churches are full of reading, singing, praying, preaching, and communion and baptism. I pray that God’s people will catch the vision and show up ready for the full liturgy. I want to challenge you to make it your aim to see the entire service each week. If we really think it all matters, then let’s act like it.

Phil. 3:20-21 and the future resurrection of the body

Jason L. Bradfield has written an excellent article in defense of the resurrection of the body. It is entitled, “Our Lowly Bodies Will Rise – Philippians 3:21 Against Hyper-Preterism” and can be found here. He writes:

In Philippians 3:20–21, the Apostle Paul directs the believer’s gaze not toward personal death nor ecclesiastical transition, but toward the eschatological return of Christ. The resurrection he anticipates is explicitly bodily—a transformation whereby our present, lowly condition is conformed to the glorified humanity of the risen Lord. This is not a vague metaphor or corporate abstraction; it is the definitive hope of the believer:

But our citizenship is in heaven, and from it we await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, who will transform our lowly body to be like his glorious body, by the power that enables him even to subject all things to himself.

Hyper-preterists, particularly those influenced by the writings of Max King, seek to subvert this reading by proposing a metaphorical and corporate interpretation. According to this view, the plural pronoun “our” paired with the singular noun “body” signifies not individual resurrection, but a covenantal, symbolic resurrection of the church that finished at the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70. Gary DeMar and Kim Burgess give voice to this interpretation:

This transition in the two covenantal administrations picks up the idea of the corporate “change” or “transformation” that Paul speaks about in 1 Corinthians 15:51-52 and Philippians 3:21. First Corinthians 15 is far, far richer than merely being a long and fancy prooftext for the resurrection of individual human bodies some day. First Corinthians 15, when seen in its proper light as Paul intended it, is his quintessential Biblical-theological (redemptive-historical andcovenantal) chapter on covenant hermeneutics, and we will return to this topic later on in this volume. A corporate covenantal “change”was necessitated if the promised New Covenant Kingdom of God was to be inherited. Earlier in this volume, we looked in some detail at Romans 8:23 and Philippians 3:21 about the “redemption” and the “transformation” of this corporate covenantal body [“our (plural)body (singular)”] as it would be redeemed and transformed “in conformity with Christ’s glorious body” which is the New Covenant Church as the corporate “body of Christ” (Eph. 1:22-23).1

Yet this corporate-only reading collapses when subjected to careful grammatical, contextual, and theological scrutiny.

Grammatically, the Greek text yields a clear and consistent meaning. Paul writes, ἡμῶν γὰρ τὸ πολίτευμα ἐν οὐρανοῖς ὑπάρχει ἐξ οὗ καὶ σωτῆρα ἀπεκδεχόμεθα κύριον Ἰησοῦν χριστόν—“But our citizenship is in heaven, and from it we await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ.” This establishes not only the believer’s present identity as a citizen of the heavenly kingdom but also orients their hope toward a future event. The verb ἀπεκδεχόμεθα (“we eagerly await”) is a present-tense verb of continuous expectation, indicating a future, not yet realized fulfillment: the return of Christ.

What does the Savior do at His return? “He will transform our lowly body to be like his glorious body.” The verb μετασχηματίσει is in the future active indicative—denoting a definite, forthcoming transformation. Paul’s focus is not on a symbolic reconstitution of covenant identity but on the future glorification of the believer’s physical body. The transformation is neither metaphorical nor ecclesiological; it is eschatological and bodily.

The phrase τὸ σῶμα τῆς ταπεινώσεως ἡμῶν—“our lowly body” or “the body of our humiliation”—is central to the discussion. Hyper-preterists contend that this refers to the collective body of the covenant community under the Old Covenant, oppressed under the weight of the Mosaic system and awaiting ecclesial renewal. They claim the “glorious body” is likewise metaphorical, referring to the church reconstituted in the New Covenant. But this reading is internally incoherent. If both “our body” and “his glorious body” are metaphors for the church, then Paul’s statement becomes circular: the church is transformed into what it already is. Such a tautology renders Paul’s statement meaningless.

Instead, the apostle draws a deliberate and theologically rich contrast between the believer’s present bodily condition—marked by weakness, mortality, and humiliation—and the glorified body of Christ, who was raised from the dead in power and incorruption. The grammar reinforces this point: Paul uses the singular σῶμα to denote the physicality of what is to be transformed, not an abstract corporate reality. This interpretation is in harmony with Paul’s broader eschatology. In 1 Corinthians 6:14, he writes, “God raised the Lord and will also raise us up by his power.” Likewise, in 1 Corinthians 15:20–23, he presents Christ as the “firstfruits” of the resurrection, thereby establishing the pattern and guarantee of the believer’s future resurrection. In verse 49 of the same chapter, he declares, “Just as we have borne the image of the man of dust, we shall also bear the image of the man of heaven.” The parallel is unmistakable: Christ’s bodily resurrection is the model for our own. Nowhere does Paul equate this hope with a metaphorical, covenantal shift.

The hyper-preterist argument also rests upon a flawed grammatical inference. They argue that the combination of a plural possessive pronoun with a singular noun—“our body”—must denote a singular, corporate body. But this is a basic misunderstanding of distributive syntax. In both Greek and English, it is common for a plural possessive to modify a singular noun in a distributive sense, referring to individual members of a group. The context determines whether the construction is collective or distributive.

This pattern is evident in passages like Matthew 10:30, where the Greek reads: ὑμῶν δὲ καὶ αἱ τρίχες τῆς κεφαλῆς—“the hairs of your (plural) head (singular).” Clearly, Jesus is not suggesting the disciples shared a literal head. The grammar distributes the singular noun among the plural subjects. Similarly, in John 14:1, Jesus says, “Let not your hearts be troubled.” The Greek—ὑμῶν ἡ καρδία—again combines a plural possessive with a singular noun. The singular “heart” is not a collective organ shared by all disciples but refers to each one’s personal, inner life. The same grammatical construction appears in Philippians 3:21 and must be read distributively: each believer awaits the transformation of his or her own body.

Moreover, the broader literary context of Philippians 3 dismantles the hyper-preterist framework. While advocates of “covenantal” readings appeal to verses 2–11 to support their thesis, Paul’s argument moves in a markedly different direction. In verses 2–6, Paul warns the Philippians against those who promote circumcision and confidence in the flesh—Judaizers who had corrupted the true meaning of the covenant. Importantly, Paul is not rejecting the Old Covenant as such, but rather condemning the perversion of the covenant into a system of self-righteousness.

His personal testimony in verses 4–8 affirms this point. He recounts his former credentials—circumcised on the eighth day, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Pharisee, zealous, and blameless according to the law. Yet he counts all of it as “loss” and even “rubbish” for the sake of knowing Christ. He is not repudiating the covenantal structure of redemptive history, but exposing the bankruptcy of seeking righteousness through external privilege or ritual observance.

The redirection of his hope is not toward a redefined ecclesiology, but toward a bodily resurrection. In verses 10–11, he speaks of knowing Christ, the power of His resurrection, and sharing in His sufferings in order to “attain the resurrection from the dead.” This resurrection is not realized in AD 70 or in symbolic ecclesial renewal. It is future, personal, and physical. The progression of Paul’s thought is unmistakable: the contrast is not covenantal but eschatological.

This trajectory continues in verses 17–21, where Paul urges the Philippians to follow his example and to take note of those who live in accordance with the pattern he has set. He then draws a sharp moral and eschatological contrast between those who “set their minds on earthly things” and those whose citizenship is in heaven. The former, whom Paul calls “enemies of the cross,” are driven by fleshly appetites and boast in what ought to bring shame; the latter live in eager expectation of their Savior’s return. This contrast is not between two administrations of the covenant of grace but between those who live according to the flesh and those who live by faith in Christ. Paul’s earlier critique of the Judaizers (vv. 2–6) finds a striking parallel here: whether through a legalistic distortion of the Old Covenant or a worldly religiosity unmoored from it, both forms of error rest on confidence in the flesh. Both seek righteousness or identity through human credentials rather than through union with Christ.

Against both distortions, Paul reorients the believer’s hope to the return of the Savior from heaven—an event not of metaphor but of power. He will “transform our lowly body to be like his glorious body,” and this promise is grounded in nothing less than the cosmic authority of Christ Himself, according to “the power that enables him even to subject all things to himself.” Hyper-preterists object, “Oh, but the change did come in its fullness – it’s metaphorical and applies only to believers.” Oh really? That hardly aligns with the claim that “he left nothing outside his control” (Heb. 2:8). Paul declares the opposite: the transformation is as real and physical as Christ’s own glorified body, and the subjection of all things is both universal in scope and future in fulfillment.

All things are not yet subjected to Christ. All things do not as yet obey the authority of Christ. As Hebrews 2:8 declares, “At present, we do not yet see everything in subjection to him.” Death remains, the curse endures, and people continue to die and decay. Hyper-preterists are thus forced into a theological contradiction: they claim that all things were subjected in AD 70, yet the observable world testifies otherwise. Death—the last enemy—has not been destroyed (1 Cor. 15:26). No graves have been opened, no bodies raised, no transformation occurred. If the resurrection has already happened, one must ask: where are the transformed bodies? Where is the consummation of Christ’s reign?

Beyond exegetical failure, the pastoral implications of the hyper-preterist view are devastating. If their interpretation is correct, there is no future resurrection to await—no bodily hope, no transformation, no vindication at Christ’s return. The believer is left with a hollow metaphor in place of a blessed hope. Christ’s resurrected body becomes theologically irrelevant. Paul’s eschatological promises dissolve into poetic language devoid of fulfillment. Such a view not only misrepresents the text—it robs the believer of the very hope the gospel proclaims.

In contrast, the Reformed and apostolic witness holds firm to the promise of bodily resurrection. Passages such as Philippians 3:20–21, Romans 8:11, and 1 Corinthians 15 offer a consistent eschatological vision: Christ, the risen Lord, will return in glory to raise His people bodily, conforming them to His image. This is no metaphor. It is the telos of redemptive history, the climax of Christian hope, and the promise that sustains us in the face of death. We are not waiting for a covenantal shift. We are waiting for the Lord from heaven—who will transform our lowly bodies to be like His glorious body. That is the resurrection hope. And it is the hope hyper-preterism forfeits.

1 Kim Burgess and Gary DeMar, The Hope of Israel and the Nations: New Testament Eschatology Accomplished and Applied, Vol. 2 (Powder Springs, GA: American Vision, 2024), p. 334