The Holy Catholic Church, the Communion of Saints
SECTION 1. THE HOLY CATHOLIC CHURCH
In the clause of the Creed which expresses
belief in Jesus Christ, He is called our Lord “And
in Jesus Christ our Lord.” That He is their
Lord is declared by believers, when they term the
society of which they are members “the Church.”
This word is derived from the Greek kurios,
Lord, in the adjectival form kuriakos, of or
belonging to the Lord the Scottish word
“kirk” being therefore a form nearer the
original than the equivalent term Church.
The Greek word translated “church” occurs
only three times in the Gospels. In English the
word is used in different senses, all of them, however,
pointing to the Lord Jesus as their source and sanction.
By “church,” we sometimes mean a building
set apart for Christian worship. The Jew had his
Tabernacle in the Wilderness, his Temple at Jerusalem,
and his Synagogue in the Provinces; the Mohammedan
has his Mosque, and the Brahmin his Pagoda; but the
Christian has his Church, in whose very name his Lord
is honoured. Sometimes the word denotes the Christians
of a specified city or locality the Church
at Ephesus, the Church at Corinth. Sometimes it
is limited to a number of Christians meeting for worship
in a house, as in Romans xv and in Philemon.
Sometimes “Church” denotes a particular
denomination of Christians, as the Presbyterian Church,
the Episcopal Church. Sometimes it expresses
the distinctive form which Christianity assumes in
a particular nation the Church of England,
the Church of Scotland. In the Creed the Holy
Catholic Church means the whole body of believers
in the Lord Jesus Christ, all who anywhere and everywhere
are looking to Him for salvation, and are bringing
forth the fruits of holiness to His praise and glory.
The Lord Jesus Christ did not, during
His ministry, set up a Church as an outward organisation.
He was Himself to be the Church’s foundation;
but in order to be qualified for this office it was
necessary that He should first lay down His life.
The work of building and extending, in so far as it
was to be effected by human agency, must be undertaken
by others after His departure. He came to fulfil
the law, and so He was not sent save to the lost sheep
of the house of Israel. He worshipped, accordingly,
in the Jewish temple and synagogues, observed the
sacraments and festivals of the Old Testament Church,
and during His earthly ministry bade His disciples
observe and do whatsoever the men who sat in Moses’
seat commanded. “The faithful saying, worthy
of all acceptation,” with which the Christian
Church was to be charged as God’s message to
the world, was not yet published, for Christ had still
to suffer and enter into His glory, and the Holy Ghost
had yet to be sent by the Father before the standard
of the Church could be set up. While the Church
rests on Christ, it is founded upon His Apostles also,
to whom He committed the work for which He had prepared
them, and for which He was still further to qualify
them by bestowing power from on high. The gifts
which He received for men when He ascended were needed
to equip them for the work of founding that Church,
which became a possibility only through His death
and resurrection. Applying to them the redemption
purchased by Christ, the Holy Ghost wrought in and
with them, and crowned their labours with success.
The Christian Church was set up on the day of Pentecost,
when the Holy Ghost came down upon a band of believers
assembled at Jerusalem waiting for the promise of the
Father. Under His inspiration Peter preached the
first Christian sermon with such power that the same
day there were added unto the Church three thousand
souls.
The Church is termed the Holy
Catholic Church. When the epithet “holy”
is applied to the Church, it is not meant that all
who profess faith in Jesus Christ and are in connection
with the visible Church, are holy, or that any of
them are altogether holy. Our Lord taught that
while in the world His Church would contain a mixture
of good and bad. He likened it to a net in which
good and bad fishes are caught, and to a field in
which wheat and tares grow together. Though
all are called to be saints, “there is not a
just man upon earth that doeth good, and sinneth not."
The sanctification of believers is the work of the
Holy Spirit, effected not by a momentary act but by
degrees, and never perfected in this life.
Upon all who truly receive the Lord
Jesus a change is wrought by the Holy Spirit of God,
which results in holiness. Looking unto Jesus,
they behold as in a glass the glory of the Lord, and
are changed into the same image. The transformation
which they undergo extends to every part of their
being. The subject of sanctification is the whole
man. The understanding, will, conscience, memory,
affections are all renewed in their operations, and
the members of the body become instruments of righteousness
unto holiness. As believers are enabled to die
unto sin, they live unto righteousness. Being
renewed in the inner man by the Divine Spirit, they
bring forth the fruits of the Spirit. Their desire
is after holiness, for they know that the restoration
of holiness is the end for which Jesus died and for
which the Spirit works. “Christ loved the
church, and gave himself for it; that he might sanctify
and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word,
that he might present it to himself a glorious church,
not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing; but
that it should be holy and without blemish." Now,
the Church is marred by many blemishes, but her imperfection
is for a time only. When her period of work and
probation is accomplished she will be purged and perfected,
and will be a church without spot or wrinkle.
Meantime she is the Holy Church because her Head is
holy, and because she is called out of the world and
consecrated to the service of God. She is holy
because she is the body of Christ, of whose fulness
she receives, and whose graces she reflects, and because
it is through her teaching, prayers, and institutions
that the Holy Spirit usually works and influences
men to follow holiness. The ministry, the preaching,
the sacraments, the laws, and the discipline of the
Church have as their end the turning of men from their
sins and persuading them to follow holiness.
The Christian Church is a Catholic
Church. The word “Catholic” means
universal, and implies that, unlike the Jewish Church,
which was narrow and local, requiring admission to
earthly citizenship as the condition of receiving
spiritual privilege, the Church of Christ is coextensive
with humanity, and accessible to all. The Master’s
charge was that the Gospel should be preached to every
creature. The Church’s field is the world,
and her commission sets before her as a duty that she
shall go into all the world bearing the glad tidings
of salvation. The disciples did not at first
realise this comprehensiveness of the new faith.
Even after his address on the day of Pentecost, Peter
had not risen above his Jewish prejudices. It
was not until after he beheld in vision the great
sheet let down from heaven, and was forbidden to regard
anything which God had cleansed as common or unclean,
that the fulness of the Gospel dispensation was understood
by him, and he discovered to his astonishment that
God is no respecter of persons, but that in every
nation he that feareth Him and worketh righteousness
is acceptable to Him.
The Catholic Church is One.
It is the Holy Catholic Church, one in its
origin as the household of God built upon the foundation
of the Apostles and Prophets, Jesus Christ being the
chief corner-stone; one body, with one hope,
one Lord, one faith, one baptism. The distinctive
marks of the true Church are allegiance to one Lord,
confession of a common creed, and participation in
the same Sacraments.
The unity of the Catholic Church is
quite compatible with the existence of separate organisations
that differ in regard to details of government or
worship. There is no outward organisation which
possesses a monopoly of Christian truth and privilege.
While all who “hold the Head” stand fast
in one spirit, they are not all enrolled as members
of one ecclesiastical body, or subject to the authority
of one earthly ruler. Their citizenship is in
heaven; not in Rome or in any city of this world.
The claim asserted by the Bishops of Rome to be infallible
representatives of Christ and exclusive possessors
of the keys of the kingdom of heaven, to whom all
men owe allegiance, and whose decrees and discipline
cannot be questioned without sin, has no support in
Scripture, which, while it enjoins unity of spirit,
never prescribes uniformity of organisation.
What the Romanist claims for the Pope
is virtually claimed for the Church by some who reject
Papal authority. By the Church they mean one
visible body of Christians under the same ecclesiastical
constitution and government, and they maintain that
the right to expound with authority the will of God
is vested in this body, and that private judgment
must be subordinated to its decisions. To constitute
the Church they say there must be bishops at its head,
ordained by men whose ecclesiastical orders have come
down from apostolic times in unbroken succession.
Without this apostolical succession, it is affirmed,
there can be no Church, no true ordination, no valid
or effectual administration of sacraments.
Such a definition of the Catholic
Church excludes from participation in the ordinary
means of grace the whole body of Presbyterians, nearly
all the Protestant Churches of Europe, and all who
refuse to admit direct transmission of orders from
the Apostles as a primary condition of the Church’s
existence. Carried to its logical conclusion,
it would exclude even those who maintain it; for all
attempts to trace back a continuous and complete series
of ordinations from modern times to the apostolic
age fail to show an unbroken line. It is therefore
not possible for any bishop or minister in Christendom
to be certain that, in this sense, he is a successor
of the Apostles. The Catholic Church is not exclusively
Episcopalian or Presbyterian or Congregational.
It is found in all Christian communities, and maintains
its identity in all. It is said by Paul to be
made up of “them that are sanctified in Christ
Jesus, called to be saints, with all that call upon
the name of our Lord Jesus Christ in every place,
their Lord and ours." As it is not the Pope that
admits to, or excludes from, heaven, so it is not the
prerogative of any church to bestow or to withhold
salvation. The right of private judgment, asserted
and secured by the Scottish Reformers, is one which
we are not only entitled but bound to exercise.
We must search the Scriptures for ourselves, that
in their light we may prove all things and hold fast
that which is good. A famous saying of Ignatius,
who first applied the term “Catholic”
to the Church, supplies the true description of a
living church “Wherever Jesus Christ
is, there is the Catholic Church."
SECTION 2. THE COMMUNION OF SAINTS
This article appears to have first
found place in the Creed as a protest against the
tenets of a sect called the Donatists, from Donatus
their leader. He seceded (314 A.D.) from the
Christian Church in North Africa, carrying with him
numerous followers, and set up a new church organisation,
claiming for it place and authority as the only Church
of Christ. Circumstances put powers of excommunication
and persecution at his disposal, which he directed
against those who refused to become his followers.
Augustine was for a time a Donatist,
but his truth-loving spirit soon discovered the real
character of Donatus, and then he became his active
and uncompromising opponent. It was probably as
a protest against the arrogance of the Donatists,
and in deference to Augustine’s wish, that the
clause was inserted. In this profession it is
declared that the Holy Catholic Church is one not
in virtue of outward forms, or even through perfect
agreement among its members upon all details of doctrine,
but because of the holiness of those who compose it.
It refuses to excommunicate any who hold fast the
form of sound words, and who adhere to one Lord, one
faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all.
It is a brotherhood of which all who have the spirit
of Christ are members. Differences in colour,
or country, or rank do not suffice to separate those
who are “the body of Christ and members in particular.”
The spirit of Christian fellowship that marks the
saints finds fitting expression in the noble words
of Augustine, “In things essential, unity; in
things doubtful, liberty; in all things, charity.”
The primary meaning of the word “saint”
is a person consecrated or set apart. In this
sense all baptized persons who are professing members
of the Church of Christ are saints. In the New
Testament the whole body of professing Christians
resident in a city or district are called saints,
although some among them may have been unworthy; just
as in the Old Testament the prophets even in degenerate
times termed the people of Israel an “holy nation,”
that is, a nation separated from the rest of the world
and consecrated to God’s service. Thus we
read that Peter visited the saints which dwelt at
Lydda. Paul speaks of a collection for the poor
saints at Jerusalem, and writes letters to all the
saints in Achaia, to all the saints in Christ
Jesus at Philippi, and to the saints at Ephesus; and
Jude speaks of the faith once delivered to the saints.
In these passages the title is applied to all who
were in outward fellowship with the Christian Church.
The term “saint” is used
also in a more restricted sense. As they were
not all Israel who were of Israel, and as not every
one that saith “Lord, Lord” shall enter
into the kingdom of heaven, so all who are enrolled
as members of the Christian Church do not lead saintly
lives, and those only are truly saints who are striving
to live godly in Christ Jesus, and to be holy, even
as He who hath called them is holy. This clause
of the Creed expresses the doctrine that Christians
ought to have fellowship one with another, and that
there ought to be harmonious relations and stimulating
communion between their several churches and congregations such
fellowship and communion as may lead the world to
believe that they are one in Christ, and that, though
compelled by circumstances to assemble in different
places and to form separate societies, they are, nevertheless,
all members of one body, of which Jesus Christ is
the Head; all stones in one building, of which He is
the chief Corner-stone; all branches in one true vine,
of which He is the Stem; and all animated and directed
by the same Spirit. Thus regarded, the clause
is a protest against the exclusiveness which often
marks Christian churches, and is a recognition of
the spirit of charity.
The extent of this Communion of the
Saints is not revealed. Much of it is spiritual,
and is therefore invisible to us. God alone marks
in full measure the fellowship of the churches, and
is acquainted with the character and conduct of all
their members. He knew the seven thousand in
Israel who had never bowed the knee to Baal, and the
real, though unrecognised, communion they had with
one another in their common fidelity and prayer to
Him; but Elijah did not know how much true fellowship
he had, when he denounced the idolâtries of Jezebel
and pleaded with God for Israel. The ignorance
of the prophet, who thought he was the only faithful
Israelite, has its counterpart in our own times.
God knows, but we do not know, how many faithful saints
there are in the world who are in fellowship with
one another because they are in fellowship with Him.
We are excluded by many barriers from the knowledge
of our brethren and sisters in Christ Jesus. Natural
and moral difficulties stand in the way, hindering
this knowledge; differences in language, in environment,
in habits and modes of thought, and other limitations,
disable us for truly gauging the character of those
with whom we are brought into close contact.
Communion is nevertheless real and true. The
members of the Church of the living God, however they
may be scattered and divided, have communion and fellowship
with the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost; and
being in fellowship with God, they are of one mind,
and are knit together by common faith and mutual sympathy.
They are all one with the same Head, and they have
all one hope of their calling.
Our Lord brought life and immortality
to light, and taught men that between the Church militant
and the Church triumphant there is indissoluble fellowship.
Those who followed holiness in this life are saints
still in the life to which they have passed. In
the Epistle to the Hebrews, believers are told that
they “are come to the general assembly and church
of the firstborn, which are written in heaven ...
and to the spirits of just men made perfect."
While the clause was probably inserted
at first to vindicate the doctrine of communion of
saints in this life, it has long been regarded as
extending to a communion subsisting between the spirits
of just men made perfect and followers of the Lord
Jesus Christ who are still on earth. The passage
last quoted justifies the inference that death does
not suspend the fellowship which believers in Jesus
Christ have with Him, their common Lord. Death
separates the soul from the body, but it does not
cut off the dead from communion with the Father or
the Son. He who is the God of Abraham, of Isaac,
and of Jacob is the God not of the dead, but of the
living. Of the whole family of the saints, some
are in heaven and some on earth, and, between those
who are there and those who are here, there is communion.
Since the heavenly Church received Abel as its first
member, there has been unceasing fellowship between
militant and glorified saints. Those who are
here are shut out by the tabernacle of the body from
personal intercourse with the souls of the departed,
but are yet in a fellowship with them that is very
real and precious. The holy dead act upon the
living, and, it may be, are reacted upon in ways we
do not understand. Of Abel we are told that “being
dead, he yet speaketh." Those whom death has
taken do not cease to exert an influence on the lives
of friends left behind. Their example, their good
deeds, their writings, the undying consequences of
what they did while on earth affect us. The veil
which death interposes between us and them hinders
us from witnessing their spirit life, and we know not
whether, or in what measure, or how, they contemplate
us. We do not go to them to ask them to intercede
for us with the Father, for we believe there is but
one Mediator between God and man. We do not invest
them with attributes which belong to God alone; all
that we are warranted to say about their relation
to us is, that what is revealed does not forbid, but
rather encourages, the thought that they are interested
in us and concerned for our happiness. If the
angels rejoice over the conversion of a sinner, are
we to think that the spirits of just men made perfect
are strangers to this joy? They are within the
veil, we cannot see them, but we know they are in
communion with God. The condition of the departed
saints is one of waiting as well as of progress.
They have not attained to fruition. There are
doctrines which to them, as to us, are still matters
not of experience but of faith and hope. The souls
of the martyrs seen by John under the altar were in
a state of expectation, desiring and pleading as when
in the flesh they had desired and pleaded for the
consummation of Messiah’s kingdom; and from them
the Apostle heard the cry ascend, “How long,
O Lord?" Saints here and saints who have passed
through the valley into the unseen must surely hold
many beliefs in common. Both alike believe the
promises of God, and anticipate the glorious consummation
for which they wait and watch, when the kingdoms of
this world shall become the kingdoms of the living
God. They believe in the resurrection of the
body and in its reunion with the soul for ever.
They have common affections. Their love is given
to the same God. They have community of worship,
and have communion in thanksgiving, praise, and, may
we not say, in prayer for the overthrow of the kingdom
of darkness and the advent of the kingdom of glory?
As those who are still in the body keep the New Testament
feast, they feel that there is fellowship between
them and saints departed, seeing that they honour
the same Saviour, glory in the same cross, partake
of the same heavenly food, and look for the same inheritance
of perfect blessedness.