Is the Local Church Inadequate?

By Evangelist Paul Mershon

August 24, 2010

 

At the outset of this article, I want to make it abundantly clear that I am not writing this Revival Thoughts as a blanket opposition to Bible colleges, nor do I wish to telegraph the thought that it is entirely wrong for young people to attend a Bible college not the ministry of the local church of which they are active members.  The decision to send young people away to Bible college is strictly a matter of parental prerogative, and especially a matter of the clear leading of the Spirit of God and His will for those young people.  I certainly stand firmly in support of parental prerogative as dad and mom assist their youngster in making wise decisions about school, and would never want to do anything to interfere with that prerogative, nor criticize or find fault.  That said, I have been giving much thought to the modern Bible college movement and how it relates to the doctrine of the local church and its responsibility to train and equip the saints who are members of their respective assemblies. 

 

“But now hath God set the members every one of them in the body, as it hath pleased him” (1 Corinthians 12:18).

 

Before I share my thoughts with you with regard to the subject at hand, please take time to read the following pertinent article I recently saw penned by Pastor Mark Montgomery of Ambassador Baptist Church located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. 

                                                                                                            A Biblical Basis for the Local Church Bible College

As I have thought this matter through very carefully and prayerfully over the past few years, I have been concerned that Bible colleges are becoming a substitute for the local church and pastor-led local church training.  There simply is no substitute for the local church.  The visible, tangible, locally-manifested New Testament church is God’s only plan for the training of His people.  The church established by God is duly gifted by God to accomplish the task of effectively training her people for service to the King.  “And he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers; For the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ: Till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ: That we henceforth be no more children, tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to deceive; But speaking the truth in love, may grow up into him in all things, which is the head, even Christ: From whom the whole body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth, according to the effectual working in the measure of every part, maketh increase of the body unto the edifying of itself in love” (Ephesians 4:11-16).  Now I fully understand that not every church may have the ability to establish a Bible institute or college, especially if a new work.  But in such cases that local assembly ought to have for its goal the inevitable establishment of such a training ministry.

I have always felt that when God calls the young men in a local church to preach, it is the responsibility and God-ordained duty of the pastor to train that newly gifted “preacher boy” for service.  Some of the best trained pastors, missionaries and evangelists I have personally known were local church trained.  The more I see today within the realm of modern fundamentalism, the more strongly I have advocated for local church Bible institutes designed to train our men for the ministry.  There are several outstanding resources available today that will help a local church facilitate a doctrinally sound and solid four-year Bible institute training program.  The program that my home church employs is wholly Baptistic and extremely thorough.   I have even had Bible college graduates tell me that it is far more in-depth than anything they had in college.  It can be done, and it can be done effectively, even by the smallest church.  The cost to the student is infinitesimally smaller than the thousands of dollars it would cost to go to a Bible college away from home.  Parents of younger college students would not be faced with huge bills, nor the challenge of coming up with the funds and all of the associated expenses of sending a youngster off to a far off location where they cannot interact with their child, nor have some measure of oversight whereby accountability is assured.  In addition to all of this, not all young people are emotionally or spiritually prepared to move away from hearth and home prematurely.  We knew of a girl who graduated early from Christian school at the age of 16.  She accelerated through the ACE program and was allowed to graduate early.  She was subsequently accepted as a student at 16 by one of our prominent independent Baptist Bible colleges, dropped out, and is doing very little for the Lord today.  She was not prepared for an adult world and failed to flourish as a student as she had in the high school environment. 

One of my greatest concerns has been that when we send our best young men off to Bible college we oft-times do not get them back.   I once expressed this concern to a Bible college president who seemed to feel that I was somehow off base.  As a pastor I was always concerned that the local church of which the student was a member was cut out of the loop.  Though these kids were members of our church we had little or no input from the school, and I am not always sure that parents had quality input or communications with the school either.  Though the student was under the authority of our local church, yet that authority was minimized by the authority of the Bible college. I find this problematic. 

I have many other reservations and thoughts regarding the subject of this article, but I shall reserve those thoughts for a later Revival Thoughts.  Again, I am not standing in hardcore, rock-ribbed, absolute opposition to sending students to Bible colleges or other Christian institutions of higher learning.  I do have some schools that I recommend and appreciate.  For example, Christian young people who want to train for the various professions (nursing – pre-law – pre-med – business – elementary and secondary education, etc.) have found Pensacola Christian College a good choice as they prepare for the profession to which they are called.  Other schools have provided good training in both the professions and trades in a Christian setting.  Young women with an interest in advanced training in music or Christian education may well look to a liberal arts Christian school.  But with all of this said,  I am developing a strong advocacy for local church training, especially for those young men called to preach the Word of God and those wishing to get a Bible education.  With a Bible institute or college within the local church, and the practical hands-on training they will get under the tutelage, guidance, and mentoring of their pastor, they will receive the benefit of instruction and experience that is second to none. 

More and more churches are establishing their own Bible institutes and colleges in order to train their own men and women.  I believe this may be the wave of the future, returning us to our intended roots where the local church is once again preeminent in outfitting and equipping the saints.  Though I fully understand the why and wherefore of sending our young people off to Bible college, yet I believe that the local church is adequate for the instruction of God’s people.  It remains my hope and prayer that more independent Baptist churches will consider the responsibility God has impressed upon the local assembly to train the saints for service in His vineyard.