A Defense of the Church Institute

The statement in Belgic Confession 28 that all believers are “in duty bound to join and unite themselves with” an instituted church that has the three marks of a true church has proved to be controversial with some in North America and Europe, as Prof. Engelsma’s recent book, Bound to Join, has been fiercely attacked by both expected and unexpected critics.

This book answers those critics, by defending the doctrine of church membership and demonstrating that love for the universal, invisible church invariably expresses itself by love for the manifestation of this church in the church institute. This new book also examines the “house church” movement and the claim by such men as Harold Camping that the church age has ended. A must-read on biblical and Reformed ecclesiology!

Contents
Preface
The Reformed Confessions on the Necessity of Church Membership
Chapter 1: Criticism by Those at Ease Outside of Zion
Chapter 2: Criticism by Presbyterian Kevin Reed: Distorting Calvin
Chapter 3: Criticism by Presbyterian Kevin Reed: Neglecting the Creeds
Chapter 4: Postscript: Promotion of Reed’s Criticisms by EPC of Australia Minister Rev. C. Connors
Chapter 5: Attack of the “Red Beetle” (a.k.a. Monty Collier)
Chapter 6: Review by a Reformed Pastor (Rev. John Bouwers)
Chapter 7: The Judgment of Harold Camping

Click here for a review of this book.

To watch the video of the author interview concerning this book, click here.


“I just got Defense of the Church Institute yesterday morning and am more than half way through already. Prof. Engelsma’s defence is excellent; it demolishes the opposition … I didn’t know Kevin Reed was a house-church man. Life is full of surprises.” – England




Bound to Join

Some professing Christians deny the necessity of church membership. Others join a church for unsubstantial reasons or leave a church for trivial, often selfish, reasons. Many remain members of apostatizing churches because of family or traditional ties. Some Christians find themselves in countries or areas where no true church exists or can be formed. They ask, sometimes in anguish, “What must we do?”

Seemingly forgotten today is the truth that Jesus Christ institutes His catholic or universal church in organized congregations that are clearly identified by objective marks. These are true churches, in distinction from false and apostatizing churches.

In the form of letters to an inquiring (though not always appreciative) European audience, this book addresses the issue of church membership in the twenty-first century. This instruction is applicable to all believers and is based on Scripture, the Belgic Confession and the important, but little known, controversy of John Calvin with the Nicodemites.

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“I found Prof. Engelsma’s Bound to Join a compelling read and very challenging. Since reading it I have dipped into it frequently. I look forward to reading his response to critics. I can understand why objections and criticisms would be raised. But his biblical foundation and logic is in my view unassailable. The marks of a true church are simple enough it seem to me. It is only when they are added to or taken from or indeed ignored that things become complicated, confused and corrupted. Residual sin in man will always want its own way, which is usually the most comfortable to his conscience. When that conscience is pricked, so is his pride. I speak from personal experience. But the dilemma that many face regarding joining themselves to a true church that is both scriptural and confessional in its life and witness is and remains in today’s prevailing apostasy increasingly difficult. – West Midlands, England

Bound to Join made me realize the importance of church membership, even though I was resistant. Your book also made me realize the importance of membership even though it may take sacrifice to find and join that true church. We desperately need this better understanding of the importance of church membership in this day and age in which Christians are oriented to be too independent and too consumer-oriented and too transitory in attendance in church.” – Florida, USA

To read a review of this book published in the Protestant Reformed Theological Journal, click here.
To read a review of this book published in the British Reformed Journal, click here.
To read a defence of this book published in the Standard Bearer, click here.

To watch the video of the author interview concerning this book, click here.

To read letter 1 of this book in Czech, click here.




Implications of Public Confession

DESCRIPTION

Abraham Kuyper was born in the Netherlands. He was a Modernist minister when he assumed his first charge, but was led, through the influence and prayers of a saintly woman in his congregation, to see that he was feeding his people husks.

He saw the truth of salvation through the blood of Christ and responded by preaching the gospel with unusual power.

Abraham Kuyper was an outstanding theologian, he led a Dutch political party, and was prime minister of the Netherlands.

Here is a stimulating volume for young Reformed people answering the vital question, “What is expected of me after I make confession of faith?” Interestingly written and easily understood, Dr. Kuyper describes the calling and life of confessing church members. Not only should young people find this book valuable but also Christian parents and church office-bearers will find it helpful for answering questions such as these:

Why should confession of faith be made publicly?
Who should make confession of faith?
Should training be given in preparation for this confession?
Of what should the preparation consist?
Are catechism classes necessary?
Is it necessary to examine candidates for confession of faith?
What is the relation between confession and being received into the church?

This excellent and worthwhile volume will prove itself indispensable indeed—and will assure interested young people all the facts and “implications of public confession.”

Click here to read a chapter from this book.

To read an excerpt of this book in Spanish, click here.




Jerusalem and Antioch

8 sermons on CD or DVD

Don Doezema: “This marked for the church the beginning of a new and important phase in its carrying out of the mandate given by Christ before His ascension, namely, that the gospel be preached to the ends of the earth. It is true that Christianity, especially as a result of the persecution that scattered the Christians from Jerusalem, had already spread
beyond the limits of Palestine; but, as Jamieson wrote, ‘still the Church continued a stranger to formal missionary effort …. It was from Antioch that teachers were first sent forth with the definite purpose of spreading Christianity, and organizing churches’” (Upon This Rock, vol. 3, p. 174)

(1) Antioch, Jerusalem’s Daughter Church (Acts 11:19-24)
(2) Antioch & Jerusalem: Their Mutually Beneficial Relationship (Acts 11:25-30)
(3) The Different Callings of the Two Churches (Acts 12:1-13:4)
(4) Antioch Sends Out Missionaries (Acts 13:1-3)
(5) The Work of Antioch’s Missionaries (I) (Acts 13-14)
(6) The Work of Antioch’s Missionaries (II) (Acts 13-14)
(7) The Jerusalem Assembly (Acts 15:1-35)
(8) The Two Churches’ Cooperation in Missions (Acts 15:35-16:5)




Moving House for God’s Church

6 sermons on Ruth 1 on CD or DVD

Martin Luther: “Anyone who is to find Christ must first find the church. How could anyone know where Christ is and what faith is in him, unless he knew where His believers are?”

(1) From Bethlehem to Moab (Ruth 1:1-5)
(2) Elimelech’s Rationale for Moving to Moab (Ruth 1:1-5)
(3) Orpah Turns Back (Ruth 1:6-14)
(4) Ruth’s Godly Resolution to Move to Join the Church (Ruth 1:15-18)
(5) Ruth’s Amazing Faith in Moving to Join the Church (Ruth 1:15-18)
(6) Naomi Returns to the Church (Ruth 1:19-22)


“I have just listened to the sermons on Ruth 1. I really enjoyed listening to them.”- Co. Antrim




Notes on the Church Order

Many church members today have little or no knowledge of the biblical and Reformed principles of church government, especially those in hierarchical or departing churches. Ministers and church periodicals do not teach these things, and members are left ignorant and helpless, unaware of their church rights and responsibilities, and unable to protest or appeal church practices or decisions.

This work by Prof. Hanko, a long-time church member, minister and theological instructor fills this need. As a teacher of church polity and one with many years of experience both of church assemblies and of helping church members formulate their presentations, he provides a safe guide to the confused layman.

The first and longest part of this work, “Notes on the Church Order,” gives a concise explanation of all the 86 articles of the Church Order of Dordt, as used in the Protestant Reformed Churches.

The second part, the “Believer’s Manual for Church Order,” explains how the child of God is to relate to church office-bearers and how he is to bring matters to the assemblies, as well as his calling in family visitation, at congregational meetings and in church discipline, etc.

Even those from different ecclesiastical backgrounds and with different church orders or church codes will find this book helpful as it sets forth the principles of Scripture and Reformed ecclesiology regarding the institutional life of the church of Jesus Christ our Head and Redeemer.