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Meaningful metaphors. That was the topic of my recent conversation with a high school English teacher. She shared about classroom learning. I shared about church learning. We agreed, metaphors add meaning to our appreciation for important concepts. If a concept is important enough to pass along, you’ll most likely find value in employing the use of a metaphor in your explanation. Metaphor adds spice. A metaphor, pronounced “met-uh-fawr,” according to dictionary.com, is a figure of speech in which a term is applied to something to which it is not literally applicable in order to suggest a resemblance, as in “A Mighty Fortress is Our God.” While God is not literally a mighty fortress, this analog tells us something about God’s provision for his people. God gives us four meaningful metaphors in the New Testament to help us understand a very important concept: His church.
First
, The church is described using the metaphor of a building. The local church is not a building as in bricks and mortar. The local church is the Spirit-imbued church members. However, the church is metaphorically referred to as a building. Jesus promises that He will build
His church and that the gates of hell will not prevail against it (Matt. 16:18). Peter says we believers are being built
up into a spiritual house (1 Peter 2:5). Paul refers to the church as having using architectural language of pillar and buttress . Plus, he refers to the church as a household intimating a home or an edifice (1 Tim. 3:15, Ephesians 2:19-22). The church is like a building with Jesus Christ as the foundation (1 Cor. 3:10-11).
Second
, The church is described using the metaphor of a body. Paul describes the church as a whole body
(Ephesians 4:16). He describes the church using the word body
a whopping 19 times in only 1 Corinthians 12:12-27. Nine times in those verses, this body of Christ, the church, is described in terms of having members
. This classic text ends with a straightforward statement of our individual conversions being visible in a local body: “Now you are
the body
of Christ and individually
members
of it” (1 Corinthians 12:27). The church is also described as a body in Romans 12:4-5, Ephesians 4:16, and Colossians 3:15.
Third
, The church is described using the metaphor of a bride. Jesus contextualizes marriage for us in Matthew 22 in teaching that we will not be married in heaven. In Matthew 19, Jesus shares that marriage is to take on the look of a man who leaves his family of origin and cleaves to his wife. This man and woman were to be in this union, described as a one-flesh union, for one lifetime. Jesus warned them that God’s creation design for marriage was not to be interrupted with no-fault divorce. But why? Likely, it’s because God instituted marriage first in the garden temple sanctuary of Eden, between Adam and Eve. Adam did not do a very good job of protecting his family from disobedience. Adam was given the command and there’s no record of his protest when Eve (a subsidiary recipient of the command) urged on the eating of fruit. Of course, the real culprit to marital destruction, at least initially, was that crafty serpent Satan. The church as the bride
of Christ is beautifully articulated in Ephesians 5:22-33 where marriage is described as a union between Christ the groom and His church the bride. This is likely why we are not given in marriage in heaven. This momentary marriage is meant to demonstrate a permanent marriage between Christ and His church—a church that is to be pursued as visible, locally, even now. All metaphors, at some point, when pressed, break down. But it seems the Bible wants us to carry this metaphor right up to the end since the book begins with a marriage in Genesis and ends with a marriage in Revelation (see 19:6-10 and 21:1-4).
Fourth
, The church is described using the metaphor of a flock. Sorry to break with the alliteration of building, body, and bride; however, God also intends to explain the church to us through the metaphor of flock. Perhaps this is the most affectionate title given to us since the building and the body are about strength and the bride feels distant for our tastes as individual Christians. The affection label of “sheep” in a flock with a great “Shepherd” (1 Peter 2:25) for our souls feels highly personal. Psalm 23 begins with “The Lord is my shepherd
.” Peter is reinstated under the auspices of being willing to feed Jesus’ sheep—
a mantle Peter surely passed on to church elders (cf. John 21:15, 1 Peter 5:1-4). Paul has no problem exhorting local church elders to care for the flock,
the church . . . which Jesus obtained with his own blood (Acts 20:28). Jesus himself describes himself as the good shepherd tending the flock. We see this in the gospel of John (1:29, 10:14). In believers from every tribe and tongue being brought into one flock
, Jesus warns members they can only enter the fold through the door—which is faith in Christ’s person and work (John 10:1-2). The separating of the sheep from the goats on the last day, a further metaphor for believers and non-believers, is described in flock-like
terms in Matthew’s gospel (25:32).
Metaphors serve an important function in language.
They help us further explain important concepts. Metaphors give the instructor options for how to pass along pertinent information to a new student. The Lord’s church is an important concept indeed. Biblical metaphors provide a rich fullness to our understanding of the church. God’s is making us a building, a body, a bride, and a flock. We are His in perpetuity. Metaphors convey meaning.
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