The Obscure Church
The church is sometimes hidden or
obscured because of sin, and rebellion against God. Is the modern church
obscured?
Proof That the
Church is Often Obscured
by Dr.
Francis Turretin
Proof
That the Church is Often Obscured: From the Condition of the Old
Testament Church.
Our
opinion is confirmed by various reasons. The first is drawn from the
condition of the church under the Old Testament, under which it is
evident that she was not rarely obscured and destitute of all splendor
(which can easily be demonstrated by her various intervals). Who can
deny that she was without splendor before the flood, when all flesh had
corrupted its way (Gen. 6:12), and in the flood when reduced to eight
souls, she was included in the ark? In the time of Abraham before his
call from Ur of the Chaldees, she lay concealed in a paternal family
given to idolatry (Jos. 24:1, 2). What was the splendor of the church in
Egypt, where she was so long a captive without any form either of a
state or of a sacred ministry? What was her splendor under the judges,
when after the death of Joshua the Israelites, having left the God of
their fathers, went after other gods (Jdg. 2:7; 3:8, 12), concerning
which times Azariah says, "Now for a long season Israel hath been
without the true God, and without a teaching priest, and without
law" (2 Ch. 15:3)? What appearance and splendor did the church have
in the time of Elijah, when he thought that he was left alone to worship
God (1 K. 19:10); God in the meantime consoling him with this-that he
had preserved seven thousand believers known to himself alone who had
not bowed the knee to Baal? What splendor had the Jewish church under
Ahaz, Manasseh, Ammon and other wicked kings under whom the sacrifice
was interrupted by law, the gates of the temple closed, an altar built
after the form of those of Damascus by Uriah the high priest and
idolatry introduced everywhere (as we read in 2 K. 16:11, 12, 14; 2 Ch.
28:3, 4, 24, 25)? And if we come down to the Babylonian captivity, where
was the splendor of the church after the city had been razed, the temple
polluted, the sacred vessels taken away, sacrifice abolished, the
worship of God interrupted (which could not be performed except at
Jerusalem) and the people brought into the most direful servitude? Hence
the pious most mournfully lamented that the prophets and all the signs
had been taken away (Ps. 74:9). In fine, what appearance and prominence
could the church have had under the most dreadful persecutions of
Antiochus and his successors, mentioned in the book of Maccabees and by
Josephus (JW 1.30-40 [Loeb, 2:16-23]). In that time, Paul says believers
"were stoned...were slain with the sword...being
destitute...tormented, they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins;
in deserts, and in mountains and in caves of the earth" (Heb.
11:37, 38).
Institutes
of Elenctic Theology,
vol. 3, p. 49 |
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