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Why We Should Love the Church

Grace To You / John MacArthur
The Truth Network Radio
June 5, 2025 4:00 am

Why We Should Love the Church

Grace To You / John MacArthur

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June 5, 2025 4:00 am

John MacArthur explains why he loves the local church, citing its eternal nature, its role as the only institution Jesus ever built, and its importance as a place of worship and edification. He emphasizes that the church is the earthly expression of the heavenly kingdom and the starting point for world evangelization.

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I'm a part of something that is a winner in the sense that it's eternal. I'm pouring my life into the church that Jesus is building and someday the church totally intact with nobody lost. They'll dwell with Him forever in eternity as the church glorified and triumphant and I'll be there and you who love Christ will be there and we'll be the winners and we'll inherit the glory forever and ever. Welcome to Grace to You with John MacArthur.

I'm Phil Johnson, your host. Perhaps you know a professing Christian who says, I'd go to church if it wasn't for the hypocrites. Or maybe a member of a local church has mistreated you or criticized you or even lied to you and so you stopped attending. Well, sadly, people in churches don't always act like, well, Christians. But the question is, can you follow Christ and not be part of a church? Today's lesson on Grace to You can help you answer that question as John MacArthur explains why he loves the church and why you should too. So with today's message, here's John. Most of you know, of course, that my passion is the local church.

My love is the local church. I'm often asked why I'm a pastor. Some of them ask me why I'm not a lawyer because it seems like I like to argue about things. Some of them say, I thought you were in athletics in college and you played football in this. Why didn't you go into an athletic career? And I've even been asked that having been a pastor for so many years, why are you still a pastor?

Don't you get tired of it? You could be the president of a school and wouldn't that be enough of a job to keep a normal person occupied? Or you could be a radio preacher and teacher and maybe write a few books. Why do you go on pastoring a church? Aren't churches places where you have a lot of problems? Isn't it tough dealing with volunteers? You have to work with the people that God gives you. Isn't it difficult preparing two sermons every week of your life and delivering them? Isn't it difficult living in a goldfish bowl and having all that responsibility and trying to deal with the sins of people and fouled up marriages and messed up homes and wayward kids and all the problems?

Why do you do that? Why is the church so precious to you that you would, among all the things that you might do with your life, do that? Why am I in the church?

That's a fair question and here's the answer I wrote down on this piece of paper. There are several reasons why I love the church. Not only as a pastor, but as a Christian. If I'm not at Grace Church, if I'm somewhere else in America, I'll find a church on the Lord's Day. And if I'm not preaching, which is a rare thing, I'll find a church where I can just go and be. I want to be in a church. I love the church.

And I'll give you a few reasons why. Number one reason I love the church is it's the only institution Jesus ever builds and promises to bless. With all that Jesus could have done, might have done in the world, had the power to do, He only built one institution. That's the church. In Matthew chapter 16, Jesus said, I will build my church. I will build my church.

You know, that's a marvelous statement. He never said He'd build anything else. All He ever said He'd build is a church, not a college, not a radio ministry.

He only built a church. One time a reporter said to me, do you have a desire to build the church? I mean, do you have a fast-growing church?

Are you driven by this? Do you have a big desire to build the church? And I said, I have no desire to build the church.

He said, why? I said, because Jesus said He'd build the church and I don't want to compete with Him. I really have no desire to build the church. I've never asked the Lord for any more people at Grace Church than we have.

It's enough responsibility to have what we've got without having more responsibility. After all, Hebrews 13 says I have to give an account to God for what I do. I have to just let the Lord build the church, and that's a tremendous joy for me. I'm not a part of a man-building operation. I never wanted to come to the end of my life and look back and say, I wonder whether I did this or God did this. I guess I've had a fear of that, and that's why I really resist gimmicks and intimidation and formulas and marketing strategies and whatever else kind of stuff comes down the pike. All I know about the church is that Jesus said He would build His church, and the Bible says He'll build His church through the power of the Word and the power of the Spirit. And anything else may end up with a man-constructed institution. I don't want to come to the end of my ministry, look back and say, was this God or was it me?

Was it part Him, part me? I want to be able to look back and say, well, I only preached the Word. That's all I ever preached, and I depended on the power of the Holy Spirit, so it's His church. I don't really want to be a part of anything that God isn't building. Once I was asked to be a president of another institution, and I said, I can't do that because I have to pastor a church.

I have to be in a church. I have to be a part of what Jesus is building. I can come alongside some other things that help the church and strengthen the church, like a college or whatever it might be, but I have to pour my life into the church. Do you know, young people, most people who graduate from seminary do not go into ministry in a church?

That's amazing. That is why at the Master Seminary, we're committed to producing pastor teachers who can exposit the Word of God as a life commitment in the church. It's the most exciting, creative, thrilling adventure that anyone could ever have, to go along with Christ as He builds His church or as He builds His kingdom.

Secondly, I love the church because the church is going to win in the end. I'm a part of a winner. A lot of people start businesses that fail.

You know that? A lot of people pour their life into a career and end up with a little or nothing. Some people decide they're going to go into finance and investments and they lose it all. Some people decide they're going to start a business and it goes belly up.

Some people get into a career and a few years into the career, it's tedious and tasteless and it's not an adventure and it doesn't really matter and who cares, it has no lasting value and there's no guarantee that it's going to have any major impact on changing society. But I'll tell you this, pour your life into the church and you're going to be a part of the winner because Jesus also said, I'll build my church and the gates of Hades shall not overpower it. The gates of Hades is a Jewish statement referring to death. The gates of Hades is simply a symbol of death to the Jews and Jesus is saying this, I will build my church and death won't stop me. See, death is Satan's most powerful weapon. He first used it on Christ. He thought if he could kill the builder of the church, he could kill the church, but the builder came out of the grave. And then not only that, but throughout the history of the church, he has endeavored to wipe the church out. He slaughtered the church, killed the church. People have died as martyrs and even to this day are still dying as martyrs for the cause of Jesus Christ.

The most powerful weapon that Satan has, however, cannot stamp out the church and any student of church history will tell you the blood of the martyrs becomes the seed in which the church flourishes. Jesus said, all that the Father gives to Me shall come to Me and I will lose none of them. Satan will not snatch anybody out of My hand. All that the Father has determined to redeem will be redeemed and nobody's going to get lost in the process. And then Jesus said in John 6, I will raise him up at the last day. Everybody the Father puts His hand on will come to Me.

Everybody who comes to Me I will hold and everybody I hold will be raised at the last day. The church is going to be victorious. That's why if you read Hebrews chapter 12, you see the church, the firstborn triumphantly in heaven and they're going to be there triumphant in toto, in glory. You come into Revelation chapter 4 and you see the church represented by the 24 elders and they are singing praise to the Lamb.

Worthy is the Lamb that was slain and there they are in their glory. I'm a part of something that's eternal. I'm a part of something that is a winner in the sense that it's eternal. I'm pouring my life into the church that Jesus is building and Satan's most powerful weapon, death, cannot even stop it. And someday the church totally intact with nobody lost but all the Father draws who come are kept by Christ and nothing will separate them from His love but they'll dwell with Him forever in eternity as the church glorified and triumphant and I'll be there and you who love Christ will be there and we'll be the winners and we'll inherit the glory forever and ever.

I've always wanted to be on the winning side, haven't always been but I am this time. The third reason that I love the church is because it is the most precious, the most precious possession that God has on earth. So how do you know that? Because in Acts chapter 20 and verse 28 we read this, Be on guard for yourselves, talking to the elders at the church at Ephesus, be on guard for yourselves and for all the flock among which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers. Listen, to shepherd the church of God and then this, which He purchased with what?

His own blood. How precious is the church? How precious is the church? Peter says you were not redeemed with corruptible things like silver and gold from your former manner of life but with the precious blood of the Lamb, spotless and without blemish. God has paid the infinite price. What, says Paul to the carnal Corinthians, what? Do you not know that your body is the temple of God, the temple of the Holy Spirit which you have from God and you are not your own for you were what?

Bought with a price. Jesus Christ Himself knew the price and He felt it as He knelt in the garden that night with the disciples falling asleep and He said, Father, please let this cup pass from me. This is more than I can bear to shed my blood as my life is crushed out of me by the sheer weight of the sins of the world. I love the church. I love the church because Christ loved the church and He loved it enough to give His blood for it and I don't like it when people speak against the church or diminish the church. It's the only institution Jesus ever built and the only one He ever promised to bless and it's the winner. It's the winner. All other institutions and associations will end and the church triumphant will occupy the glories of eternal heaven.

And the price inestimable beyond belief. That's how precious the church is. There's a fourth reason I love the church.

I love the church because it's the earthly expression of the heavenly kingdom. It's the closest thing. Are you ready for this? To heaven on earth. It is. Do you remember back in Matthew when Jesus was giving a sermon on the mount and He said, this is how you're supposed to pray.

Remember that? How are you supposed to pray? Our Father who art in heaven, say it with me, hallowed be thy name, thy, stop right there, thy kingdom come. Now the next line, thy will be done.

What's the rest? Hmm. Now where do you think God's will is going to be done on earth as it is in heaven?

Where? In the government? In the educational system? In the moral value system of us?

No. Only one place where God's will in heaven is done on earth. Where is it? Church. In Matthew chapter 18, there's a very, very important passage about the church.

And I just want to mention it to you. I don't want to take time to unfold all of it. Verse 15 of Matthew 18 says this, if your brother sins, go and reprove him in private. That's pretty simple, isn't it? People say sometimes, what do I do if I see a Christian sinning? Go to him and tell him he's sinning.

It's pretty clear. Just go to him in private and say you're sinning. You say, really? Yeah, that's right. And if he listens to you, you've won your brother.

I mean it. You really will win your brother if you go to him in private and confront his sin. You'll win your brother. Now what happens if your brother doesn't listen if he says, you know, I'm not interested in that.

Get out of my sight. Then you take two or three witnesses and gang up on him. If he still doesn't listen, verse 17 says, tell the whole church. Tell the whole church. You say, why do you tell the whole church? So they can all gang up on him. And if he still doesn't listen, you put him out as if he were an unbeliever.

You say, man, that's hard. I mean you can't just run around the church looking at people and say, you're sinning. You better repent or I'm going to tell the whole church. I remember when we started to do, to follow Matthew 18, one pastor said to me, you'll empty the place. You'll absolutely empty the church.

People aren't going to stand for that. Well, that was when we had 500 people. We didn't empty it. We just followed the directions and God blessed.

God blessed. Because I believe real Christians hate their sin and the accountability of that kind of confrontation keeps you pure. You say, well, it's hard to do. I mean, who am I to do that? I got my own problem. Then fix your own problem, will you? You say, I can't go to him.

I got a two by four in my own eye. Right. Get it out.

Then you can go work on your brother. So it's sort of a self-purifying thing. You're making the church like heaven. You're purifying the church like heaven is pure. You see, the church is the earthly expression of the heavenly kingdom. I want to live in the church. I want to be a part of the church. I want to be there every time they crack the doors.

Because this is my place. I don't want to be a sometime attendee in heaven, do you? I don't want to visit heaven.

I want to go there and stay. I want to live in the kingdom. That's why I love the church. You say, well, the church isn't that great. Well, it isn't what heaven is, but it's a lot better than any other human institution. And I want to give my life to make it as close to heaven as I can. There's another reason why I love the church, not only because it's the only institution Jesus ever built and promised to bless and because it's the winner in the end and the most precious thing on earth and the earthly expression of the heavenly kingdom, but it's the place of worship. It's the place of worship. Oh, I know I can worship God in my spirit. Philippians 3, 3 says that, we worship God in the spirit. I know that. I can worship God in my own heart all alone, but there's something that absolutely lifts me right out of myself in corporate worship.

Isn't that true? This kind of corporate dynamic that happens when we get together here, you're not going to get that alone. There's a dynamic. That's why in Hebrews 10 it says, Do not forsake the assembling of yourselves together. Why? Because you stimulate one another to love and good works in the dynamic of a corporate worship. I need that. I need to sit in the pew and I need to hear the Word of God preached to me with somebody sitting beside me who knows me very, very well so that they know I know that and they can hold me accountable to live that. Right? You say, I don't go to church. I buy John MacArthur and Chuck Swindoll tapes. Give me a break. You can listen to a John MacArthur, Chuck Swindoll tape and nobody in the world knows you're accountable for what you heard because nobody knows you heard it.

Right? Your accountability comes in the relationships. You need the corporate responsibility of having sat right there with the people who know you and they now know that you know what you just heard and you're accountable to live it. There's no substitute for the church. So it's a place for worship. It's a place for edification. It's a place to be taught. And we come there for worship and edification. Some people today think the church is a place for unbelievers to come. I don't believe that. There's not one word in the New Testament that says a church service is to be designed for an unbeliever.

Not one word. That's right. The church gathers in order that it might corporately worship God and stimulate each other to love and good works and it might be edified and held accountable for the truth that it's hearing. And then it scatters to touch the world. In 1 Corinthians there's a very interesting comment the Apostle Paul says, and I think most people don't even know it's in there, you just kind of look at it past it. He's looking at the Corinthian church which is just total chaos. He says look, verse 23, if your whole church gets together and everybody speaks in tongues, what will happen if an unbeliever comes in? Now isn't that an interesting statement? He says look, if you're having church and everybody is speaking in tongues, what's going to happen if an unbeliever comes in?

You know what first hits me about that? The whole point of church isn't for unbelievers. But imagine, one of them might even come. An unbeliever might come. It's possible.

I mean it's not as if that was the plan, right? You say what are you going to do if an unbeliever shows up? Like what an odd thing but it might happen. You don't meet for unbelievers. If the unbeliever comes in and you're all doing that, he's going to say these people are out of their minds, everybody speaking in tongues. But if all are prophesying, what does that mean?

That doesn't mean some esoteric, ecstatic experience. That means if you are declaring the truth of God. If they come in and someone is teaching the Word and declaring the Word, then an unbeliever is going to come in and he's going to be convicted by the devotion of everybody to the Word of God. And he's going to be called to account by everybody. The secrets of his heart are disclosed and he falls on his face and worships God and says, wow, God is here. You don't have to create some kind of a comfort zone for unbelievers and try to attract them to the church. But if they come and they eavesdrop on your worship and they eavesdrop and they hear the Word being powerfully taught and there's no power like the Word, sharper than any two-edged sword, and they see that you all submit to the Word and you're all worshipping God, he's going to fall on his face and say God is here.

This is incredible. A young man came into the baptistry. He was homosexual, dying of AIDS. He said, I wandered in the back of this church all alone. And he said, John, the first thing you did was stand up and you read the psalm, a psalm.

He said, I never heard it in my life. And then he rattled off ten verses verbatim which he had memorized out of that psalm. And it was about the chains being broken and the prisoners being set free and those who were on the edge of death being given new life. And he said, the tears began to race down my face and I sat through that service and I watched the people who worshipped God.

And I heard that God was a delivering, healing, restoring, freeing God. And at the end of that service I gave my life to Jesus Christ. Just three weeks ago he said, I not only have not had a homosexual encounter and they have sometimes as many as five a day, but I have no desire for that and never had since the moment I gave my life to Christ.

We didn't create a service for homosexuals to make homosexuals feel loved and comfortable. A homosexual eavesdropped on the power of the Word of God and the corporate worship of God's people and he fell on his face before God. That's why I love the church. It's a place for worship and it's a place for edification. And then a last point, it's the beginning point of world evangelization. It's the beginning place of world evangelization. You go into the New Testament book of Acts, and I won't even take the time to go through it, and you'll find that it was the church that sent out all the missionaries.

There was always that kind of accountability. There was always that connection to the local church. There they were. Read Acts chapter 13. There they were, Paul and Barnabas with three other pastors in the church of Antioch.

There were five of those guys. They were just pastoring the church at Antioch and all of a sudden as they were meeting and sharing, the Spirit of God began to prompt their heart and the message coming from the Spirit was separate two of your guys, Paul and Barnabas, and send them to the world. And they went right out of that local church and world evangelization took place.

But it wasn't just for those unique kind of people. It was for everyone in whom the Spirit of God dwelt because Jesus said in Acts 1-8, after you receive the Holy Spirit, you shall be witnesses unto me. Where? In the church? In the foyer? In the lobby? No, in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and what?

The uttermost part of the earth. The church is the starting point for world evangelization. I love being the president of a college and I love doing radio ministry because I love to teach and I love to write books because I love to just put truth down and spread it. But if I lost every bit of that, I would be completely fulfilled in the love of the church pouring my life into that glorious institution. Young people, I hope you catch my passion for the church and I hope you love the church. Jesus loved it enough to give His blood for it. That's John MacArthur, Chancellor of the Masters University and Seminary. Today's lesson showed you what to look for in a church.

That's also the title of our series. Now, John, I thought about the church that I'd like you to comment on. With recent political changes in the United States, we have entered into a season that arguably is more favorable to biblical values than in the very recent past. But as welcome as some of those changes may be, I know you would say that the church cannot become complacent about its mission.

So talk about that for a minute. No, that's absolutely right, Phil. The kingdom of God advances without help from the world. The kingdom of God advances without interference from the world. So you might have a political structure that is the enemy of the church, but the church will still advance.

I will build my church. Jesus said, and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it. So it advances when the government is hostile, and it also advances when the government is favorable.

And in fact, the choice you might want to make of those two options would be to pick hostility, because that is purifying. That is what drives believing people into separation from the world, looking for nothing from the world. We don't lobby Washington to tell us what to do as a church.

And we lived that through COVID, remember? We kept our church open, the state of California sued us, and all that whole drama. They don't tell us as a church what to do. So I think persecution is the purest form of spiritual motivation. When you're basically falling into the category of James 1, count it all joy when you face trials for the testing of your faith produces.

Patience and patience has a perfect work. So while we should be thankful for a period of time when the political guns are not pointed at the church, we should take that as a gift from the Lord. But the kingdom of God neither advances by the favor of the world or the disfavor. And we can't forget that when the population, and particularly the leaders, tolerate Christianity, there is more likely going to be a false conversion, a false Christianity, a false understanding of salvation built into that tolerance of Christianity. Thanks, John.

That is a helpful perspective. And friend, for even more insight into what God expects from you as a Christian, no matter the political landscape, I would encourage you to go to our website and check out John's sermon titled Hope for a Doomed Nation. It's free to download in MP3 and transcript format, so get in touch today. Our web address is gty.org. And in this message, Hope for a Doomed Nation, John helps answer questions like, Will electing the right presidential candidate solve the most fundamental of our nation's problems?

And what can you do, if anything, to help a nation that's drifting further and further away from biblical morality? Again, to download this timeless lesson, just go to gty.org. And as we've been mentioning, the study John wrapped up today, What to Look For in a Church, is one that he taught during chapel services at the Masters University. If you or someone you know would like more information about this fully accredited liberal arts university in Southern California, you'll find a link for the school on the Grace to You website.

Just look near the bottom of our homepage at gty.org. Now for John MacArthur, I'm Phil Johnson. Be back tomorrow as John unpacks the topic of spiritual leadership, showing you that if you're a Christian, you have a critical influence on those around you. And the question is, how do you honor God with that influence? What does it look like in practical terms? Consider that when we return with another 30 minutes of unleashing God's truth, one verse at a time, on Tomorrow's Grace to You.

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