Institutes of the Christian Religion (Vol. 2 of 2)
CHAPTER I.05
The True Church, And The Necessity Of Our Union With Her, Being The Mother Of All The Pious - Reading 05
IX. Hence the visible Church rises conspicuous to our view.
For wherever we find the word of God purely preached and
heard, and the sacraments administered according to the institution
of Christ, there, it is not to be doubted, is a Church of
God; for his promise can never deceive—“where two or three
are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of
them.” [741]
X. We have stated that the marks by which the Church
is to be distinguished, are, the preaching of the word and the
administration of the sacraments. For these can nowhere exist
without bringing forth fruit, and being prospered with the
blessing of God. I assert not that wherever the word is
preached, the good effects of it immediately appear; but that it
is never received so as to obtain a permanent establishment,
without displaying some efficacy. However this may be,
where the word is heard with reverence, and the sacraments
are not neglected, there we discover, while that is the case, an
appearance of the Church, which is liable to no suspicion of
uncertainty, of which no one can safely despise the authority,
or reject the admonitions, or resist the counsels, or slight the
censures, much less separate from it and break up its unity.
For so highly does the Lord esteem the communion of his
Church, that he considers every one as a traitor and apostate
from religion, who perversely withdraws himself from any
Christian society which preserves the true ministry of the word
and sacraments. He commends the authority of the Church,
in such a manner as to account every violation of it an infringement
of his own. For it is not a trivial circumstance, that the
Church is called “the house of God, the pillar and ground of
truth.” [742] [743] [744]
XI. Let us, therefore, diligently retain those characters impressed upon our minds, and estimate them according to the judgment of God. For there is nothing that Satan labours more to accomplish, than to remove and destroy one or both of them; at one time to efface and obliterate these marks, and so to take away all true and genuine distinction of the Church; at another to inspire us with contempt of them, and so to drive us out of the Church by an open separation. By his subtlety it has happened, that in some ages the pure preaching of the word has altogether disappeared; and in the present day he is labouring with the same malignity to overturn the ministry; which, however, Christ has ordained in his Church, so that if it were taken away, the edification of the Church would be quite at an end. How dangerous, then, how fatal is the temptation, when it even enters into the heart of a man to withdraw himself from that congregation, in which he discovers those signs and characters which the Lord has deemed sufficiently descriptive of his Church! We see, however, that great caution requires to be observed on both sides. For, to prevent imposture from deceiving us, under the name of the Church, every congregation assuming this name should be brought to that proof, like gold to the touchstone. If it have the order prescribed by the Lord in the word and sacraments, it will not deceive us; we may securely render to it the honour due to all churches. On the contrary, if it pretend to the name of a Church, without the word and sacraments, we ought to beware of such delusive pretensions, with as much caution as, in the other case, we should use in avoiding presumption and pride.