Matthew 16:13-20 · Peter’s Confession to Christ
The Church Is Alive and Well
Matthew 16:13-18
Sermon
by James Merritt
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Lewis Berry Shafer was one of the great theologians of this century, and the founder of Dallas Theological Seminary. Dr. Shafer once said, "Next to salvation truth, it is vitally important for the believer to know the Bible doctrine of the church."1

One of the all time best selling authors in history, Warren Wiersbe, said, "The greatest wonder that God has on earth is the wonder of His church."2

One holy church of God appears
Through every age and race,
Unwasted by the lapse of years
Unchanged by changing place.
- Samuel Longfellow 3

There are some who say that the church is on the way out, and in one sense they are right. Jesus has called the church out, He is sending the church out, and one day He will take the church out. But really and truly the church is not on the way out, it is on the way up. Just like that Timex watch, "It takes a licking, but it keeps on ticking."

In this passage of scripture before us, Jesus gives his first and fullest statement about The church, His church, God's church. Believing that Dr. Shafer was right, we will do well to study what our Lord had to say about the church.

I. The Glorious Foundation of The Church

Jesus' teaching on the church came as a response to a question and answer session that He had with His disciples. First, he asked a question concerning public opinion:

"When Jesus came into the region of Caesarea Philippi, He asked His disciples, saying, ‘Who do men say that I am?'

So they said, ‘Some say John the Baptist, some Elijah, and others Jeremiah or one of the prophets.'" (vv. 13-14)

Now there were all kinds of opinions about Jesus in that day just as there are all kinds of opinions about Jesus in our day.

There are some who say Jesus was a great preacher like John the Baptist. There are others who would say that Jesus is a great person like Elijah, upon whom the mantle of God rested. Then there are some who would say Jesus was a great prophet like Jeremiah.

But Jesus is not concerned about public opinion. He is concerned about personal conviction. So we ask the second question:

"He said to them, ‘But who do you say that I am?'" (v.15)

You see, it is irrelevant what your parents think about Jesus, or what your pastor thinks about Jesus, or what your professor thinks about Jesus. The only thing that matters is what do you think about Jesus?

Well, Simon Peter, for once, came through. Normally, every time Peter opened his mouth it was just to change feet. But this time he got it right:

"And Simon Peter answered and said, ‘You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.'" (v.16)

Notice that Peter's personal conviction led to his public confession. He confessed Jesus outwardly, publicly, boldly, verbally, dogmatically, which is the way every one of us ought to confess the Lord Jesus Christ.

In response to Peter's confession, Jesus said, "And I also say to you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build My church." (v.18) For fifteen hundred years there have been those who have said that the church is built on Peter, that Peter was the first Pope, the Bishop of Rome, and all of the popes had descended from him in what is known as apostolic succession. Therefore the pope is the supreme authoritative representative of Jesus Christ on earth, and when he speaks excathedra, his word is final.

Well, I know that Peter could not have been a pope. Because the Bible says that Jesus healed Peter's mother-in-law. Why would he want a mother-in-law if he didn't even have a wife.

But a little study of the original language will clear up any misunderstanding. Peter is from Petros, a masculine form of the Greek word for a small stone, a tiny boulder. If you are from Arkansas it means "little rock." But the word rock is from the Greek word Petra, which is the feminine form of that word, referring to a strata of rock, a huge mountain.

Here in Georgia we have a massive mass of granite called Stone Mountain. If you go to the base of that mountain you can pick up all kinds of pieces of the rock. The stone is a Petros, the mountain is a Petra.

What Jesus said to Peter was this: You are Peter "a little stone," but upon this Petra, the mountain, I will build My church. Now we do not have to wonder what the rock is, therefore what the foundation is. Paul said in I Corinthians 10:4, "That rock was Christ."

In that same book he also said, "For no other foundation can anyone lay than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ." (I Cor. 3:11)

As the song goes, "The church's one foundation is Jesus Christ her Lord." The foundation of the church is not Peter. The foundation of the church is the Lord Jesus Christ. Because of this the church has a sure, safe, solid, enduring, endless, eternal foundation.

If you want a church to last, don't build it on a man, a movement, a method, or a monument. Build it on the Master, the Lord Jesus Christ.

II. The God-given Faith of The Church

Peter had given the right answer to the right question. But he didn't get it out of a book, and he didn't come to it because of his brilliant intelligence. Jesus said in verse 17, "Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah, for flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but My Father who is in heaven."

You see, this was not a matter of human reasoning, it was a matter of heavenly revelation. You don't come to Jesus by figuring. You come to Jesus by faith.

We are to preach truth, and teach truth, and try to reach others with truth. But only God can reveal truth.

That is just as well. Because anything that I can talk you into, somebody else can talk you out of. But anything that God talks you into will be yours forever.

Only God can open the eyes of the spiritually blind. Only God can open the ears of the spiritually deaf. Only God can give life to the spiritually dead. That is why Jesus said in John 6:44, "No one can come to Me unless the Father who sent Me draws him."

I want you to understand something. God uses preachers, and God uses preaching. "It pleased God through the foolishness of the message preached to save those who believe." (I Cor. 1:21) But I want you to know that people are not saved by the sermon, they are saved by the Spirit.

I can get teaching into your head, but only God can get truth into your heart. You are not saved through your head, you are saved through your heart. We are all a part of the church of God today because of our God-given faith.

III. The Godly Formation of The Church

Jesus is not only the base of the church, He is the builder of the church. He is not only the church's foundation, He is the church's founder and framer. He says, "I will build My church."

Now Jesus did not say, "I will build your church." Neither did He say, "You will build My church." He said, "I will build My church." We've got some egotistical preachers and church members who need to understand that we are not building the church for Jesus, Jesus is building the church for us.

I am glad to tell you today that the church cannot fail because Jesus cannot fail. Neither communism, nor materialism, nor secularism, nor humanism, nor socialism, nor atheism, can keep the church from being built because Jesus is the Master carpenter.

Have you ever started a letter that you never finished writing, a book that you never finished reading, a project that you never finished building, a race that you never finished running? Well, I am sure many of you have. But what Jesus starts, Jesus finishes.

Now we can build denominations, and we can build organizations, but only Jesus can build the church. The word for church is ecclesia, from which we get the word ecclesiastic. It literally means "to call out." Throughout the ages Jesus is calling out people from every tribe, tongue, and nation and placing them stone by stone, brick by brick, as He builds His church.

Peter was the little rock that had been chipped off the big block. Now a little rock is just a piece of a big rock. It has the same nature. What Jesus was saying to Peter was, "You not only have a piece of the rock, you are a piece of the rock." You see, in a real sense a Christian is just a chip off the old block.

Jesus pointed to Peter and said, "You are one stone." Then He pointed to Himself and said, "I am the foundational rock." Jesus laid that first stone upon that foundation. Ever since, Jesus has been building the church, stone by stone, on the rock which is Christ. That is what Peter was surely thinking about when he said in I Peter 2:5, "You also, as living stones, are being built up a spiritual house, a holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ."

You see, Jesus is the builder, we are the bricks, and the mortar that holds us together is love. So often today people confuse the church with a building.

I heard about a man who was going into the hospital and he was filling out the required forms. He came to a line that said church preference, and he wrote down "red brick."

Well, please don't confuse the church with a building. Friend, if this building burns down the church will be alive and well. The building is not the church, we are the church. As the hymn writer put it:

The church is not a building,
The church is not a steeple,
The church is not a resting place,
The church is a people.4

Now because the church is His church, we ought to love the church because we love Him. Do you want to know how much you love Jesus, you tell me how much you love His church. You can gage your love for Jesus by how much you love His church.

If Jesus loved the church enough to give His life for it, you ought to love the church enough to give your life to it. Now Jesus and the church are not identical. But Jesus and the church are inseparable. Sometimes the church is called a body, and Jesus is the head. Sometimes it is called the bride, and Jesus is the groom. Sometimes it is called the building, and Jesus is the foundation. You cannot love one if you do not love the other. If you tell me that you love Jesus, and that Jesus is your Lord, but you don't care anything about His church, you either have the wrong love, or the wrong Lord.

IV. The Guaranteed Future of The Church

If you want to talk about a confidence booster, listen to these words, "and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it." Now I want to clear up a misunderstanding. Gates are not for offense, they are for defense. The gates of Hades are not attacking the church. The church is to be attacking the gates of Hades.

Now the church is under attack. But what we need to do is attack back. We have got too many people singing, "Hold the Fort" when we ought to be singing, "Onward, Christian Soldiers." Jesus did not put the church on earth to survive, He put the church on earth to thrive.

Now the word Hades literally means "the abode of the dead." It was a place of death, darkness, and despair.

It is the job of the church, day in and day out, to be storming the gates of Hades, knowing that victory is ours. The gates of death cannot prevail against the life of God the Son. The gates of darkness cannot prevail against the light of God the Spirit. The gates of despair cannot prevail against the love of God the Father.

Think about all the things the church has survived throughout the centuries: persecutions from without and problems from within. It has been attacked by its foes, neglected by its friends, infected with heresy, stained with compromise, weakened by strife and selfishness. Yet, it's still on its feet.

It reminds me of a man who hired a carpenter to build a fence. He told the carpenter, "I want it 4 ft. high, but I want you to not only guarantee me that it will be 4 ft. high, but I want you to guarantee me that it will never fall." The carpenter thought for a minute, "Now to build it 4 ft. high wouldn't be so bad, but to guarantee that it will never fall will take some thinking."

So the carpenter thought about it a few days and then he came and built it. When he was finished and ready to collect his money, the man said, "Is it 4 ft. high?" He said, "Yes, it is." He said, "Well, what assurance do I have that it will not fall down?"

The carpenter said, "Well, I not only built it 4 ft. high, I built it 5 ft. thick, so if it falls down it will be a foot higher than it was before it fell."

Has the church been knocked down? Yes. Has the church fallen down? Yes. But I tell you it stands higher and taller today than ever before.

Jesus said, "I will build My church." I would say He has. He started with Himself as the Chief Cornerstone. Then He chose twelve more, and then 70. By the time He ascended around 33 A.D. He left 120. He then added 3,000 in one day from three continents and fifteen nations.

In A.D. 45 it is estimated there were 100,000 Christians; by the Second Century two million Christians; by the Third Century four million Christians; by the Fourth Century ten million Christians. Today close to one billion people call Him Lord and Savior.

To put it in perspective, in A.D. 100, .02% of the world was made up of Bible-believing Christians. In 1992 14.7% of the world was made up of Bible-believing Christians. In A.D. 100 the ratio of Bible-believing Christians to non-Christians, was 220 to 1. Today it is 6.8 to 1, the lowest ratio in history. Christianity is not only the world's fastest growing religion, but the evangelical movement world-wide is growing three times faster than the world's population.5

Statistics published recently by The Institute of World Missions (IWM) showed that "there is an incredible multiplication in the number of people around the world who are coming to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ. They report that in the year 100 A.D. an average of one hundred persons a day, world-wide, were being converted to Christianity. The rate continued to climb steadily until 1900 when the average was nine hundred and forty-three per day. By 1950 the number grew to four thousand five hundred per day, growing at a pace that surpassed the population explosion.

By 1980 the average number of conversions had increased to twenty thousand per day; and by 1993 fully eighty-six thousand new converts were coming to the cross of Christ every single day. This makes Christianity the fastest growing religion in the entire world, by far. At that rate of growth, in 1995 the number of those converted to Christianity surpassed one hundred thousand every single day of the year, and by the turn of the century they are predicting it will top two hundred thousand per day! In other words, the number of souls being won to Jesus Christ, and the number of persons who will experience the new life of faith, will have increased two hundred times in the Twentieth Century!"6

I read recently that the average life expectancy of a church in America is 75 years, where the average life expectancy of The Church is eternity.

Late in the last century there was a great Methodist church planner named C. C. McKay who traveled around the country planting one new church a day. He was on a train in Oregon and he picked up a newspaper and read the report of a speech given to the free-thinker society in Chicago by the noted lawyer and orator, Robert Ingersoll. Robert Ingersoll was an agnostic, a philosopher, a brilliant intellect who was famous for his virulent attacks on Christianity. In this report, Ingersoll was quoted as saying that the church was dying.

Well, at the next stop C. C. McKay got off the train, went to the telegraph office and cabled the following message to Robert Ingersoll:

Dear Bob,

In the Methodist church we are starting one new congregation a day. Now because of what you said, we propose to make it two.

C. C. McKay

P. S. All Hail the Power of Jesus' name!

This telegram prompted a series of debates between McKay and Ingersoll, most of them won by McKay. Because of that telegram churches began to multiply, and thereafter two churches a day were indeed planted in the Methodist church.

But the most wonderful footnote of the story did not happen until years later. In 1941, almost fifty years after this took place, Robert Ingersoll's grandson, Robert Ingersoll, III, walked into a church in Chicago, heard the gospel, gave his heart to Jesus, was baptized and became a member of the church. The next week his son, Robert Ingersoll, IV, gave his heart to Christ.

All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name! The church is alive and well.


1 Growing Deep in the Christian Life, Charles Swindoll, p. 335.

2 Real Worship, Warren Wiersbe, p. 85.

3 Ibid., p. 85.

4 Richard Avery & Donald Morris, We are the Church, (Pasadena, CA: Hope Publishing House, 1972).

5 Christianity Today, November 9, 1992.

6 D. James Kennedy, Character and Destiny: A Nation in Search of Its Soul, (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondavan Publishing House, 1994), p. 286.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by James Merritt