KeysRev.
Dale Kuiper
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Of the eight occurrences of the word key or keys in
the Scriptures, only one has a purely literal meaning (Judges
3:25). The other Old Testament occurrence has both a literal and a symbolic
idea, of which more later. All the New Testament uses
are symbolic and speak of authority to open and close the kingdom of heaven.
The words in the original have simple meanings: to open wide, an opener, a key; to close,
shut up, a key.
In Isaiah
22 we read of Eliakim who was appointed by God to
be prefect of the
In distinction from the sword power of the
state, the financial power of the employer, and the corporal power of parents,
the church has been given by Jesus Christ key power relative to the kingdom. He
who has this great authority Himself (Rev.
1:18; 3:7; 9:1; 20:1) entrusts such authority for its exercise to officebearers whom He calls and qualifies. We read of this
in Matthew
16:19, where Jesus speaks not only to Peter but to all the apostles, and
not to the apostle alone, but to all elders until the end of time: "And I
will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom: and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven; and
whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed
in heaven." The keys of the kingdom are the preaching of the gospel
in faithfulness to the Scriptures and the administration of Christian
discipline in the punishment of sin (see Belgic
Confession, Art. 29). To understand how the kingdom of heaven can be opened and
shut by the use of these keys, see the Heidelberg Catechism, L.D. 31. In Answer
84 we are given a definition of faithful, antithetical preaching that the church
must hear, and insist on hearing, today. The
basis for this description of preaching that can serve as key power is such a
passage as Isaiah
3:10,11: "Say ye to the righteous, that it
shall be well with him: for they shall eat the fruit of their doings. Woe unto
the wicked! It shall be ill with him: for the reward of his hands shall be
given him."
In
summary, key power implies: 1) That the sovereign God
of heaven and earth has bestowed all power and authority upon Christ as part of
His Mediator's glory when He ascended into
heaven. 2) Christ exercises this authority from heaven through pastors (the
faithful preaching of the full counsel of God) and elders (the patient, careful
disciplining of church members). 3) That the
And no little blessing to belong to a
congregation and denomination where the keys are not rusty but used! Key power
protects the preaching of the gospel from heresy and the administration of the
sacraments from superstition. It protects the believer from the motions of sin
in his members. It protects the entire congregation from profaning the covenant
and bringing down the wrath of God upon her. A church that exercises the keys
is a safe habitation for believers and their children.
Last Modified: 13-Jul-2002