I
charge thee therefore before God, and the Lord Jesus Christ,
who shall judge
the quick and the dead at his appearing and
his kingdom;
Preach the word, be instant in season, out of season;
reprove, rebuke,
exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine.
For the time will come when they will not
endure sound doctrine;
but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers,
having itching ears; and they shall turn away their ears from the truth,
and shall be turned
unto fables.
I Timothy 4:1-4
It doesn’t take too many days of this before you
look around and begin to see the world differently. For example, I’ve come to at least three
distinct conclusions:
2.
Many Christians don’t believe that the
Scriptures are the sole authority of truth in their lives, and therefore rely
more on feelings and experience.
3.
Many Christians get their teaching from books
and internet videos rather than from the Bible ... and much of that has false
teaching in them.
Either I’m over-exaggerating by looking for a heretic under
every bush, or this truly is the end times and I am seeing the outer fringes of
the coming apostasy. Maybe what I am
becoming aware of is what Christ described:
And
many false prophets shall rise, and shall deceive many. Matt 24:11
It is a relatively new thought for me that the departure
from the faith is coming from teachers within the church. It appears that people are departing from the
faith but don’t realize it. They think
they are still living a Christian life, but it is only a form of godliness,
which according to the verse in I Timothy above is motivated by lust.
In my reading through the Bible I ran across two situations
that seem to be an example of this. It
is such a predictable pattern of my own sin nature (to justify all my actions
so they appear to be righteous) that I really shouldn’t be surprised.
The first example is what the Scripture refers to as the
“matter of Peor.” In a detailed account
in Numbers 22-25 the story is told of King Balak of Moab who wanted to fight
against the children of Israel as they were making their way to the Promised
Land. With promises of great wealth and
power he tried to hire a well known sorcerer named Balaam to put a curse on the
children of Israel.
Balaam wanted the money and power and so he went to do what
the king asked. The Lord warned him
through an angel and a talking donkey, and eventually put words of blessing
into his mouth instead of a curse.
However, Balaam did not give up.
When he saw he could not defeat Israel directly he came up with another
plan. (Numbers 31:16) By combining religious worship and worldly
lust he beguiled Israel into joining themselves unto another god by committing
whoredom with the daughters of Moab. (Numbers
25:1-3,18) It appears that this idea
that we can do what we feel like doing and still be a good religious person is
at least as old as Balaam. God’s severe
judgment against Israel that followed is an indication of God’s attitude toward
this concept.
The second example comes from the ministry of Jeremiah. He pronounced a very clear response of God
against “the pastors that destroy and scatter the sheep of my pasture.” (Jer 23:1)
The Lord in this chapter describes the leaders of the people of God (the
prophets and priests) who were false teachers for their own gain. Listen to these descriptions:
-
Both prophet and priest are profane.
-
I have seen folly in the prophets of
Samaria.
-
They speak a vision of their own heart and
not out of the mouth of the Lord.
-
They say unto everyone that walketh after
the imagination of his own heart, “No evil shall come upon you.”
-
The prophets … prophesy lies in my name
saying, “I have dreamed.”
-
They are prophets of the deceit of their own
heart.
-
I am against them that prophesy false
dreams, saith the Lord, and do tell them, and cause my people to err by their
lies, and by their lightness.
Some of the verses I am memorizing indicate that this same
scenario of false teaching from the leaders in the church will be accelerated
in the last days. It says, for instance,
that “certain men crept in unawares” in Jude 3. And in Acts 20:29 it says “shall
grievous wolves enter in among you, not sparing the flock.”
However, what I am startled by is that this will happen
because the people of the church in their lust will ask for it. Notice in the verse from I Timothy:
But
after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching
ears, and they shall turn away their
ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables.”
If we go back to Jeremiah 23 we find not only the
sad problem but the simple solution …. the Word of God.
Is not my word like as a fire? Saith the Lord:
and like a hammer that breaketh the rock in pieces? Jer 23:29
The Word of God is the only standard of truth,
and I need to be in it daily and listening and obeying …. and according to our
verses in I Timothy … be exhorting those around me by standing true to what God
has revealed.
Here is what was happening in the DR and
the challenges I had in putting this principle into action:
1.
The small English-speaking church that we have
chosen to fellowship with this past year has recently chosen a pastor. This young man in his mid-twenties has
recently graduated from a conservative Bible college in the States and is engaged to
be married this coming year. He also teaches
at another Christian school not far from our town of Santiago.
Our church constitution was copied
from another church in Haiti in some forgotten past and does not describe
how we want to “do church”. So our
little congregation has been meeting together to re-write the
constitution. I can’t imagine a more
challenging activity for a group of diverse believers. We have people born and raised in Europe,
Dominican Republic, Haiti, Guyana, and fromweird places like
Idaho. Should we have congregational or
Presbyterian polity? Should women serve
as deacons? Can women preach? Is the word of God our sole standard for
faith and practice? And we haven’t even
begun to discuss our doctrinal statement yet!
If we can survive this and come up
with a church that is grounded in the Word, this will be where we will worship next
year. My wife and I are currently
helping with the music and leading the songs.
We are also trying our best to uphold the Scripture and protect against
false teaching as we formulate this constitution which has taken a lot of study
and time.
2.
Since our selection of a pastor was fairly
recent, our church has been inviting guest speakers to fill the pulpit a Sunday
at a time. Because we are a
non-denominational church, quite a variety of backgrounds and doctrines were
represented by various recognized pastors and teachers.
I was able to realize firsthand how false teaching can come from the
pulpit and not being able to do much about it.
Fortunately though, most of the men
were fairly solid Biblically.
During the times when we couldn’t
find a “real” pastor, I was asked to fill in.
About three years ago when I finally realized that many of the people
around me didn’t know the Bible or believe it was important, I made a
commitment that if the Lord allowed me an opportunity to speak publicly I would
use it to emphasize our need for turning
to the Scriptures. Not only have I been making this a theme when I preach, I have also been encouraging the importance of the Bible during my classes each day as I start the period with a verse and
prayer.
3.
The small
group Bible studies that happen in and around the campus here, we’ve discovered,
do not usually study the Bible. Most studies use a popular book or video written or made by a famous pastor or teacher.
My wife was a part of a women’s study and I was a in a men’s study during this past year. As you can imagine, it has
the potential to become a hot-bed of false teaching depending on what the book
or video is about and who the leader is.
Last Christmas when the men’s group
finished the book we were studying, we entertained suggestions on the next
“Bible Study” to buy. I suggested that
we study the books of first and second Peter directly from the Bible. They agreed with my idea and we were able to finish at the end of the school year . This was a delightful change
and immensly encouraging to me.
This summer we are traveling around the world to see our
family. We are spending several
weeks each in Texas, Japan and Peru. In
some ways it has been good to get away for a while. The Dominican Republic, unpredictably
volatile during an election year, survived this latest presidential election
with relative calm. The same political
party, the Dominican Liberation Party, will retain office with a different
president, Danilo Medina, in a close 51-47 percent margin.
The weather was also unseasonably hot and humid. It was 97 degrees the week we left with humidity
around 80%. This had followed two months
of sometimes torrential rains. Our
family joke was, “It is almost 4:30 … time to rain.” It seemed to rain everyday at the same time
(slight exaggeration) but even if we were caught in it, as we were a couple of
times, it is like taking a shower.
The pictures, by the way, are orchids that our neighbor lady has. To me it is a symbol of beauty and order in an uncertain time because God is in control of His creation. I scattered them throughout my blog to remind myself of that fact.
So we have left our little island of tropic temperatures
and unpredictable politics for a couple of months to see our children and two grand-babies that we haven’t met yet.
When the summer is finished I will try to summarize our world tour. My prayer is that during this time away we will be faithful to be a
couple that marks his word.
For
who hath stood in the counsel of the Lord,
and hath perceived and heard his word?
Who hath marked his word, and
heard it?
Jeremiah 23:18
1 comment:
It has occurred to me a few times that there is a very simple way to do what you want:
1. Figure out what God wants.
2. Want that.
3. Do what you want.
Now if only that was as easy as it is simple.
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