Tag Archives: Brotherhood brawling

Not for sale

not-for-rentIn a comment this week, someone warned me that my thoughts may not be convenient to me financially. I’m well aware of that. If I wanted to be more popular, I would go with what sells. Praise the U.S. and the G.O.P. Make fun of global warming, Obama, etc. Dump on those who make tough decisions about whom to include in church directories. Criticize anyone who chooses to stand up for traditional doctrines. Talk about feeding people and building houses and avoid talking about evangelism…

I know what plays in Peoria.

Unfortunately, I’m committed to teach the truth as I see it. Not what’s popular. Not what’s trendy. Not what’s convenient or comfortable. As a friend of mine pledged when accepting the role of pulpit minister at a certain congregation: “I will teach the Word of God no matter the personal cost.”

This space is not for rent nor for sale.

Diotrephes

“I wrote to the church, but Diotrephes, who loves to be first, will have nothing to do with us. So if I come, I will call attention to what he is doing, gossiping maliciously about us. Not satisfied with that, he refuses to welcome the brothers. He also stops those who want to do so and puts them out of the church.” (III John 9-10)
I fear that many of our brethren have not paid much attention to the story of Diotrephes. Our brotherhood has been plagued for years with “finger pointing” publications, those that feel the need to try and point out every speck in everyone else’s eye. Brother maligning brother, filling their pages with venom instead of ink. I guess what really saddens me is to see the pleasure that some brethren take in finding error in others. It seems so ungodly.
Another sin of which Diotrephes is accused is refusing to welcome the brothers. It’s sad to say, but this has been seen in our brotherhood. One congregation refuses to accept another because they have a fellowship hall. Or have a paid preacher. Or have Sunday school. Or use multiple cups to take the Lord’s Supper. Or support orphan’s homes. Or… well, you probably know the stories better than I. Some brothers take pride in drawing ever more exclusive circles, bragging about being part of one of the few “faithful congregations that are left.” I’ve never talked to anyone who was a member of one of those “faithful congregations” who didn’t also claim to be one of the dwindling number of truly faithful Christians within that congregation. It was said of one brother: “He only fellowshiped the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost… and he had his doubts about the Holy Ghost.”
Diotrephes is also described as wanting to prevent others from fellowshiping certain brethren and for putting them out of the church for doing so. I was reading something recently on the Internet in which one brother was denouncing several others for having appeared on a lectureship with “false teachers.” The writer said that if these men didn’t repent, they should also be marked as “wolves in sheep’s clothing.” Diotrephes would have been proud.
I fear that the spirit of Diotrephes is alive and well in our brotherhood. It brings discord and division. It also distracts us from our main mission of seeking the lost. Our eyes turn inward instead of outward, and we waste precious energy fighting amongst ourselves instead of fighting for the Kingdom. There are false teachers around, and we need to beware of them. But we also need to beware of the spirit of Diotrephes, the divisive, judgmental spirit that ravages churches across our land. If we allow it to take root in our congregations, it will destroy the body.
May God grant us the desire to fight for the unity of His church. For it is a godly fight.
“Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace.” (Ephesians 4:3)

Labels, labels, labels

“I never call Christians or others ‘anti’s,’ ‘digressives, ‘ mossbacks,’ ‘tackies,’ or ‘trash.’ I concede to all, and accord to all, the same sincerity and courtesy I claim for myself, as the Golden Rule demands…” T.B. Larimore

As I’ve taken another look at Restoration History the last few years, I’ve become a fan of T. B Larimore. I’d love to be known as a man who refuses to take sides and who refuses to label others. It wasn’t until recently that I realized that the church where I grew up in San Angelo, Texas, was basically started through a one-month gospel meeting by T. B. Larimore. I guess some of his views were imparted to me from very young. One of those views is a deep-set distrust of labels.

Conservative. Liberal. Change agent. Anti. Progressive. Digressive… who wears what label depends on who is speaking. It’s rare that someone applies a label to himself. I’ve been called sectarian. I’ve been called liberal. I’ve been called a legalist. I’ve even been called evil (I’m sure that e-mail was sent in Christian love!). And all for expressing basically the same ideas. It just depends on where the other person is standing. In the big scheme of things, it really doesn’t matter what others say:“But with me it is a very small thing that I should be judged by you or by any human court. In fact, I do not even judge myself. I am not aware of anything against myself, but I am not thereby acquitted. It is the Lord who judges me.” (1 Cor 4:3-4) Still, I hate to see people resort to labels. There are several reasons why:

  1. When we resort to labels, we’ve stopped viewing the other person as an individual. We judge them in terms of other people, not according to what they actually think and believe.
  2. When we resort to labels, we stop listening. “Everything you’ve got to say, I’ve heard before from others just like you.”
  3. When we resort to labels, we tend to fall back on preset ways of reacting. “Post-modernists think this way, and here’s what I always say to them.” If I were to accept anything that a “post-modernist” says, I’d be accepting everyone else to whom I’ve given that label.

So here’s one suggestion for preserving the integrity of our Lord’s church: stop the labeling!

If you want to heal wounds in the Lord’s Church today,
Gather all of your labels and put them away.
If you have to use labels, I suggest these and few others:
Christians, fellow saints, disciples and brothers.