What’s The Harm?

By Andy Alexander

What is the harm in calling any denomination by name if what is said or written is the true position of that denomination. If the belief and teaching of the denomination is not misrepresented, why get upset? The church of Christ teaches that a sinner must hear the word of God, believe in Jesus as the Son of God, confess his name before men, repent of his sins, and be baptized in order to wash his sins away (Rom. 10:17; John 3:16; Matt. 10:32; Acts 2:38; 22:16). This writer does not care if any and every denomination in town proclaims from its pulpit this doctrine. Why? Because every word of it can be supported by the gospel of Christ. But, they will not do it, because it contradicts what they teach and it might wake someone up to the face that he is in error.

Jesus said, “He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved” (Mk. 16:16). That’s what the church which belongs to Christ will teach, because that is what Christ taught. The Baptist denomination teaches, “He that believes is saved and shall be baptized.” Now, who is following Christ?

Jesus said that we cannot serve two masters (Matt. 6:24). When an individual is subservient to the Baptist denomination and its creed, then he cannot be faithful to Christ at the same time. We have to serve either Christ and his teaching alone or the teachings and commandments of men. We cannot serve both and please Christ.

Kirby Godsey, president of Mercer University and a well known Baptist, told a group at the Woodmont Baptist Church in Nashville that “God is not a Southern Baptist.” He continued, “Being Southern Baptist is not the ultimate good. . . Even if [the Southern Baptist Convention] does fall, God’s kingdom will endure” (The Tennessean, 9-9-88). We cannot be in two kingdoms. Either we are in the kingdom of God that will endure forever or we are in some other kingdom that is sure to fall (Dan. 2:44).

There is no harm in calling names. Only good can come from teaching people the truth and warning them of religious error. The harm comes to a teacher of the gospel who fails to warn those in error. God will hold that individual responsible for not teaching his will so that others would have an opportunity to repent (Ezek. 3:16-21).

The gospel of Christ is the only message from God to man that teaches us what we must do in order to be saved (Rom. 1:16; 1 Cor. 1:21). Any other teaching must be rejected (Gal. 1:6-10). Denominations have added and taken away from every part of God’s word until most religious services do not even remotely resemble what we read in the New Testament.

These denominations have turned the spiritual, into the carnal. They teach the social gospel that so many worldly people desire to hear. Paul warned Timothy that people would depart from the faith and heap to themselves teachers after their own lusts (2 Tim. 4:14). So, it should be no surprise to those who read their Bible and cannot see any resemblance in their denomination to the church they read about in the New Testament.

There’s no harm in exposing the false doctrines of the denominations. Only good can come from a proclamation of the true gospel of Christ. The church of Christ follows the doctrine of Christ as found in the New Testament. We have no board, convention, or synod to direct our work and worship. We answer to Jesus Christ and follow his divine will alone. We invite visitors to attend our worship and ask questions or make comments. Your soul is the most valuable possession you own and it is the only thing you have that will be here when this earth is no more. Put aside family ties, discard the teachings of men, or break the social ties that bind you to false religions and serve God as his will beckons while time still remains (Matt. 10:28,34-39; 15:7-14; 11:28).

Guardian of Truth XXXIII: 2, p. 47
January 19, 1989

Reflections On The Nashville Meeting

By Larry Ray Hafley

My purpose is not to exacerbate a situation nor to excoriate an individual but to make some observations on the recent meeting in Nashville. The discussions were frank, forthright and frightening. Each participant spoke for himself. No one was muzzled or put on a leash. Thus, everyone spoke his convictions in an open, direct manner. Brethren Warpula and Ramsey assured us that nothing we could say would stop them from loving us. (What a comfort that was!) So, the sessions were plain and pointed.

But they were also frightening. Johnny Ramsey and Stafford North spoke against church support of colleges, but Calvin Warpula, Bill Swetmon and Richard Rogers argued for “a new hermeneutics,” for a new way of establishing Bible authority. Reuel Lemmons said direct commands, approved apostolic examples and necessary inferences as a way to establish Bible authority could not be found before 1800 A.D. Swetmon argued that since there was no complete New Testament before the fourth century, there could not have been a New Testament pattern for the work, worship and organization of the church as we know it. Hence, we cannot bring in our “man-made” conclusions, reasonings and inferences in establishing a Bible pattern, plan or blueprint to guide the church in its activities.

Swetmon, Rogers, Warpula and others contended that Christ, not formerly unavailable New Testament documents, is our authority. They recommended that we content ourselves with Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, and look to Jesus as our pattern and not to Acts or the epistles, which, they affirmed, were not accessible to the church in the first three centuries. If the implications and insinuations in that line of thinking do not scare you, then you are impervious to a spiritual “Boo!”

While this is not the place for a detailed study of hermeneutics and the issues raised above, remember that the New Testament was available in the first century. Paul’s ways were ordered and ordained, appointed and approved everywhere in every church (1 Cor. 4:17; 7:17; 11:2; 16:1). The “word of the truth of the gospel” was preached “in all the world” in the first century (Col. 1:5,6; Rom. 10: 18; Tit. 2:11). The faith was once for all delivered (Jude 3). It was in “earthen vessels” for a time, and then in them and their writings (2 Thess. 2:15). The mold, the pattern, “the form of sound words” was committed to men who taught it and to letters (2 Tim. 1:13; 2:2; Rev. 1: 11). The things the apostles wrote were “the commandments of the Lord,” the voice of God (1 Cor. 14:37; 1 Jn. 4:6). Peter said disciples possessed and were established in “the present truth” and that he wrote so they could have it after he was gone (2 Pet. 1:3, 12-21).

We need, therefore, to preach fervently and frequently on the inspiration and authority of the holy Scriptures. We must be urgent and insistent that we not go beyond what is written, that we not transgress the doctrine of Christ (1 Cor. 4:6; 2 Jn. 9; 1 Pet. 4:11).

In Nashville, the liberals argued that 2 John 9 was a reference to the doctrine about Christ and his person, not the doctrine that Christ taught. (Compare the doctrine of the Nicolaitans and the doctrine of the Pharisees – Matt. 16:12; Rev. 12,: 15. Was that a reference to the doctrine about the Pharisees and the Nicolaitans, or was it a reference to their doctrine or teaching?) All we need do, they contended, is to be right about the deity of Christ and not worry about a “pattern theology.” They need to tell us how one arrives at truth regarding the deity of Christ. Is it through the word of God? Is there a pattern of truth concerning the nature and character of the person of Christ? If so, how may we know it?

Sectarians make the same lame appeal to 2 John 9 when they cannot defend their doctrines by the Bible. If we accept their terms, if we allow them to re-define truth, there win be no stopping place short of Rome, unless it be Boston and Crossroads.

Moving Fences

Brother Calvin Warpula is an outstanding speaker. He is clear, impassioned, articulate, even eloquent, but he is a liberal of the deepest dye. I like him and he loves me, but we are on opposite sides of the fence of truth.

Calvin related a touching story about a dead man whose family wanted him to be buried in a “church cemetery.” Since the man was not of the same faith of that church’s cemetery, he was buried outside the fence. (I suppose you could say the man had a dead faith.) The family was saddened, crushed, because their loved one was excluded from the fellowship of the dead. The excluding “pastor” was so touched by their sorrow that he rebuilt the fence around the dead man’s grave, thus including him in the corps of corpses. When the dead man’s family saw the pastor’s change of heart, they were glad and thankful. What a benevolent, loving pastor! He tore down his disbarring, exclusive fence and included the deceased in the dormitory of the dead. Conclusion? We “antis” should remove our fences to include those from whom we are separated. If we have the love we should have, our hardened hearts will melt and we can remove our barriers to fellowship and include our liberal brethren.

This sounds good. It is a touching, tender story, but it does not appeal to Scripture. It is an emotional argument. So, we ask brother Warpula if he should remove his anti-instrumental music fence to include the Christian Church? Should he remove his anti-sprinkling fence to include Methodists and other sprinkler systems? Should he remove the fence of baptism for the remission of sins in order to include Baptists? Should he remove his elders in every church fence to include the Boston-Crossroads funeral procession?

Or should there be a fence? If so, what are its limits? Does it exclude anyone? What if the corpse had died as an atheistic drunk? Would the pastor have chunked his body on the coal pile? Should he tear down his fence altogether? Calvin still loves me, but we need to discuss the authority and limits for fences before we bury one another in denominational grave yards.

Personally, I felt a twinge of sorrow for Johnny Ramsey and Roy Lanier, Jr. They represented the liberal view and stood (ashamedly, it seemed to me) identified with Reuel Lemmons, Richard Rogers, Bill Swetmon and Calvin Warpula. Brethren Lanier and Ramsey rather lamely attempted to strike a biblical pose toward the work, worship and organization of the church. They oppose the church’s involvement in recreation and entertainment. They oppose church support of colleges, and you could almost feel them cringe at the rank modernism of Swetmon and Rogers, but they stood on the same stage with them. Their influence is with the liberal crowd and their tents are pitched in liberal camps.

For example, brother Lanier, after teaching principles that would condemn benevolent societies supported by the churches, nevertheless felt the need to throw a sop to the old liberal argument of Guy N. Woods (in loco parentis) and attempted to justify his stance with the liberal crowd.

Poor brother Ramsey. For over twenty years I have heard that Johnny Ramsey “is about to forsake the liberals and start preaching the truth” on the work and organization of the church. I first heard such rumblings in 1967. His closest friends cannot understand his reasons for using his life and influence in liberal circles. They love him and wish he would openly disavow his ties and preach the truth. So, once again the word was out in Nashville, “Brother Ramsey appears ready to leave liberalism.” Well, it did not happen. But brother Ramsey does not have to leave. All he needs to do is to preach what he says he believes. If he does, he will not have to leave, he will be escorted out.

Brother Ramsey seemed horribly out of place. He looked uncomfortable. Perhaps I am getting soft in my old age, but I nearly felt sorry for him once or twice. But just when I was ready to extend him the right hand of sympathyship, I would come to myself and realize that he is to blame for his condition. He is to blame for his position. He is older, wiser and more knowledgeable than am I. Somehow, though, I did not get the idea that he would advise me to leave where I am and join him.

It was said that reports of the Nashville meeting would be watched by the liberals and the tone and tenor of our writings about it might determine whether there would be other such meetings. That is a “cop out,” pure and simple.

Strangely, the liberals urged us not to judge their works and institutions by (what is to them) an imaginary Bible blueprint or pattern, but they feel constrained to judge our motives, our attitudes, and our love. They tell us not to be judgmental as they judge us to be judgmental! So, we cannot evaluate their doctrines by the Bible, but they can judge our hearts when we judge their doctrines by the Scriptures. Hmmmm.

It will be much easier for liberals to sit and comfort themselves in the belief of how harsh, caustic and abrasive those antis are than it will be for them to openly and honestly confront the issues that are raised.

Our differences will not be resolved by sweet smiles and hugs. Issues will not be settled by verbal avowals of love. “Only’ ” as Marshall Patton so ably and eloquently appealed, “in the crucible of controversy” will truth be seen by good and honest hearts. Our appeal is to truth, not to positions, papers, labels or institutions. If what I believe is not the truth, let me be smitten by the word of truth. I may cry out for mercy. I may resort to demeaning your attitude and accuse you of a lack of love. I may squall and squirm and resent you, but do not be deterred. Preach the truth; press it upon me – cry aloud and spare not. Meet me, face me, confront me on every hand and side with book, chapter and verse. As long as I am willing to study and to consider our differences in light of the Scriptures, stay after me with God’s eternal truth.

Conclusion

When the history of the Lord’s church in the twentieth century is written, the views of the liberals as expressed in Nashville cannot be ignored. They will serve to show the advance of a monstrous departure from the ancient landmarks. The gulf between brethren is a chasm, a Grand Canyon in magnitude, with respect to the authority of the Bible. Their arguments, as a careful study of their speeches will clearly show, reflect a lack of respect for the form of sound words, a complete and utter rejection of a New Testament pattern for the work, worship and organization of the church.

If the Nashville speeches are any indication, the liberalism that engulfs some churches of Christ is beyond belief, description, and, sadly, perhaps beyond hope. The evolution of liberalism, which began with feint, subtle, almost imperceptible wiggles, is now advancing in quantum leaps and intergalactic bounds. And the end is not yet in sight. The unthinkable has occurred in the past forty years, but the half has not been told. The worst, I fear, is yet to come.

What do we do? Panic? Resignation? Despair? No, brethren, but with Christians in all ages, we simply content ourselves with godly living, loving service, plain preaching and patience of hope. We take heed to ourselves and unto the doctrine, for in so doing we shall both save ourselves and them that hear us (1 Tim. 4:16). There is no grand army to marshal, no carnal weapon to employ, no political power to exert. There is simply a need for gentle piety, for sharp rebuke and humble penitent hearts to serve God day by day, “considering thyself left thou also be tempted.” Institutional forces are not necessary. Powerful, moneyed men, per se, are not needed. Live a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty. Pray for truth and for its advocates. Study to be approved unto God. Mind your own business. Raise your children within the nurture and admonition of the Lord. Be temperate, gracious, prayerful. Be sweet to everyone, but check to see that you have a sharpened two-edged sword to wield, just in case things get ugly (Eph. 6:17; Heb. 4:12).

Guardian of Truth XXXIII: 2, pp. 49-51
January 19, 1989

1,586 Religions In America

By Johnie Edwards

The March 1980 Good Housekeeping reported a study by Mr. J. Gordon Melton as to the number of religious faiths in America. At that time Mr. Melton reported about 1200 religions in America.

According to an article in the Saturday, November 26, 1988 Port Arthur News entitled “Research Indicates New Faiths Growing,” Mr. J. Gordon Melton of Santa Barbara, California said 835 new religions have been formed since 1940. Mr. Melton is director of the Institute for the Study of American Religions and editor of the Encyclopedia of American Religions. Melton is a United Methodist.

A new edition of the Religious Encyclopedia to be published in December of this year will list 1,586 United States faiths according to Mr. Melton.

There seems to be no end to the starting of new religions. As we read such reports of the formation of new religious bodies, one is surely made to stop and ask, “Does the Word of God authorize the formation of all these religious bodies?”

Old Testament Prophets Foretold One Church

One would think that the Old Testament is full of prophecies concerning the establishing of many religious bodies, as we see so many in existence today. But this is not the case. The prophets wrote by inspiration and told of the coming of only one religious body. The Lord said through the prophet Zechariah, “Therefore thus saith the Lord; I am returned to Jerusalem with mercies: my house shall be built in it, saith the Lord of hosts, and a line shall be stretched forth upon Jerusalem” (Zech. 1:16). Here Zechariah saw the coming of only “my house” – one house. The Lord’s house is the Lord’s church. Paul told Timothy, “But if I tarry long, that thou mayest know how thou oughtest to behave thyself in the house of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth” (1 Tim. 3:15).

Isaiah saw the establishing of only one religion. “And it shall come to pass in the last days, that the mountain of the Lord’s house shall be established in the top of the mountains, and shall be exalted above the hills; and all nations shall flow unto it. And many people shall go and say, Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; and he will teach us of his ways, and we will walk in his paths: for out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem” (Isa. 2:2-3). “The Lord’s House” (singular) is predicted in the words of Isaiah! Remember the Lord’s house is the Lord’s church (1 Tim. 3:15). This religious body was to have its beginning in the city of Jerusalem, in the last days as all nations flowed unto it, according to Isaiah.

The New Testament Reveals Only One Religious Body

As we leave the prophecies of the Old Testament concerning the establishment of the Lord’s House and look into the New Testament to find its establishment, we find that only one church was established. The church foretold in the Old Testament is revealed in the New Testament. Acts 2 records the beginning of the Lord’s house, the church. It is on the day of Pentecost, the first day of the week (Lev. 23:15-16) about 9 a.m. on a Sunday morning as the Holy Spirit guided the apostles of our Lord to preach the truth in its fulness for the first time. On this occasion the gospel was preached to the Jews. “And there were dwelling at Jerusalem Jews, devout men, out of every nation under heaven” (Acts 2:5). This event took place in “the last days” (Acts 2:16-17) just as the prophets had said (Joel 2:28-29; Isa. 2:2-3). The gospel was preached, men heard it and the preaching of the ‘gospel convicted the sinners of their sins as the word pricked their hearts. As a result of this preaching, they asked, “Men and brethren, what shall we do?” As believers, they were told to “repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost” (Acts 2:38). About three thousand were baptized and Acts 2:47 says, “And the Lord added to the church daily such as should be saved.” Did you notice the phrase, “the church” which means only one.

The Lord Established Only One Church

The simplest way to see that there is only one church revealed in the New Testament is to notice what the Bible teaches about the body. Paul said “there is one body” (Eph. 4:4) and he told the Colossians “for his body’s sake, which is the church” (Col. 1:24). There is one body and the body is the church, so there is only one church established by the Lord; if not, why not?

There Is One Faith

Paul wrote the Ephesians and said, “There is one faith” (Eph. 4:5). Mr. Melton reports there are 1,586 faiths in the United States. There is quite a difference in what the Bible says and what actually exists. The word “faith” in Ephesians 4:5 refers to a body of truth, the gospel. Galatians 1:23 says that Paul “preacheth the faith” while Paul told the Corinthians that he preached “the gospel” (1 Cor. 15:1-2). To preach the faith is to preach the gospel and to preach the gospel is to preach the faith. Jude said, “Beloved, when I gave all diligence to write unto you of the common salvation, it was needful for me to write unto you, and exhort you that ye should earnestly contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the saints” (Jude 3). Jude refers to “the faith” and that means only one faith! By the way, all of it has been delivered and there are no new revelations.

Guardian of Truth XXXIII: 2, p. 45
January 19, 1989

Mormons And Their Alleged Bible Contradictions

By Michael Garrison

You may have had a knock at your door, answered it, and found two well-dressed young men wanting to give you their “testimony It about what a “modern day prophet” revealed. They claim to be elders, but the New Testament shows that an elder, bishop, overseer, and pastor is to be “the husband of one wife . . . having his children in subjection … not a novice” (1 Tim. 3:2,5-6). So, just because someone makes the claim of being an elder does not make him one!

These young men will also want you to think they are Bible believers. Yet, after you talk and study with them for awhile, as I did, you soon find out just the opposite! I studied with some of these young men for about 10 hours over a four or five week period and they brought me a list of what they alleged were Bible “contradictions.” If they believed the Bible to be the inspired word of God, they would have tried to harmonize these so-called “contradictions” rather than try to cause people to have less confidence in the Scriptures.

After these young men gave me the list of “contradictions” I prepared some answers which I wish to share with you at this time.

1. Acts 9.7 versus Acts 22:9. Did the men with Saul hear or not? In his Dictionary of New Testament Words, W.E. Vine says (p. 204), “Thus in Acts 9:7, ‘hearing the voice,’ the noun 6voice’ is in the partitive genitive case . . . whereas in 22:9, ‘they heard not the voice,’ the construction is with the accusative. This removes the idea of any contradiction. The former indicates a hearing of the sound, the latter indicates the meaning or message of voice (this they did not hear).” So, an honest investigation shows there is not any contradiction here!

2. Lying spirit (1 Kgs. 22:20-23 versus Tit. 1:2). God cannot lie, yet he is accused of doing so by the Mormons. I quote from Alleged Discrepancies of the Bible by J.W. Haley (p. 98): Quoting a Mr. Bahr, Mr. Haley says, “Because Ahab, who had abandoned God and hardened his heart, desired to use prophecy for his own purposes, it is determined that he shall be led to ruin by prophecy. As God often used the heathen nations as the rod of his wrath for the chastisement of Israel (Isa. X. 5), so now he used Ahab’s false prophets to bring upon Ahab the judgment which Elijah had foretold against him.” Then, Mr. Haley says, “God for judicial purposes suffered Ahab to be fatally deceived.” And as E.M. Zerr points out, God used various agencies to accomplish the results necessary to his plans. Again, there is no contradiction.

3. Matthew 20.-20-28 versus Mark 10.35-45. Who went, mother or her sons? “The Bible often tells of something being done by proxy, that is, by another. Examples – David killed Uriah (2 Sam. 12:9); but the Ammonites killed him (2 Sam. 11: 17). The priests bought the potter’s field (Matt. 27:6,7) and Judas purchased it, that is, furnished the occasion for its purchase (Acts 1: 18). So it is with the passages under consideration – he who does a thing for another, does it himself” (Haley, p. 347). No contradiction here, either!

4. Age of Ahaziah – 2 Kings 8.26 versus 2 Chronicles 22.-2. “According to the latter text, Ahaziah must have been two years older than his own father! The perfectly simple explanation adopted by Gesenius and most critics is that the copyist mistook one numeral letter for another” (Alleged Bible Contradictions, p. 398). (Note: if you see the original Hebrew for 20 and 40, you could see how the mistake might have occurred.) Scribes (those who copied the manuscripts) were not inspired men and a worn and faded copy of the Scriptures could be misread by anyone. Again, the problem is solved and no contradiction exists!

5. Matthew 28.-2 and Mark 16.-5 versus Luke 2434 and John 20.12. How many angels were at the tomb? When we compare the texts in their contexts, we will learn there are different people and different times under consideration. Some did see two angels; others saw only one angel There is not a discrepancy when one studies the matter honestly!

6. John 1:18; Genesis 32.30, John 6.46 and 2 John 11. Was God seen by men or not seen by men. To see God’s face is death (Exod. 33:20). In what way can it be said that one has “seen” God? Certainly not in a literal sense. We would be dead if we did! So, we see God figuratively. It can be said that we “see” God in the sun, moon, and other of his creations – that is, we see the evidence of his handiwork. There is no contradiction here!

7. In Matthew 27.,9-10, Jeremy (Jeremiah) is quoted, but the prophecy is found in Zechariah 11:13. “. . . the difficulty may have arisen from abridgment of the names. In the Greek, Jeremiah, instead of being written in full, might stand thus, ‘Iriou’; Zechariah thus, ‘Zriou.’ By the mere change of Z into I, the mistake would be made” (Alleged Bible Discrepancies, p. 15 3). This problem is solved, also!

8. Acts 7.22 versus Exodus 4.10. The only contradiction here is in one’s lack of reading and understanding. Who said one cannot be mighty in words and at the same time not be of slow speech and of slow tongue? The words spoken in slow speech and tongue can indeed be mighty ones! There is no contradiction here, except in the desperate attempts of false teachers and false prophets to discredit the word of truth!

We must never be guilty of twisting the holy word of God to our own destruction (see 2 Pet. 3:16). Nor should we call that which is good, evil (see Isa. 5:20-21).

Although we may admire the zeal of the young men who go from door-to-door teaching their false doctrine, we must realize they are in error and need to know the truth. Let us at least try to teach them when they come to our house. No, they may not be convinced by our teaching, but at least we can do our best to point to Jesus, The Way.

Guardian of Truth XXXIII: 2, p. 44
January 19, 1989