Hope In Christ

By Rolland W. Fritz

In regard to the fact that Jesus was raised from the dead and that we will be raised from the dead, Paul the apostle said, “If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable” (1 Cor. 15:19). That there will be a resurrection from the dead, Paul affirms there is no doubt, for Christ’s resurrection is proof of the fact of resurrection (1 Cor. 15:1-8) and Christ promises all will be resurrected (Jn. 5:28-29).

Hope In This Life Because Of Resurrection

The main blessing we can receive now is because of the resurrection of Jesus which Paul discusses here in the fifteenth chapter of first Corinthians. We are saved by the gospel containing the story of Christ’s resurrection (15:1-2). Paul said he preached it, they received it, they stood in it and are saved by it. He then reiterates for them what he had delivered unto them when he told them of Christ’s resurrection:

1. Christ died for our sins (3).

2. He was buried (4).

3. He rose the 3rd day (4).

4. He was seen (5-8).

If There Was No Resurrection

The teaching that there was no resurrection from the dead was taught among the Corinthians and other brethren. Paul shows the inconsistency of this false teaching inasmuch as they also believed that Jesus had been resurrected from the dead. He reasoned:

If There Is No Resurrection From The Dead:

1. Christ is not risen (13, 16).

2. Apostle’s preaching vain (14).

3. Corinthian’s faith vain (14).

4. Apostles are false witnesses (15).

5. Corinthians yet in sin (17).

6. Dead in Christ perished (18).

It is at this point that Paul concludes his affirmation with the statement, “If in this life only we have hope in Christ we are of all men most miserable” (1 Cor. 15:19).

Hope In This Life

Peter explains that to have hope in this life means being begotten to an incorruptible inheritance in heaven by a resurrection from the dead (1 Pet. 1:3-5). Paul says this begettal of the Corinthians was by the gospel (1 Cor. 4:15). James adds that it is by the word (Jas. 1:18). This is a spiritual birth, not a physical one (Jn. 3:3,5,7). Our hope includes a number of other things too, like those found at 1 Peter 1:4-9.

1. An inheritance in heaven (4).

2. Being kept by God’s power unto salvation (5).

3. Receiving the end of our faith, the salvation of our souls (9).

We Have Hope In Christ In This Life.

This means hope now (1 Cor. 15:19). We don’t have to be in darkness on this, because “whatsoever things were written beforetime were written for our learning, that we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might have hope” (Rom. 15:4). Let us notice that the faithful have confidence of salvation and resurrection now and don’t have to wait and wonder. This occurs “in Christ” (Eph. 1:7; Col. 1:7). Sins are forgiven when we contact the blood of Christ (Heb. 9:12; 1 Pet. 1:18-19; Rom. 5:9; Rev. 7:14). We have constant cleansing from sins if we walk in the light (1 Jn. 1:7). God’s Word tells us when and how we come into contact with the blood of Christ. We come into contact with the blood of Christ, receiving forgiveness or remission of sins when, as a repentant believer, we are baptized into Christ for that purpose (Acts 2:38; 8:22; Rom. 6:3-6).

We Have Hope In Heaven After This Life

If we are saved, we have been added to Jesus Christ and to His church by the Lord Himself (Acts 2:47). It is quite obvious in Scripture that we are added to the Lord’s church when we become saved from sins (Acts 2:38,41,47). Having been saved from sins and added to the Lord’s church, we must remain faithful to the Lord to be saved at the end (Rev. 2: 10; 3:10; Mt. 24:13).

What Is Your Hope?

Christ loved and purchased His church with His blood (Eph. 5:23; Acts 20:28). The hope of every member of the Lord’s church who remains faithful unto death is reserved for them in heaven (1 Pet. 1:4; Col. 1:5). Dear friend, may God’s grace include you among the faithful that you might share this wonderful hope of eternal inheritance, for “If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable” (1 Cor. 15:19).

Guardian of Truth XXX: 16, p. 499
August 21, 1986

Redigging The Well Of The Doctrine Of Grace

By Tom M. Roberts

Like Abraham’s wells (Gen. 26:18) which had to be cleaned out and renamed by Isaac because they had been filled with debris by the Philistines, the biblical doctrine of grace must be rescued from the clutter of denominational debris. Grace, as essential to our spiritual life as water to a dying man, is often hidden and kept from view by such clutter. We need a restoration of pure teaching on the “true grace of God” (1 Pet. 5:12). Jesus is the Water of eternal life (John 4) and grace is the extension of this “living water” to sinful man. Jesus can be said to be the personification of grace, the unmerited favor of God. Whatever grace is, it can be no more or less than that expressed in the person and teaching of Jesus Christ. Those who would define grace in philosophical and theological terms other than that taught by Jesus are throwing stones in the well of pure grace. Like Isaac, we need to redig the wells and rename them. Let us be sure that we “speak as the oracles of God” (1 Pet. 4:11). When this is done, by the grace of God, Jesus will become “in him a well of water springing up unto eternal life” (Jn. 4:14).

Some of the ancient and modern Philistine debris that clutters the knowledge of grace are:

Taught as theological doctrine by some and believed by many (listen to most funeral eulogies), grace is extended to all men, good and evil alike. God is seen by the Universalist as a doting, permissive, indulgent Fatherfigure who will be displeased by how some men live, perhaps, but will, at the Judgment, permit all men into heaven. Becoming popular in the 14th-15th centuries in Germany and England, universalism was known to Clement of Alexandria and Origen (2nd Century). In 1712, Jeremiah White of Trinity College wrote a book with the self-explanatory title, The Restoration of All Things, or A Vindication of the Goodness and the Grace of God, to be Manifested at last in the Recovery of His Whole Creation of Their Fall. In America, the doctrine was espoused by James Relly (1722-1778) who believed that the suffering of Jesus on the cross provided “finished salvation” once and for all.

The Universalist Church in America was organized in 1779 by John Murray. In 1803, the “Winchester Profession” was completed and today, headquarters are in Boston, Massachusetts. No discernible difference is found between the Universalist and the Unitarian; in fact, ministers often hold dual memberships and a merger is often discussed.

The apostle John condemned the antiChrist (1 Jn. 4) who denied that Jesus lived in the flesh as a man. This early error had its roots in the belief that mankind corrupted himself so thoroughly in the Fall (Gen. 3) that his entire being (body and soul) was stained. Such inherent corruption was passed along, genetically, to future generations and all flesh became evil by nature. In the view of the antiChrist, Deity could not inhabit a sinful abode, thus Jesus could not be Incarnate. Augustine, a few hundred years later, picked up this heresy and expounded upon it, opposed by Pelagius. Augustine saw grace as an “enabling power” that made it possible for man to do good. Without it, he was not able to do good, any good. Consequently, man, apart from “grace” had no free will, no faith and could not act morally until God restored this tipower” (grace) by the Holy Spirit. Only after the Holy Spirit acted upon his corrupt nature could man, thus enabled, act so as to believe and “do” any good work.

If man has no free will; if man has no power to comprehend truth and act upon it; if man cannot believe except and unless God gives him faith by the Holy Spirit direct and apart from the Bible, then man can do nothing – God must do it all. Salvation is wholly of grace.

Such error is part of the debris that obscures the “true grace of God.”

After the controversy between Augustine and Pelagius (which Augustine won, leaving his imprint on developing Catholicism), other men added to the rubble.

James Arminius “remonstrated” against Confessions ofFaith in Holland which included Augustine’s beliefs. He, in turn, was opposed by the Synod of Dort (1618) which rejected “Arminianism” and produced documents advocating their own positions. Since Arminius challenged five points of the Confessions, the Synod’s response was issued in five points, giving birth to the “Five Points of Calvinism.” Martin Luther and John Calvin (1509-1564) had protested Catholic doctrine because they believed it to have drifted away from Augustinian philosophy. In fact, both the Reformation and the efforts of the Synod of Dort against the Remonstrants were attempts to maintain “pure” Augustinianism. Calvin’s explanation in his Institutes of Christian Religion so popularized his beliefs that, today, we refer to these doctrines as Calvinism even though they did not originate with John Calvin.

Whatever they are called, like the rose by any other name, they smell the same. Building on the fallacy of the loss of free will and “enabling grace,” Calvinistic creeds take man completely out of the picture except as a passive sinner, unable to act or think in such a manner so as to make a decision about his salvation; God must do it all. This is the modern view of grace: justification by faith alone; salvation wholly of grace. Millions now living do not know of the “true grace of God.” It is hidden under the accumulation of centuries of Philistine debris.

There are Calvinists in the church of Christ, enemies in the camp, casting stones of error into the well. However well-intentioned, some brethren are teaching the very things faithful brethren have been attempting to clean out. Unlike denominational teachers, they aver not to be Calvinists. Baptists, Presbyterians, Lutherans, etc. wear the badge proudly. But our brethren who teach the same doctrines, using the same terminology, claim to be insulted when so identified. But Isaac knew a Philistine when he saw one, and so can we.

Calvinism is a logical system and pulls one inexorably into the depths of its consistency. Brethren who want to espouse a little will accept a lot. A brother may misunderstand how righteousness is imputed, but unless he gets his thinking back on the Bible, he will proceed to inherited sin and corrupted nature. He may want to broaden the “umbrella of grace” so as to include the pious unimmersed but he might end up accepting that baptism is not essential to salvation. (We speak not just in generalities.) He may claim to promote only the security of the believer but if he goes beyond the comfort of the Scriptures, he may wind up teaching once saved, always saved. What may we say more of those who would deny the doctrine of Christ on the free-will of man, moral agency, the nature of sin, how sin is accounted before God, the nature of righteousness, how righteousness is accounted before God, faith, works, law, fellowship with error, and many other such things? Surely, they hinder a proper understanding of grace and the proclamation of it.

I suggest that we begin with the perception, as Abraham’s well was still the source of water in spite of the debris, even so Christ and His word is still the source of the grace of God in spite of all the denominational error. Truth is truth in spite of all the error in the world. Truth, unperceived, is still truth (the world is round even if I don’t know it); truth, misunderstood, is still truth (the Lord’s church is not a denomination); truth, denied, is still truth (Jehovah is God in spite of the claims of the atheist). Exactly so about the grace of God. Unperceived, it is there. Misunderstood, it can be known. Denied, it is affirmed throughout the word of God. In one sense of the word, God’s grace never needs restoration; like the universe, it exists by the fiat of God. But in the sense of our study and with the environs of human weakness, we must work to restore a knowledge of the true grace of God to lost mankind. Many have been denied access to grace by error; others have been led astray. We all need to turn to “the word of his grace, which is able to build you up, and to give you the inheritance among all them that are sanctified” (Acts 20:32). Let us establish our hearts that God’s grace is there, as solid as the universe, until time is no more.

A second place of beginning is that of properly “speaking as the oracles of God” (1 Pet. 4:11). A concept that cannot be united with a scriptural word(s) is not a Bible concept or truth. In acknowledging the apostles’ inspiration, Paul stated that the Holy Spirit was “combining spiritual things with spiritual words” (1 Cor. 2:13). “Justification by faith” is a Bible truth, provable by passages of Scripture. “Justification by faith alone” cannot be found in the Bible; it is a concept without a foundation. Singing is scriptural; playing on an instrument is not. Local church autonomy is a concept of truth for which scriptural words may be found; the papacy is not. Non-biblical words must be invented for concepts and practices which the Holy Spirit has not authorized. This is also true about a study of grace. Some brethren are being very loose in their language as they teach about grace. One hears about “imputing the personal righteousness of Christ,” “umbrella of grace,” “man’s corrupted nature,” “sin and righteousness being transferred,” “automatic cleansing of sins,” “sin not being charged to the believer,” and many similar statements. If we must borrow terminology from the sects to phrase our beliefs about grace, we had better take care. If God intended us to know something about grace, He was able to state it in understandable terms. If these terms are not sufficient for us, it is an indication that we are not satisfied with grace as God established it. But remember, God does not bend the dispensation of grace to our human definitions.

Third, there is no substitute for Bible knowledge. The Scriptures teach: “Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall set you free” (Jn. 8:32); “be not foolish, but understand what the will of the Lord is” (Eph. 5:17); “whereby, when ye read, ye can perceive my understanding in the mystery of Christ” (Eph. 3:4). These passages could be multiplied. But many of us are woefully ignorant about such matters. When we “ought to have our senses exercised to discern good and evil” (Heb. 5:14), we don’t recognize error when it it taught. We mirror today, the situation about which the Hebrew writer lamented when he tried to teach concerning the priesthood of Melchizedek and found his listeners “dull of hearing.” How distressing, likewise, to know that many brethren do not recognize rank Calvinism when they hear it. Calvinism is an ugly, evil doctrine when stripped of its sophistry. It denies the true grace of God and would put us in bondage to total depravity, inherited guilt, limited atonement, individual predestination, justification by faith only and once saved, always saved. Such ideas turn the “grace of God into lasciviousness ” (Jude 4). To avoid this pitfall, we must know the truth. Preachers and churches may change with time, but God’s word is always the same. We must still “search the scriptures daily” (Acts 17:11).

Finally, know specifically the subject of grace. Don’t study about it; study “grace.” Use a concordance. Use a Bible dictionary. Apply passage to passage; keep them in context and harmonize them with the rest of God’s word. The grace of God is an extension of God Himself: it is possible because He is a merciful God. All God’s grace in salvation is realized in Jesus Christ. God has “blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ” (Eph. 1:3ff). Man is a sinner, therefore he ought to die (Ezek. 18:4). But we are saved “by grace through faith” (Eph. 2:8,9). We are saved by grace in that Jesus was given to die in our stead, taking our punishment (Isa. 53). This is the mercy of God expressed in the perfect sacrifice of Jesus, who learned obedience (Heb. 5:8,9) to present to God a body prepared for that purpose (Heb. 10). That sacrifice atoned for our sins, the anti-type of the bloody animal sacrifices. Once atonement for sin had been made, reconciliation was possible (2 Cor. 5:17-2 1) and we are called unto God by the gospel message (2 Thess. 2:14). The proper response of man to the grace of God is faithful obedience (Rom. 1:5; 16:26). Because we believe and obey, our sins are forgiven (Rom. 4:1ff) and, since we are forgiven, with no sins charged to us, God puts righteousness to our account. It is possible for us, therefore, to stand before God as His redeemed, saved by His grace. Because of this marvelous gift, it is possible to have that “well of water, springing up unto eternal life” (Jn. 4:14). The water from Jesus is greater than the water from the well of Abraham or of Jacob. Let us strive to speak with one voice about this grace so that lost men and women will not be hindered in their search for mercy.

Guardian of Truth XXX: 16, pp. 496-497, 501
August 21, 1986

Cecil Willis Restored

By O.C. Birdwell, Jr.

The following is a copy of the statement read by brother Cecil Willis to the Highway 287 Church in Groveton, Texas on 23 July 1986.

My purpose in coming before you at this time is to make acknowledgment of each and every sin of which I have been guilty. I am sorry for whatever reproach might have come upon the name of Christ as a result of my sins. I ask your forgiveness, and your prayers that God might forgive me. I will be willing to serve the church in any way you request, and whenever you think appropriate.

My work schedule, at present, hinders me in attending many services of this congregation, but I do worship each Lord’s Day with a small church in Trinity, Texas.

My marriage to __________ is ending; divorce proceedings are underway at present.

This statement is made to renew my relationship with this church. A copy thereof will be sent to the church in Huntsville for them to use as they see fit. Any additional questions you may have regarding my circumstances, feel free to ask.

Brotherly,

Cecil Willis

Copies of the above statement were sent to the church in Huntsville, Texas, and to numerous friends and interested individuals.

Because of the fact that Mike Willis, editor of this journal, is a brother in the flesh to Cecil, he has asked me to comment on the statement from Cecil.

It is my understanding that the church at Huntsville, Texas had withdrawn from Cecil because of his courtship, in view of marriage, of the woman from whom he has now been separated since March of this year. As noted already, this statement was mailed to the Huntsville church.

We accept Cecil’s confession as being from a sincere heart, and from one who intends to do right. If you wish to contact him, write him as follows: Cecil Willis, P.O. Box 15, Woodlake, Texas 75865.

As Jesus discussed the prodigal son he said, “And while he was yet afar off, his father saw him, and was moved with compassion, and ran, and fell on his neck, and kissed him” (Lk. 15:20). If you will permit a personal expression of emotion on my part, may I say that I have this same feeling toward Cecil. No preacher has done more for me in my preaching efforts than Cecil Willis. Outside my family, there is no one I have loved more than Cecil. If I had the vocabulary to state my deep feeling about Cecil and about his confession of sin and new resolve, emotion would stand in the way of a proper expression.

Several have been anticipating a statement from Cecil concerning his spiritual condition. To m) knowledge, in recent months he has had lengthy visits from such friends and brethren who love him as Ron Halbrook, Connie Adams, Steve Wolfgang, and his brother, Mike Willis. In some of these discussions, Cecil explained that he had been thinking seriously about his need to make a confession in order to correct his life and influence, then to live a celibate life and to devote himself to the service of God in any way possible.

Brother Cecil is no longer involved in the courtship and subsequent marriage which alienated him from the Hunstville church. He acknowledges and expresses sorrow for his sins, and asks for forgiveness and prays that God will forgive him. I am deeply thankful for his statement. My prayer is that his life, extensive knowledge, and no small ability, may be rededicated to the Lord, and used to advance His teaching and His church. I would not hesitate to recommend him to any church needing a preacher.

(The above statement and comment is being printed with the knowledge and consent of brother Cecil Willis.)

(Editor’s Note: Praise the Lord! Rejoice with us in Cecil’s restoration to the Lord. Many prayers have been answered. I bear such a load of debt to Cecil. He has given me many books, encouraged me in every good thing, and advised me in so many ways through the years that I have been preaching the gospel. We look forward to him being more involved in the Lord’s work in the future but rejoice that he is already restored to our Lord.)

Guardian of Truth XXX: 17, p. 518
September 4, 1986

Preachers Must “Go”

By Wayne Partain

“The harvest indeed is plenteous, but the laborers are few” (Matt. 9:37). This is very true today. Why? What are we doing to correct the situation? What do we plan to do about it?

Just before ascending to heaven, Jesus told His apostles to preach the gospel to all the world. The book of Acts tells us that they did. In his letters Paul could say that the gospel had been preached to the whole world in that generation. “But I say, Did they not hear? Yea, verily, their sound went out into all the earth, and their words unto the ends of the world” (Rom. 10:18); “the gospel which ye heard, which was preached in all creation under heaven” (Col. 1:23).

But how are we doing today? Is the gospel being preached in all the world in our generation? If not, how concerned are we?

I don’t claim to be an authority on the subject of world evangelism, but I do speak with the voice of experience. I first went to Mexico June 20, 1945 – forty-one years ago – and have continued to be involved in the Spanish work until the present, having been permitted by God’s kind providence to preach in twelve Spanish-speaking countries, and hope to continue to preach in these and still others. Now, perhaps more than ever, these fields are white unto the harvest. The Lord is opening doors for us faster than we can enter them. There is an urgent need for more workers in this field Oust as there is in all other foreign fields, and even in many parts of our own country).

We need to stimulate more thought on world evangelism. We need to do more preaching and writing on the subject and be more involved in it. More preachers – especially young preachers – should become increasingly determined to take the gospel to other countries. The Spanish work has never been more encouraging and rewarding than now, and I imagine the same can be said about other fields. I certainly hope this article will spark the interest of some preachers, young or old, who would like to consider such work.

First Century Preachers “Went”

We must speak as the Bible speaks. We must learn about the work of an evangelist from the New Testament evangelists, and then preach and practice this evangelism – according to the pattern. Jesus didn’t travel very far because His ministry was to the “lost sheep of the house of Israel.” But the apostles did. Paul “went” and all the New Testament evangelists “went.” They went all over the world.

“From Jerusalem, and round about even unto Illyricum, I have fully preached the gospel of Christ; yea, making it my aim so to preach the gospel, not where Christ was already named” (Rom. 15:19,20). “As I exhorted thee to tarry at Ephesus. . ” (I Tim. 1:3). “For this cause left I thee at Crete. (Tit. 1:5). “Now if Timothy come (to Corinth) . . .” (1 Cor. 16: 10). “But when Silas and Timothy came down from Macedonia. . . ” (Acts 18:5). The book of Acts traces the work of these New Testament evangelists throughout the Roman Empire.

Are we “going” as they did? If not, are we really “speaking where the Scriptures speak”? Is the Book of Acts really a model for us? Do we respect the authority of the Scriptures, and hold the pattern of sound words if we don’t? Are we keeping the church pure if we fail to teach, preach and practice New Testament (worldwide) evangelism? Is it a part of the faith or merely incidental to it? Are we justified before God so long as we faithfully defend the rest of the faith, even though we are weak and neglectful in contending for and practicing New Testament evangelism? Is this doctrine (commandment) less important than other doctrines for which we contend so strongly? Is not “going into all the world” a very basic part of the faith? Just how sound and scriptural are we if we downplay or ignore its importance?

Why Do So Few Go Into Foreign Fields?

Are few preachers going into foreign fields because it’s so hard to leave family, friends, native language and culture, and familiar surroundings? What do we have in mind when we preach Sunday after Sunday about sacrificing for the cause of Christ? When we tell people to be strong and take up their cross and follow Jesus, do we ever think about applying this to ourselves regarding our duty to go into all the world?

It’s a fact that just about anywhere we go when we leave the U.S.A. is “down.” Many countries are more backward. They don’t have many of the conveniences that we take for granted in this country. Those who go into various foreign countries find inferior merchandise, inferior medical attention, inferior education, even less law and order, and less sanitation (not to say downright filth in some places).

This great country of ours has advanced far ahead of most of the rest of the world. In many ways it is by far the greatest nation on earth. Nor should Americans feel guilty about being prosperous; God has richly blessed this nation. Some of the basic principles on which this country was built and continues to function come right out of the Word of God. These have produced material abundance, along with numerous other blessings.

But if we are so attached to our country, and especially to our high living standard, that we refuse to take the gospel to other nations, we will have to answer to God for it. We must never let God’s blessings keep us from serving Him effectively. We often preach 1 Timothy 6:6-10 to the brethren, but we must be sure to apply it to ourselves also. Preachers can fall into the snare Paul discusses in this text.

When we compare America with many other nations, it’s a veritable “fantasy land.” Leaving “all this” to go to some other countries is like leaving paradise. But we need to take a careful look at those sermons we preach about the danger of sacrificing future well-being for present comfort and satisfaction.

We love to sing “Anywhere He leads me I will gladly go.” Do we mean “so long as it is somewhere in the U.S.A. -preferably in the South, and not too far from our family”? This country makes up about six per cent of the world’s population. But I would imagine that at least around 95 percent or more of all American gospel preachers are preaching in this country. Furthermore, many people across the northern States in this country aren’t hearing too much gospel preaching.

When we sing “Lord, send me,” do we mean “Send me to some well-established church that can pay a good salary and preferably one that is close to my wife’s relatives, or close to our children and grandchildren, or close to a university?” Does the place have to have a good golf course or be near good fishing and hunting? Is the Lord obligated to “send” us to a place that has good shopping malls? And with a moderate climate?

Incidentally, preachers and their wives must be concerned about the education of their children, and beyond doubt this has kept many from seriously considering foreign fields. But in view of the extreme danger caused by the acceptance of secular humanism in our schools, this country is not exactly the ideal place for educating our children. So preachers and their families would do well to reexamine this factor.

“Located Preachers,” “Local Work”

Perhaps one of the most serious mistakes we preachers make is in thinking that one option we have is simply to be “local preachers” in the spot of our choice in the U.S.A. Where do we learn this? Which passages of Scripture lead us to believe that we can be just “local preachers” in our native land, devoting all or nearly all our time to preaching and teaching in a given community (even though the gospel has been preached there for many years, even generations), without being seriously involved in getting the gospel into other areas of the world where Christ has not been preached?

All the preachers we read about in the New Testament were “located preachers,” but we need to take a careful look at where they were located! The “church . . . in Jerusalem . . . sent forth Paul and Barnabas as far As Antioch. . . even for a whole year they were gathered together with the church, and taught much people” (Acts 11:22,26). They were “located” for a year in Antioch of Syria. Paul “dwelt (in Corinth) a year and six months, teaching the word of God among them” (Acts 18:11). “By the space of three years (while with you in Ephesus) I ceased not to admonish every one night and day with tears” (Acts 20:31).

We’ve already mentioned Titus in Crete, Timothy in Ephesus, and how many times have we traced the journeys of Paul and other evangelists in the book of Acts? Remember, New Testament evangelists went all over the Roman Empire preaching the gospel. They were “located preachers” – but did they spend their entire lives preaching in their native countries? They were “located” all over the Roman Empire!

There are a number of faithful gospel preachers from this country who are “located” now in Japan, Germany, South Africa, England, Norway, etc. They’re doing “local” work, and extending their gospel ministry as far as they can in the countries where they are “located.”

If we speak as the Bible speaks, we will make no distinction between “local preachers” and other preachers. The Bible makes no such distinction. Nor will we find the word “missionary” in the Bible. This term, as used by sectarians and liberal brethren, is foreign to Bible terminology. We need to get our thinking straight on this point: The Bible does not talk about “missionaries” and the other preachers who remain in their native land doing “local work. ” So why do we? A preacher is an evangelist – a minister of the gospel – and should preach the Word as extensively as possible!

Time and time again we hear or read the comment (criticism) that “located preachers” are doing the work of elders. It is true that the work of elders and the work of preachers overlap. But is it not an undeniable fact that a great deal of what is done by preachers in “local work” could be (and should be) done by elders and other men in the congregation – even in the pulpit and class rooms -thus enabling preachers to concentrate more time and energy in getting the gospel to those who haven’t heard, and in building up smaller congregations (setting in order the things that are lacking)?

What preachers do in “local work” is extremely important. But wouldn’t we be far more scriptural in doing the work of evangelists and in fulfilling our ministry if we insisted that the elders and other brethren shoulder more of the load locally and send us out more often into areas where Christ has not been preached or where the cause is weak? Many elders and preachers understand this – and practice it! Many elders realize that not only they themselves but also other men in the congregation should be more active in doing more preaching, teaching and personal work, and not only “let” the preacher go into destitute fields, but gladly provide the financial assistance (fellowship) he needs in order to go.

Every gospel preacher is privileged, obligated and should be determined to take the gospel as far as he possibly can, just as Paul did (Rom. 15:19). He should be deeply interested in places where the gospel has never gone, and in places where the cause is barely getting started and needs much attention. Every gospel preacher should be ready and willing to go into such places. And every congregation should be willing to send preachers, to the fullest extent of its ability.

If a man doesn’t want to go, if he isn’t interested in preaching in a foreign field, or in more neglected areas in our country, he has the wrong attitude about preaching. No church should want him for a “local preacher” if this is the attitude. On the other hand, if a congregation that pays his salary doesn’t want to send him (or doesn’t even want to “release him from his duties to the local church” so someone else can send him), then it is wrong, and is in need of teaching and admonition. A preacher who finds himself with such a church has an obligation to preach on the scriptural work of elders and preachers, speaking where the Bible speaks and remaining silent where the Bible is silent. Such a situation should be corrected, just as any other error should be corrected.

“You Don’t Have To Get Seasick”

Did you hear anyone say, “Well you don’t have to get seasick to preach the gospel”? Or, “we have lots of unconverted folks (‘heathen’) right here at home”? Just what are such expressions supposed to mean? Exactly which preachers are obligated to take the gospel into destitute fields, and which ones are at liberty to stay with well-established congregations all their lives and never go? How is this to be decided? Is any gospel preacher really obligated to go overseas? Or to Canada or Mexico? Or into the Northern States of this country where very few or no congregations exist?

Would it be all right if every preacher in this country stayed his entire preaching life with well-established congregations and never participated in foreign evangelism? If so, how is world evangelism to be carried out? In other words, does any preacher really have to “go”? Do we fully meet our obligations by just doing “local work” and holding meetings with other congregations that have been hearing “the best preachers in the brotherhood for nigh on to forty years”?

“If thou put the brethren in mind of these things, thou shalt be a good minister of Christ Jesus” (1 Tim. 4:6). There is no argument here. Gospel preachers must teach the brethren; we preach the whole counsel of God to His people, as well as to the world. There is a constant battle over worldliness, doctrinal softness, institutionalism, all forms of Calvinism and Neo-Calvinism, humanism, divorce and remarriage heresies, etc. The work being done by a large number of “local preachers” in this country is extremely important and effective! Absolutely nothing is being said here to detract from this.

Let one thing be very clear: this article has nothing to do with the right of a church to have a located preacher, nor the right of a preacher to locate with a church. This question has always seemed to me to be without much substance, since everybody has to be located somewhere! Whether it’s for a day, a week, a month, a year or many years is beside the point. What in the world is a “dislocated” preacher anyway? New Testament evangelists were located preachers. We know this is so because the Bible tells us where they were located. American preachers working overseas are located preachers. Many of them have lived in the same place for years. They have homes. Some of them have educated their children in these countries.

So that’s not the question. What we’re getting at is the need for us to be sure we are not just working with congregations (in local work and in meetings) that are well-established and doing what the elders and others could be and should be doing, and failing to launch out into neglected fields.

We must strongly emphasize what Paul told Titus (1:9-11) about the work of elders: “holding to the faithful word . . . that he may be able both to exhort in the sound doctrine, and to convict the gainsayers. For there are many unruly men . . . whose mouths must be stopped.” To the extent that elders do this (and meet their responsibilities in general) and free the preachers to work more in unevangelized areas, to that extent the churches will grow stronger, spiritually, and then numerically, and far greater progress will be made in evangelizing the world.

A sound congregation with a strong eldership will not “fail apart” when it sends the preacher into some destitute field for a few weeks or months (or even years).

“But Some Do Go Into Foreign Fields”

Very true! but the fact that some do go means simply that these men are fulfilling their responsibility. They are not going for other preachers. So this has nothing to do with the individual responsibility of all other preachers. In the first place, there are very few in foreign fields; proportionately, there are very few across the northern States. Nor are there large numbers of preachers who go into foreign or other destitute fields even for shorter periods of time.

But if there were ever so many, this wouldn’t lessen the responsibility of others. Every preacher is an evangelist. The Bible makes no distinction between the two terms. An evangelist certainly teaches the brethren, but he also does all he can to get the gospel to the lost, here at home and in other countries. He is to “go” – as far and as often as he possibly can, according to circumstances and opportunities.

“For if the readiness is there, it is acceptable according as a man hath” (2 Cor. 8:12) – this will apply to our work, as well as to our giving. God doesn’t require a blind man to do work that requires sight. Some preachers are more limited than others with regard to how much “going” they can do. Poor health limits some. Many preachers work at secular work to support their families, and are not as free to travel as those who are supported by the church. But all of us, as we’re able, must allow the Lord of harvest to send us into His harvest throughout the world. We must take the gospel to the lost and work to build up smaller congregations.

No one should ever try to tell us exactly where we should go, or when, or how far, or how often, or how long to stay. But “go” we must!

We will all give account of our stewardship one of these days. And we should be sure that we shall have ordered this ministry according to the will of God – in keeping with the blessings and opportunities he has given to us. In this as in everything else we should say, “Thy will and not mine be done.”

Guardian of Truth XXX: 16, pp. 490-491, 500-501
August 21, 1986