The Modern ‘Charismatic Revival’

By Daniel H. King

Still another fatal flaw in the thinking of charismatics is the tendency they have of considering themselves more “spiritual” than others. Earlier we spoke of the feeling of spiritual superiority many have as the result of the conviction that they receive direct guidance and communication from God. They also consider themselves more spiritually 4 6mature. ” I have had them advise me that my ministry was missing one of the most important elements it could possess: I had not prayed for and received a miraculous anointing of the Spirit. To them all people who are in a similar circumstance are lacking this important ingredient for spiritual maturity. To their way of thinking one who accepts the Bible alone as his guidebook for daily living and uses it to answer every spiritual question is missing some important element of growth, when, according to Paul, this was the very state to which first-century Christians were to aspire (1 Cor. 12:31; 13:12-13).

What this assumes Is that those who possess miraculous gifts of the Spirit are necessarily mature spiritually. The truth is that this was not even so in the days when miraculous powers were available to men. The church at Corinth possessed gifts in abundance as I Corinthians chapters 12 through 14 show. Yet Paul said of them that they were at a pitifully elementary stage of growth: “And 1, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal, as unto babes in Christ. I fed you with milk, not with meat; for ye were not yet able to bear it: nay, not even now are ye able; for ye are yet carnal . . . ” (1 Cor. 3:1-3). Possession of gifts had absolutely nothing to do with spiritual maturity. Many of those who received them in the first century were given them at the outset of their Christian lives, before they had opportunity to grow any at all (witness, for example, the case of Cornelius and his household). Gifts were given by God either directly or through his messengers; they were never earned. They were bestowed not merited. They were called “gifts” (charismata), and by their very nature they were received for reasons other than personal worth or worthiness. Neither did one receive them at the culmination of a process of growth and development as a sign or mark of the same. They were given chiefly for two reasons: first, in order to convince the worldling of the authenticity of Christianity; and, second, to edify the church in her newfound faith. As Paul put it, “Tongues are for a sign, not to them that believe, but to the unbelieving: but prophesying is for a sign, not to the unbelieving, but to them that believe” (1 Cor. 14:22). Neither of these things has anything whatever to do with an already-attained maturity. The latter situation, though, assumed that maturity needed yet to be arrived at.

When the”crop” yielded by the presence of the Spirit in one’s life is described by the apostle Paul (Galatians 5), it is discussed almost entirely in terms of personal relations and qualities of character. The results of the “flesh” are, over half of them, sins of rivalry, jealously and hatred. Yet these were the very sins the Corinthians were guilty of in spite of their possession of and intense interest in spiritual gifts. There ought to be a message here for the modern charismatic! If possession of gifts had no connection with maturity in Christ then, it would certainly have little connection today. But the desire for them, from Paul’s own viewpoint, shows an immature desire to return to the church’s infancy (1 Cor. 13:8-11). It is much like a five year old, physically ready to go to school, who yet wishes to have his bottle. Time and circumstances require that things of this sort be left behind!

One of the most devastating flaws of this movement is its inability to produce miracles of the type performed by Jesus and the early apostles. It is one thing to claim healing in the case of a person whose problem has been self-diagnosed as “cancer.” It is another to walk into a cancer ward and raise up a man who lies at death’s very door, his body filled with the disease and daily tortured by its attendant pain. The former is the type that we usually hear about. The latter would be the sort that Christ’s apostles would have performed. The difference is obvious, not only in this case but also in the total absence of miracles which have been or can be verified by those qualified to pronounce them to be such. Of one of the miracles which was performed by Peter the book of Acts says, “And seeing the man that was healed standing with them, they could say nothing against it. But when they had commanded them to go aside out of the council, they conferred among themselves, saying, What shall we do to these men? for that indeed a notable miracle hath been wrought through them, is manifest to all that dwell in Jerusalem; and we cannot deny it” (Acts 4:14-16). Where are the miracles of this sort in the modem charismatic movement? Where have they occurred? Where is the city wherein are leaders so astounded by the miracles thus performed that they “cannot deny” them? I suggest to the reader that the very inability to produce such a place and comparable miracles is proof positive that the modern charismatic movement is bereft of the power it claims to possess. We can admit that in those cases where illnesses are purely imagined (psychosomatic) there have been actual healings. In such instances the conviction that one is healed is really the only important thing, never mind the source. In addition, physicians have long held that the state of the mind has a great deal to do with whether the body will be able to heal itself in any given circumstance. Too, God answers prayer. We believe that God grants His faithful children their heartfelt needs when they are in accord with His will (see 1 Jn. 5:14). This might involve the healing of the body of some disease or malady. But, once more, this is a far cry from the miracles of Christ and the apostles! And the failure to appreciate this difference has led to many of the mistaken notions which are so popular among charismatics today.

Jesus healed a man with a withered hand. He walked on water and turned water into wine. He commanded the winds and the waves to be quiet and they obeyed His word. He multiplied loaves and fishes. He and His apostles raised the dead. Paul struck one man with blindness. Yet miracles of this kind just do not happen among modern charismatics. Many of those that do are rather to be classed as “magic” than miracle, the kind of antics you see in a carnival sideshow. For example, one fellow claims the ability to read through his empty eye-socket (one eye is missing). He tapes the other eye shut and claims the Holy Spirit gives him the power to read through the empty socket. When a magician was called in to comment by a local TV station, he called it an “old trick” and said that he was reading down the edge of his nose under the tape through the good eye. He challenged the “miracle-worker” to allow him to tape up the good eye. The challenge was not accepted!

Large sums of money have been offered in some cities for one proven case of a miracle. Those sums have always gone unclaimed and uncollected. Why? If these “miracles” are of the undeniable variety like those of Jesus and the apostles were (Jn. 3:2; 9:32; Acts 4:14-16), where is the incontestable proof of them (see Acts 1:3). We will leave it to the reader to decide.

One of the most damaging flaws of charismatism is its handling of the Bible. A movement which claims to be Biblebased must treat the Bible with absolute respect and must handle it properly (“handling aright the word of truth,” 2 Tim. 2:15). Abuse of the Scriptures is a sure sign of false doctrine and false teachers: “We have renounced the hidden things of shame, not walking in craftiness, nor handling the word of God deceitfully; but by the manifestation of the truth commending ourselves to every man’s conscience in the sight of God” (2 Cor. 4:2). In addition to passages abused to which we have already called the reader’s attention, we would like to add a couple of others as illustrative of this point.

Acts chapter I and 2 are important in the minds of charismatic preachers for obvious reasons. But, in their hands, these have become mere proof texts. Those things distinctively believed by Pentecostals and others related to this movement which are claimed to derive from these two chapters are read into rather than out of them. In the first place, they suggest that the baptism of the Holy Spirit was intended for everyone and was subsequently bestowed upon everyone mentioned in Acts 1, i.e. the one hundred and twenty (v. 15). But the promise of Jesus was never made to the one hundred and twenty. It was made to the apostles and to them alone: it was they to whom He spoke (v. 2); it was they whom He gathered for the purpose of relating the promise (v. 6); and it was they to whom the promise was made (v. 8).

When the one hundred and twenty gathered in the upper room, it was still the apostles who were the main characters (vv 13-14). Peter stood to address the assembly and one was chosen to take the place of Judas in the apostolic band, rounding the number out once more to twelve. At the very conclusion of the chapter the text reads that Matthias “was numbered with the eleven apostles” (v. 26). When the next chapter begins, charismatics assume that the one hundred twenty were still present in the upper room and that they were all baptized with the Holy Spirit and all spoke with tongues. But the text proves otherwise. It begins (2: 1), “And when the day of Pentecost was now come, they were all together in one place The question which arises is, who are the “they” of the text? Are they the 120 or the 12 apostles? The rules of grammar suggest that, unless some overwhelming contextual consideration is present, the last acceptable antecedent (in this case “the eleven apostles”) must be taken as its explanation. This follows not only from the evidence of Acts 1:26, but also from Acts 2:14 and 37. The only ones said to have been included in the events of Pentecost are the twelve apostles. Morever, the most likely place where these things occurred is the temple courtyard, since they “continued steadfastly in the temple” (2:46). An upper room of a private dwelling would have been insufficient for a gathering of more than 3000 people (2:41); and since there is no evidence that the upper room was the place, it is unfair to the text to insert it here.

The charismatic movement misunderstands the baptism of the Holy Spirit and so is forced to treat these and other Scriptures in such a way as to allow for their forced interpretations of it. God intended it merely as a sign, first to the Jew (Acts 2), then to the Gentile (Acts 10) that the doors of the kingdom of heaven were open to all. Note that in both cases where it takes place it is connected inextricably with the conversion of men to Christ and their being added to the church. Pentecost represented the beginning of the church and the conversion of the household of Cornelius represented the first Gentile household to be allowed membership. When Paul later spoke of baptism he numbered only “one” on God’s list (Eph.4:5), a definite indication that Holy Spirit baptism had fulfilled its intended purpose of signaling the willingness of God to accept men into his church and no longer in evidence. If it had still been around then Paul could not have called water baptism the “one baptism.”

Chapter 13 of First Corinthians represents the gifts of the Spirit as of limited duration and so has also been a target of some corrective surgery: “Love never faileth: but whether there be prophecies, they shall be done away; whether they be tongues, they shall cease; whether there be knowledge (divinely bestowed), it shall be done away” (1 Cor. 13:8). Paul speaks of prophecy and revelation as merely partial (“in part:”. And so it was. Revelations were bestowed at particular times and places, just as the individual letters, gospels, and the Acts were given or sent to particular groups or churches. But Paul promises that when “that which is perfect (teleion) is come, that which is in part shall be done away” (v.10). Charismatics interpret “that which is perfect” as being Christ. But the gender of the noun (in Greek) is neuter, as evidenced by the translation “that which.” If Christ were intended it would read “he who” is perfect. Some say it is the Second Coming that is meant. But that would be feminine in Greek (parousia, “coming” is feminine gender) and would read (literally) “she who.” Actually neither is intended by Paul.

The word “perfect” is used twice in the New Testament in ways that help us understand its use here. In Colossians 1:28 Paul hopes that he may “present every man perfect (teleion) in Christ.” He speaks here of a stage of development that leaves childish things behind (cf. Heb. 5:12-14; 1 Pet. 2:1-2; etc.). This bears a clear resemblance of 1 Corinthians 13. We refer to this “perfection” as maturity. Also, in James 1:25, the writer talks about “the perfect (teleion) law, the law of liberty.” In this place he describes the Word of God as “perfect,” as needing no additions or alterations to bring it to a state where it can be wholly useful. It is that which, in the final analysis, must be brought into play to make men and women “perfect in Christ.” When revealed completely is that which was to replace the gifts of Corinth and Pentecost, as Paul goes on to explain: “When I was a child, I spake as a child, I felt as a child, I thought as a child: now that I am become a man, I have put away childish things. For now we see in a mirror, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know fully even as also I was fully known” (vv.11-12).

Paul sees as rudimentary that stage in the church’s development wherein she depended upon spiritual gifts to supply her with the knowledge of Christ and His will. The time would be when it would be “face to face.” Charismatics have taken this to mean that the return of Christ will bring about a situation where man will look into the very face of God and have knowledge of him as close friends do. That of course will be the case (see Rev. 21:3), but it is not what 1 Corinthians 13 is saying.

This identical expression is found also in many places in the Old Testament (Gen. 32:30; Num. 14:14; Deut. 5:4; 34:10). In those texts it is said that God is seen “face to face” by His people or by a particular messenger (as Moses). Yet it was not meant to be taken literally. As Exodus 33:20 further explains: “Thou canst not see my face; for man shall not see me and live.” Or, as John put it (Jn. 1:18): “No man hath seen God at any time. So then what does this expression mean? It portrays a familiarity enjoyed through the experience of divine revelation. Moses did not literally see the face of God. No man could see the face of God and live. Howbeit God made Himself familiar to Moses by constant association with him in His frequent revelations to the great Lawgiver and prophet. So Moses came to know God through divine revelation – so much so that it came to be described in Scripture as a “face to face” intimacy.

Similarly, Paul uses this metaphorical figure to express the state of things when the church reached spiritual maturity and was given the fulness of God’s word, the completed canon of Scripture. At that time, when the apostles and prophets finished their work of revealing the totality of God’s truth (see Jn. 16:13-14), man would enjoy a familiarity with God that he had never known before. Something greater than what Moses had enjoyed. Even charismatics agree that the canon of Scripture is closed and nothing new can be added. No new book written by man today can qualify to be inserted among the sacred books of Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Paul or any of the rest of that first generation of spiritually gifted men. But if charismatism. were taken to its logical conclusion it would be forced to allow that any one of their “prophets” could write such a book! The very fact that they make no pretension to this ability is evidence aplenty that they recognize a difference between that first generation of charismatics and the charismatic revivalism of today.

One further flaw exists in the thinking of this movement to which we would like to draw the reader’s attention. This is its tendency to lead its adherents to compromise with the gravest of effors. One can see evidence of this in the meetings held by advocates of charismatism. People from religious movements which are as far apart doctrinally as day and night share the same platforms, embrace one another, and cooperate together in unified efforts. They declare this to be evidence of the “unity of the Spirit” (Eph. 4:3), but this cannot be. It can, however, be easily explained. Those who share comparable experiences are taken to be just as right with God, iffegardless of doctrinal stance, for one simple reason: to deny the next fellow’s experience would leave oneself open to the same denial by others! “If the other fellow’s experience is not genuine, then maybe people will think mine is not!”

The result has been a total divorcement of the “unity of the Spirit” from the “Spirit of Truth” (Jn. 16:13). They utterly ignore what the Spirit of Truth has revealed on a variety of questions that are of importance in the spiritual realm for the sake of unity in compromise. They are thus left with a dilemma. Either: (1) The Spirit of God is in contradiction with Himself; or, (2) The modern charismatic revival is in contradiction with the Truth which the Spirit revealed and thus the spirit which they possess is not the Spirit of God. John warned us to try the spirits because mani false prophets are gone out into the world (1 Jn. 4:1-6). Regrettably, we must conclude that the second alternative offered above is the one which suits the case and that the modem charismatic is not under the influence of God’s Spirit but of some other.

Conclusion

In this study we have tried to present the truth of God in love. For some people it will be impossible to believe that, since anyone who questions their religious beliefs or experiences is immediately labelled ungracious and unkind. As Paul himself said it, “Am I become your enemy by telling you the truth?” (Gal. 4:16). But if you are a charismatic, then let me say something to you flatly: I have written this because I love you and am concerned about your soul and its ultimate destination. This material is the result of many weeks of laborious research, writing and rewriting. I will not make one penny from it. It will come to you free of charge. It will cost me and others time and effort and money to make it available to you. But if you will prayerfully and objectively read it, then it will have been worth our efforts – and one of two things will happen. Either you will change your mind about the modem charismatic movement, or you will want to prove us wrong.

If the latter is the case then why not do it. We stand ready to hear the evidence that may be offered on behalf of this or any other religious stance. We will defend our views through any medium available to us: in writing, in public debate, etc. But if we are wrong then we are prepared to change. We stand willing to do either or both, as the occasion allows.

But if you have changed your views on the charismatic movement, then why not join with us in the churches of Christ in our attempt to revive what really needs reviving about the church. We are attempting to restore the creed, worship, work, and organization of the early church. In short, we are working toward a restoration of New Testament Christianity. Why not help us?

Guardian of Truth XXVIII: 5, pp. 133-134, 150-151
March 1, 1984

A Few Sobering Thoughts About Liquor

By Dudley Ross

Are you aware of the fact that when you drive down the highways of our nation, one out of every ten drivers you meet will be legally drunk? Are you also aware of the fact that there are sixty-eight deaths every day due to drunk drivers involved in automobile accidents? Do you know what the chances are that a drunk driver will be detected by the police and stopped? The governmental statistics say that last year the chances that a drunk driver would be stopped and arrested by a policeman was one in a thousand. The figures also show that eighty per cent of the deaths of teenagers in our country are caused by drunken drivers. Now, here is also a cheery thought – if you are on the road in your car, figure the group of ten cars nearest you and think that one of them is drunk. Then consider the group of ten cars you meet and one of them is being driven by a drunk. What does that do to your chances of surviving the trip to visit the family or to attend a meeting?

“But they also have erred through wine, and through strong drink are out of the way, the priest and the prophet have erred through strong drink; they err in vision, they stumble in judgment” (Isa. 28:7). If a twentieth century addendum were written, it would add, “and they kill people by the thousands by their liquor.”

Guardian of Truth XXVIII: 5, p. 132
March 1, 1984

Preacher’s Methods (2)

By J.W. McGarvey

The study of the Scriptures by topics is the third method which I have named. While prosecuting the methods already mentioned, a general knowledge of leading topics will have been obtained; but the preacher should never be satisfied with a general knowledge of any topic treated in the Bible. Detached pieces of information are never satisfying, and they are very likely to prove misleading. Complete, systematic and exact information is what our calling demands, and this we must as soon as possible acquire.

I know of no method by which such a knowledge of topics can be acquired less laborious than the following: First, by means of your recollection from former readings, and by use of your Concordance, gather up all the passages which treat of the subject in hand, or which throw any light upon it. Second, classify these passages according to the different branches of the subject with which they are connected. The branches of the subject are often known in a general way before the investigation begins. They have come into notice by inquiries of your own mind, or they have been made familiar by religious controversy. When the divisions thus suggested are but a part, the passages themselves will suggest the remainder, so that there will seldom appear any difficulty in completely classifying the collected passages and obtaining exhaustive subdivisions of the topic. The next step is to arrange the thoughts and facts under each branch of the subject in some natural order of sequence, and thus obtain a systematic view of it as it stands in the Scriptures. Finally, the parts must be studied with reference to one another and the whole; and the whole must be studied with reference to all its parts. When this is done you are prepared, and not till then, to write or speak on the subject or any of its parts with the assurance of one who understands fully what he proposes to say.

This is a laborious process. It is one which only the few have the industry to pursue; but the few who do pursue it are the masters in Israel, they are the teachers of teachers; while those who lack this industry must remain contented with very imperfect knowledge, and must obtain their knowledge in the main at second-hand. I suppose myself to be addressing men who wish to rank with the former of these two classes. It may be well to add, however, that a young preacher, in the beginning of his ministry must necessarily discuss some subject before he can have had time and opportunity for this exhaustive study; but all such should remember that this necessity is one of the disabilities of inexperience which must be put away as soon as possible.

In the last place, I am to speak of studying the Scriptures devotionally. The preacher who has not a devotional spirit, lacks the chief elements of power with the people both in the pulpit and out of it. He is utterly incapable of cultivating a devotional spirit in his hearers; and without this the entire service of 1he church becomes an empty form. No man who is to lead the people in the way of life can afford to neglect this element of the Christian character, this source of religious enjoyment, this element of pulpit power. Apart from frequent prayer and much meditation, there is no way to cultivate this spirit except by the thoughtful reading of those portions of Scripture which are especially designed to awaken devotional sentiments. The preacher, therefore, should study these portions a great deal. They should be in his hand every day.

When we speak of devotional parts of the Scriptures, the mind turns at once to the book of Psalms; for in it are collected the richest poetic effusions of pious hearts throughout the period of Jewish inspiration, from Moses to the poets of Babylonian captivity. But only a certain portion of these is well adapted to the cultivation of devotion. Some of them are descriptive, some didactic, and a few are vindictive, giving utterance to that sentiment of the Mosaic law which allowed the demand of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. By frequent reading of all the Psalms, the preacher will make himself acquainted with those which contain pure devotional feeling according to the Christian standard, and these should be his sources of inspiration.

But besides the Psalms, there are many passages in Job, in Ecclesiastes, in Proverbs, in the prophets, and even in the historical books of the Old Testament, the study of which lifts up the soul to the loftiest sentiments, while in the New Testament, which contains not a single book of poetry, there are passages in the Gospel, in Acts, in the Epistles, and in the Apocalypse, fully equal to the most sublime poetry for filling the soul with every holy emotion. The preacher, while studying the Scriptures historically, by books and by topics, will have found all these passages. He should mark them as he discovers them, and should subsequently revert to them, for devotional reading until both their contents and their places in the book became familiar to him.

In order to the best effort upon our hearts, our devotional study should not consist in a mere dreamy reading of the parts referred to; for in this way the impression made is likely to be shallow and transitory. We should study these passages exegetically, searching into the significance of every figure employed, and trying to paint before imagination’s eye every image projected by the writer. If we read, “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want,” we do not feel full force of the metaphor until we learn all about the work of a Palestine shepherd, as it is alluded to throughout this Psalm, and as it is literally described by Jesus in the tenth chapter of John. So of all the metaphors, tropes and historical allusions throughout the poetry of the Bible.

But the best effects of devotional study will still lie beyond our reach, if we do not commit many of these inspiring passages to memory, so that we can meditate upon them in the night watches, call them up amid our labors and our journeyings, and make them subjects of conversation when the Bible is not at hand. It is in this way that the word of God is to dwell in us richly in all wisdom. If you will inquire you will find it almost universally true of men and women eminent for piety, that their memories were vast storehouses for the most precious portions of God’s Holy Book.

As a kind of concluding note I must append to this part of my lecture the remark, that in all of our study of the Scriptures we must constantly consult the original if we can, and that we must by all means use the best version. The Canterbury revision of the New Testament should now totally supplant the King James version, not only because it is a great improvement as a version, but because it is the only representative in English of the corrected Greek text. A man is not safe in venturing upon the exegesis of a single passage by the aid of the old version until he shall have compared it carefully with the new; and rather than be continually making these comparisons, it is better to at once adopt the new into exclusive use.

Guardian of Truth XXVIII: 5, pp. 135-136
March 1, 1984

Have Ye Not Read?

By Hoyt Houchen

Question: Is it Scriptural for a local church of Christ to have a large sum of money in the treasury (say $100, 000 or more), deposited in a bank or land savings and loan association and earning interest, instead of helping those many preachers who requested support that they may be able to spread God’s Word? I may add that the money was and is not needed by the church at the present or future times.

Reply: God is not pleased with a situation such as the one described in the question. It is unscriptural. The New Testament teaches that Christians are to give their money upon the first day of the week, as they have prospered, to be used in the Lord’s work (I Cor. 16:1,2). In the “ample of the Corinthians, the money placed in store was to meet a special need – that of the poor saints in Jerusalem. This was a treasury (from Greek word thesaurizo which means “in store,” W.E. Vine, Expository Dictionary of N.T. Words, Vol. 4, p. 77). It is not wrong for the church to have a treasury, for the Scriptures authorize it. Nor is it wrong for a local church to have a large sum of money in the treasury (a bank where the money is in safe keeping) provided it is there for a present or future specific need. But for brethren who are supposed to love the Lord and be dedicated to His Cause to allow a huge sum of money to lie dormant, only to earn interest and not be used in the Lord’s work, is inexcusable.

The Bible teaches that Christians are to engage in honorable occupations or professions that they may support the work of the church, support their families and meet other necessities of life (see Eph. 4:28; 1 Tim. 5:8 etc.) They are to give from the heart liberally and cheerfully upon the first day of the week, that the work of the local church can be done (2 Cor. 9:6,7). When they contribute their hard earned money, they have every right to expect that it be used for the work of the Lord by those who are entrusted with it.

Scores of faithful and worthy gospel preachers are in need of financial support. There is hardly a week that goes by that we do not receive an appeal for help from such preachers. It is shameful that some of these men must work with their hands – “make tents” for a living or to supplement their income because of a lack of financial assistance from brethren. Brethren who are responsible for such an existing situation as referred to by our querist, will have to answer to God at the judgment. They are not properly discharging their obligations as faithful stewards. They fail to consider, that the money contributed upon the first day of the week by Christians, is not their money to sit upon, but it is the Lord’s money to be used. Preachers, like others, can work at other jobs for their support; but there is no reason why they must do so. when there are churches financially able to support them.

Paul labored with his hands while at Corinth, not taking financial support from those brethren, but not because he did not have the right for such support; for in this case he waived this right so that he would not be suspected of seeking gain (1 Cor. 9:12). Paul upheld the right of those who labor in the gospel to be remunerated for their work and gave examples in 1 Corinthians 9: the soldier who receives pay for his services, he who plants a vineyard and eats the fruit from it and the one who feeds the flock and eats the milk from it (v. 7). He reminded them of what is said in the law of Moses: “Thou shalt not muzzle the ox when he treadeth out the corn” (v. 9). He asked, “If we sowed unto you spiritual things, is it a great matter if we shall reap your carnal things?” (v. 11). Then he sums up this teaching in verse 14: “Even so did the Lord ordain that they that proclaim the gospel should live of the gospel.” Brethren who have any doubts about gospel preachers being supported by brethren would do well to read and ponder upon 1 Corinthians 9:1-8. Paul wrote in his second letter to the church at Corinth, “I robbed other churches, taking wages from them” (2 Cor. 11:8). He later wrote to Timothy: “The laborer is worthy of his hire” (1 Tim. 5:18). The church at Philippi had fellowship with Paul in the preaching of the gospel (Phil. 4:15,16).

Brethren who allow large amounts of the Lord’s money to accumulate and sit idle with no present or future plans, and with the many gospel preachers who need to be supported, should be ashamed. We are afraid that some brethren will lose their souls for such action and neglect. The main business of the church is to preach the gospel, not to accumulate huge bank accounts. I feel keenly about this matter and have great concern. If any who read this column are guilty of such selfishness and indifference, may they repent and use the Lord’s money in the way He intended for it to be used.

Guardian of Truth XXVIII: 5, pp. 132-133
March 1, 1984