Preaching Like Elijah

By Andy Alexander

“Some say John the Baptist; some, Elijah; and others, Jeremiah, or one of the prophets” (Matt. 16:14). This was the answer given by Jesus’ disciples when he asked them, “Who do people say that the Son of Man is?”

As the Jews in the first century watched and listened to Jesus proclaim God’s message, they were reminded of the great prophets of old and of John the Baptist who had just recently been in their midst. In this article we want to focus on the preaching of Elijah and notice some of the similarities between his preaching and our Lord’s preaching that would cause people to think that Elijah had returned.

The Jews would be particularly interested in studying Elijah because in Malachi 4:5 it was prophesied that he would return before the “great and terrible day of the Lord.” His life was filled with many events that would leave an impression upon one’s mind.

While Jesus was not Elijah, Elijah did return as prophesied, but the people did not recognize him (Matt. 17:12). John the Baptist was the forerunner of Christ who fulfilled the prophesy in Malachi, but John was not what many of the Jews were looking for and they rejected him just as they rejected Christ (Matt. 17:12-13).

Concern for Lost Souls

Elijah was sent by God to rebuke Israel for their sins. In doing so, he used various methods of teaching to try to convict them. He issued a public challenge to the prophets of Baal, then ridiculed them as they failed to produce any evidence that Baal existed (1 Kgs. 18:23-24,27).

Why did Elijah call all Israel together to witness the confrontation between himself and the prophets of Baal (1 Kgs. 18:19)? Was he trying to make a name for himself, was he in it for the money, or was he concerned for their souls? There were probably accusations similar to the first two previously mentioned, but Elijah’s real motive was to restore Israel to the Lord God whom they had left (1 Kgs. 18:21).

The people were steeped in sin and error and had become indifferent toward the truth, and Elijah was trying to wake them up. He wanted them to sober up and see their true condition before God and repent before it was too late.

People are like cars in that we need something to drive us or make us go. Cars need gas and our physical bodies need food, but what drives us to teach God’s word to the lost or to try to restore one who has fallen away? If it is not a sincere desire to save the lost, then we will never preach like Elijah.

Willingness to Confront Error

Another trait which Jesus and Elijah had in common was their willingness to confront error. They did not sit back and wait for those in error to come to them. They were aggressive; they went into the strongholds of error and exposed the false religions of their day.

Elijah had some formidable opponents. He was up against a well established religious system that was sanctioned and supported by the government (1 Kgs. 18:19). The wealthy and affluent were aligned with this false system, as well as the majority of the population of Israel.

Baal worship was also an emotional type religion and this would be an appealing factor to many (1 Kgs. 18:26-28). Elijah was a fiery, emotional preacher, but his zeal for the Lord was based on knowledge and not in the unreliable feelings of the heart. Elijah brought no new doctrine to the people. He, like Jeremiah, was trying to get Israel to return to the “old paths” where they could find rest for their souls (Jer. 6:16).

In the confrontation on Mount Carmel with the prophets of Baal, Elijah pressed his case by teaching that there was a right and a wrong religion (1 Kgs. 18:21). One could not be saved in error, even if he sincerely believed it. Public proclaimers of the gospel, as well as private teachers, can preach like Elijah by emphasizing the contradictions in false religions and by appealing to the Scriptures as the final authority for determining the truth on any given practice.

Take baptism, for example. It is essential for salvation or it is not essential for salvation. The Bible teaches that baptism is one of the conditions that man must obey in order to be saved (Acts 2:38). The vast majority of religious denominations today teach that baptism is not essential. Both cannot possibly be right. These two positions are exactly opposite to each other and someone is wrong. Who is right? Press the case and use the Scriptures to prove the point. The honest of heart will accept God’s word and be thankful (Lk. 8:15).

Jesus was an aggressive teacher in his day. In Luke 13:10-17, he challenged the leaders of one of the synagogues on the Sabbath by performing a miracle. He knew that this would generate controversy because of the false teaching that was being promoted by the religious leaders of his day, but his goal was to teach the truth so the people could repent and return to the Lord.

On that day Jesus did not convert the hypocritical leaders of the synagogue, but he did reach the audience that witnessed the event. Listen to the conclusion from Luke 13:17, “And as he said this, all his opponents were being humiliated; and the entire multitude was rejoicing over all the glorious things being done by him.” Neither Christ nor Elijah enjoyed humiliating the false teachers of their day, but they were teaching truth and exposing error in the most effect way possible. People need the truth, even if it hurts (Jn. 8:32).

Dealt Severely With False Teachers

In dealing with the prophets of Baal, Elijah was very careful to destroy every single one of them. “Seize the prophets of Baal; do not let one of them escape,” was his cry when the contrast was over (1 Kgs. 18:40). Then he led the people down to the brook Kishon and proceeded to kill every single one of them (18:40).

Emphasis should be placed on the fact that Elijah did not want any to escape. He knew the harm that just one false teacher could do and wanted to prevent that if at all possible. Since the kingdom of Christ is purely spiritual, we do not use a physical sword to oppose false teachers today. Still, “the weapons of our warfare are . . . mighty through God” and our attitude toward error ought to be just as fervent as Elijah’s (2 Cor. 10:4; Eph. 5:11). The sword of the Spirit must be drawn against every false doctrine and every teacher of false doctrine.

Christ severely rebuked false teachers and issued a grave warning to those who would lead his children astray (Matt. 23; 18:7-11). We cannot improve on the methods of the Master Teacher. We must strive to follow his example in dealing with those who teach error.

Some Christians in our time see no need in rebuking and reproving those who promote error. “Attack error, but leave the teacher alone” is their cry. “Do not call names, someone might be offended.” By teaching the truth and exposing error Jesus offended the hypocritical Jews, but he did not change his methods to fit the “soft-sell” approach that some of his disciples thought would be better (Matt. 15:12-14).

All people who are in denominationalism are in error, and they need to be awakened to that fact. No matter how pious their leaders profess to be, they are leading them into a pit from which there is no return. We must expose the false teacher and save the flock, if at all possible.

The most dangerous rock that one encounters while mowing grass is the rock that is hidden in the grass. The rocks that are exposed to view pose no great threat to the man mowing the grass. So it is with false teachers. When they are exposed for what they are, the man who carelessly follows has no one to blame but himself.

Christ exposed false teachers, Paul identified men who were leading the saints astray, and John called Diotrephes by name in order to warn the saints in the first century (Matt. 23; 1 Tim. 1:20; 2 Tim. 2:17; 3 Jn. 9). Can we be in any better company than this?

Falsely Accused

When Elijah met King Ahab just prior to the contest on Carmel, Ahab accused Elijah of being a troublemaker (1 Kgs. 18:17). Christ was falsely accused of misleading the nation of Israel and teaching that they should not pay taxes to Caesar (Lk. 23:2). Had they just taught that nominal obedience was all that was necessary, refrained from calling names, and made only general application in their teaching, they likely would never have been persecuted. Their teaching cut to the heart of their hearers, and those who were unwilling to repent struck back with viciousness.

Danger of Despair

Sometimes when reading about men like Elijah, we tend to think of them as super-human, but James states that Elijah was a man with a nature like ours (Jas. 5:17). He had feelings and emotions just like we do. After the great contest on Mount Carmel, he ran away scared and asked God to take his life, because he thought that he alone was left to follow God and the authorities were going to execute him anyway (1 Kgs. 19:10).

The case of Elijah reminds us that we must guard our hearts against discouragement. Like Elijah, we may suffer false accusations when we are trying our best to do good. Seemingly unsuccessful attempts to win the people over to righteousness can be frustrating. Even the strongest of Christians can be tempted to throw up their hands and quit at times. This is just another one of the devil’s traps to try to stop the preaching of the gospel. The Pharisees tried to scare Jesus into running for his life, but Jesus saw through evil plans and would not run (Lk. 13:31-32). Even though Jesus seemed to convert only a few, he kept on teaching the truth of the gospel (Matt. 11:20-30).

We must never despair when standing for the truth, because God is on our side (Rom. 8:31). Peter taught the first century disciples to resist the devil and be firm in the faith, “knowing that the same experiences of suffering are being accomplished by your brethren who are in the world. And after you have suffered for a little while, the God of all grace, who called you to his eternal glory in Christ, will himself perfect, confirm, strengthen, and establish you” (1 Pet. 5:9-10).

Beware of Satan’s Traps

Every teacher of the gospel wants to be effective. We know that every person who responds to the call of the gospel is translated out of the power of darkness and into the kingdom of Christ (Col. 1:13). This is a wonderful change and causes even the angels in heaven to rejoice (Lk. 15:7).

However, in striving to be effective we can be lured into adopting carnal means to attract people to Christ. The denominations and liberal churches of Christ succeed in attracting large numbers through carnal methods and this can cause us to lean in that direction. We certainly must guard against the wicked devices of Satan.

Another equally dangerous trap is preaching to soothe the ears of those who need to repent. We are living in the time that Paul described to Timothy when people would heap to themselves teachers after their own lust (2 Tim. 4:34). Paul pointed Timothy to the inspired Scriptures because they equip the man of God for every good work (2 Tim. 3:16-17).

The Scriptures contain the record of preachers like Elijah, Jeremiah, and John the Baptist. Around us today we have examples of men like Robert Schuller, Oral Roberts, and Billy Graham. These modern orators are careful not to reprove or rebuke anyone, except in the most general way.

These men will not engage in a religious debate, would not call names of people or denominations which they regard to be in error, and will not teach by any stretch of the imagination what true repentance is. These things would offend their followers and dent their hefty bank accounts.

These men preach to please the world and the world hears them (1 Jn. 4:5). Some Christians including preachers, elders, and members – have adopted the same strategies that these men use with the result that congregations now exist which are worldly to the core. We must fight with every fiber of our being the attempts of Satan to silence the gospel.

Preaching in today’s world must be like preaching found in God’s word if it is to accomplish what God would have it to accomplish. People of the world and worldly members of the church will not accept plain gospel preaching, but “we must speak, not as pleasing men but God, who examines our hearts” (1 Thess. 2:4).

Guardian of Truth XXXVI: 3, pp. 72-74
February 6, 1992

Soul-Seeking In Seoul

By Daniel R. Vess

During the past two years we have witnessed more doors opening around the world giving us the opportunity to share the gospel with those in other nations. A wonderful opportunity has also presented itself in South Korea.

Several years ago, while preaching in Florida, I had an opportunity to teach the gospel to Paul Lee, an electronics engineer from Seoul, Korea. Only two months after his baptism he moved to Maryland where he fell away from the Lord. For a couple of years he wandered from one denomination to another. Two years ago he returned to his country and wrote me a letter asking for help. He was fed up with denominationalism and wanted to return to the Lord’s church. We began to correspond on a regular basis. Unable to find a sound church, he began to establish one near Seoul. After several months of reading his letters asking for more help, I was no longer content with sending him sermon tapes, tracts, etc. I felt compelled to make a trip in answer to this “Macedonian call” from Korea.

On May 28th I began a two-week visit with Paul Lee to assist him in establishing a church in the Hwagok district of Seoul. Like Paul and Barnabas we wish to report on what God has wrought and “how he has opened a door of faith” to the Korean people.

Establishing the Hwagok Church of Christ

Paul Lee’s efforts to establish a church centered in Anyong City, thirty miles south of Seoul where he works. He used his office building as a place of worship. Since this was a business district, we realized the church could not be very effective at this location.

In search of an alternative, we set out one afternoon to visit local real estate brokers about renting a store front. However, renting in Korea is based on a totally different concept than in the U.S. Koreans must put up a large deposit of about $40,000 to rent a simple apartment. The owner invests the money and his interest is the rent. Your deposit is returned when you leave the apartment. The best deal we could find was a 20′ by 20′ basement room for a $20,000 deposit. This would of course be unrealistic at this time.

With this in mind we decided to concentrate our efforts out of Paul Lee’s home in the Hwagok district of Seoul. Unfortunately this didn’t solve all of our problems. The Hwagok district is densely populated, the streets are teeming with people. As a result of such close public existence, Koreans are very private when it comes to their homes. Koreans feel that their walled homes are their only refuge.

Therefore, it is considered taboo to have any public gathering in a home.

Keeping these things in mind, but not letting them deter us further, we set out to teach the gospel to Koreans. Before our first Sunday worship service, we sent out 500 flyers advertizing our location, times of services, and times of Bible classes throughout the week. In addition, we posted signs about the church and classes. Even while we were posting signs people would stop to read them. We posted signs in the gate and wall in front of Paul Lee’s home. Hundreds of people walked past daily and almost everyone would either stop or slow down to read the signs.

Each night we stood at the open gate in front of Paul Lee’s home to encourage people to come in and study. Hundreds of people would walk by. Although only one man came into the house to study with us, several people studied with us briefly on the street.

Our first Sunday worship service included Paul Lee, his father, and myself. Paul Lee’s father, who is in his late seventies, was very interested in the points against sprinkling as a form of baptism. On further study we found out that Mr. Lee had been baptized 25 years ago by a gospel preacher from America named Rice. Paul Lee’s father seem to be a very religious man. He has been an elder for over 30 years in the Presbyterian Church. Between 1971 and 1976 he preached weekly on a radio station for Christian Broadcasting. His radio sermons were published in a book titled Echoes of Gratitude. His father currently worships with him, but continues to maintain close ties with the Presbyterian church.

Throughout the next week we continued our “on the street” evangelism. We also composed another flyer. This flyer included Scriptures of early Christians meeting in their homes to help overcome our location stigma. We also tried to make it clear that we were not connected with the Mormons, the Jehovah’s Witnesses, or the Unification Church which the Christ-believing Koreans had been warned against. We were able to send out 3,000 of these flyers in a local newspaper.

On my second Sunday in Korea the three of us met again for worship. My lesson included four points: frequency of the Lord’s Supper, sin of religious division, original sin, and baptism. The lesson was designed for the denominational Koreans such as Paul Lee’s father who make up a large percentage of the Hwagok district.

In addition to our outward evangelistic efforts, I spent much of my time edifying Paul Lee. Since he is young in the faith, he had several areas of questions and misconceptions. After our evening public Bible studies, we would study privately till the late hours of the night. The area where Paul Lee grew the most was his ability and confidence to carry the gospel to others. At first Paul Lee acted only as a translator for me. Later he could get a discussion started and refer to me only for more difficult questions, Before I left Korea, Paul Lee could discuss the Lord’s church for twenty minutes with individuals without any assistance.

Religions in Korea

Korea has a rich and varied religious history. One of the most ancient religions is Shammanism. This consists of ancestor worship, superstitions, and witch doctors or prophetesses. It is usually practiced only in some rural districts of Korea today.

Confucianism influences every Korean to some degree. About 17 percent of the population adhere to the tenants of Confucianism. Most regard it as merely a social philosophy instead of a religion. They have shrines, but unlike Buddhism, these contain no images. All the same, South Korea is probably the most Confucian nation on earth even today.

Buddhists have the highest number of adherents with 37 percent of the population. Here and there you can see Buddhist monks. They are easily distinguished by their clothing and shaved heads. There are temples and monasteries throughout the country.

Coming in at a close second is Christianity. One third of Koreans have embraced Christianity. This is the largest figure for any East Asian country except the Philippines. In Japan only two percent claim to be Christians. Unlike the Catholic dominated Philippines, 75 percent of Koreans who claim to be Christians are Protestant.

From a moral stand point, the Koreans are more upright than many nations. They dress neatly, appropriately, and modestly. Shorts are confined to the beach. The divorce rate is low. They eat healthy and stay in shape. They are, however, heavy beer drinkers and smokers.

Taking Advantage of an Open Door

Korea offers a golden opportunity for planting the New Testament church. While it is true that there are many churches of Christ to be found in the major cities, most of these are very liberal. All the churches Paul Lee contacted in Seoul use instrumental music. As far as we know, there isn’t a sound Korean speaking congregation in all of Korea. We have been encouraged by the recent establishment of an English speaking sound church 50 miles south of Seoul, on the Camp Humphrey Army base.

Today, South Korea is a nation with over 45 million people. This gives it a population density higher than Japan or even India. There are nearly 11 million people in Seoul alone. Korea has a lot of good things going for it today. God has blessed this industrious people with a modern standard of prosperity. Their nation has advanced in a single generation from one of the world’s poorest countries to the threshold of full industrialization. This is a remarkable transition from the 60’s and 70’s when it was a major recipient of U.S. foreign aid which ended in 1980.

Paul Lee believes that any American could make pretty good money teaching conversational English to Koreans. Most educated Koreans can read English which is taught in all secondary schools. All the signs and most of the menus in restaurants are in English and Korean. Added to this is the fact that Korea’s literacy rate is one of the highest at over 95 percent. With the help of Paul Lee, learning Korean would not be absolutely essential, but any serious effort to teach the lost would require it.

Paul Lee is going to need extra help if he is going to succeed in reaching the people of Seoul. To support an evangelist and his family on a long term basis in Seoul would be very costly. But to support a couple, single man, or a couple of college age men for ninety days might be a feasible alternative. A ninety day touring visa can be prearranged through a Korean Embassy. Paul Lee said his home is available for anyone who wishes to come work with him. He has one good size bedroom and a small one to offer.

Living in Seoul wouldn’t be too difficult for an American. Their lifestyle and standard of living has been westernized. There are an abundance of modern medical facilities. In certain sections of the city, there are riot police on the side walks with their helmets and shields stacked nearby. This was only to deal with the annual student demonstrations that come in May.

Update

Allow me to give you an update on what is happening. The company he works for came down pretty hard on him for working only eight hours a day during my two week visit. A month later they asked him to resign. This was quite a shock since he was making good money as the Director of the Research and Development Department of an electronics manufacturing company. Instead of being deterred from his efforts, he was waxed stronger in his commitment. He wrote in a recent letter, “We know that the trouble we experienced to set-up Hwagok church of Christ and to deliver the true gospel is nothing compared to the trouble which the apostle John or Paul had.” Paul Lee has been in contact with the newly established church at Camp Humphreys. This should provided both groups with some mutual encouragement.

Anyone who is going to be visiting Seoul is encouraged to worship with Paul Lee. His home is only ten minutes from the Kimpo International Airport. (His address is: Paul Lee, Kangsegoo, Hwagok 5-dong, 1027-87, Seoul, Korea). Please feel free to call or write me if you have any information that may prove helpful in this effort. We are especially interested in locating someone who can assist in translating Bible study materials into Korean. Most of all we hope to encourage someone to go help spread the gospel among Korea’s millions.

Guardian of Truth XXXVI: 2, pp. 46-47
January 16, 1992

Preaching In Today’s World

By Mike Willis

This special issue on preaching is a call for brethren to return or adhere to, as the case may be, Bible preaching. The temptation to be “conformed to this world” (Rom. 12:2) is not limited to conformity in moral degeneration; there is also a temptation to allow this age’s view of preaching to shape our own, that we be conformed to the image of modern denominationalism in our preaching.

This temptation to depart from the “old paths” and change the content of the message of the gospel is not new. It has repeated itself in many different apostasies. The apostle Paul warned of departures from gospel preaching as he wrote to Timothy:

I charge thee therefore before God, and the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge the quick and the dead at his appearing and his kingdom; Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine. For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears; And they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables (2 Tim. 4:14).

In this article, I want to document the trends away from gospel preaching as they have occurred in other apostasies in the hope of identifying dangerous trends among us today.

When Moses Lard warned of the trends toward liberalism in his day, he opened his article with this pertinent observation:

The prudent man, who has the care of a family, watches well the first symptoms of disease. He does not wait till his wife is helpless, and his children prostrated. He has learned that early cures are easy cures, while the late ones often fail. On this experience he resolutely acts, and the world applauds his wisdom. Why should not the same judicious policy be acted upon in the weighty matters of religion?(1)

We hope to identify the roots of liberalism which gave birth to innovations in the past with the hope of making adjustments and corrections to avoid committing the same sinful departure from the word of God which has occurred on several occasions in the last 150 years.

The Christian Church Apostasy

The successes of early restoration history in America were thwarted by the divisions which the introduction of church supported missionary societies and instrumental music in worship caused. These led to division among the people of God, creating the Christian Churches and churches of Christ. As the apostasies developed, one of the noticeable changes was in the preaching. Lard warned, “Effeminate sentimentalism, and a diluted, licentious charity, are the carbonic gas of the kingdom of Christ. No soul of man can live in them or with them. The truth dies under their blight, while the church grows cadaverous and lean.”(2) He continued,

He is a poor observer of men and things who does not see slowly growing up among us a class of men who can no longer be satisfied with the ancient gospel and the ancient order of things. These men must have changes; and silently they are preparing the mind of the brotherhood to receive these changes. Be not deceived, brethren, the Devil is not sleeping. If you refuse to see the danger till ruin is upon you, then it will be too late. The wise seaman catches the first whiff of the distant storm, and adjusts his ship at once. Let us profit by his example.

Let us agree to commune with the sprinkled sects around us, and soon we shall come to recognize them as Christians. Let us agree to recognize them as Christians, and immersion, with its deep significance, is buried in the grave of our folly. Then in not one whit will we be better than others. Let us countenance political charlatans as preachers, and we at once become corrupt as the loathsome nest on which Beecher sets to hatch the things he calls Christians. Let us consent to introduce opinions in politics as tests of fellowship, and soon opinions in religion will become so. Then the door of heresy and schism will stand wide open, and the work of ruin will begin. Let us agree to admit organs, and soon the pious, the meek, the peace-loving, will abandon us, and our churches will become gay worldly things, literal Noah’s arks, full of clean and unclean beasts.(3)

He warned of dangerous attitudes in preachers: “The vanity to become a popular public speaker, to sway great audiences at will, and to be puffed in newspaper paragraphs as the distinguished so and so, is a dangerous vanity, which preachers may well afford to decline.”(4)

Earl West marked the same changes in the pulpit in his excellent work The Search for the Ancient Order. Surveying the Post-Bellum days (1865-1875), West wrote,

The demand for progress among some took on various characteristics. In some cases it threatened the basic conception of what constituted a New Testament Church. There was a definite trend to make the church another sect among sectarians; another denomination in denominationalism. There was also abundant evidence of a definite revolt against the past. Men who symbolized the previous generation were set for a stormy session. Progress also courted a more fashionable appeal to the rich by what many considered an extravagant expenditure for church buildings. The cry for progress also demanded a new position for the preacher and a different content to his message.(5)

The changes noted bv West included (a) The trend toward fashionable church buildings, (b) The trend in preaching, (c) The place of the preacher. Writing about the trend in preaching, West Observed:

The cry for progress also expressed itself in new trends for preaching. Indeed, this was the point where the drift now centered. Some brethren were becoming extremely intolerant toward the preaching of the “first principles.” Preachers stressing these were less popular than before. The cry for higher spirituality was everywhere heard. J.B. Briney, realizing a change had come over the content of the sermons, wrote the following:

There are some among us who seem to have imbibed quite an antipathy to first principles. They love to talk about a “higher spirituality,” a “deeper piety,” a “broader love,” etc. Were it not that these men make such lofty pretensions to a “higher spirituality,” you would be led to think that this is the very article they most need . . .

The man that is tired of the first principles of the doctrine of Christ is tired of the only thing that can convert men to God, and lift their souls in holy aspirations toward heaven. But when a man says he is tired of first principles, what does he mean? Does he mean he is tired of faith? No. He has much to say about faith. It is his theme on all occasions. Does he mean that he is tired of repentance? Certainly not. He is for repentance, theoretically, at least. What, then, is the substance of all this opposition to first principles and to the men who are devoted to them? Simply this: “I am tired of baptism for remission of sins.” This is what you get when you simmer all this talk about a “higher spirituality,” etc. down.

Men were heard to speak frequently of “legalism” and “the spirit of the New Testament.” Preachers were now preaching, not the “letter” of the New Testament, but the “spirit” of it, an attitude that (Isaac) Errett championed. . . .

A class of men yet remained, however, who preached the first principles, who insisted upon a “Thus saith the Lord” in their preaching. Against this class of men, the ugly title of “legalist” was continually hurled. Ben Franklin, Moses E. Lard, John W. McGarvey, David Lipscomb, and Tolbert Fanning were now classed as “legalists.” Some who laid claim to have progressed a little more had reached the point of denying completely that there was a law under Christ. . . .

Moses E. Lard, however, looked with pathetic humor upon these more progressive men. He wrote:

They are partial to the “pious” in other sects; yet they pounce unmercifully upon the faults of their own brethren. They appear doubtful that their brethren are right in anything . . .

These “progressive” men, Lard went on to say, were sweet and pious as long as a sectarian was their mark, but they were “ferocious as a hungry hippopotamus” when a brother was to be dispatched. In the pulpit their greatest delight appeared to be to preach so that no one knew what they believed. Their greatest desire was to let the world know they were out of sympathy with their brethren. These men, in their pursuit of a “higher spirituality,” had abandoned preaching on the gospel plan of salvation.

Ben Franklin admits that “progress” is a good word, but he expressed a fear that brethren misunderstood it. These who cried for “progress” showed an extreme dislike for a “Thus saith the Lord” and for a “It is written,” said Franklin.(6)

The change in preaching was also noticeable in the gospel papers. During this period, Benjamin Franklin’s American Christian Review was the most popular periodical circulated. Franklin was too conservative in his preaching for the progressives so a new paper to be edited by Isaac Errett was created. It was The Christian Standard. West characterized the two attitudes of the editors and papers saying, “The Standard, however, conceived its role to be that of ‘moving forward,’ adapting the church to changing environmental factors. Franklin resisted these changes, clinging to the older practices.”(7) Franklin was characterized as “perverse” and “stubborn”; he was regarded as a “pest upon the body ecclesiastic” and a “millstone around the neck of the reformation.”

J.S. Lamar, the biographer of Isaac Errett, wrote of the conflict between Errett and Franklin.

Elder Benjamin Franklin was by no means without gifts. Commonly, it is true, though not always, he wrote in a slapdashing sort of style, but his pen was trenchant, and he always called a spade a spade. He would have been the last man in the world to speak of it as an “agricultural implement.” His paper was the leading, and for a long time the only widely circulated weekly among the Disciples, and he wielded great influence.(8)

But Franklin manifested an “ungracious spirit,” became “intolerant” toward those who recognized Christians in other denominations, charging that they were “falling away,” “compromising the truth of the gospel,” and making a “bid for popularity.” Because of dissatisfaction with the Review, the Christian Standard was born. Lamar continued,

I would say nothing here derogatory of the editors of these papers. They represented and fostered that unfortunate type of discipleship to which allusion was made in a previous chapter – a type with which the leading minds among the brotherhood could have no sympathy. We may credit these writers with sincerity and honesty, but we can not read many of their productions without feeling that we are breathing an unwholesome religious atmosphere. They seem to infuse an unlovely and earth-born spirit, which they clothe, nevertheless, in the garb of the divine letter, and enforce with cold, legalistic and crushing power. The great truth for whose defense the Disciples are set, demanded a wiser, sweeter, better advocacy – an advocacy that should exhibit the apostolic spirit as well as the apostolic letter.(9)

The Christian Standard was born out of a desire “for a weekly religious paper of broader range, more generous spirit and a higher order of literary skill and taste than any that had yet appeared under their patronage.”(10)

W.T. Moore (1832-1926), one of the leading liberals among the Disciples, became concerned about the direction of preaching toward the latter part of his life. In 1918, he edited The New Living Pulpit of the Christian Church, to which he wrote an introduction lamenting the direction of preaching in the Christian Church. He cited these criticisms:

(2) The union sentiment which is so prevalent at this time is doing much to change the character of preaching. For some time preaching has ceased to be doctrinal in most of the pulpits. . . A spineless gospel will not save the world, though it should be proclaimed in the interest of so beautiful a cause as Christian union. . . Even a union that cannot bear the sunlight of truth would be worse than the present divisions.

(3) Economical and social questions are having their influence on the pulpit of the twentieth century. . . .

(5) Closely akin to the foregoing is the song service. This has already come to be a prominent feature in many churches. In these churches the music is of more importance than the preaching…. In many of our present day churches the organ and choir have the first place, and this makes it impossible for the preacher to do his best, being conscious that he is practically playing second fiddle to the “Stormy Petrel” that plays and sings for the church.

(6) The demand for short sermons is compelling preachers to reckon with the time limit to such an extent as to make it impossible for them to preach great sermons even where they are abundantly able …. At most the preacher is allowed a half hour for the delivery of the most vital message that mortals ever heard; and worse than all he knows he must not exceed this time limit, for how can he hold the attention of the audience when a mental dinner bell is ringing?

(7) Much of the preaching of the present time is sensational and lacks vision. Such preaching as that of Billy Sunday, etc., may be interesting to listen to but it does not feed the soul with the food that builds up the spiritual life. But the people cry for the sensational, they want something to make their ears tingle, and that they can taste on their tongue. . . . It is like drinking intoxicating beverages, the more one has the more one wants.

Not much of this kind of preaching has found hospitality among the Disciples. But in some churches the doors have been thrown wide open and it has been invited to come in, and in all such cases the churches have ceased to grow spiritually, though the audiences may have doubled, or even quadrupled. . . .

. . . In short, are not our churches in danger of changing the worship into an entertainment for the enjoyment of the senses, rather than the furnishing of food to feed hungry souls with the bread of life?(11)

W.T. Moore’s call for a change in the pulpit was ineffective in stopping the trends of liberalism. He was trying to stop the very liberalism which he had helped to create, to kill the Frankenstein monster of his own creation. Liberalism moved further than he wanted it to go but he was powerless to stop it.

We are in a position historically to judge where the trends led. The movement away from a “thus saith the Lord” led the Christian Church into the mainstream of Protestant denominationalism. The most liberal branch took control of the ecclesiastical institutions (missionary societies, orphan homes, colleges, etc.) and led the church into the ecumenical movement. A small group protested, resulting in a division that was formally crystallized in 1968 when the Independent Christian Churches refused to take part in restructuring the Christian Church into full-fledged denominational organization. The Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) long ago abandoned belief in the inspiration of the Bible and have just recently had a controversy of no small proportions over whether or not to elect a president who approved appointing homosexuals as preachers. The Independent Christian Churches, still hold to the inspiration of the Scriptures, but are nevertheless involved in many unscriptural activities.

The Institutional Apostasy

In the history of the churches of Christ, the spirit of apostasy has also done its work. Many of our readers already can identify many similarities in that recent apostasy and the one faced a generation before in the division with the Christian Church.

Perceptive men saw the spirit of apostasy developing before the actual introduction of church support of colleges and orphan homes. Cled E. Wallace wrote about “The Right Kind of Preaching” saying,

Much is being said about the right kind of preaching and writing. Charges of “hard” and “soft” are being bandied back and forth. With as plain a book as the New Testament in hand and with its abundant supply of examples of the very best preaching and writing, it ought not to be difficult to determine the kind of both that should be done. . . . Men who say the most about “the right method of approach,” “constructive articles,” etc. betray the fact that a lot of their ideas come from modern psychology, materialistic philosophy, and sectarian sources, rather than from Jesus and the apostles. It is futile to do a lot of talking about the method of approach, when you never approach. It would improve some preachers and writers if they could forget about the method and go ahead and approach.(12)

In 1967, the Indianapolis area churches formed a sponsoring church arrangement to conduct a “Campaign For Christ.” They secured Pat Boone to lead the singing and Jimmy Allen to do the preaching, The Gospel Guardian put out a special issue in June to discuss “Campaigns For Christ.” Editor Yater Tant observed,

“Campaigns for Christ” is not an isolated or independent development. It grows right out of the post war (World War II) mania to get the Church of Christ “On the March.” It is part and parcel of an almost pathological desire on the part of some brethren to change the “image” of the Church of Christ from a small, rural, isolated, lower-middle class people to a powerful, successful, aggressive, sophisticated society which is rapidly forging to the front as the leading non-Catholic church of America! (118)

Indeed, the image of the church was changing and nowhere was it more noticeable than in the pulpits and bulletins of the churches.

Brethren noticed that the bulletins of the liberal churches contained nothing distinctive in their teaching. Most of the bulletins ceased to be a teaching mediums and began to be used to advertise the various social activities of the local church. When an occasional article did appear, the article contained nothing distinctive. Articles on the identifying marks of the New Testament church, water baptism (its subject, action, and purpose), conditions for salvation, possibility of apostasy, etc. no longer appeared. The articles in some church bulletins among us could appear in any Baptist and Methodist church bulletin.

The deterioration of the distinctive plea of the pulpit was also noticed by some of the less liberal liberals. On September 10, 1973, a meeting was called with the representatives of the Herald of Truth in Memphis, Tennessee. The liberal brethren were alarmed at the message they were not hearing on the Herald of Truth program. Attended by over 200 preachers, the critics “made it unmistakably clear, that aside from the doctrinal error under consideration, they and multitudes of others were disappointed by the largely nondistinctive type of preaching currently done on the program” (p. ii). Time and again the less liberal element among the liberals protested the non-doctrinal preaching, watering down of the restoration plea, and pentecostal preaching on the Herald of Truth.

The trend has continued to develop, almost unabated. Two groups have emerged among the liberals, just as distinct as the two groups among the Christian Churches. The more liberal minded are rapidly moving the liberal churches into the mainstream of Protestant denominationalism. They control most of the institutions (colleges, orphan homes, hospitals, etc.). A smaller group has formed in opposition to the more liberal trends of their brethren. This group consists of the writers for Firm Foundation, The Spiritual Sword, Contending For the Faith, and other smaller journals. J.A. McNutt wrote about “Gospel Preaching” as follows:

About 25 years ago, when Mission Magazine appeared, we began to be told that the older generation of preaching could not talk to the young, intellectual, sophisticated members of society. Doubts were expressed that the New Testament church could be restored. Eliminate the negative, accentuate the positive was the cry. Quit claiming we were the only Christians and just profess to be Christians only. Be less exclusive, listen to others, and learn from what they (the Baptists and the Catholics) offer.

Look at what this advice has gotten us in the last 25 years: (1) Loss of strong doctrinal preaching and efforts to take the gospel to a lost world. (2) Emphasis on social and economic problems. (3) Compromise with denominational bodies (which failed to move them but weakened us) and (4) Accommodation to worldly standards of conduct. Some churches have given up on gospel meetings. Where once the word was boldly proclaimed, we now have counseling sessions designed to build our self-esteem, while thousands die without ever hearing a gospel sermon.(13)

Contending For the Faith contains a steady diet of warnings against specific cases of apostasy with detailed documentation to leave no question about the liberal teachings being exposed.

These brethren cannot turn the tide of liberalism. They might as well try to move a mountain with a spoon. The very liberalism which they created and defended in the 1950s has grown into a mighty force which they could no more stop than W.T. Moore could the liberalism of his day.

The unity-in-diversity message of Leroy Garrett in Restoration Review is accepted among many liberal churches. There is a significant movement to extend fellowship to the Independent Christian Churches, the instrument of music no longer being a significant difference to some liberal brethren. Garrett’s series on “What Must The Church of Christ Do To Be Saved” is not falling on deaf ears. He calls on the churches of Christ to confess that we have been wrong in charging that others churches are denominations and we are not, in our position on instrumental music, in our restoration hermencutics, in being “male dominated,” etc.(14) This is the direction that the mainline liberal churches is headed.

Learning From the Past

Reminding ourselves of the early steps of apostasy in the past should alarm us to the incipient forms of liberalism among ourselves. We must not bury our heads in the sand and pretend that similar departures from gospel preaching cannot infiltrate us. I am convinced that they not only can but already have infiltrated us.

Sometimes what is not said is more important than what is said. We tend to notice the latter quicker than the former, but each can do its damage. There are some things which are not being said in our church bulletins. I have received some church bulletins for well over a decade and never seen anything distinctive in their pages. If this reflects what is also heard from the pulpit, these churches have not heard gospel preaching for years. These bulletins have quit printing articles on the identifying marks of the New Testament church, water baptism (its subject, action, and purpose), conditions for salvation, possibility of apostasy, immodest dress, dancing, smoking, gambling, social drinking, and such like (Gal. 5:19-21).

We have some rare churches among us! These churches are so strong that they can go a decade without preaching to their members about the sinfulness of denominationalism, faith only, possibility of apostasy, Calvinism, the identifying marks of the New Testament church, immodest dress, mixed swimming, social drinking, etc. The churches with whom I have worked have not been so strong. I have seen the need to preach on these subjects regularly, for the sake of the young Christians growing up there, reminding the older Christians, teaching the new converts, and warding off the influence of the denominational world about us which so affects our thinking.

We have preachers who are enamored with Charles Swindoll, James Dobson, Max Lucado, and other popular poppsychology preachers, but have little use for anything produced by their brethren. Roy Cogdill observed, “If a preacher does not feed his own soul on the word of God, he cannot be expected to impart such food unto others. A constant study of the truth is therefore essential. Preachers who preach on current events, book reviews, modern philosophy, etc. are simply distributing the kind of food they partake of themselves. Such preaching would create a famine of God’s word.”(15) We are seeing advertisements for “gospel” meetings featuring lessons on time management, managing one’s personal finances, tri-angular relationship, and other self-help, pop psychology themes.

The writing which is popular is patterned after the human interest pages of the daily newspapers. Again, what is said is generally true, but we should not equate human interest stories with gospel preaching and Bible teaching! Slipping in one Scripture in a human interest article does not make it Bible teaching. Bulletins and journals which specialize in this kind of writing rarely present an article which is distinctive; most articles appearing in such publications could appear in nearly any denominational bulletin or periodical in the country.

This special issue of Guardian of Truth is designed to awaken us to the trends that are occurring. It is a call for retrenching ourselves, immersing ourselves in the word of God, and sending forth a clarion sound in the message we preach. We hope that those in the pew will demand Bible preaching, driving from their pulpits anyone who dilutes and weakens that message by failing to preach the distinctive doctrines of the Bible.

Endnotes

1. “The Work of the Past – The Symptoms of the Future,” Lard’s Quarterly 2:251 (1865).

2. Ibid. 258.

3. Ibid. 262.

4. Ibid. 324-325.

5. The Search for the Ancient Order II:133.

6. Ibid. 143-145.

7. Ibid. 135.

8. U.S. Lamar, Memoirs of Isaac Errett 1:279.

9. Ibid., 300-301.

10. Ibid., 309.

11. W.T. Moore, The New Living Pulpit of the Christian Church 42-46.

12. Cled E. Wallace, “The Right Kind of Preaching,” Bible Banner I:11 (June 1939), 1.

13. J.A. McNutt, “Gospel Preaching, Is It Relevant Today?” Firm Foundation 106:9 (September 1991), 8-9.

14. Garrett’s series appears in the 1991 issues of Restoration Review.

15. Roy E. Cogdill, “Instructions to a Young Preacher,” Preaching in the Twentieth Century 191.

Guardian of Truth XXXVI: 3, pp. 66, 94-98
February 6, 1992

Preaching Like Jeremiah

By Jerry Fite

Jeremiah began his prophetic work in the thirteenth year of Josiah’s reign. As a youthful Josiah wielded kingly force to tear down idols, young Jeremiah applied moral persuasion to eliminate the idolatrous heart. Despite forty years of exposure to Jeremiah’s preaching, Judah’s heart did not change.

One will not find Jeremiah’s name among those preachers who had success in leading many to God. People responded to his message by mocking, smiting and imprisoning him. They continued turning their back to God, instead of their faces (Jer.32:33). After extending many invitations, Jeremiah tearfully described Israel’s lost opportunities as follows: “The harvest is past, the summer is ended, and we are not saved” (Jer.8:20). Receiving encouraging words for his lessons at the temple and city gates was not his to enjoy; his solace in preaching was, “God knowest.” The fact that God approved of Jeremiah and his work makes him a worthy example for true preaching servants of God.

Jeremiah was appointed to “pluck up, and to break down and to destroy and overthrow, to build and to plant” (1:10). While the people were hearing words of “peace, when there is no peace,” (Jer.6:14) Jeremiah preached of impending judgment. While Israel’s perverted worship and wayward living were tolerated by their leaders, Jeremiah strongly denounced their idolatry and sins. While Jeremiah’s message contained hope of building and planting, it would occur after the overthrowing and plucking (Jer. 31:28,40).

Condemnation always needs to be communicated with sound reasoning. Jeremiah was God’s communicator. He reasoned with the people from the theme: “they are gone far from me, and have walked after vanity, and are become vain” (Jer. 2:5). With imagery he drove home his point: they were “forsaking the fountain of living waters,” and replacing him with “broken cisterns, that can hold no water” (Jer.2:13). Surely no right thinking person would turn away from a flowing fountain and walk downstream to build a leaky pit to hold the water. But Israel did this when they served Baal and Asherah instead of God, the fountain of living waters. In following after gods of vanity, Israel became vain. The leaky cisterns would not save them, only God could. In turning away from him they were facing their own “hurt” (Jer. 7:6).

Preachers today need to preach Jeremiah’s outline. One does not simply commit one sin by forsaking God, he adds another, the making of his own idol. Many have turned their affections away from God to embrace empty materialism. Putting money and pleasure first, our society has become vain. In the midst of lamenting the symptoms of a crumbling society, we need to hear the cause: we have forsaken God. Until our society turns to God, following his commands in his word, we can expect “hurt,” not healing.

In Jeremiah’s day, God’s people lost their sense of shame. When they should have been ashamed for their covetousness and deceitful dealings, they could not blush. Jeremiah was not bashful in his condemnation. He says, “For from the least of them to the greatest of them every one is given to covetousness: and from the prophet even unto the priest everyone dealeth falsely. . . Were they not ashamed when they had committed abomination? Nay, they were not at all ashamed, neither could they blush: therefore they shall fall among them that fall; at the time that I visit them they shall be cast down, saith Jehovah” (Jer.6:13,15).

With condemnation of Judah’s brazenness, Jeremiah offered the Divine solution: “Thus saith Jehovah, stand ye in the ways and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good way: and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls” (Jer. 6:16). Rest for their souls demanded seeking the paths that God first set before his people at Sinai, and walking accordingly.

Jeremiah reminds us that man’s inability to blush does not mean he has no reason to be ashamed. Some brethren no longer blush when wearing their immodest shorts and skimpy swim suits in public. Some no longer blush when dancing in their school proms. Some no longer blush in drinking alcoholic beverages in social settings. The purity and influence for good among God’s people today demands instruction, pointing God’s people back to the principles found in the “old paths” of the gospel.

“Modest” dress, sensitive to its effects upon others by remaining well within the bounds of that which is proper (“shamefastness”), manifesting sound judgment (“sobriety”), and in accord with one who is “professing godliness” is the good way of the Lord that many are ignoring (1 Tim. 2:9-10). The prom dance may appear sophisticated and graceful, but the indecent bodily movements and unchaste handling of another’s body are shameful exhibitions of lasciviousness that have no place in the Christian’s life (Gal. 5:19; 1 Cor. 6:18; Matt. 5:28). The drink which deadens godly restraints and leads to drunkenness, addiction, ruined lives and death is no drink for the Christian, socially or privately (cf. 1 Pet. 4:3-4; Tit. 2:12; Gal. 5:20; 1 Cor. 6:11).

Old paths, if not continually marked and traveled upon will soon blend in with the rest of the field, Glorifying God with godly living, while guarding closely one’s example before others is the Lord’s clear path (Matt. 5:16; 1 Cor. 10:31-32; Phil. 2:14-16; 1 Tim. 4:16). Immodest apparel on the streets or by the pool, dancing and social drinking will never promote the good way of the Lord. They will hinder our profession of purity. Brethren today need preaching like Jeremiah’s to keep the paths marked, and we all need to walk accordingly.

“Rising up early” to “speak,” “teach” and “protest” were familiar phrases in Jeremiah’s preaching (Jer. 25:3; 32:33; 11:7). As one would rise early to attend to urgent matters, God sent his servants to speak out, instruct and condemn Israel’s sin. Such urgency to condemn error and warn of judgment did not come from a sadistic God but a compassionate One. The chronicler records, “Jehovah, the God of their fathers, sent to them by his messengers, rising up early and sending because he had compassion on his people and on his dwelling place” (2 Chron. 36:15).

Like God who sent him, Jeremiah condemned sin with a compassionate heart. Convicted of the reality of judgment, Jeremiah communed with his soul in anguish for his people’s fate (Jer. 4:19-22). He contained more anguish in his heart over his people’s destruction than he had tears. “Oh that my head were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I might weep day and night for the slain of the daughter of my people” (Jer. 9:1). He responded to Judah’s refusing to return to the Lord with crying “in secret” over their “pride” (Jer. 13:19). While he refused to be part of their evil ways (Jer. 9:2), Jeremiah did not admonish Israel’s sin unsympathetically.

Over six hundred years after Jeremiah preached judgment with tears, another preacher appeared reminding people of Jeremiah. His name was Jesus. After Jesus had begun preaching he asked the question, “Who do men say that the son of man is?” Jesus learned from his disciples that some said he was “Jeremiah” (Matt. 16:13-14). Like Jeremiah, Jesus was not bashful in exposing popular sins, nor timid in warning of judgment (Matt. 15:1-9; 8:11-12; 23:1-25:46). Yet, who does not hear the compassion in his heart when he cries, “0 Jerusalem, Jerusalem” and feel his pain, when he like Jeremiah laments, “Behold your house is left unto you desolate” (Matt. 23:38; Jer. 10:22)? Jeremiah and Jesus exemplify a balance needed in all preachers. They were uncompromising toward sin, while compassionate over the fate of the sinner.

The world, just a heartbeat away from eternal destruction, does not need a preacher who offers false peace and tolerates sin. Sinners need the preacher who condemns sin with sound reasoning, sets before all the good way of the Lord and warns of imminent judgment with tears. If God were to come in judgment tomorrow, the world would need preaching like Jeremiah’s today.

Guardian of Truth XXXVI: 3, pp. 70-71
February 6, 1992