A brother was explaining
the distinctive character of the church of which he was a member. He
said, "We support an Orphan Home." Of course they did.
They couldn't stop
that $15 per month
contribution if they wanted to; for it was a status symbol. Lower that
flag, and "prominent brethren" would rebel, institutional pressures
would be applied, and someone might even call them "Anti."
They would lose their place in their party.
The same thing could be
said of churches that march under the flag of "no class," "no located
preacher," or even "no support of institutions."
We are not here concerned
with arguing the merits of any of these "positions." Further, we
understand the necessity of sticking with honest convictions; and we
know that those with the same or similar convictions have rapport or are
drawn into association with those of like faith. But we are concerned
with the sectarian spirit that puts "party" before honest convictions,
"flag" before God's word.
Being
right about a
position does not avoid a sectarian spirit or status. I suspect there
are some who would "throw a fit" if a piano was used in the worship, but
who couldn't explain
why to save their
lives. "No instrument has become their "flag" — inherited from an
earlier generation, and followed without genuine regard for God's
teaching on the subject.
Or maybe some one knows
all about his particular "flag," Right or wrong he can make all the
arguments, citing pet scriptures for the symbol of his "soundness." But
his ears are closed to the opposition, no matter how many scriptures
used. This is not honest, objective following of God's word. It is
sectarian flag following. Such a person may have meager knowledge of any
save his "pet" scriptures.
The
Lord's church does not need sectarian "flags" to survive. His people
"sanctify in their hearts Christ as Lord, and have a reason for the hope
that is in them" (1
Pet. 3:15). "Soundness" is found in "wholeness," not in emphasis
upon some one part. The Lord's people can say "hello" without waving a
party flag.
Other Articles by Robert Turner
A Few Make History
Those
Other Sinners
A Man Called
David
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