“They went out from us, but they were not really of us;
for if they had been of us, they would have remained with us; but they
went out, in order that it might be shown that they all are not of us.”
(1 John 2:19)
Among Christians, often a new group will pop up teaching
and practicing things vastly different from the apostles’ doctrine
taught in the congregation(s) from which they came. We are shocked and
rightly so. But in most cases these folks were “not of us” long before
“they went out from us.” It usually happens after they have failed to
win enough support within the congregation(s) where they formally
attended to take over. They have now shown the world where their hearts
had been for sometime.
All of this demands diligence on the part of overseers
and other knowledgeable Christians to be begin to deal with the problems
when there are initial signs that they are “not of us” in their
thinking. Instead, often the church’s leadership, instead of dealing
forthrightly with it by corrective teaching and discipline, they prefer
to not rock the boat, thus allowing the leaven enough time to work its
way through a larger portion of the whole lump.
The Lord gives the responsibility to elders to shepherd
the sheep and to watch for their souls. Instead, in too many cases,
elders are mostly concerned with balancing the church’s budget and
directing the church various “programs.” They have neither the time nor
knowledge to spot and correctly deal with the wolves among them. They
resent and/or ignore warnings from knowledgeable Christians outside
their congregation who are aware of what “is going on” with some of
their members. These elders and other knowledgeable men should be able
to get a handle on the problem long before it becomes self-evident that
they “are not OF us” when they “went out FROM us.”
Other Articles by Edward O.
Bragwell, Sr.
A New Dogma
How to Raise a Heartache
The Right Baptism
Standing Alone