The great curse of the church of Jesus Christ is
division. Christ foresaw that strifes and divisions would be the
weakness of the church and the curse of the world. The church of
Christ is the light of the world, the salt of the earth. Whatever
weakens its power and destroys its influence, injures the world and
ruins man. Jesus Christ foreseeing this, in the prayer in which he
poured out his soul to God, besought earnestly that his disciples
"might be one," that all who believe on him through the words of the
apostles" may be one, even as I and my Father are one." He prayed
they might be one, "that the world may believe that thou has sent
me." It is clear that without that oneness among his children, the
world could never believe that he was sent by the Father, that is,
that he was the Christ the Son of God. Without this belief that
leads to acceptance of him, as Lord and Savior, and the obedience to
God, through him, no man can see God in peace.
The apostles in their teachings, everywhere sand at
all times, condemned and warned against division and strife within
the churches as the cause of weakness and inefficiency, of
corruption and defilement — that unfitted them for temples of the
Holy Spirit, that disabled them from saving their own members and
from proving a savor of life to the world.
Christ warned, "a house divided against itself cannot
stand." Paul said, "Now I beseech you, brethren, by the name of our
Lord Jesus Christ, that ye all speak the same thing, and that there
be no divisions among you; but that you be perfectly joined together
in the same mind and in the same judgment." (I Cor. 1:10) He
asks, "Is Christ divided?"
The church is the body — the spiritual body of
Christ, and if Christ is not divided against himself, the members of
his body cannot be. When his people divide and strive, they divide
the body of Christ himself; they rend his spiritual body, and sever
its members from each other, and serve his spiritual, worse than his
murderers did his fleshly body. His enemies pierced that body, but
his children is under the spiritual body, part from part, and leave
it torn and lifeless without power to save itself or others. In
every letter written by the apostles the sin of division is
condemned — the danger is signaled and Christians forewarned against
it as the sure premonition of death. The Master and the apostles not
only warn against a danger so threatening, and so fatal and fearful
in its results, but they give directions how to avoid division, and
the way to promote and maintain unity. The Savior prayed that his
disciples might be one, and he gave clear directions as to how they
should remain one:
"For I have given unto them the words which thou
gayest me; and they have received them, and have known surely that I
came out from thee." — "I have given them thy word, and the world
hath hated them, because they are not of the world, even as I am not
of the world. Sanctify them through thy truth: thy word is truth.
Neither pray I for these alone but for them also which shall believe
on me through their word." (John 17:8-20.)
The apostles also admonished them to speak the same
thing, and the oneness of the word, which guides and directs all,
secures the unity of the body, growing out of and guided by the word
of the living God.
Notwithstanding the prayer and warning of the Savior,
the entreaties and expostulations of the apostles, and the specific
directions of Jesus and the Holy Spirit to maintain unity, the
professed followers of Christ have been divided into striving
parties from the beginning, often resulting in war and bloodshed.
Many efforts, through the centuries, have been made at union, which
have proved abortive.
About the beginning of the present century an effort
was made to find ground on which all sincere worshipers of God could
stand in unity and work together in harmony and love, for the honor
of God and the salvation of man. The ground or fundamental basis of
union, was, that all should lay aside all theories and practices
based on human authority and standing in the wisdom of men, and in
all religious service take the word of God as the only guide and do
only the things required in the teachings of Christ and the
apostles. It was expressed in the adage, "where the Bible speaks we
will speak, where the Bible is silent we will be silent." If they
were not to speak in matters of religion without Bible authority,
much less could they act without Scripture direction. This meant, no
one could teach or practice anything in religion not clearly taught
in the Bible. All would do what the Bible required. and would ask of
no one to do or to submit to what it did not require. This bound all
to the word of God — to what was commanded by the Lord. It bound
them to do all that was taught, it bound them to reject everything
in religion, not taught in the word of God. This would bring unity
through the word of God, as the Savior taught it must come. For a
time, the effort at union on this basis seemed to work well. Men and
women from all churches in Christendom and from no church, came
together on this basis, and laying aside all theories and practices
not required by the word of God, diligently sought to learn what
that word required, and guided by the things taught in the Bible,
they walked in harmony and love, and success without precedent in
modern times, crowned their labors in calling men and women to
Christ.
Of late years, this unity of faith and harmony of
action have been much disturbed. Divisions and discords, threatening
the disruption of church and Christian fellowship, have entered in
and have well-nigh destroyed the peace, and much weakened the
efforts of those seeking to unite all worshipers of God in the unity
of the faith, and in the bonds of love. This is a dire and fatal
disaster to befall an effort so full of promise of good to man, and
of honor to the Lord and Master. Can we find the cause of this
disaster?
From the beginning there have been two classes in the
church. One disposed to strictly construe the Bible and to cling
close to its teaching. This class, in all questions that arise, ask,
What does the word of God require? And they restrain their practices
and service within the requirements of the Divine word.
The other class, interpreting the word of God more
liberally or loosely, ask, Is it forbidden? What is not forbidden,
they claim the right to practice. A little thought will show the one
class walks by the requirements of the Bible. The other class walks
in the wisdom of men. These do the things suggested by that wisdom,
unless it is specifically forbidden by the word of God. The
practices of one class necessarily spring from God and his holy
word. No practice can be accepted with this class, that does not
come from God, and that is not required by his holy word. God is the
author of all religious service with this class. The other class
looks largely to its own wisdom, and the wisdom of men for authority
and for guidance in things of religion, and anything man's wisdom
approves may be used in religion unless specifically forbidden by
the word of God. These paths rapidly diverge. And those walking in
these diverging paths cannot walk together. They cannot live in
unity and harmony.
These diverse ways of regarding the services of
religion, led 'to the first division among Christians. They have in
all ages of the church, led to divisions. In the days of Luther, the
question of infant baptism was raised. He asked, Where is it
forbidden? and because not forbidden he retained it. The same
question came up with the Campbells, father and son. They adopted
the rule to practice only what was required. The son said to the
father, Infant baptism is not required in the Scriptures. He
responded, It must go then. Under Luther's rule, he and Melanchthon
were forced to advise Philip of Hesse, that bigamy is allowed,
because not specially prohibited.
Under this rule many gross and hurtful perversions of
the truth, as well as many sinful and corrupting practices may be
brought into the church because they are not 'specially prohibited
in the Scriptures. This principle of interpretation releases men
from a close adherence to the will of God as revealed in the Bible,
and gives wide license to the introduction of human wisdom as the
rule in the church and the life of a Christian. The substitution of
human wisdom for the will of God subverts the church from the ends
for which it was instituted.
--
David
Lipscomb
editor, The Gospel Advocate