FOREWORD
The subtle enemies that affect the soul-winning
efforts of the local church have too long gone unnoticed as well as
unchallenged. Dr. Jack Hyles, Pastor of the church with the "World's
Largest Sunday School" and the worlds foremost soul-winning ministries,
contests these enemies, one by one.
These enemies must be exposed for what they
are: a definite attempt, by Satan, to stop fundamental, soul-winning churches
from doing the work God has ordained them to do.
These insights given by Dr. Hyles may seem
controversial, but in reality they are logical as well as Biblical.
Enemies of Soul Winning will reveal adversaries you may have thought were
your friends!
About the Author
Jack Hyles began preaching at the age of 19
and has pastored for 45 years. These pastorates include churches that
varied in membership from 44 to over 100,000. All of these pastorates, other
than the present one, where in the state of Texas: First, the Marris Chapel
Baptist Church of Bogata, Texas; then the Grange Hall Baptist Church in
Marshall, Texas; from there to the Southside Baptist Church of Henderson,
Texas; and then to the Miller Road Baptist Church of Garland, Texas. He
pastored the Miller Road Baptist Church for approximately 7 years and saw this
church, under the Lord, grow from a membership of 44 to over 4,000. It was from
the Miller Road Baptist Church that he was called to his present pastorate at
the First Baptist Church in Hammond, Indiana.
Dr. Hyles has been Pastor of the First
Baptist Church since August, 1959. This church has a membership of over 100,000
and has averaged over 23,000 conversions and 8,000 baptisms per year for the
past 6 years. For many years the church has been acclaimed to have the
"World's Largest Sunday School." During Dr. Hyles' ministry the First
Baptist Church has increased in property evaluation to over $50,000,000.
Besides his position as Pastor, Dr. Hyles is
FounderChancellor of Hyles-Anderson Schools, which enrolled approximately 4,000
students last year. The schools are operated by the First Baptist Church and
are housed in separate facilities away from the church property. Dr. Hyles has
served as President of the Baptist Bible College in Denver, Colorado.
Dr. Hyles is the author of 41 books and
pamphlets, exceeding over 12 million copies in sales. Many of his sermons are
also available on tape.
Dr. Hyles' experience covers numerous
evangelistic campaigns, Bible conferences, etc. He has preached in virtually
every state of the Union and in many foreign countries. His annual Pastors'
School attracts thousands of preachers from every state and many foreign
countries.
Chapter One
Lordship Salvation -
An Enemy of Soul Winning
Exactly what do we mean when we say,
"Lordship Salvation"? We are talking about the false doctrine that says
that in order for a person to be saved, he must make Jesus the Lord of his
life. If that doctrine were true, then no one could be saved, because as long
as we are limited by these fleshly bodies, we will be unable to make Jesus
totally the Lord of our lives. This can happen only when we are like Him. I
John 3:2, "Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it
doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when he shall appear,
we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is."
The Apostle Paul, perhaps the greatest
Christian who ever lived, spoke of the battle he had. He said in Romans
7:18, "For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh,) dwelleth no good
thing...." Inverse 19, he said, "For the good that I would I
do not: but the evil which I would not want, that I do." In verse 23,
he talks about the warfare between the flesh and the spirit, and in verse 24,
he calls himself a "wretched man."
Of course, every believer should have a
sincere desire and make a sincere effort to make Jesus Lord of his life, but in
the flesh, that is impossible, and we will not be satisfied until we awake in
His likeness. Psalm 17.15, "As for me, I will behold thy face in
righteousness: I shall be satisfied, when I awake, with thy likeness."
1. There is only one Gospel. Galatians 1:6-9, "I marvel that ye are so soon
removed from him that called you into the grace of Christ unto another gospel:
Which is not another; but there be some that trouble you, and would pervert the
gospel of Christ. But though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other
gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you, let him be accursed.
As we said before, so say I now again, If any man preach any other gospel unto
you than that ye have received, let him be accursed."
The word "another" in verse 6, and
the word "another" in verse 7 are not the same words. The first means
"another of a different kind"; the second in verse 7 means
"another of the same kind." For example, suppose you say to someone
at the table, "Pass another cookie to me." You could mean another one
of the same kind you have been eating, or you could mean another kind of cookie
that is at the table. What the Apostle is saying here is that some people were
preaching another gospel; that is, another kind. Then he reminds us that that
kind is not another of the same kind. Basically there are only two kinds of
salvation: (1) Man does it; or (2) God does it. Someone has rightly said that
the two kinds of salvation are wrapped up in two small words: do and done.
Anything that we would do to save ourselves, anything that another person would
do to save us, or anything that another group of people would do to save us is
a false salvation. The true salvation is that it has already been done! Jesus
has done it all, if we by faith appropriate what He did.
2. If there is anything that we can do to
save ourselves or to help save ourselves, or if there is anything that another
person or group of others can do to help save us, salvation is not of grace. We
know, however, that salvation is of grace!
Ephesians 2:8, 9, "For by grace are
ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not
of works, lest any man should boast." If it is of grace, works can have nothing to do with
it, and if there is one tiny bit of works,
it is not of grace! Romans 11:6, "And if by grace, then is it no more
of works: otherwise grace is no more grace. But if it be of works, then is it
no more grace:
otherwise work is no more work." If we must make Jesus Lord of our lives in order to
be saved, then salvation is not all of grace, and what is not all of grace is
heresy!
3. David was saved when Jesus was not Lord
of his life. All of us know the tragic story of David and his sins. Was David
saved? Yes, he was. Was Jesus Lord of his life? Of course not. Look at Psalm
51:12a. David said, "Restore unto me the joy of my salvation." He
did not say, "Restore unto me Thy salvation." He was saved, but
he was away from God. Jesus was not Lord of his life. If Lordship salvation
were true, then David lost his salvation when he ceased to make Jesus Lord of
his life.
4. Jesus was not Lord of Lot's life. II
Peter 2:7, 8, 'And delivered just Lot, vexed with the filthy conversation of
the wicked. (For that righteous man dwelling among them, in seeing and hearing,
vexed his righteous soul from day to day with their unlawful deeds;)" Was
Lot saved? Verse 7 says he was "just," which means he was justified
in the sight of God, even though he was living in wicked sin. In verse 8 he is
called a "righteous man," which means that he was righteous in the
sight of God, having had the righteousness of Jesus Christ imputed to him. Romans
10:1 -3, "Brethren, my heart 's desire and
prayer to God for Israel is, that they might be saved. For I bear them record
that they have a zeal of God, but not according to knowledge. For they being
ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to establish their own
righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of
God."
Romans 4:5, "But to him that worketh
not, but believeth on him that just ifi eth the ungodly, his faith is counted
for righteousness." Was Lot
saved? Yes, he was. Was Jesus Lord of his life? No, He wasn't.
Look at the awful thing Lot had done. In the
first place, he had chosen to go to the well-watered plains toward Sodom.
In the second place, he had not only gone to
Sodom, but Sodom had come to him. Two angels had come to visit Lot in Sodom.
When the homosexual men heard of this, they came to Lot's house asking for him
to give them those men so they could commit their sin with them.
Now look at Genesis 19:7, 8, "And
said, I pray you, brethren, do not so wickedly. Behold now, I have two
daughters which have not known man; let me, I pray you, bring them out unto
you, and do ye to them as is good in your eyes: only unto these men do nothing;
for therefore came they under the shadow of my roof" Lot called these
wicked perverts "brethren" in verse 7. Then in verse 8, he offered
his two daughters to these men if they would leave the angels alone. What a
wicked thing! Later on when Lot fled Sodom with his two daughters, both of them
became pregnant by him. Each gave birth to a son, and each son fathered a
heathen race - the Moabites and the Ammonites. Was Lot saved? Yes,
he was. God says that he was. Was Jesus Lord of his life? No, He wasn't. If
Lordship salvation were true, Lot could not have been saved, because Jesus was
far from being Lord of his life at this time.
5. Noah was saved, but Jesus was not Lord
of his life.
Genesis 6:8, "But Noah found grace
in the eyes of the Lord." Genesis 9:20-24, "And Noah began to be an
husbandman, and he planted a vineyard: And he drank of the wine, and was
drunken; and he was uncovered within his tent. And Ham, the father of Canaan,
saw the nakedness of his father, and told his two brethren without. And Shem
and Japheth took a garment, and laid it upon both their shoulders, and went
backward, and covered the nakedness of their father; and their faces were
backward, and they saw not their father's nakedness. And Noah awoke from his
wine, and knew what his younger son had done unto him."
Was Noah saved? Yes, Genesis 6:8 says he "found
grace in the eyes of the Lord," and we know that salvation is by
grace. Was Jesus Lord of his life? In Genesis 9:2 1, we find he got drunk and
that he was naked inside his tent. In verse 22 his son saw his nakedness.
Obviously from verse 24, his younger son had
done something to him. Perhaps this was a
homosexual act committed with his own father while his father was drunk. To say
the least, Noah was anything but a Christian who had allowed Jesus to be Lord
of his life. Was he saved? Yes, he was. Was Jesus Lord of his life? No, He was
not.
6. The Corinthian church members were saved,
but Jesus was not Lord of their lives. I Corinthians 3:1-4, "And
I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal,
even as unto babes in Christ. I have fed you with milk, and not with meat: for
hitherto ye were not able to bear it, neither yet now are ye able. For ye are
yet carnal: for whereas there is among you envying, and strife, and divisions,
are ye not carnal, and walk as men? For while one saith, I am of Paul; and
another, I am of Apollos; are ye not carnal?" Notice in verse 1 that
they were "carnal," which means "fleshly." Notice in verse
1 that they were "babes." Notice in verse 2 that they were so
immature in their Christian life that they could not take spiritual meat, but
had to have spiritual milk. In verse 3 it again says they were carnal. It also
mentions that there were envyings and strife and divisions, and they walked as
men, not as Christians ought to walk. Was Jesus Lord of their lives? No, He was
not. Were they saved? Yes, they were. Look at the last two words in verse 1- "in
Christ." II Corinthians 5: 17a says, "Therefore if any man be in
Christ, he is a new creature." Were they saved? Yes, they were. Was
Jesus Lord of their lives? No, He wasn't.
7. Babes in Christ are saved, but Jesus
is not Lord of their lives. I
Peter 2:1, 2, "Wherefore laying aside all malice, and all guile, and
hypocrisies, and envies, and all evil speakings, As newborn babes, desire the
sincere milk of the word, that ye may grow thereby." If one must make Jesus Lord of his life in order to
be saved, he would have to be a mature Christian then, but the Bible says there
is such a thing as a "babe in Christ," which means that such a person
is saved, but he has a lot of growing to do.
8. The fact that the Christian must grow
in grace means that a person can be saved without Jesus being Lord of his life.
II Peter 3:18, "But grow in grace,
and in the knowledge ofourLord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To him be glory both
now and for ever. Amen." The
word "grow" here means that the Christian has not yet
"arrived." He is not yet mature. The words "in grace" mean
that he is saved. Is such a person saved? Yes, he is. Is Jesus Lord of his
life. No, He is not.
9. A person can be righteous in the sight
of God and be saved without making Jesus Lord of his life. Romans 4:5,
"But to him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth the
ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness." Here is a person who
does not work for God. All he does is believe. The Bible says his faith is
counted for righteousness. Is he saved? Yes. Is Jesus Lord of his life?
Absolutely not. Jesus commands us to work, to win souls and to serve God, but
here is a man who does not do those things; yet he is righteous. He is saved,
but Jesus is not Lord of his life.
10. A person can be saved and not have
his body yielded totally to Christ. Romans 12:1, 2 "I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye
present your bodies a living sacnfice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your
reasonable service. And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed
by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and
acceptable, and perfect, will of God." Were the people to whom he was speaking saved? Yes, they were. Notice
the word "brethren" in verse 1. Was Jesus Lord of their life? No, He
was not. The Apostle Paul was beseeching them to present their bodies a living
sacrifice, to be holy, and not be conformed to the world, but be transformed in
order that they might do the perfect will of God. Were they saved? Yes, they
were. Was Jesus Lord of their lives? No, He was not.
A person can be saved and even call Jesus
"Lord" without the Saviour actually being the Lord of his life. Luke
6:20, 46, 'And he lifted up his eyes on his disciples, and said, Blessed be ye
poor :for your's is the kingdom of God. And why call ye me, Lord, Lord, and do
not the things which I say?" This entire passage was written to the
disciples by Jesus. Were they saved?
Yes, they were. Verse 20 plainly calls them
His disciples. Now what did He say to His disciples? Among other things, in
verse 46 He said they were calling Him "Lord," but doing not the
things which He said. In other words, they were like the Lordship salvation
crowd today. Since none of us can totally do everything He says until we awake
in His likeness, it is foolish for us to say that Jesus is Lord of our lives.
Were these people saved? Yes, they were. They were called "disciples"
in verse
20. Was Jesus Lord of their lives? No, He
was not, because verse 46 tells us that they did not the things which He said.
Yes, Jesus is Lord. He is Lord of the
universe, and, of course, we believe that He is Lord. However, to believe that
in order to be saved one must make Him the Lord of his life is just another
form of salvation by works.
May God help me day by day to give Him more
control of my life and yield more and more to Him so that He can become day by
day more and more the Lord of my actions, my will and my life; but, I must
realize that I am hampered by this body of clay, and that there is a battle
being raged. I must yield myself to Him constantly, making Him more and more
the Lord of my life, but I am looking forward to the day when I shall be like
Him, and He, in fact, will be the Lord of my life.
Chapter Two
Ultra-Dispensationalism -
An Enemy of Soul Winning
I have no problem with the word "dispensation." It is a Bible
word, but I do have a problem with dispensationalism which says that salvation
comes in different ways in different dispensations. For example, the Scofield
Reference Bible, page 1115, in subpoint (2) of footnote 1 on grace, notice the
words, "As a dispensation, grace begins with the death and resurrection of
Christ (Rom. 3. 24-26; 4. 24, 25)." The note continues as follows,
"The point of testing is no longer legal obedience as the condition of
salvation, but acceptance or rejection of Christ...."
Now it is certainly true that salvation in
this age is by acceptance or rejection of Christ, but Mr. Scofield is wrong
when he says that before the death and resurrection of Christ the condition of
salvation was legal obedience! This is what I call
"hyper-dispensationalism." There are those who likewise erroneously
believe that salvation will be other than grace through faith during the
millennium. This is also heresy! Salvation has always been and will always be
by grace through faith in Christ. From the first sin in the garden of Eden
until the last person who is saved in the millennium, every person who goes to
Heaven will go there by grace.
I take even stronger issue with the
hyper-dispensationalism which says that the letters to the seven churches in
Asia Minor in Revelation 2 and 3 represent
seven ages of church history. For example, Mr. Scofield says that the message
to the church in Ephesus is the church at the end of the apostolic age. Where
is that in the Bible? Then he says that the letter to the church in Smyrna
represents the "Period of the great persecutions to A.D. 316." Where
is that in the Bible?
Then he says that the letter to the church
in Pergamos represents "The church under imperial favour, settled in the
world, A.D. 316 to the end." Where is that in the Bible? Then he says that
the letter to the church at Thyatira represents "A.D. 500-1500: the
triumph of Balaamism and Nicolaitanism; a believing remnant (vs. 24-28)."
Where is that in the Bible?
Then he says that the letter to the church
in Sardis represents "The period of the Reformations; a believing remnant
(vs. 4, 5)." Where is that in the Bible? Then he says that the letter to
the church in Philadelphia represents "The true church in the professing
church." Where is that in the Bible? Then he says that the letter to the
church in Laodicea represents the final state of apostasy. Where is that in the
Bible? This kind of heresy is no where to be found in the Word of God, and the
danger of it is that these hyper-dispensationalists enjoy teaching that since
this is the day of apostasy, God does not do any great works anymore and that
this is the day where we just hold out faithful to the end. According to them,
no great churches can be built, and no great revivals can be had.
What a sad commentary! What a pitiful look
at the Scripture! There is absolutely nothing that says we cannot have revival
today. We can have revival anytime God's people will pay the price!
These seven letters to the seven churches
are exactly that. There were churches named, "the church at Ephesus,"
"the church at Smyrna," the church at Pergamos," "the
church at Thyatira," "the church at Sardis," "the church at
Philadelphia" and "the church at Laodicea." These churches had
problems like all churches do. The Holy Spirit inspired the
Apostle John to write letters to these
churches to help the churches get straightened out. Would somebody please show
me in the Bible where these letters represent the seven ages of church history?
There Is a False Teaching Also
Concerning the Last Days
The first time the term "the last
days" is mentioned in the Bible is in Isaiah 2:2, 'And it shall come to
pass in the last days, that the mountain of the LORD'S house shall be
established in the top of the mountains, and shall be exalted above the hills;
and all nations shall flow unto it." Here we have something that is
predicted to happen in the last days.
Now we come concerning the last days to Joel
2:28, 29, 'And it shall come to pass afterward, that I will pour out my spirit
upon all flesh; and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men
shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions: And also upon the
servants and upon the handmaids in those days will I pour out my spirit."
Please note what will happen in the last
days. It is talking about the power of the Holy Spirit coming upon people.
Please notice Acts 2:14-1 8, "But Peter, standing up with the eleven,
lifted up his voice, and said unto them, Ye men of Judea, and all ye that dwell
at Jerusalem, be this known unto you, and hearken to my words: For these are
not drunken, as ye suppose, seeing it is but the third hour of the day. But
this is that which was spoken by the prophet Joel; And it shall come to pass in
the last days, saith God, I will pour out of my Spirit upon all flesh: and your
sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions,
and your old men shall dream dreams: And on my servants and on my handmaidens I
will pour out in those days of my Spirit; and they shall prophesy."
It is Pentecost; 3000 people are about to be
saved. Peter stands up to speak. He explains that what is happening there on
Pentecost is a fulfillment of the prophecy of Joel 2:28, 29, which he quotes.
Notice also in verse 17 that he calls these the last days.
Now I'm not saying that there are no signs
that must precede the second coming of Jesus Christ to the earth. I'm fully
aware of the tribulation plagues, of the end time war, of Russia and her allies
attacking Israel and the Western Confederacy defending Israel, and of the
Eastern Confederacy coming from the land of the sun rising to join Russia, etc.
Though I do believe that the rapture is an imminent event that could take place
anytime, I nevertheless do not discount that there are some signs that could
point to the soonness of the tribulation period and the second coming of Christ
at the end of that period. However, the term "the last days"
describes the days from the resurrection of Christ even until this day and
until the consummation of the age.
Now turn to II Timothy 3:1-8, "This
know also, that in the last days perilous times shall come. For men shall be
lovers of their own selves, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient
to parents, unthankful, unholy, without natural affection, trucebreakers, false
accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good, Traitors,
heady, highminded, lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God; Having a form
of godliness, but denying the power thereof from such turn away. For of this
sort are they which creep into houses, and lead captive silly women laden with
sins, led away with divers lusts, Ever learning, and never able to come to the
knowledge of the truth. Now as Jannes and Jambres withstood Moses, so do these
also resist the truth: men of corrupt minds, reprobate concerning the
faith."
Notice there in II Timothy 3:1 the term,
"the last days." Likewise notice the condition of the last days,
bearing in mind that the last days started at the resurrection of Christ, as we
learned a while ago in Acts 2:16, 17. We find such things
characterizing this age as people being
lovers of themselves, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to
parents, etc. It goes on to say, "without natural affection,
trucebreakers, false accusers, "etc. Then it mentions "having
a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof" Now these are not
things unique to the days in which we live. People have always been lovers of
their own selves, covetous, boasters. People have always been trucebreakers,
false accusers, high minded, disobedient to parents, lovers of pleasure. People
have always had a form of godliness.
However, we should notice here that whatever
these last days are, in II Timothy 3:5 Paul tells Timothy, "from such
turn away." He was saying, "Timothy, you turn away from these
people," showing that these were already the last days. Notice the words
in verse 6, "for of this sort are they...." Notice the word "are."
That word is in the present tense. These people were there then. These
people then were covetous, unthankful, unholy, false accusers and disobedient
to parents. They were alive then, for the apostle said, "are
they."
Notice also in II Timothy 2:6 it says, "and
lead captive silly women laden with sins...." Notice the present
tense. They were doing it then.
Now look down to verse 8. Notice the words, "so
do these also..." In other words, as Jannes and Jambres withstood
Moses, there were people at that very time who did the same thing. Paul is
saying to Timothy, "In these last days, these people will do these things,
and this is the way you are supposed to respond to them."
Now turn to Hebrews 1:1, 2, "God,
who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers
by the prophets, Hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son, whom he
hath appointed heir of all things, by whom also he made the worlds." Notice
that Paul (probably the writer of Hebrews), used the present tense, "hath
in these last days," so in Hebrews 1:1 the last days were already
there.
Now turn to I Peter 1:19, 20, "But
with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without
spot: Who verily was foreordained before the foundation of the world, but was
manifest in these last times for you." Notice especially in verse 20
the words, "in these last times." Once again, Peter is saying
what Paul had said - that these were the last days.
Now notice II Peter 3:3-5, "Knowing
this first, that there shall come in the last days scoffers, walking after
their own lusts, And saying, Where is the promise of his coming? for since the
fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning of the
creation. For this they willingly are ignorant of, that by the word of God the
heavens were of old, and the earth standing out of the water and in the
water." In verse 3 he mentions the last days. In verse 5 he
says, "for this they willingly are ignorant of...." Notice the
present tense - they "are ignorant of." In other words,
these "last days" were in existence at the time that this was
written.
Now notice I John 2:18, "Little
children, it is the last time:
and as ye have heard that antichrist
shall come, even now are there many antichrists; whereby we know that it is the
last time." Notice the words in
the first part of verse 18, "it is the last time." The word
"is" indicates present tense. John said the same thing that Peter and
Paul said.
Again you find in the last part of verse 18,
"it is the last time." How much more plain could it be? Paul,
John and Peter all attested to the fact that the last days were in existence at
the time they were living.
Now turn to Jude 18, 19, "How that
they told you there should be mockers in the last time, who should walk after
their own ungodly lusts. These be they who separate themselves, sensual, having
not the Spirit."
In Jude 18 the term "last time"is mentioned.
In verse 19, it says "these be"-notice present tense. "They
who separate themselves"-notice present tense. There Jude joined with
Paul, Peter and John in attesting to the
fact that the last days were days during which they were living.
God's people can do great things
for Him now!
Daniel 11:20-23, "Then shall stand up
in his estate a raiser of taxes in the glory of the kingdom: but within few
days he shall be destroyed, neither in anger, nor in battle. And in his estate
shall stand up a vile person, to whom they shall not give the honour of the
kingdom: but he shall come in peaceably, and obtain the kingdom by flatteries.
And with the arms of a flood shall they be overflown from before him, and shall
be broken; yea, also the prince of the covenant. And after the league made with
him he shall work deceitfully: for he shall come up, and shall become strong
with a small people."
Daniel 11:32, 33, 'And such as do
wickedly against the covenant shall he corrupt by flatteries: but the people
that do know their God shall be strong, and do exploits. And they that
understand among the people shall instruct many: yet they shallfall by the
sword, and by flame, by captivity, and by spoil, many days."
In verse 20-23, it is obvious that God is
talking about the end time. He talks about the antichrist and his work; he
talks about the league that will be made with Israel. All Bible teachers who
hold the premillennial position would agree that these verses deal with the end
time. Now, notice the last half of verse 32, "but the people that do
know their God shall be strong, and do exploits." Then look again at
verse 33, 'And they that understand among the people shall instruct
many...." It sounds to me like exploits will still be done in
the end time. The truth is, one of the greatest revivals (as far as evangelism
is concerned) that the world has ever seen will take place during the
tribulation period, and certainly God's grace is not limited to this
generation.
It is a wicked thing for dusty Bible
teachers with their dusty theology to compartmentalize the Bible concerning
salvation and soul winning. It doesn't bother me for someone to talk about
dispensations, and it doesn't bother me for people to divide the Bible, as long
as they do not divide it up concerning the plan of salvation, concerning the power
of God, and concerning soul winning! People can be saved today like they were
in the book of Acts! God's people can have revival just like they always could!
I was preaching in the deep South. On
Tuesday night I made a statement that startled myself. I made the statement
that if somebody would pay the price in this generation, a church could still
have 3000 people saved on one Sunday. I could not believe I said it. Flying
back to Chicago the next morning, the Lord seemed to impress that upon me. In
fact, I could almost hear Him speak and ask me if I believed what I had said
the night before. I was somewhat stunned that I had said it. Somewhat to my own
surprise, I went to my people that Wednesday night and told them that we were
going to have 3000 people saved on the third Sunday of March of that year.
(That date was about two months away.)
The First Baptist Church of Hammond,
Indiana, began to work and pray as I've never seen a church work and pray. We
were asking God to give us 3000 people saved on, as it were, another Pentecost.
On that special Sunday, 5195 people walked the aisles of the First Baptist
Church of Hammond receiving Christ as Saviour! The next year we had a second
Pentecost Sunday, and over 3300 people were saved! Then the next year we had
another Pentecost Sunday, and over 4900 people were saved, as Dr. Curtis Hutson
was our guest speaker.
I'm not a great preacher. I don't profess to
be a great Christian. I just profess to serve a great God Who is the same
yesterday, today and forever, and Who will give revival when God's people pay
the price!
I believe that II Chronicles 7:14 is still
valid, and while the ultra-dispensationalists are saying it cannot happen
today, there are men of God all over America who are seeing it happen! More
people are being baptized today than in the history of the United States of
America. More great soul-winning churches are being built than have ever been
built.
Let the dusty theologians say it can't be
done, but give me a generation of young preachers on fire for God who believe
the Word of God, believe the promises of God and claim the blessings of God,
and we will prove by the grace of God that it can be done today! I am not
fighting dispensationalism; I am attacking vigorously the heresy and false
teaching that says it can't be done today. Whatever God could do, God can do!
Whatever God can do, God will do, if His people meet His conditions!
Chapter Three
Formal Worship -
An Enemy of Soul Winning
Of course, the word "formal" comes
from the word "form," which means "an outline." From this
we can believe that formal worship then would be an outline of worship - going through the form.
II Timothy 3:5, "Having a form of
godliness, but denying the power thereof from such turn away.
The first mention of worship in the Bible is
in Genesis 22:5, "And Abraham said unto his young men, Abide ye here
with the ass; and I and the lad will go yonder and worship, and come again to
you."
This is the story of Abraham offering Isaac
on Mount Moriah. Notice the words, "I and the lad will go yonder and
worship." This is a far cry from what we call worship. The worship
that Abraham was going to do was to go to a mountain, build an altar, take a
knife, kill his son and offer him for a sacrifice.
The next mention of worship in the Bible is
in Genesis 24:26, 48, 52, "And the man bowed down his head, and
worshipped the LORD. And I bowed my head, and worshipped the LORD, and blessed
the LORD God of my master Abraham, which had led me in the right way to take my
master's brother's daughter
unto his son. And it came to pass, that,
when Abraham 's servant heard their words, he worshipped the LORD, bowing
himself to the earth." Abraham
had sent his servant back to the old country to choose a bride for his son
Isaac. At each step in the accomplishing of this task, the servant worshipped.
Neither of these two instances had anything
to do with a public worship service.
Worship in the Bible
Was an Individual Act
There is not one single mention of a worship
service in the New Testament. There is not one single command or even an
implication to the church to have a public worship service. Worship was a
private matter.
In Genesis 22:5, Abraham
and Isaac went to Mount Moriah to worship. This was an individual act. In
Genesis 24:26, 48, 52, Abraham's servant worshipped in an individual
act.
In Exodus 34:8, Moses worshipped
individually upon the receipt of the second tables of the law. "And
Moses made haste, and bowed his head toward the earth, and worshipped."
In Judges 7:15, in the midst of his battle
against the Midianites, Gideon worshipped individually. "And it was so,
when Gideon heard the telling of the dream, and the interpretation thereof,
that he worshipped, and returned into the host of Israel, and said, Arise; for
the LORD hath delivered into your hand the host of Midian."
In I Samuel 1:19, when Hannah was told that
she would bear a son, she worshipped individually. "And they rose up in
the morning early, and worshipped before the LORD, and returned,
and came to their house to Ramah: and
Elkanah knew Hannah his wife; and the LORD remembered her."
In I Samuel 1:28, Hannah brought Samuel to
Eli, and Samuel worshipped individually. "Therefore also I have lent
him to the LORD; as long as he liveth he shall be lent to the LORD. And he
worshipped the LORD there."
In I Samuel 15:3 1, Saul worshipped
individually. "So Samuel turned again after Saul; and Saul worshipped
the LORD."
In II Samuel 12:20, David arose after the
death of his illegitimate child borne by Bath-sheba, and after having repented,
he worshipped individually. "Then David arose from the earth, and
washed, and anointed himself, and changed his apparel, and came into the house
of the LORD, and worshipped: then he came to his own house; and when he
required, they set bread before him, and he did eat."
In II Samuel 15:32, David came to the top of
the mount, and he worshipped individually. "And it came to pass, that
when David was come to the top of the mount, where he worshipped God, behold,
Hushai the Archite came to meet him with his coat rent, and earth upon his
head."
In Job 1:20, Job worshipped individually
upon hearing of the death of his children. "Then Job arose, and rent
his mantle, and shaved his head, and fell down upon the ground, and
worshipped."
In Matthew 8:2, a leper came to Jesus and
sought cleansing. When he came to the Saviour, he worshipped Him saying. "And,
behold, there came a leper and worshipped him, saying, Lord, if thou wilt, thou
canst make me clean." He worshipped individually.
In Matthew 9:18, a certain ruler came to
Jesus interceding for his daughter, and he worshipped individually. "While
he spake these things unto them, behold, there came a certain ruler,
and worshipped him, saying, My daughter is
even now dead: but come and lay thy hand upon her, and she shall live."
In Matthew 15:25, a woman seeking healing
for her daughter worshipped individually. "Then came she and worshipped
him, saying, Lord, help me."
In John 9:38, a blind man was healed by
Jesus, and he worshipped individually. "And he said, Lord, I believe.
And he worshipped him."
In Acts 16:14, Lydia by the riverside
worshipped individually. "And a certain woman named Lydia, a seller
ofpurple, of the city of Thyatira, which worshipped God, heard us: whose heart
the Lord opened, that she attended unto the things which were spoken of
Paul."
In Acts 18:7, Justus worshipped
individually. "And he departed thence, and entered into a certain man's
house, named .Justus, one that worshipped God, whose house joined hard to the
synagogue."
In Hebrews 11:21, Jacob, at the time of his
death, leaned upon the top of his staff and worshipped individually. "By
faith Jacob, when he was a dying, blessed both the sons of Joseph; and
worshipped, leaning upon the top of his staff"
Worship in the New
Testament
The word "worship" is mentioned 35
times in the New Testament. Not one time does it deal with a public worship
service.
In Matthew 2:2, the wise men came to worship
Jesus. This was not a public service. "Saying, Where is he that is born
King of the Jews ?for we have seen his star in the east, and are come to
worship him."
In Matthew 2:8, Herod enquired of the wise
men so he could come and worship Jesus. Had this been done, it would not have
been a public service, but an individual matter. "And he sent them to
Bethlehem, and said, Go and search diligently for the young child; and when ye
have found him, bring me word again, that I may come and worship him
also."
In Matthew 4:9 and Luke 4:7, Satan promised
to give Jesus the kingdoms of this world if He would fall down and worship him.
"And saith unto him, All these things willl give thee, if thou wilt
fall down and worship me." "If thou therefore wilt worship me, all
shall be thine."
In Matthew 15:9 and Mark 7:7, we have the
mention of vain worship. "But in vain they do worship me, teaching for
doctrines the commandments of men." "Ho wbeit in vain do they worship
me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men."
In John 4:20, 22-24, we have Jesus rebuking
formal worship as He talked to the woman at Sychar's well and explained to her
that they who would worship Him must worship Him in spirit and in truth. He was
telling her that she worshipped one place and the Jews worshipped another
place, but that worship was an individual matter and could be done anywhere.
The woman at the well said, "Our fathers worshipped in this mountain;
and ye say, that in Jerusalem is the place where men ought to worship." Jesus
answered her, "Ye worship ye know not what: we know what we worship:
for salvation is of the Jews. But the hour cometh, and now is, when the true
worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth: for the Father
seeketh such to worship him. God is a Spirit: and they that worship him must worship
him in spirit and in truth."
In John 12:20, the Greeks came to worship at
a feast. This was done by bringing offerings. "And there were certain
Greeks among them that came up to worship at the feast."
In Acts 7:42, 43, we have the word
"worship" mentioned concerning the golden calf in the wilderness. "Then
God turned,
and gave them up to worship the host of
heaven; as it is written in the book of the prophets, 0 ye house of Israel,
have ye offered to me slain beasts and sacnfices by the space of forty years in
the wilderness? Yea, ye took up the tabernacle of Moloch, and the star of your
god Remphan, figures which ye made to worship them: and I will carry you away
beyond Babylon."
In Acts 17:23, Paul mentions on Mars' hill
that the Greeks were worshipping an unknown god. "For as I passed by,
and beheld your devotions, I found an altar with this inscription, TO THE
UNKNOWN GOD. Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, him declare I unto you.
In Acts 18:13, worship contrary to the law
was rebuked by some. "Saying, This fellow persuadeth men to worship God
contrary to the law."
In Acts 24:11, the word "worship"
is connected with Jewish worship. "Because that thou mayest understand,
that there are yet but twelve days since I went up to Jerusalem for to worship."
In Acts 24:14, the worship was done by
believing the Bible. "But this I confess unto thee, that after the way
which they call heresy, so worship I the God of my fathers, believing all
things which were written in the law and in the prophets."
In Philippians 3:3, we have individual
worship. "For we are the circumcision, which worship God in the spirit,
and rejoice in Christ .Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh."
In Hebrews 1:6, we find the mention of
angels worshipping. "And again, when he bringeth in the first begotten
into the world, he saith, And let all the angels of God worship him."
In Revelation 3:9, we have worship at the
synagogue of Satan. "Behold, I will make them of the synagogue of
Satan, which say they are Jews, and are not, but do lie; behold, I will make
them to come and worship before thy feet, and to know that I have loved
thee."
In Revelation 4:10, 11, we have worship
pertaining to the judgment seat; that is, worship that will be done in the air
after the rapture. "The four and twenty elders fall down before him
that sat on the throne, and worship him that liveth for ever and ever, and cast
their crowns before the throne, saying. Thou art worthy, 0 Lord, to receive
glory and honour and power: for thou hast created all things, and for thy
pleasure they are and were created."
In Revelation 9:20, we have worship of
idolatry in the tribulation period. "And the rest of the men which were
not killed by these plagues yet repented not of the works of their hands, that
they should not worship devils, and idols of gold, and silver, and brass, and
stone, and of wood: which neither can see, nor hear, nor walk."
In Revelation 13:8, 12, 15, we have the
worship of the Antichrist during the tribulation period. "And all that
dwell upon the earth shall worship him, whose names are not written in the book
of life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world. And he exerciseth
all the power of the first beast before him, and causeth the earth and them
which dwell therein to worship the first beast, whose deadly wound was healed.
And he had power to give life unto the image of the beast, that the image of
the beast should both speak, and cause that as many as would not worship the
image of the beast should be killed."
The consequence of those who worship the
Antichrist is stated in Revelation 14:7, 9-11, "Saying with a loud
voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for the hour of his judgment is come:
and worship him that made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and the fountains of
waters. And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, If any man
worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark in his forehead, or in
his hand, The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured
out without mixture.... And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever
and ever: and they have no rest day nor night, who worship the
beast and his image, and whosoever
receiveth the mark of his name."
In Revelation 15:4, we have the
tribulation worship. "Who shall not fear thee, 0 Lord, and glonfy thy
name?for thou only art holy: for all nations shall come and worship before
thee; for thy judgments are made manifest."
In Revelation 19:10, John worshipped an
angel and was rebuked for doing so. "And I fell at his feet to worship
him. And he said unto me, See thou do it not: lam thy fellowservant, and of thy
brethren that have the testimony of Jesus: worship God: for the testimony of
Jesus is the spirit of prophecy."
In Revelation 22:8, 9, we have the same
rebuke given to John again for bowing down and worshipping before an angel. "And
I John saw these things, and heard them. And when I had heard and seen, Ifell
down to worship before the feet of the angel which shewed me these things. Then
saith he unto me, See thou do it not: for I am thy fellowservant, and of thy
brethren the prophets, and of them which keep the sayings of this book: worship
God."
We have just covered every time the word
"worship" is mentioned in the New Testament. It mentions not one
public service where they worshipped, not one formal worship, not anything like
the average formal church does on Sunday morning-no anthems, no "Gloria
Patri," no "Sevenfold Amen," no liturgy, no high-church public
service.
The Church Assembled for Things
Other Than Worship
Though worship was a private matter and not
a public matter, we nevertheless are commanded to assemble ourselves together
as God's people. Hebrews 10:25, "Not forsaking the
assembling of ourselves together, as the
manner of some is; but exhorting one another: and so much the more, as ye see
the day approaching."
According to the New Testament, the public
meetings were for strength for God's people, for fellowship, for the taking of
the Lord's Supper, for praying, for studying the Bible, for praise, etc. The
soul winning was to be done publicly and from house to house. The worshipping
was to be done alone, and the church assembled for the aforementioned reasons.
When formal worship is substituted for the
real purpose of the assembly, Christians do not get strengthened, encouraged,
exhorted or motivated to do the main task of the church, and that is to carry
out the Great Commission, which is soul winning. To that end, formal worship
becomes an enemy of soul winning!
Chapter Four
Misunderstood Repentance -
An Enemy of Soul Winning
Over and over again the question is asked
me, "Is repentance necessary for salvation?" Of course, this is of
utmost importance. Anything that deals with the way a person can escape the
fires of eternal Hell and go to Heaven to live forever is of vital importance.
In this chapter, we will address this most important question.
1. First, we need to find what makes one
lost. Please notice John 3:18, "He that believeth on him is not
condemned:
but he that believeth not is condemned already,
because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God."
It is very plain in this verse what
makes a person lost. Notice the words, "he that believeth not is
condemned already." A person who does not believe is condemned, so not
believing is what makes a person lost.
Bear in mind, the word "believing"
is the Greek word which means "to rely upon." When one believes on
Christ, he simply relies on Him to save him and take him to Heaven when he
dies. It is very plain here that what condemns a person is believing not. Then
notice it says, "because he hath not believed in the name of the only
begotten Son of God." Once again, we are told what makes a person lost
- because he has not believed in the name of the only
begotten Son of God. It is as simple as that.
Now look at John 3:36, "He that
believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son
shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him." Again, we
are trying to decide and determine what makes one lost. It is very plain here.
Notice the word believeth, "and he that believeth not the Son shall not
see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him." What keeps a person
from seeing life? Believing not! What makes the wrath of God abide on a person?
Believing not! So, from what must a person repent in order to be saved? He must
repent of that which makes him lost. Since "believing not" makes him
lost, "believing" makes him saved. The repentance there is a turning
from the thing that keeps him from being saved to the thing that saves him. So,
yes, there is a repentance from unbelief in order to believe. It is simply a
change of direction. It means a turning around. You are going away from
believing, and you decide to turn around and believe. You change your direction;
you change your mind. With your will you believe and rely upon Christ to save
you. In order to believe, you have to repent of unbelief. That which makes a
man lost must be corrected.
Now turn to John 5:40, "And ye will
not come to me, that ye might have life." Oh, how simple this is, and
yet how plain! Why does a person not have life, according to this verse?
Because he will not come to Christ. So, if a person is going away from Christ,
he must turn around and come to Christ, which is a change of direction or a
change of mind. This is repentance - repenting of the
thing that keeps one from being saved, repenting from "going away" to
"coming to."
Notice Isaiah 53:6, "All we like
sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the LORD
hath laid on him the iniquity of us all." Especially notice the words,
"we have turned every one to his own way." That's what not
being saved is - turning to our own way. Now if we turn to God's way,
which is putting our faith and trust in Jesus, we turn around from going our
own way to going His way, from unbelief to belief. This is Bible repentance.
Bear in mind, it is the faith that saves. The turning around is necessary in
order to put our faith in Christ. One must repent from that thing that keeps
him from being saved in order to be saved.
If a person were saved by good works, then
he would have to repent of bad works, or of not doing good works, in order to
be saved. If a person were saved by quitting his sinning, then he would have to
repent of his sinning in order to be saved. A person is saved by believing, so
he repents of his unbelief or turns from his unbelief in order to be saved.
Let us look at the verses that teach us we
are saved by belief.
John 3:15, "That whosoever believeth
in him should not perish, but have eternal life."
John 3:16, "For God so loved the
world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him
should not perish, but have everlasting life."
John 3.18, "He that believeth on him
is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he
hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God."
John 3:36, "He that believeth on the
Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see
life; but the wrath of God abideth on him."
Acts 16:31, "And they said, Believe
on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house."
There are those who say we have to repent of
our sins in order to be saved. No, we have to repent only of the thing that
makes us unsaved, and that is unbelief. If a person needs to turn from his sins
in order to be saved, what sins does he turn from? Does he turn from pride?
Does he turn from selfishness? Does he turn from covetousness? The truth is,
nobody can turn from all of his sins until he is raptured and he receives a
body like the body of the Saviour. I John 3:2, "Beloved, now are we the
sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that,
when he shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he
is." According to Psalm 19:12, we do not even know all of our sins.
David said, "Cleanse thou me from secret faults." What he is
talking about here is being cleansed from faults he doesn't even know he has. A
person, when he is first saved, does not know all the things that he is doing
that are wrong, and if a person has to repent of all of his sins, where is
growth in grace? Where is being a babe in Christ? Where does the carnal
Christian fit in here?
Now don't misunderstand me. I am certainly
for separation and for living a godly life, but the cleansing of our lives is
not done by us any more than salvation is done by us. Salvation is simply
repenting of unbelief, and believing, and letting Christ save us. We yield to
Him to save us; He does! Immediately the Holy Spirit comes in to live. The Holy
Spirit begins His work of cleansing in our lives. He is the one Who cleanses,
just as he is the one Who saves. He is the one Who points our sins out to us
after we are saved just as He is the one Who saves us when we are saved.
This chapter is being dictated in San
Antonio, Texas. I am sitting in a Holiday Inn. Tomorrow morning early I will
catch a plane for Chicago. Let's suppose I get on that plane, and I am trusting
the pilot to take me to Chicago. I do not know how to operate the plane, nor do
I know the route to Chicago by air. There is nothing I can do to get myself to
Chicago by that plane. I trust the pilot to get me there. So, we get up in the
air thousands of feet high, and let's suppose I get a knife and cut up the seat
in front of me. Now, where am I going? I'm still going to Chicago. Why? I
repented of "not trusting the plane to take me" to "trusting the
plane to take me."
The stewardess comes and says, "Mr.
Hyles, what are you doing back here?" I say, "I'm just cutting up a
little bit!"
Then suppose I reach up and cut off a lock
of her hair. Now where am I going? I'm going to Chicago. You see, how I behave
on the flight does not determine my destination.
So, the stewardess goes to the pilot and
says, "Mr. Hyles, back in seat 14A is causing some disturbance. Look at my
hair. Go back and look at the seat." The pilot leaves the plane in the
hands of the co-pilot and comes back to seat 14A and says, "Mr. Hyles,
what are you doing back here?" He looks at the seat I've cut up, he sees
the lock of hair that I've cut off the stewardess, and I reach out and cut off
his tie. Now where am I going? I'm going to Chicago. That was all
determined when I got on the airplane. Now the truth is, I will not enjoy
Chicago as much as I would have enjoyed it, nor will I go to the part of
Chicago I'd planned to, but I'm still going to Chicago.
When we put our faith and trust in Christ,
and repent of unbelief, and believe, God's Holy Spirit comes in to live and
begins to straighten us out. He points out our sins, and as we yield to Him, He
cleanses us from our sins. If we misbehave on the journey, we are still going
to Heaven, because we go to Heaven by trusting Christ to take us there. The
Holy Spirit Who came in to live begins to point out things that we should and
should not do. If we do not obey Him, if we misbehave on the journey, we will
still go to Heaven; we simply will not enjoy it as much as we would have had we
behaved, just as I would not enjoy Chicago as much as I would have had I
behaved.
I know a young man who recently got married.
He got an apartment several months before he got married and lived there alone
until the wedding took place. What a mess that apartment was! His pants were
hung on the bedpost, his shoes were left on the floor beside the bed, and the
bed was never made. Then one day he got married. Now how did he get married? He
got married by turning from being single to being married. He repented of not
being married and got married. When he took his new bride to the apartment, she
was aghast, but immediately she began to straighten things up. She put his
shoes in the closet, took his shirt off the chair, removed his clothes off the
bedpost, and made a lovely little apartment out of the mess that he had made.
Now he was not married because he cleaned up his apartment; he was married
because he
repented of that thing that kept him from
being married. He repeated the vows and accepted her as his wife. It was then
that she came in; it was then that his apartment began to get clean!
Practically every false doctrine comes from
getting things out of order. God's divine order is salvation, then change; not
change and then salvation! If one has to be changed to be saved, that's
salvation by works. It is also salvation by the flesh. The truth is, one is
cleansed from the sins of the flesh just as he is saved; by yielding to the
Holy Spirit and letting Him do His work.
2. You can repent of something other than
sin. Matthew 7:3, "Then
Judas, which had betrayed him, when he saw that he was condemned, repented
himself, and brought again the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and
elders." Notice that Judas
repented. Now what does it mean? It means he repented about keeping the money.
He had sold our Saviour for thirty pieces of silver; he changed his mind and
took the silver back. A change of mind and change of direction took place, but
it had nothing to do with salvation. He had made a bad deal; he regretted he
had made that bad deal, and he tried to correct it.
Everybody who lives in sin eventually
repents, but they do not repent of unbelief. They change their mind about sin.
No one lives in sin without realizing later that it did not bring the joy,
happiness, peace and contentment that it claimed to bring. I talk to people
every week who are tired of their sins, unhappy in their sinful life or living
a miserable, wretched life because of the results of sin. What have they done?
They have changed their mind about sin, and in some cases, they even quit their
sin - at least that sin which was most predominant in their
lives. You can repent of sin without repenting of unbelief. Such was the case
with Judas. No doubt he repented that he had done wrong. He certainly repented
of the bad deal he had made. He turned around, changed his mind and brought the
money back, but he did not repent of that thing from which he must repent in
order to be saved, and that is unbelief.
3. God repents. Notice Genesis 6:6, "And it repented the LORD
that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him at his heart." Bear
in mind, the word "repent" means "change of mind." God made
man and wished He hadn't. He was grieved because of what man had done, and He
repented that He had made man. This does not mean that God repented from sin,
because God could not sin; He simply changed His mind, which He does often.
Basically, that is what answered prayer is much of the time.
Now notice I Samuel 15:35, "And Samuel
came no more to see Saul until the day of his death: nevertheless Samuel
mourned for Saul: and the Lord repented that he had made Saul king over
Israel." God had made Saul king over Israel. The truth is that
God did not want to do so, but Israel clamored for a king. Saul was chosen to
be that king, but it then did not turn out as it should have. So, in this verse
it simply says that God repented that He had made Saul king. He changed His
mind.
What I'm saying is, there is repentance
other than repentance from sin. A lady can change her mind about the kind of
perfume she wears. A man can change his mind about the kind of food he eats or
the kind of clothes he wears. He can change his direction concerning his
manners. You can repent from discourtesy to courtesy. You can repent from
stubbornness to leniency. You can repent from impatience to patience, but those
things don't save. Repenting from the thing that makes you lost is the thing
that makes you saved, and that is, repenting of your unbelief.
Now notice Exodus 32:9-14, "And the
LORD said unto Moses, I have seen this people, and, behold, it is a stiffnecked
people: Now therefore let me alone, that my wrath may wax hot against them, and
that I may consume them: and I will make of thee a great nation. And Moses
besought the LORD his God, and said, LORD, why doth thy wrath wax hot against
thy people, which thou hast brought forth out of the land of Egypt with great
power, and with a mighty hand? Wherefore should the Egyptians speak,
and say, For mischief did he bring them
out, to slay them in the mountains, and to consume them from the face of the
earth? Turn from thy fierce wrath, and repent of this evil against thy people.
Remember Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, thy servants, to whom thou swarest by
thine own self, and saidst unto them, I will multiply your seed as the stars of
heaven, and all this land that I have spoken of will I give unto your seed, and
thy shall inherit it for ever. And the LORD repented of the evil which he
thought to do unto his people."
Let me paraphrase the story. God said to
Moses, "I'm sick and tired of the people and their rebellion. Get out of
the way so I can consume them." Moses came to God and said, "Lord,
don't do that. You're the One Who brought the people out of the land of Egypt,
and if You consume them, the heathen people are going to criticize You. Not
only that! You promised Abraham, Isaac and Jacob that you would multiply their
seed and that You would give them the land of Canaan for an everlasting
possession." Moses pleaded his case before God, reminding God what God had
promised. Then verse 14 simply says, "The LORD repented of the evil
which he thought to do unto his people." The word "evil"
here means something that would cause them pain; it's not talking about sin. God
decided not to hurt them after all. He decided not to consume them after all.
He changed His mind, but He did not change His mind concerning a sin, because
God cannot sin.
Now turn to Jonah 3:9, 10, "Who can
tell if God will turn and repent, and turn away from his fierce anger, that we
perish not? And God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way; and
God repented of the evil, that he had said that he would do unto them; and he
did it not."
God was going to punish Nineveh. Jonah had
preached in Nineveh and had warned the people that destruction was coming. The
people believed God, turned from their unbelief to belief, and God changed His
mind about punishing the people. In verse 10 the Bible says, "And God
repented of the evil that he had said that he would do unto them; and he did it
not."
Again, God simply changed His mind and
changed His direction. He was going to punish; they believed; He decided not to
punish. He changed from the direction of punishing to the direction of not
punishing. This is repentance, but not repentance from sin, because God cannot
sin.
Look at Amos 7:3, "The Lord repented
for this: It shall not be, saith the Lord."
Amos 7:6, "The Lord repented for
this: This also shall not be, saith the Lord God."
So, repentance does not always deal with
salvation and sin; it is simply a change of direction or a change of mind.
4. Now we consider repentance and salvation.
Look at Acts 3:19, "Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that
your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the
presence of the Lord."
Peter is preaching here. He tells the people
to repent and be converted. Now we have to go back to what saves. John
3:14-16, 18, 36, "And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness,
even so must the Son of man be lifted up: That whosoever believeth in him
should not perish, but have eternal life. For God so loved the world, that he
gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish,
but have everlasting life. He that believeth on him is not condemned; but he
that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the
name of the only begotten Son of God. He that believeth on the Son hath
everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the
wrath of God abideth on him." Acts 16:31, "And they said, Believe on
the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house."
So these people had to repent from not
believing and believe in order that they might be converted. They had to change
directions, change their minds.
Let me say again that I do not believe for a
second that Christian people should live like the Devil. No preacher preaches
separation more than I do. I simply believe that that separation is a work of
the Holy Spirit just like regeneration is a work of the Holy Spirit, and it
starts after one has repented from that which makes him lost, and that is
unbelief. When this is done, he believes, he is saved. Then the Holy Spirit
comes in and begins to tell the Christian what sins from which he should
repent. The man changed his mind about unbelief. The Holy Spirit directed him
there. Now the Holy Spirit comes in to live and begins to change his mind about
other things.
Now look at Acts 2:38, "Then Peter said
unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus
Christ for the remission of sins, and ye
shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost."
Peter is saying, "Change your mind and
be baptized." Now, about what did they change their minds? This is
answered in verse 41. Look at what they did in response. They gladly received
His Word, and then they were baptized. So what was this repentance? It was
repentance from not receiving His Word to receiving His Word. That's all Peter
was saying. He was saying, "Change your mind about receiving the
Word," which states that you must believe and repent from unbelief in
order to be saved.
Now turn to Acts 17:30, "And the
times of this ignorance God winked at; but now commandeth all men every where
to repent." Notice God commandeth all men every where to repent.
Repent from what? Repent from the thing that keeps them lost, and that's
unbelief. What corrects this? Look at Acts 17:34, "Howbeit certain men
clave unto him, and believed: among the which was Dionysius the Areopagite, and
a woman named Dammaris, and others with them." Notice it said,
"certain men believed." So, when he said, "repent," he was
saying "repent from unbelief and believe," because just as in Acts
2:38 and 41 a command was given to repent, and the believing was the obedience
to that command. They changed their mind about belief. They decided to believe
instead of not believe.
Now look at Mark l:15, "And saying,
The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and
believe the gospel."
Jesus Himself is saying repent, and notice
immediately He says, "repent, and believe." What He was saying is,
"Quit unbelieving, and believe. Quit not believing, and believe."
Again, I'm not saying a Christian should live like the Devil, but I am saying
that changing your life does not save you. That's salvation by works. Faith is
what saves you. You turn from unbelief to belief; from no faith to faith, and
then repentance from sins begins, because He Who convicted you from the sin of
unbelief to believing now lives in you. How easy it is now for Him to convict
you day by day of other things from which you can repent and about which you
can change your mind.
5. Repentance from sin is directed to God's people.
Revelation 2:5, "Remember therefore
from whence thou art fallen, and repent, and do the first works; or else I will
come unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his place,
except thou repent.
Here is a case of a church that was a good
church. It was a church that worked. It worked hard. It hated sin. It was
doctrinally sound. Revelation 2:2, "I know thy works, and thy labour,
and thy patience, and how thou canst not bear them which are evil: and thou
hast tried them which say they are apostles, and are not, and hast found them
liars." It was a patient church. It was a church that believed in the
name of Jesus and did not faint in their standing for that. Revelation 2:3,
"And hast borne, and hast patience, and for my name's sake hast laboured,
and hast not fainted." However, it was a church that had left its
first love. It does not say that that church lost its first love, but they left
their first love. When you lose something, you don't know where it
is. When you leave something, you know where
to find it. It does not say that this church did not love any more. The truth
is they did love. Love is what made them
faithful, what made them work, what made them have patience, what made them
hate sin, what made them stand for the name of Jesus, what made them hate false
doctrine. This was a church of people who loved God, but they had left their
first love - that first sweet love - maybe more
shallow than the love they had then.
It does not say that they loved Him less.
The truth is they probably loved Him more, but God is saying, "I want
both. I want the deep, mature love that you have now and the sweet expressive
love that you used to have.
The only sin this church had committed was
the sin of leaving their first love -that "Amen!" love, that
"Hallelujah!" love, that "Glory to God!" love, that sweet,
expressive love. Nevertheless, they sinned, and God told them to repent. Repent
from what? Repent from drinking? No. Repent from adultery? No. This is not the
subject here. It's repenting from not loving Christ with the first love.
This same type repentance was commanded to
the church in Pergamos. Revelation 2:16, "Repent; or else I will come
unto thee quickly, and willfight against them with the sword of my mouth."
The same thing was said to the church at Thyatira in Revelation 2:21,
22, "And I gave her space to repent of her fornication; and she repented
not. Behold, I will cast her into a bed, and them that commit adultery with her
into great tribulation, except they repent of their deeds." The church
in Sardis was told likewise to repent in Revelation 3:3, "Remember
therefore how thou hast received and heard, and hold fast, and repent. If
therefore thou shalt not watch, I will come on thee as a thief, and thou shalt
not know what hour I will come upon thee." The church at Laodicea
received the same command in Revelation 3:19, "As many as I love, I
rebuke and chasten: be zealous therefore, and repent."
So you can see that God tells individuals to
repent; He also tells groups to repent. He tells nations to repent. Time and
time again He called Israel to repentance.
Now let us review, as follows:
1. God says to the unsaved, "Repent
of your unbelief."
It's very interesting that in I John the
word "repentance" is never mentioned, and yet the purpose of I John
was to give people the assurance of salvation. I John 5:13, "These
things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God; that
ye may know that ye have eternal life, and that ye may believe on the name of
the Son of God." Of course, repentance is certainly implied throughout
the entire book, because the book tells us that what saves is believing on
Christ (or relying on Him) to save, which, of course, implies that that person
must repent of what makes him lost, which is unbelief.
2. God says to the saved people,
"Repent of sin." This is done by the Holy Spirit as He comes in
to live to remind us to take the clothes off the bedpost, the shirt off the
chair, put the shoes into the closet, etc.
3. If a person must repent of his sins to
be saved, of what sins must he repent? Can he repent of all of them? Isn't
that sinless perfection or holiness? Isn't that salvation by works? Of
what sin must one repent? He must repent of the sin that makes him lost, and
that's the sin of unbelief.
4. If turning from sins would get you
saved, then turning back to sins would get you lost. In Acts 16:30 the very
simple question is asked, "What must I do to be saved?" This
is the one time in the Bible where this question is asked. Now the
answer to this question must be what saves a person. Acts 16:31,
"And they said, Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved,
and thy house." There's the answer-belief. There is nothing about
repentance here, except, yes, there is something about repentance, because you
can't believe without repenting from unbelief.
5. If a person has to clean up his own
life before he gets saved, we are back to Arminianism or salvation by works.
6. We cannot do what the Holy Spirit can
do. The Holy
Spirit first convicts us of our sin of
unbelief to bring us to Christ. Once He brings us to Christ, He comes in us to
live. Romans 8:9, "But ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if
so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if any man have not the Spint of Christ, he is none of
his." I Corinthians 6:19, 20, "What? know ye not that your body is
the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are
not your own? For ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your
body, and in your spirit, which are God's."
Then when the Holy Spirit is in us, He
begins to convict us of things in our lives that should be changed. Then the
Christian life becomes a constant repenting until we wake in the likeness of
Christ.
Chapter Five
False Bibles -
An Enemy of Soul Winning
In order to live as a child of God, I must
have a perfect Bible. Matthew 4:41, "But
he answered and said, It is written, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by
every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God." Notice the words, "every word."
If I have my prayers answered, I must have a
perfect Bible. John 15:7, "If ye abide in me, and my words abide in
you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you." That
means that somewhere in the world, there has to be a perfect Bible.
God has told us that His words are pure. Psalm
12:6, "The words of the LORD are pure words: as silver tried in afurnace
of earth, punfied seven times."
God has told us that these pure words
would be preserved forever. Psalm
12:7, "Thou shalt keep them, 0 LORD, thou shalt preserve them for this
generation forever." Since
today is a part of forever,
somewhere in the world there must be pure words of God. Hence, it does not
satisfy me for someone to say that only in the original do we have the pure
words of God. Since there are no original manuscripts today, or for that
matter, there are no manuscripts even near the original manuscripts as far as
time is concerned, then what these people are saying is
that we do not have anywhere today any book
that contains the pure words of God. Yet, I am commanded to preach the Word.
II Timothy 4:2, "Preach the word; be
instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all
longsuffering and doctrine."
Now since the words of God are pure, and
since all of the so-called Bibles do not have the same words, only one can be
the real Bible that contains the very words of God, the pure words of God, and
the preserved words of God. The purpose of this chapter is not to enter into a
discussion about the Textus Receptus or Westcott-Hort; it is simply to say that
if God commanded me to preach His Word, He would have to give me His Word to
preach, and certainly His Word is pure, because the words of God are pure
according to the aforementioned Scriptures and will be preserved forever. This
preacher believes that those preserved words are in the Bible that I hold in my
right hand at this very moment-the King James Bible!
I have more respect for the person who says
that one of the false Bibles contains the very words of God than for a person
who says only the original contains the very words of God. At least he
believes, though wrongly, that we still have the words of God which are pure.
For many, many reasons I believe that the King James Bible has been preserved
in the English language word-for-word. I have to believe that. I must have the
words of God, if I live, if I preach and if I get my prayers answered.
1. There are some things that are
incorruptible. The word
"incorruptible" means "perfect," "cannot change,"
"cannot be improved." If you change something, it must go to
perfection or from perfection, so if something can be changed, it must have
been imperfect and been made perfect, or it must have been perfect and made
imperfect. Let us notice some things that are incorruptible.
(1) God. Romans 1:23, "And
changed the glory of the
incorruptible God into an image made like
to corruptible
man, and to birds, and foutfooted beasts,
and creeping things." This
means God is perfect. He cannot be improved; He cannot change. He cannot be
taken from imperfection to perfection or from perfection to imperfection.
(2) Our future crown. I
Corinthians 9:25, "And every man that striveth for the mastery is temperate
in all things. Now they do it to obtain a corruptible crown; but we an
incorruptible." Once the crown is received, it cannot be improved; it
cannot change. It will be perfect.
(3) Our glorified bodies. I
Corinthians 15:52, "In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last
trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible,
and we shall be changed." I John 3:2 "Beloved,
now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we
know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as
he is." Notice that our
glorified body will be like His, and it will be incorruptible. His glorified
body is incorruptible. You cannot improve it; you cannot change it. Then, my
glorified body will be incorruptible. It cannot be improved; it cannot be
changed.
(4) Our inheritance. I Peter 1:4,
"To an inheritance incorruptible, and undefiled, and that fadeth not away,
reserved in heaven for you." Our inheritance will be perfect. It
cannot be improved; it cannot be changed.
(5) The Word of God. I Peter
1:23, "Being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by
the word of God, which liveth and abideth forever." Psalm 126:6, "He
that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come again
with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him." Luke 8:11, "Now the
parable is this: The seed is the word of God." You will notice the seed from which we are born again
is incorruptible. It is the Word of God, which liveth and abideth forever.
Consequently, you cannot improve it; you cannot change it. If you do, you must
go from imperfection or to imperfection. Notice in
I Peter 1:23 it is called
"incorruptible." Just as God is
incorruptible, just as our crown is
incorruptible, just as our glorified body will be incorruptible, just as Jesus'
body is incorruptible, just as our inheritance is incorruptible; likewise, the
Word of God is incorruptible.
Notice in Psalm 126:6, it is "precious
seed." This implies that there is some seed which is not precious. Luke
8:11 teaches us that this seed is the Word of God. It is perfect; it cannot be
changed; it cannot be improved.
2. The words of God are the genes of
regeneration. Titus 3:5,
"Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his
mercy he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy
Ghost." Actually the word
"regeneration" means "to be re-gened." Just as the genes of
my parents brought my old nature into existence, even so the genes of God
brought my new nature into existence. Your old nature is sinful because there
was sin in the genes, but the genes of the Word of God are incorruptible,
meaning that which is born of God; that is, the new nature, cannot sin.
Now if the very words of God must be pure,
and if in fact the King James Bible contains the preserved words of God, then
any other words are not the words of God. This means that the Revised Version
is not precious seed because it is not incorruptible. This means that the Good
News for Modern Man is not precious seed, because it is not incorruptible.
This means that the Living
Bible is not precious seed because it is not incorruptible.
This means that the Reader's Digest Bible is not precious seed, because
it is not incorruptible. This means that the New King James Bible is not precious seed because it is not incorruptible. This means that
the New Scofield Bible is not precious seed, because it is not
incorruptible. This means that the New International
Version (NIV) is not precious seed,
and it is not incorruptible. This means that the American Standard Version
is not precious seed because it is not incorruptible. If the versions do not
agree, then all of them cannot be the very words of God that have been
preserved for us.
3. The genes of the new birth must be
incorruptible. I Peter 1:23,
"Being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by the
word of God, which liveth and abideth for ever." These words were penned in the first century, but it
says that the incorruptible seed "liveth and abideth for ever." Since
today is a part of "for ever," we must have the incorruptible seed in
order to be re-gened, or regenerated, or born again.
4. Suppose corruptible seed is used. Can
a person then
be born again from it? You answer that
question. According to I Peter 1:23 we read, "Being born again,
not of corruptible seed...." Then, if corruptible seed is used, one
cannot be born again. I have a conviction as deep as my soul that every
English-speaking person who has ever been born again was born of incorruptible
seed; that is, the King James Bible. Does that mean that if someone goes soul
winning and takes a false Bible that the person who receives Christ is not
saved? I believe with all of my soul that the incorruptible seed must have been
used somewhere in that person's life. If all a person has ever read is the
Revised Standard Version, he cannot be born again, because corruptible seed is
used, and I Peter 1:23 is very plain to tell us that a person cannot be born
again of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible seed, and it explains that that
incorruptible seed is the Word of God, and it explains that it liveth and
abideth forever.
This is also borne out in Psalm 19:7,
"The law of the LORD is perfect, converting the soul: the testimony of the
LORD is sure, making wise the simple." Notice the words, "the
law of the LORD is perfect, converting the soul." It is the law
of the Lord that converts. It is the Word of God that regenerates. The Word is
the seed, and the seed must be incorruptible.
7. The perfect Word of God must be used if a person
grows in grace. 1 Peter 2:2,
"As newborn babes, desire the sincere milk of the word, that ye may grow
thereby." Notice that it is the
"sincere" Word of God by which we grow in grace. So, to grow in
grace, we must have the sincere (pure) Word of God.
This same thing is taught in Deuteronomy
4:10, 36, "Specially the day that thou stoodest before the LORD thy God in
Horeb, when the Lord said unto me, Gather me the people together, and I will
make them hear my words, that they may learn to fear me all the days that they
shall live upon the earth, and that they may teach their children. Out of
heaven he made thee to hear his voice, that he might instruct thee: and upon
earth he shewed thee his great fire; and thou heardest his words out of the
midst of the fire."
Notice the words of God are what teach us,
and from the words of God we are to be instructed. If they are in fact words of
God, they must be pure, because a pure God could not give impure words, and an
incorruptible God could not give corruptible words.
8. These words of God are perfect. There
are several things in the Bible that are called perfect.
(1) His work is perfect. Deuteronomy 32:4, "He is the
Rock, his work is perfect: for all his
ways are judgment: a
God of truth and without iniquity, just
and right is he."
(2) His way is perfect. Psalm 18:30, "As for God, his way is perfect:
the word of the Lord is tried: he is a buckler to all those that trust in
him."
(3) The Heavenly Father is perfect. Matthew
5:48, "Be
ye therefore perfect, even as your Father
which is in heaven is perfect."
(4) The glorified body will be perfect. I Corinthians
13:10, "But when that which is perfect
is come, then that which is in part shall be done away.
(5) The law of the Lord is perfect. Psalm 19:7, "The law of the Lord is perfect,
converting the soul: the testimony of theLord is sure, making wise the
simple." So we must have an
incorruptible, perfect Word of God. To say that this could be found only in the
original manuscripts is to say we have no words of God today that are perfect,
which means we have no perfect Book to preach, we have no perfect Book to read, we have no perfect Book by which to grow, and we have no perfect
Seed by which we can be born again or re-gened or regenerated.
9. There are several ways that the
words of God are made into impure words by translators and theologians
(selfstyled).
(1) They add to the Word of God. Proverbs 30:5, 6, "Every word of God is pure; he
is a shield unto them that put their trust in him. Add thou not unto his words,
lest he reprove thee, and thou be found a liar." Notice several things in these verses. First, every
word of God is pure. Psalm 119:140, "Thy word is very pure: therefore
thy servant loveth it." Psalm 12:6, "The words of the LORD are pure
words: as silver tried in a furnace of earth, purified seven times." Psalm
19:8, "The statutes of the LORD are right, rejoicing the heart: the commandment
of the LORD is pure, enlightening the eyes." Second, in Proverbs 30:6,
we are told not to add to these words. Third, in verse 6 the Bible says that He reproves
those who do add to His words.
Then in verse 6 also, the Bible says that
those who do add to His words are liars.
Now notice Deuteronomy 4:2a, "Ye
shall not add unto the word which I command you...." We are commanded
not to add to His Word.
(2) They take away from the words of God.
Deuteronomy 4:2, "Ye shall not add
unto the word which I command you, neither shall ye diminish ought from it,
that ye may keep the commandments of the Lord your God which I command
you." God
plainly commands that we not diminish His Word.
Now notice Revelation 22:19, "And if
any man shall take away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God
shall take away his part out of the book
of life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are written in
this book" A stern rebuke and
warning is given to anyone who takes away from the words of God. This means
that God's judgment will rest upon those who try to give us a condensed Bible.
(3) They will try to change the Word of God.
Jeremiah 26:2, "Thus saith the Lord; Stand in the court of the LORD'S
house, and speak unto all the cities of Judah, which come to worship in the
LORD'S house, all the words that I command thee to speak unto them; diminish
not a word." Here we have a command not to diminish one word. It is
not talking here necessarily about taking words away but changing a word or
diminishing a word. Let the translators of the many versions take heed and take
warning.
In conclusion, one may ask, "What does
this have to do with soul winning?" Beloved, it has everything to do with
soul winning. If the words of God are the incorruptible seed, and if seed must
be incorruptible, if someone is born again, then the soul winner must have a
perfect Bible. Thank God, we do!
Chapter Six
Church Leaders (Nobles)
Not Soul Winners -
An Enemy of Soul Winning
Nehemiah 3:1-5, "Then Eliashib the
high priest rose up with his brethren the priests, and they builded the sheep
gate; they sanctified it, and set up the doors of it; even unto the tower of
Meah they sanctified it, unto the tower of Hananeel. And next unto him builded
the men of Jericho. And next to them builded Zaccur the son of Imri. But the
fish gate did the sons of Hassenaah build, who also laid the beams thereof, and
set up the doors thereof, the locks thereof, and the bars thereof And next unto
them repaired Meremoth the son of Urijah, the son of Koz. And next unto them
repaired Meshullam the son of Berechiah, the son of Meshezabeel. And next unto
them repaired Zadok the son of Baana. And next unto them the Tekoites repaired;
but their nobles put not their necks to the work of their Lord."
My ministry has spanned two generations. I
have preached in the great churches of both generations. I have preached in the
great fundamental colleges and Bible institutes of both generations. I have
watched the deterioration of churches and colleges and Bible institutes. I have
wondered what caused it. I have studied the cause, and in this chapter I
present
at least one thing that has aided the
deterioration of our churches and schools.
When I became Pastor of the First Baptist
Church in Hammond over 33 years ago, I inherited an unusual situation for an
old-fashioned, hellfire-and-brimstone preacher such as I. I inherited a church
with 22 committees. It seemed to take five people seven days to put flowers on
the communion table, and it seemed to take seven people seven days to plan the
music for Sunday.
I inherited a church where my predecessor
preached in formal attire with striped pants and a scissor-tail coat. The
church would not allow the piano to be played on Sunday morning. They allowed
only a pipe organ for accompaniment. They would not allow a congregational song
leader on Sunday morning. Sunday morning was the formal worship service. Sunday
night was an informal service, attended by a handful.
When I went to the First Baptist Church as
Pastor, my Associate Pastor, now Evangelist Jim Lyons, went with me. Shortly
after we arrived, Brother Lyons went to his office on Sunday morning to find a
picture taken from his wall. This picture was one of his wife and children. A
note was placed beside the picture from one of the trustees saying that he
could not hang a picture on his wall without permission from the Board of
Trustees.
In the church there was a constitution
committee. Every adult Sunday school class was required to have a constitution.
Each constitution was submitted to the constitution committee for approval.
Shortly after I arrived we had a missions
conference. Dr. John R. Rice and Dr. Walter Wilson were scheduled to preach.
The missions committee came to me and said, "You can't have the missions
conference without permission from the missions committee." (They soon
found out that they were wrong on this!)
At the first service of the missions
conference we took an offering, whereupon I was advised by the finance
committee that I could not take an offering without permission form the finance
committee. (They soon found out that I could take an offering without
permission from the finance committee!)
It wasn't long until we had a deacons'
meeting, whereupon the deacon chairman asked, "Pastor, do you have any
speaking engagements that you want us to approve? The deacons must vote to
approve where you speak." (They soon found out that this would not work
either!)
Soon the deacon chairman said, "We
would like to have a list of all the organizations where you serve as a board
member so we can approve them." (Of course, I would not submit to this
either.)
There are many other things that would
simply enlarge upon the situation that I inherited which are unnecessary to be
mentioned. What I'm saying is that this church, at that time a member of the
American Baptist Convention, had become what so many other churches are now
becoming. Now this wasn't the way the church was first organized. Nobody starts
a new church with this kind of super-organization and unnecessary baggage. What
caused this deterioration? What is causing a similar deterioration in many of
our churches today? Such deterioration has brought formal worship services, a
paralyzed pulpit, weak pastoral leadership, an over abundance of unnecessary
committees and a de-emphasis on soul winning.
When a church is started, it is an exciting
time. Especially is this true of an independent, fundamental Baptist church.
These churches are started on street corners, in vacant lots, in storefront
buildings, in basements, in tents and in many other places. When a church is
started, there is a fervor of soul winning; people are getting saved. No one
ever thinks about a music committee, educational committee, a missions
committee, a flower committee or a finance committee! They are
simply interested in getting people saved
and down the aisle and building an old-fashioned, New Testament Baptist church.
Notice the step-by-step deterioration of a convert in a young church.
1. The period of spiritual infancy. During
this time there is usually a period of adjustment while learning the songs,
some Bible, and the Christian vocabulary and manner of life.
2. The period of enthusiastic work at the
church. The people become excited about the work. Though awkward, they attempt
to win souls; they are zealous. This period continues for some time.
3. The period when the work becomes a
ritual. After a while, some get adjusted to the work. They keep on teaching a
class but are not too excited about it. They keep on working on the buses but
have lost much of their enthusiasm. However, during this time, they become
known in the church. They come to a place of great respect. Perhaps at one time
they had the biggest bus route or fastest-growing Sunday school class. This
made them highly visible in the church. Everybody knows them, and they are
becoming, to an extent, church leaders.
4. The period of becoming noblemen. Now one
is a deacon, a trustee, church clerk or church treasurer. He can be called a
"nobleman" in the church. Perhaps he is Sunday school superintendent
or treasurer. Then he becomes so busy in the organization and business of the
church and in his place of leadership that his Sunday school class is
neglected. His bus route is low on his list of priorities, and his soul winning
has diminished. After a while, he quits his soul winning, resigns his bus
route, and makes only a token effort in his Sunday school class. He has too
much to do as a deacon or a trustee or as a church officer, until finally he
resigns his Sunday school class.
While he does this, there is another group
of people who have not been saved for long. They are building the church while
he is running the church. The new, zealous Christians are
doing the work, so we have a cast system
that has developed. The older, seasoned Christian has traded the building of
the church for the running of the church. The younger, less-experienced
Christian is building the church. This will eventually lead to its destruction.
One group builds the church and another group runs the church; the commoner
does the work while "their nobles put not their necks to the work of
their Lord."
Every deacon ought to be a soul winner.
Everyone who sings a special ought to be a soul winner. Every church officer
should be a soul winner. The same people who lead in the church should build
the church. There are hundreds of churches in America who have a group of
nobles whom the people respect and follow while a bunch of commoners are doing
the work! After a while, the church is controlled by the non-builders, and
those who are building the church have no part in the running of the church.
The builders become second-class citizens. No bus worker or soul winner is a
second-class citizen! There should be no division between the work of the
church. Every person should be a soul winner. No one has a right to lead the
church who is not taking part in building the church, winning folks to Christ,
building bus routes and building Sunday school classes.
Sometimes the nobles even get involved in
some other project outside the church -perhaps some interdenominational
organization which is a parasite off the New Testament churches. The greatest
child evangelism in the world should be in the local church. The greatest youth
for Christ program should be in the local church. All across this nation there
are men who once built the church who have become nobles and stopped doing what
they once did in soul winning, Sunday school building, passing out tracts,
street preaching, etc. They have become nobles who run the church while another
group builds the church.
The same thing happens in colleges. While in
college, the student is a soul winner. He brings folks down the aisles, he
passes out tracts, he witnesses on the street corner. He may even
preach on the streets. Perhaps he builds a
bus route. When he graduates, he has impressed the administration, and he is
hired on the faculty. Far too many times, he thinks he no longer has to be a
soul winner. He has graduated from the production end. He is now on the
faculty. He is now a nobleman. Certainly you wouldn't expect a nobleman to do
the work of soul winning! So, the result in many colleges, seminaries and Bible
institutes is that the students do the work and the noblemen teach the classes.
This, of course, will lead to the spiritual destruction of a college. When the
students obey the Great Commission, and the administration and faculty do not,
the wrong people are doing the teaching!
This same thing happens in our day schools.
Many of our Christian high schools, junior high schools and elementary schools
literally ignore the local church. Every teacher in every Christian school in
America should be actively involved in the local church, and more than that,
each one of them should be involved in the production part of the local church.
'Tis sad but true, many Christian school teachers feel they are doing their job
for God in the school and that their work for God ends there. Nothing is
farther from the truth! The church is many times more important than the
school, and no one is qualified or deserving to teach in a Christian school
unless he is doing the work of producing, soul winning, church building in the
local church.
Once again, we have arrived at the place
where we do not think the nobles have to put their necks to the work of the
Lord. The faculty is supposed to win souls just like the students. The
administration is supposed to win souls just like the faculty and students. The
staff is supposed to win souls just like the laymen. The deacons are supposed
to win souls just like the custodian. The Ph.D. is supposed to win souls just
like the illiterate. The old folks are supposed to win souls just like the
young people. Nobody has a right to be a nobleman in a church unless he is
participating in the carrying out and obeying of the Great Commission. Now how
can we avoid this dreadful situation of the nobles who put not their necks to
the work of the Lord?
1. The noble should keep working. This
should be kept before the church constantly. I preached this sermon vigorously
at First Baptist Church of Hammond, and the statements that have been made in
this chapter have been made many times from my pulpit. No one has a right to be
a deacon at First Baptist Church who is not helping to build the church and win
souls to Christ. No one has a right to teach at Hyles-Anderson College who is
not active in the soul-winning program. No one has a right to teach or be on
the administration of our Christian schools unless he is winning folks to
Christ, building bus routes, passing out tracts, witnessing on the street
corner. Let the most zealous people in the church be the noblemen. Let the
greatest soul winners in the church be the noblemen. Let the bus captains be
the noblemen. The simple truth is, in the sight of God, these who are obeying
the Great Commission are the noblemen!
Some nobleman is reading this chapter. You
know who you are. There was a day when you were active in production. There was
a day when you built a great Sunday school class. There was a day when you went
soul winning. There was a day when you built a bus route. There was a day when
you were bringing folks down the aisle receiving Christ as Saviour, but, you
have become a big shot, affluent and "high brow." You have no right
to remain a nobleman unless you remain in the ministry of obeying the Great
Commission!
Our churches are filled with committee
members who feel that is their job as a member of the church. We are incumbered
by unnecessary, superfluous committees such as flower committees, Christian
education committees, pulpit committees, music committees, youth committees,
library committees, literature committees, etc. who do nothing to obey the
Great Commission and are using these committees as shields behind which to
hide, deceiving others and trying to deceive themselves into believing they can
totally disobey and disregard
the Great Commission! Because they put
petunias on the communion table once a week; or because they belong to the
missions committee, the finance committee, the budget committee, the roof
committee, the ceiling committee, the wall committee, the floor committee, the
picture committee, the painting committee, the mashed potatoes committee, the
"bother the preacher" committee, the "run the pulpit"
committee or the "pester the pastor" committee, they think they are
immune from obeying the Great Commission!
God pity these churches that are organized
for everything but soul winning. Why not organize a tract committee, a jail-preaching
committee, a street-preaching committee, bus committee, soul-winning committee,
rescue mission committee, and obey the Great Commission instead of having a
group of professors in some college who have never built a church, never had an
altar call, never seen a mourner's bench, never preached a tent revival, never
felt the breath of the Holy Ghost upon their lives but sit in their halls of
ivy behind the shields of their desks training our young people and killing our
churches as they fill our pulpits with their own clones!
2. Make the builders the most famous. This
is why we at Hyles-Anderson College have no inter-collegiate athletics. The
most popular person on the campus of our college is not the fellow who puts the
ball through the hoop the most times. The most popular person on the campus of
Hyles-Anderson College is not the fellow who makes the touchdown runs. The most
popular fellow in Hyles-Anderson College is the one who has the biggest bus
route, the one who wins the most people to Christ.
Let us make the soul winners the famous
people in the church. Instead of boasting about "Mr. Big Bucks"
because he gives a big offering, brag on the fellow who has the biggest bus
route. So many of our Christian colleges have gotten to the place where we
recruit athletes and give athletic scholarships and music scholarships, speech
scholarships. Brother, why
don't we give soul-winning scholarships and
bus route scholarships and magnify those who do what God says to do!
3. Do not put the church or the school in
the hands of the non-working nobles or intellectuals. Do you know what's
happening to our schools? The churches are building schools that are not like
the church! Our people go to church on Sunday and hear one kind of music and
then go to school on Monday and hear another kind of music. Praise God, at
Hyles-Anderson College, if we have a piano concert, we don't have a great deal
of classical music. Let the high-brow schools do that. Let the old-fashioned,
independent, fundamental schools use "Blessed Assurance," "At
Calvary," "There's a New Name Written Down in Glory,"
"There is a Fountain Filled with Blood" and "Amazing Grace"
at their piano recitals! Our churches are dying because noblemen have taken
over the churches. Our schools are being destroyed because noblemen are taking
over the schools. Church music is deteriorating because noblemen have taken
over the church music and the training of our church musicians in our Christian
colleges!
One of my deacons, who is a
multi-millionaire, came to me one day and said, "Pastor, I'm resigning
from the deacon board. I think you are the greatest preacher alive, but I do
not agree with you on business. If I stay on the board, I'll get upset with you
and leave the church. I don't want to do that. I want to come to this church. I
want to hear you preach. I want to see people saved. I'm resigning the deacon
board because I do not agree with you on business, and I do not want to cause
you trouble." What he was saying was that he was afraid if he stayed on the
deacon board he would become a nobleman and not keep on obeying the Great
Commission. Praise God for a man like that!
All across America our churches are stocking
deacon boards with the wealthy people and the businessmen, and the big shots
are running the church while the soul winners are being run by the big shots.
Now I'm not opposed to wealthy men being on the deacon board, but I think the
deacon board and the
leadership of the church should be
representative of the entire church. On our deacon board at First Baptist
Church of Hammond we have professional men, we have businessmen, we have
Ph.D.'s, but we also have men who are illiterate and can't write their names.
We have deaf men on our deacon board because we have deaf men in our church. We
have a blind man on our deacon board because we have blind men in our church.
We have poor men on our deacon board because we have poor people in our church.
We have businessmen on our deacon board because we have businessmen in our
church, but because a man has money or formal training does not give him any
more votes or influence than the fellow who can't write his own name.
When I came to the First Baptist Church of
Hammond, one of the wealthiest men in town invited Mrs. Hyles and me to his
house to eat. The food we ate was flown in from Europe. The house was a castle.
The spoons and forks and knives were lined up like soldiers in pursuit. We sat
down to eat, and in the midst of the meal, the wife of this wealthy man asked
me if I were going to join the ministerial association. I tried to avoid the
question, but she wouldn't let me. Finally, her wealthy husband said,
"Pastor, answer my wife! Are you or are you not going to join the
ministerial association?"
I put my silverware down, looked him in the
eye and said, "Sir, you run a business in this town. If you ever need my
advice about how to run your business, you ask me and I'll give it to you. I'm
Pastor of First Baptist Church of Hammond. If I ever need your advice about
whether I join a ministerial association or howl preach, I will ask you, but
until I ask you, you keep your nose out of my business!"
God give us sense again. God give us some
reasoning power again.
There is not a week passes but that I get a
call from some pastor who is having trouble. As soon as he tells me he is
having trouble, I can take it from there. Some influential people in the church
want to run the pastor. Some fellow who is president of
the corporation, president of the local
civic club, chairman of the board, and whose wife presides at the local flower
club, is so accustomed to running things, he wants to run the preacher. It's
typical. It happens all the time, and the poor preacher who is faithful in his
preaching the Gospel has his hands tied by some man who doesn't know any more
about preaching than the preacher does about the man's business.
Sure, wealthy people in the church should be
represented on the board. The middle-class people in the church should be
represented on the board. The poor people in the church should be represented
on the board. The highly, formally educated people should be represented on the
board, and those who have little or no formal education should be represented
on the board. No one class of people should be allowed to run a church, and, by
the way, no one class of people is better than another class of people because
of financial standing, prestige, political power or formal training!
I know a big church that was almost
destroyed because when the pastor who had been there over 40 years resigned, the
choosing of a new pastor was basically placed in the hands of seven well-to-do,
wealthy men, and these men called a pastor that, in my opinion, practically
destroyed the church. What a pity!
We have businessmen in our church; we have
doctors in our church; we have lawyers in our church, but they sit side by side
with everyone else. The poorest man in our church is as welcome as the richest,
the least formally-trained person is as welcome as the most formally trained,
the illiterate is as welcome as the Ph.D., and all are equally represented in
places of leadership. The doctors, lawyers, the college-trained and the
businessmen are humble, godly people who realize that whatever they have is by
the grace of God, and they happily sit side by side with those who have less
money, less formal training and less opportunity.
The vice president of a bank in downtown
Hammond was on our deacon board. (Though he is now in Heaven, we remember him
with gratitude.) One night I recommended something that he thought was unwise,
but as a deacon he stood and said, "I'm the vice president of a bank, and
what the Preacher suggested doesn't make sense to me, but I make a motion we do
it because the Preacher wants to do it, and I think he knows best in this
case." God pity the nobles who are trying to run their preachers, and God
pity the preachers who let them do it.
When I first came to Hammond, the deacon
chairman came to me and said, "Pastor, some of the deacons are concerned
about your preaching. We want to have a meeting to discuss your preaching. Is
that okay?" I said, "Why, of course it is." He said, "How
about tomorrow night (Monday night) in the Frances Classroom?" I said,
"That will be fine." He said, "Would 7:00 be all right?" I
said, "Seven o'clock is fine." He said, "All right, then, we
will have a meeting tomorrow night at 7:00 in the Frances Classroom to discuss
your preaching." I said, "That's good." About 7:30 the next
night he called me and said, "Where are you?" I said, "I'm at
home. Where did you call?" He said, "I thought you said we could have
a meeting in the Frances Classroom at 7:00 tonight to discuss your
preaching." I said, "You can, but don't expect me to be there,
because my preaching is none of your business." I told them they could
have a meeting every Monday night at 7:00 in the Frances Classroom if they
wanted to, but I was not going to be there.
Years ago at a deacons' meeting at First
Baptist Church, a deacon was discussing a little problem that had arisen. He
was a good man, and this meeting did not keep him from continuing to serve on
the deacon board, but he mistakenly stood and said, "Pastor, if you hadn't
said something in your sermons recently about a certain thing, we wouldn't have
this problem." I left the front of the room, walked to the back row of the
deacons where he was sitting, and in front of all the deacon board I said,
"Sir, when we paint these walls, you get one vote. When we build a
building, you get one vote. When we borrow money, you get one vote, but when I
walk in the pulpit, you don't get a vote!"
I am not in any way trying to cast
reflection on the highly trained or highly successful, but I like what the old
fellow said when he said, "The only difference in the educated and
uneducated is that they are ignorant on different subjects." I am not
fighting for diminishing the importance of the educated and wealthy; I am for
putting everybody on the same level.
In another generation, Chief Justice Charles
Evans Hughes was moving his membership to a Baptist church in Washington, D.C.
Numbers of people joined the church that Sunday. Charles Evans Hughes was on
one end of the line, and a very, very poor person of another race was on the
other end of the line. When the pastor read the names of those who had come for
membership, he started with Charles Evans Hughes, whereupon Justice Hughes
said, "Pastor, start at the other end of the line. The ground is level at
the foot of the cross." He was right!
Several years ago a very wealthy couple
visited First Baptist Church of Hammond. She was sitting there with her furs
and diamonds, and he was sitting there with the best of apparel. Across the
aisle from them was a little Mexican boy who had a hole in his pants. He
reached down and with embarrassment put his hand over the hole in his pants. The
very wealthy lady looked at her husband and with a tear in her eye said,
"Honey, do you know what makes this church great?" He said,
"What?" She replied, "That little Mexican boy over there
covering up the hole in his pants is just as welcome here as we are." She
was right. It could also be said that she was just as welcome as that little
poor boy was. Praise God, the ground is level at the foot of the cross!
4. Nobles and common men should share the
leading of the church. At this writing, we have seven doctors and three lawyers
in our church. We have numbers of businessmen. I doubt if there is a church in
America who has more college
graduates than the First Baptist Church of
Hammond. Praise God, I also doubt if there is a church in America that has as
many poor little bus kids as the First Baptist Church of Hammond, and there is
not a church that has as many Spanish-speaking people as we have in the First
Baptist Church of Hammond, and there is not a church in America that has as
many deaf people as we have in the First Baptist Church of Hammond, and there
is not a church in America that has as many poor people as we have in the First
Baptist Church of Hammond, but here is one church where the ground is level! No
one is better than anybody else because of the house in which he lives, the car
that he drives, the ring on his finger, the clothes on his back or the degrees
hanging on the walls of his office. Together every class financially, every
class educationally, every class socially should have representation in the
leadership of the church; that is, if all are participating in the obeying of
the Great Commission.
5. The pastor should preach these truths sternly and lovingly to his
people. God has a way of protecting such a pastor. When I took my stand in the
early days at Hammond, we lost over 400 people. Some people threatened to take
the buildings away from us, but how God has blessed through these years! Put a
guard around your church. Walk guard around it yourself. Watch for every little
place that you can see a danger point. Keep the church in the hands of the soul
winners, the street preachers, the bus captains. Don't even check to see what
the balance is in their bank accounts. I have no doubt in my mind but that
American Baptist Churches started their decline when they put the building of
the church in the hands of the common people and the leadership of the church
in the hands of the noblemen. The same could be said about thousands of
Southern Baptist churches, Baptist Bible Fellowship churches, Southwide Baptist
Fellowship churches and strictly independent churches.
Practically all of these churches were
started by workers. That's why the churches grew, but over the passing of the
years, the inevitable happened. Hard-working people become successful people.
When they become successful, they often cease to become a part of those who
build the churches.
Such was the case in our text. The people
were rebuilding the wall around Jerusalem after the 70 years of captivity in
Babylon. Nehemiah had returned to help with the rebuilding of this wall. People
were working hard, but sad to say, "their nobles put not their necks to
the work of their Lord." Let this not happen in your church and mine.
Let us love everybody equally and give everybody equal opportunity! Do not look
down on somebody because he is poor or because he is rich. Do not look down on
somebody because he is unlearned or learned, educated or uneducated. Let the
ground stay level at the foot of the cross!
Chapter Seven
Opposition to Pastoral
Leadership -
An Enemy of Soul Winning
One of the great battlegrounds in New
Testament churches is that of pastoral leadership. It is the opinion of this
preacher that far too many pastors have allowed their hands to be tied, and far
too many people have tried to tie the pastor's hands. Now I do not think for a
minute that the pastor should be a dictator. I simply think he should be a
leader. For the next few pages, we will discuss the Scriptural position of the
place of the pastor in the leadership of the church.
1. In business matters, the church should be
a pure democracy. Of course, it would be unwise for the pastor to be allowed to
borrow money on behalf of the church or to build a building without church
approval. The business of the First Baptist Church of Hammond, Indiana, is in
the hands of the people, not the pastor.
I know a pastor who said to his people that
he would leave if they did not build. I think this is poor leadership, and I
also think it is unwise leadership. God may call the pastor to another church,
or He may call him to Heaven, and the people would be saddled with a debt that
he incurred. When it comes to the borrowing of money, the church is a
democracy. When it
comes to the church budget, the church is a
democracy. When it comes to church business, the church is a democracy.
Just as ridiculous as the pastor being the
business dictator of the church is the unscriptural practice that the deacons
are supposed to be the business dictators of the church. There is no Scripture whatsoever
to substantiate this. At the First Baptist Church of Hammond, the deacons are
an advisory board. The pastor recommends the budget to the deacons; the deacons
work on the budget and then present it to the church. The final authority is in
the hands of the church. The pastor cannot spend a dime of the church budget on
his own. The only money that he can disburse at his own discretion is money
that is given him with that instruction. Quite often people give a check made
out to the church and they say, "Pastor, use this in any ministry you feel
wise." This is exactly what I do, but unless the money is designated for
such, I have no power whatsoever to disburse the money, except as is dictated
in the budget, which is approved by the church.
Let me also say that there is not one
Scriptural reference of trustees or a board of trustees in the church. Philippians
1:1, "Paul and Timotheus, the servants of Jesus Christ, to all the saints
in Christ Jesus which are at Philippi, with the bishops and deacons." Here
you have the simplicity of the organization of the New Testament church - pastor, deacons, people. At our church, we have five trustees elected
from the deacon board. However, they do not form a board of trustees; they
simply form the official signature of our church. So, when the church votes to
take action in business matters and loan matters, the trustees sign the papers.
There are hundreds of deacon boards in America and boards of trustees in
America who rebel against pastoral dictatorship, and then in turn wrestle the
power of business in the church for themselves, making the church a bureaucracy
which is just as unscriptural as a dictatorship.
2. The spiritual program of the church
should be under the leadership of the pastor, and the people should follow. If
I were to lead the First Baptist Church into borrowing money that the church
did not want to borrow, and God called me Home to Heaven, I would have done the
church an injustice. However, if I lead the church to have a Bible conference,
and I choose the speakers, which I would, this does not leave the church with
any responsibilities in the case of my death.
When I became Pastor of First Baptist
Church, there was an evangelism committee to try to tell me when to have
evangelistic meetings. There was a missions committee to try to tell me when to
have missions conferences. There was a finance committee to try to tell me when
to take an offering. There was a pulpit committee to try to tell me whom to
have preach when I was gone and to approve where I could preach. Of course, I
could not live under this situation, and I would not, and I did not. If I'm not
going to be the spiritual leader of the church, then I'll move on and get a
soap box and a vacant lot and preach on a street corner somewhere.
A typical example of the average church
battle concerning this subject is the story of Moses and Aaron.
1. While Moses was busy, he received a call
from God.
Exodus 3:1, "Now Moses kept the
flock of Jethro his fat her in law, the priest of Midian: and he led the flock
to the backside of the desert, and came to the mountain of God, even to
Horeb." Notice that Moses was
busy keeping the flock of Jethro, his father-in-law. He was seeking no place of
leadership whatsoever. This is usually the way it is. God calls a man who is
busy somewhere else. I know of no place in the Bible where God called someone
who was seeking a position. He calls someone who is busy doing the job where he
is. I have been pastoring for 45 years. I have never sought a church,
nor have I ever wanted to leave a church where I was pastoring. I have tried to
stay busy and work hard. I tell God my phone number and my address (He probably
already knew it!) and tell Him to contact me when He wants me to move. Until
then, I will not seek to move, nor will I desire to move.
I was busily serving as Pastor of Miller
Road Baptist Church in Garland, Texas. One day I received a letter from First
Baptist Church of Hammond. I had never heard of the church, nor had the church,
for that matter, ever heard of me. One of the deacons, Mr. George Huisenga,
owned a little gift shop in downtown Hammond. He sold enough Christian books to
receive a catalogue from Zondervan Publishers. Zondervan had published a little
book for me, and that little book was advertised in the catalogue. In this
advertisement were some statistics about the growth of the Miller Road Baptist
Church in Garland, Texas. The little advertisement couldn't have been over 1
1/2" square. Mr. Huisenga saw it, tore it out of the catalogue, went to the
pulpit committee, tossed it on the chairman's desk and said, "This is the
fellow you ought to consider calling." Nobody had recommended me, I had
not sought the position, and for that matter, I did not want the position. They
sent me an application form. I replied that I was not interested.
They continued seeking me and pursuing me.
Finally when I was speaking in the Chicago area, two members of the pulpit
committee came to hear me speak. They took me out to eat and introduced me to
the rest of the pulpit committee. I told the committee that I had no interest,
that I would be flying back to Texas the next day, and that I did not want to
leave my church in Garland, Texas. Mr. Huisenga looked at me and said,
"Well, we did buy you a meal. Would you at least pray this prayer at least
one time sometime soon: 'Dear God, do You want me to visit First Baptist Church
in Hammond, Indiana? Amen.' - would you pray that
prayer?" I said, "Yes, I'll do that."
I went back to Texas, and to be quite frank,
I forgot the promise I made. Weeks passed. One night I was driving from
Oklahoma City to Dallas. I left Oklahoma City after preaching in a Baptist
church there and drove through the night to get home. In the wee hours of the
morning, I came to the little town of Denton, Texas. Just before I got to that
town, I remembered the promise I had made to Mr. Huisenga, and so I simply
began to pray while driving, "Dear Lord, do You want me to visit Hammond,
Indiana? Amen." Within five seconds after I prayed that prayer, I was stunned
as I looked to the right of the highway and saw a neon sign that said three
words: HAMMOND WELCOMES YOU. I could not believe it! I stopped the car, walked
over and put my hand on the sign to be sure it wasn't a mirage. It was the
Hammond Service Station in Denton, Texas, and painted on the sign were such
things as "cheap gas," "mechanic on duty," etc., but there
in neon it simply said, HAMMOND WELCOMES YOU. I was stunned. I trembled as I
drove the rest of the way to my home in Garland, Texas. That was on a
Wednesday.
After the service Wednesday night, I was to
drive to Lake Louise, Tacoa, Georgia, to speak in a Sword of the Lord
Conference. I asked my deacon chairman to drive with me so we could share the
driving responsibilities, as I had not slept the night before, and I was afraid
that two nights in a row driving all night would make me so sleepy I would be
injured in an accident. I couldn't forget that sign the night before, so I
thought I had better pray some. My deacon chairman drove from Dallas to Little
Rock, and from Little Rock to Memphis, I drove.
As I was driving, I got to thinking about
the sign I had seen the night before. It simply said in neon lights, HAMMOND
WELCOMES YOU. I began to pray as I was driving between Little Rock and Memphis.
Something like this was my prayer:
"Dear Lord, did You mean anything by
that sign last night? Should I visit Hammond? Make it plain to me."
I fell asleep at the wheel while praying!
When I woke up, I was just a few inches from the back of a big six-wheel truck.
I jammed on the brakes, skidded the tires, burned some rubber and stopped,
after barely tipping the truck in the back, doing no damage to the truck or my
car. I was scared to death! I looked up! Would you like to know what was on the
back of that truck? Two words-HAMMOND, INDIANA. I said, "Dear God, if You
will get me to Tacoa Falls safely, and if that church ever calls me again, I'll
go preach up there."
When I drove into the conference grounds at
Tacoa Falls, Georgia, before I got out of the car, somebody came out of the
office and said, "Is Dr. Jack Hyles here yet?" I said, "Yes,
here I am." They said, "There is a call for you." I said,
"It's from Hammond, Indiana, isn't it?" They said, "Yes. How did
you know?" I said, "I saw some signs along the way!" I picked up
the phone and told the caller that I would come to visit Hammond, Indiana.
What I am saying is that I had no desire to
go anywhere. I was busy where I was. God literally had to grab me and shake me
to get me to consider going to Hammond. Now I praise His name that He called me
here to Hammond.
Exodus 3:2-4, "And the angel of the
Lord appeared unto him in a flame of fire out of the midst of a bush: and he
looked, and, behold, the bush burned with fire, and the bush was not consumed.
And Moses said, I will now turn aside, and see this great sight, why the bush
is not burnt. And when the Lord saw that he turned aside to see, God called
unto him out of the midst of the bush, and said, Moses, Moses. And he said,
Here am I." Notice that Moses was
surprised when God called him to a place of leadership, but notice that he did
say, "Here am I."
Now look at Exodus 3:10, "Come now
therefore, and I will send thee unto Pharaoh, that thou mayest bring forth my
people the children of Israel out of Egypt." God called this
unsuspecting, unseeking man to lead His people out of Egypt. No real leader
wants to be a leader. A man who wants to lead is not qualified to lead. In my
opinion, that's what's wrong with our presidential system in America. The way
we choose a president will never offer us a real leader. We choose from men who
seek the job. We should seek the man who is qualified for the job. Notice
Exodus 3:11, "And Moses said unto God,
Who am I, that I should go unto Pharaoh, and that I should bring forth the
children of Israel out of Egypt?" Especially notice the words, "Who
am I that I should go unto Pharaoh?" Moses did not feel
worthy to do the job. Ah, it sounds to me
like this fellow is going to be a leader.
Moses even argued with God somewhat in Exodus
4:1, "And Moses answered and said, But, behold, they will not believe me,
nor hearken unto my voice: for they will say, The LORD hath not appeared unto
thee." He had some reluctance, feeling that he could not do the job,
and God had to convince him that he would not have to do the job alone.
Now notice Exodus 4:10-12, "And
Moses said unto the Lord, 0 my Lord, I am not eloquent, neither heretofore, nor
since thou hast spoken unto thy servant: but lam slow of speech, and of a slow
tongue. And the LORD said unto him, Who hath made man's mouth? or who maketh the dumb, or deaf or the seeing, or the blind? have
not I the LORD? Now therefore go, and I will be with thy mouth, and teach thee
what thou shalt say." Moses argued
on the basis that he was not a good speaker. He was not eloquent; he was slow
of speech. Maybe he had some impediment of speech.
What I'm saying here is that Moses did not
seek the job, Moses did not want the job, Moses did not put himself up for the
job, and at no place did he exalt himself.
Now notice that Aaron did not seek the job
of the high priesthood. Exodus 40:1, 12-15, "And the LORD spake unto
Moses, saying. And thou shalt bring Aaron and his sons unto the door of the
tabernacle of the congregation, and wash them with water. And thou shalt put
upon Aaron the holy garments, and anoint him, and sanctify him; that he may
minister unto me in the priest's office. And thou shalt bring his sons, and
clothe them with coats: And thou shalt anoint them, as thou didst anoint their
father, that they may minister unto me in the priest's office: for their
anointing shall surely be an everlasting priest hood throughout their
generations." Aaron was God's choice. Aaron did not apply for the job
of being the high priest. He did not seek it. He did not necessarily want it,
but he was chosen by God.
So we have two men. One was the leader of
Israel; another was the high priest of Israel. Both were chosen by God; neither
seeking the job, or for that matter wanting the job, or for that matter feeling
qualified for the job, but they were called of God.
2. People often challenge God's leaders. Numbers
16:1-4, "Now Korah, the son of Izhar, the son of Kohath, the son of Levi,
and Dathan and Abiram, the sons of Eliab, and On, the son of Peleth, sons of
Reuben, took men: And they rose up before Moses, with certain of the children
of Israel, two hundred and fifty princes of the assembly, famous in the
congregation, men of renown: And they gathered themselves together against
Moses and against Aaron, and said unto them, Ye take too much upon you, seeing
all the congregation are holy, even one of them, and the LORD is among them:
wherefore then lift ye up yourselves above the congregation of the LORD? And
when Moses heard it, he fell upon his face." Let us notice several
things about this rebellion of Korah.
(1) This is the same Korah that is mentioned
in Jude
11. "Woe to them! for they have gone
in the way of Cain, and ran greedily after the error of Balaam for reward, and
perished in the gainsaying of Core." So, according to the Word of God,
we know Korah made a serious mistake.
(2) He was of the family of Kohath, a son of
Levi. Now the three sons of Levi were Kohath, Gershon and Merari. So we have
these three families-the Kohathites, the Gershonites and the Merarites. Each
was given a task to perform concerning the tabernacle. The Gershonites were
responsible mainly for the tent of meeting; that is, the tabernacle itself. The
Merarites were responsible for the boards and bars of the tabernacle. The
Kohathites were responsible for the transporting of the furniture of the
tabernacle. Ah, it's a wonderful thing to have a part in the work of God. It is
also a wonderful thing to be satisfied with the part that God has given to you.
(3) There were others in the rebellion.
Dathan and Abiram, men of the tribe of Reuben, the firstborn of Jacob, no doubt
felt they should have been chosen to do the job that Moses and Aaron had been
chosen to do.
(4) They rebelled against Moses. Numbers
16:12. Notice, there were 250 princes; that is, bosses, men of rank. Notice
also they were famous in the congregation, men of renown, men who were
accustomed to being in charge and well-known people.
This is the same old story. You would think
that this was a Baptist church split. The Devil has no new methods. He operates
the same way, and he has always operated the same way.
(5) They gathered themselves against Moses and Aaron. Notice in Numbers
16:3, "Ye take too much upon you." Nothing could be farther from
the truth. Neither Moses nor Aaron took the job upon them. They did not want
their jobs. They did not seek their jobs. It was God Who called them, just as
God calls men today to pastor churches. Moses tried every way he could to avoid
the job that God called him to do. He did not feel qualified; he did not want
the position.
I know how he felt. I do not like to lead. I
certainly do not like to be a boss. If I had my way, I would never boss
anybody. Time and time again after I have had to be a boss or a strong leader,
I've gone to my office and wept. Such is the case with any real man of God.
Now notice the words in Numbers 16:3c, "... wherefore then lift ye up yourselves above the
congregation of the Lord?" This
is the typical lie that rebels use. Moses did not lift up himself; Aaron did
not lift up himself; God lifted them up! God called them!
Every organization must have a leader. A
country must have a king or a president. A state must have a governor. A city
must have a mayor. A team must have a coach. A school must
have a principal. A home must have a father.
A church must have a pastor.
Now notice the words in verse 3, "seeing
all the congregation are holy." Somehow these people could not accept
the fact that what they were doing was holy. God had given the Kohathites the
responsibility of transporting the furniture; He had given the Gershonites the
responsibility of transporting the tent; He had given the Merarites the
responsibility of transporting the boards and the bars, and bless your heart,
that was as holy as the jobs that Moses and Aaron had.
There is no unholy job for God; every job is
important. If God has given you the responsibility of pastoring a church,
realize that it is holy and sacred, and give it your best. If God has given you
the responsibility of being the church custodian, realize it is holy and of
God, and give it your best. If God has given you the responsibility of being a
church secretary, choir director, Sunday school teacher or deacon, you have
been called of God just as much as the pastor has. Give it your best, but let
each be satisfied with the will of God for his own life. There are no big shots
or little shots in the New Testament church.
No real pastor wants to lead, but he has to;
he has been called of God to do so. Every real God-called pastor would rather
follow than lead, but somebody has to lead, and there is nobody to lead but
human beings.
3. The first committee ever appointed made a
tragic mistake! Deuteronomy 1:19-22, 26, "And when we departed from Horeb,
we went through all that great and terrible wilderness, which ye saw by the way
of the mountain of the Amorites, as the LORD our God commanded us; and we came
to Kadesh-barnea. And I said unto you, Ye are come unto the mountain of the
Amorites, which the Lord our God doth give unto us. Behold, the LORD thy God
hath set the land before thee: go up and possess it, as the LORD God of thy
fathers hath said unto thee; fear not, neither be discouraged. And ye came near
unto me even one of you, and said, We will send men before us, and they shall
search us out the land, and bring us word again by what way we must go up, and
into what cities we shall come. Notwithstanding ye would not go up, but
rebelled against the commandment of the Lord your God."
(1) The Israelites were at the door of the
Promised Land. They came to Kadesh-barnea, and God told them that He had given
them the land. In Deuteronomy 1 :20b, notice the words, "which the LORD
our God doth give unto us." In verse 21, notice the words, "go
up up andpossess it, as the LORD God of thy fathers hath said unto thee." It
was God's command for them to go possess the land.
(2) They wanted to appoint a committee. Look
at verse 22. God had led the Israelites all the way from Egypt, as He led
Moses, and Moses led them. God told Moses and Moses told the people concerning
the passover. God told Moses, and Moses told the people concerning the crossing
of the Red Sea. God told Moses, and Moses told the people concerning the
journey across the wilderness. Then they came to the very door of the Promised
Land - their goal. Again God led Moses, and Moses led the
people. It was time to enter into the Promised Land. Couldn't they go in the
same way they got to the door of the Promised Land? Yes, but, sad to say, the
people wanted to appoint a committee!
Someone has said that a committee is a group
of the unprepared who are unqualified to do the unnecessary and who read the
minutes and waste the hours. Somebody else has said that a camel is a horse put
together by a Baptist committee.
(3) The committee came back and recommended
not to go. The Israelites took the advice of the committee and refused to go
into the Promised Land. How tragic! For 40 years they then needlessly wandered
in the wilderness all because they had changed their method of following the
will of God as a people. Sure, God allowed them to have the committee, but that
was not His first choice.
His first choice was for the people to
follow Moses as Moses followed God.
Our churches are "committeed" to
death!
4. God expects His people to follow His
chosen pastors.
Hebrews 13:7, 'Remember them which have
the rule over you, who have spoken unto you the word of God: whose faith
follow, considering the end of their conversation."
(1) Notice the word "remember." It
means, "don't forget," "Keep this before you."
(2) Notice the word "rule." The
word "rule" is the word "guide" or "lead."
(3) Notice the words, "who have spoken
unto you the word of God." Here we have the spiritual leaders whom God
chooses. They are our guides or leaders - again, not in
matters of business that would cumber the church with a great debt, but in
spiritual matters.
(4) Notice the words, "whose faith
follow." Wow, what a statement!
Now look at Hebrews 13:17, "Obey
them that have the rule over you, and submit yourselves: for they watch for
your souls, as they that must give account, that they may do it with joy, and
not with grief for that is unprofitable for you." Here you have the
same word "rule," and then you have the word "submit,"
which means "to yield." Then it tells us to whom we are to yield - to those who watch over our souls. Then we are reminded that they must
give an account to God for what they do. We are not talking here about moral
matters. We are not talking here about business matters; we are talking about
spiritual leadership.
Now when does this unscriptural practice of
a muzzled pastor start? So often it starts with the choosing of a new pastor. A
man of God serves faithfully for many years. His people follow him; they trust
him; they love him. He leads them well, and they follow well, and there is a
wonderful relationship.
Then, the pastor resigns or passes away. The
people must choose another man of God.
Between pastors, people who are capable have
to assume some of the responsibilities that the pastor had fulfilled.
Oftentimes, these are places of leadership. These men who are capable of
leadership fulfill these responsibilities, and, of course, they are often men
of renown, famous men in the congregation, as we noticed in Numbers 16:1. These
men enjoy this leadership, but now it's time to call a new pastor. The church
calls a new pastor, and the pastor assumes the responsibilities Now these men
who have led in the interim period have enjoyed their place of leadership and
hate to relinquish it to the pastor.
Then the people do not know the new pastor
and do not trust him as much as they did the old pastor. This is normal and a
natural thing. However, the people are supposed to follow the new pastor, not
because they know him well, but because he is God's man! Soon his hands are
tied. He does not have the liberty the other pastor had. A few men in the
congregation who are famous and well-known do not want to relinquish the powers
that they had to assume during the interim period.
In conclusion, let it be said that this
pastor does not enjoy leading, nor is he advocating men who want to usurp
authority and power. He is simply saying that when God calls a man to a place,
that man is usually busy somewhere else and does not seek the place. No pulpit
committee or no church should seek a man who is seeking them. Let God lead the
committee to the man, as was the case in the First Baptist Church of Hammond a
third of a century ago, and let that man be fully persuaded in his own mind
that he is the man, and let the church be fully persuaded. Then let that man
lead with love and the people follow with love. Let the business of the church
be a democracy, and let the spiritual program of the church be placed in the
hands of God's chosen man. What a wonderful relationship can exist when God's
people follow God's man and when God's man, not wanting to lead, accepts the
call of God and does lead!
Chapter Eight
The Universal Church -
An Enemy of Soul Winning
(For a detailed study on the doctrine of
the church, consult the author's book on this subject.)
I could not believe my ears! I was listening
to a preacher on the radio. He announced that it was time to take communion. He
suggested that each listener get a cracker or a piece of bread and some juice
and sit beside the radio and take communion with his other listeners. He then
said, "If you do not have any bread, a banana would be all right. If you
don't have any juice, any kind of liquid, even a glass of water, will do as
long as you do it in memory of the broken body and shed blood of Christ."
What a tragedy! What a travesty! What a total lack of knowledge concerning the
Lord's Supper being an ordinance of the New Testament church!
I was reading a national publication. It
told of an international youth organization having communion at its annual
convention. What a shame to miss totally the purpose of the Lord's Supper and
bypass the institution to whom it was given!
Over and over again I hear and read the
term, "electronic church." Of course, there is no such thing as the
electronic church, but it is just as scriptural as the term "invisible
church" or "universal church."
The word "church" in the New
Testament is a "called out assembly," and it is to have pastors,
deacons and members. This called-out assembly has been given a commission found
in Matthew 28:19, 20, "Go ye therefore, and teach all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Ghost: Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you:
and, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world. Amen."
Mark 16:15, "And he said unto them,
Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to even creature."
The local church has been given two
ordinances: baptism and the Lord's Supper. The church is the unit by which the
work of God is carried on.
The following sentences are certainly an
oversimplification and at best are a summary. The New Testament knows nothing
about "a church" or "the church," except as it is given a
location. All believers cannot and do not form a church because all believers
have not yet become a called-out assembly. This chapter is being dictated on an
airplane. I am flying from Chicago to Charlotte, North Carolina. It is Monday
afternoon. Yesterday, a called-out assembly met in an auditorium on the corner
of Oakley Street and Sibley Street in Hammond, Indiana. This called-out
assembly is named the First Baptist Church of Hammond, Indiana. This is all
that Jesus had in mind when He started the New Testament church, and it seems
that for some time the Christian world used the term "church" only as
it relates to a local, called-out assembly.
Shortly after the beginning of the fourth
century, Emperor Constantine supposedly was converted. He had a desire for all
to do likewise, and it has been recorded by some that he commanded baptism.
From this endeavor came the Catholic denomination. It was named the
"universal church," the name "Catholic" meaning
"universal."
Here the battle started. We then had New
Testament Baptist people (though often called by other names such as
Anabaptists, etc.) believing in the Scriptural doctrine of the local, New
Testament church, and we had the Catholic denomination advocating a universal
church. Hence, the battle started concerning this doctrine, and it wages until
this day. Historically, the Anabaptists and Catholics strongly differed on the
doctrine of the church.
With the passing of the centuries came the
Protestant Reformation from which came our Protestant denominations of today.
Of course, the Reformation began as a battle between Martin Luther and the
Catholic denomination over justification by faith; and though Luther, Zwingli,
Calvin and other reformers are to be greatly admired, they, nevertheless,
continued the Catholic originated doctrine of the universal church; that is,
that all believers form the church. The term "invisible church" is
often associated with this doctrine.
As far as this doctrine is concerned, the
battle that once was Catholics versus Baptists now becomes Catholics plus
Protestants versus Baptists.
With the passing of the centuries something
happened that I often call the "second reformation." As the
Protestant denominations became more liberal, especially on the doctrine of
salvation, many churches and pastors and members became disenchanted with the
mainline Protestant denominations. From this group came what we call
"inter-denominationalists." Basically, they are fundamental
Protestants, and much of their discontent with the mainline Protestant
denominations was caused by the same thing that caused the first reformation - the doctrine of justification by faith. However, just as their
forefathers protested on that doctrine, they did not protest on the doctrine of
the church and continued teaching the doctrine of the universal or invisible
church.
So the first battle concerning this doctrine
was waged between the Catholics and the Baptists. Upon the first reformation,
the Protestants joined in this malay, and at the second reformation the
interdenominationalists were added to those advocating the universal or
invisible church, making it now a battle between the Catholics, Protestants and
interdenominationalists versus Baptists. Sad to say, because so many Baptist
preachers have been trained in inter-denominational institutions, the doctrine
of the universal or invisible church has infiltrated even Baptist movements and
Baptist churches. The usually reliable Scofield Bible has added fuel to the
flame until it has now become in many Baptist circles unpopular for one to
advocate and believe the historic Baptist doctrine that Jesus started only the
called-out assembly, or the local New Testament church, and that that is the
only church in existence and will be until the rapture.
As we investigate this doctrine of the
church, it must be remembered that we are always talking about a called-out
assembly.
1. There are now New Testament churches.
Much has been said about when New Testament churches started. The Scofield
Bible erroneously teaches that the "church" was started at Pentecost.
Of course, we can not accept the fact that there is such a thing as "the
church." There are churches, and the first New Testament church was
started during the personal ministry of Jesus Christ. Since it is a
"called-out assembly," it appears that the first church was started
in Matthew 10:1, "And when he had called unto him his twelve disciples,
he gave them power against unclean spirits, to cast them out, and to heal all
manner of sickness and all manner of disease." The word
"called" here comes from the same root word from which the word
"church" comes. Here Jesus called out the apostles. Matthew
10:2-4, "Now the names of the twelve apostles are these; The first, Simon,
who is called Peter, and Andrew his brother; James the son of Zebedee, and John
his brother; Philip, and Bartholomew; Thomas, and Matthew the publican; James
the son of Alpheus, and Lebbaeus, whose surname was Thaddeus; Simon the
Canaanite, and Judas Iscariot, who also betrayed him."
Now turn to I Corinthians 12:28,
"And God hath set some in the church, first apostles, secondarily
prophets, thirdly teachers, after that miracles, then gifts of healings, helps,
governments, diversities of tongues." Notice that in the church were
first apostles. It was in Matthew 10 when Jesus called out the apostles. Though
I would not make an issue of this, it seems plain to me that this was the
beginning of the first called-out assembly or the first church. I would make an
issue, however, that the church was not started on Pentecost, and that it was
started sometime during the public ministry of Jesus.
Notice please Matthew 18:17, "And if
he shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church: but if he neglect to
hear the church, let him be unto thee as an heathen man and a publican." Here
we have a mention of a local called-out assembly. Mr. Scofield in his Bible
says that this is "discipline in the future church," but there is
nothing that says, "tell it to the future church"; it simply says,
"tell it to the church." The church was certainly in existence by
Matthew 18:17.
Read Acts 2:41, 47, "Then they that
gladly received his word were baptized: and the same day there were added unto
them about three thousand souls. Praising God, and having favour with all the
people. And the Lord added to the church daily such as should be saved." Notice
the words "added to." It is impossible to add to something that is
not already in existence. It is obvious that these verses are talking about
people being added to the local New Testament church assembly. Consequently,
there must have been an assembly. You cannot add to something that is not
already in existence. (Again, study my book, The Church for a more detailed
explanation.)
2. Though the New Testament church was
started during the earthly ministry of Jesus, there were such assemblies in the
Old Testament. God never changes His philosophies. If Christians in the New
Testament age need the fellowship of God's people and compose a unit for that
fellowship, for the propagation of the Gospel, and for the edification of
believers, then there would certainly be a need in every age for a similar
assembly. Again, let it be stated that we are not talking about a New Testament
church. However, wouldn't the Old Testament Christians need to get together?
Wouldn't there be a need for edification, for Bible study?
Notice Acts 7:3 7, 38, "This is that
Moses, which said unto the children of Israel, A prophet shall the Lord your
God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me; him shall ye hear. This
is he, that was in the church in the wilderness with the angel which spake to
him in the mount Sina, and with our fathers: who received the lively oracles to
give unto us." The Israelites were called "a church in the
wilderness." Now this does not mean they were a New Testament church. It
does mean that they were a called-out assembly. They had been in Egypt, through
the passover lamb and the Red Sea miracle; they were called out of Egypt, and
they assembled in the wilderness. So, this was a called-out assembly - not a New Testament church, but, nevertheless, God had called out His
people and had them assembled. Again let me emphasize that God never changes
His philosophies. If His people in one age need to assemble, His people in all
ages need to assemble.
3. There will be a church in the air. Hebrews
12:23, "To the general assembly and church of the firstborn, which are
written in heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and to the spirits of just men
made perfect." In conjunction with this, read I Thessalonians
4:14-1 8, ' 'For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again,
even so them also which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him. For this we say
unto you by the word of the Lord, that we which are alive and remain unto the
coming of the Lord shall not prevent them which are asleep. For the Lord
himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the
archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first:
Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the
clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord.
Wherefore comfort one another with these words."
Here we have what is commonly called the
rapture or the calling away or the calling out of God's people. This will take
place at the first resurrection when all the saved people are called out of the
world to an assembly in the air where we will enjoy the Marriage of the Lamb,
the Marriage Supper of the Lamb and the Judgment Seat of Christ. Then for the
first time, all of God's people will be assembled. Because they will be called
out, and because they will be assembled, then and only then will all Christians
become a church, for then and only then will all Christians become a called-out
assembly!
I make a big issue of this because of the
error that many make of bypassing local congregations because they feel they
belong to "the church" simply because they are saved. These are they
who advocate the doctrine of the invisible church, such as all believers are
called in the Scofield Bible.
The very nature of their work, however,
contradicts their doctrinal position, for those who advocate the doctrine of
the invisible church always go to the visible church when they need money, and,
gullible as we are, we in the visible churches support our invisible church
friends, as they bypass us but feed off of us!
It is also interesting to note that colleges
and Bible institutes that teach the invisible church seem to get most of their
students from the visible churches. Often, however, these same invisible church
adherents neglect and sometimes ignore the local church. Mr. Scofield even
calls the invisible church the "true church," which would imply to me
that the local church is not the true church.
In one interdenominational institution that
has many Baptist students, the students are not allowed to go to a church on
Sunday morning. They have what they call the "campus church." (There
are as many Scriptures for the electronic church as there are for the campus
church!) It might be interesting to visit that campus on a Sunday evening and a
Wednesday evening to see what emphasis it gives to the very institutions who
have made it what it is. They are sending out preachers to pastor the very
institutions that they neglect and overlook. One of its graduates told me
recently that she attended that institution for four years and never one time
went to a Baptist church.
4. There will be some kind of an
"assembly" in the tribulation and in the millennium. God will not
change His mind about the needs of His people. We are told that there will be
multitudes of people saved in the tribulation period. It seems to me that these
people would need more than ever a place of refuge, of strength, of
edification, of encouragement, of Bible teaching, like a church. Though there
will not be "New Testament churches," nevertheless, there will be
assemblies of Christian people who will need such an institution.
Preachers often erroneously call this
"the church age." It should be called the "New Testament church
age." There is no doubt that the New Testament assembly (church) is a
unique one, and there has never been nor ever will be one exactly like
it. Bearing in mind that God does not change
His philosophies, nor will the needs of Christian people change, there must be
some unit of assembly for the Christians in the tribulation and in the
millennium.
The Great Commission will likewise be given
to these assemblies or, better still, it will apply to them. Matthew 28:19,
20, "Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of
the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:
Teaching them to observe all things
whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the
end of the world. Amen." Notice
the words, "even unto the end of the world." When will the
world end? Read Revelation 20:11, "And I saw a great white throne, and
him that sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and
there was found no place for them." Revelation 21:1, "And I saw a new
heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven and the first earth were passed
away; and there was no more sea." This is at the end of the
millennium, after which we will abide in the New Jerusalem. Until that time,
there will always be saved people who will live on earth, and an unchanging God
will have some form of assembly for them, so it is interesting that the Great
Commission is until the end of the world, which means that there will be soul
winning in the tribulation and in the millennium, and there will be baptisms in
the tribulation and in the millennium. These are church ordinances or assembly
ordinances.
Now turn to Matthew 26:29, "But Isay
unto you, I will not drink henceforth of this fruit of the vine, until that day
when I drink it
new with you in my Father's
kingdom." You will notice here
that our Saviour promised us that He will one day take communion with us. So we
see that communion will be given and taken during the millennium. Since this
supper is a church ordinance (or an assembly ordinance), it leads us to believe
that there will be some kind of an assembly of Christians until the end of the
millennium.
I cannot emphasize strongly enough that these
assemblies will not be New Testament churches. New Testament churches were
started by Jesus Himself probably in Matthew 10:1, and certainly during the
public ministry of Jesus, and will end when all believers of this New Testament
church age are raptured, thereby forming the church in the air.
During this New Testament church age, we are
to be faithful in attending our churches just as a soldier is faithful and
supportive of his own unit of battle. Suppose I meet a soldier on the street,
and I ask him, "What battalion are you in?" and he replies, "Oh,
I don't belong to a local battalion; I belong to the invisible army or the
universal army. Occasionally I visit a local squad or platoon or company or
battalion, and I think they are all right, but I belong to the great battalion
composed of all soldiers everywhere." My dear reader, such soldiers would
build an army that would never win a battle. There must be the individual
fighting unit, and there must be leaders in that unit. So God has given us the
individual fighting unit called the local church. Without it we will be as
ineffective as an army would be
without squads or companies or battalions;
and the invisible, universal church is as unscriptural as the universal,
invisible army is unlawful!
Chapter Nine
The Modern Tongues
Movement -
An Enemy of Soul Winning
Matthew 28:19,20, "Go ye therefore,
and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the
Son, and of the Holy Ghost: teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I
have commanded you: and, lo, Jam with you alway, even unto the end of the
world. Amen."
Luke 24:47, "And that repentance and
remission of sins should be preached in his name among all nations, beginning
at Jerusalem."
Mark 16:15, "And he said unto them,
Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature."
Acts 1:8, "But ye shall receive
power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you: and ye shall be witnesses
unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the
uttermost part of the earth."
John 20:21, "Then said Jesus to them
again, Peace be unto you: as my Father hath sent me, even so send I you."
All of the aforementioned Scriptures deal
with the cornmission that our Lord has given us to take the Gospel to the
entire world and to every creature. Upon the resurrection of our Lord, the
church in Jerusalem had a wonderful ingathering of souls. However, a problem
arose. There were people there out of every nation under Heaven. Acts 2:5,
9, lO, 11a. "And there were dwelling at Jerusalem Jews, devout men, out of
every nation under heaven. Parthians, and Medes, and Elamites, and the dwellers
in Mesopotamia, and in Judea, and Cappadocia, in Pontus, and Asia, Phrygia, and
Pamphylia, in Egypt, and in the parts of Libya about Cyrene, and strangers of
Rome, Jews and proselytes, Cretes and Arabians...."
Now, what could be done? People from all
over the world were there in Jerusalem. Peter stood up to preach. The Gospel
was being delivered, but the people could not understand what Peter was saying.
Suddenly, a miracle took place. God gave the
ability to the soul winners there to speak in other languages. Acts 2:4,
"And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and began to speak with
other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance." The word
"tongues" here is the word "glossa," in the Greek, which
means either the physical tongue or a language.
Now then, every man from all the countries
heard the Word of God in his own language. Acts 2:6, 8, "Now when this
was noised abroad, the multitude came together, and were confounded, because
that every man heard them speak in his own language. And how hear we every man
in our own tongue, wherein we were born?" It is very interesting here
that the word "language" in verse 6 and the word "tongue"
in verse 8 are used interchangeably. Then in verse 11, we have the word
"tongues" mentioned again. "Cretes andArabians, we do hear
them speak in our tongues the wonderful works of God." This was given
in order that people might be saved.
1. This wonderful miracle was perverted by
some immature Christians. I Corinthians 3:1-4, "And I, brethren, could
not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal, even as unto babes in
Christ. I have fed you with milk, and not with meat: or hitherto ye were not
able to bear it, neither yet now are ye able. For ye are yet carnal: for
whereas there is among you envying, and strife, and divisions, are ye not
carnal, and walk as men? For while one saith, I am of Paul; and another, I am
of Apollos; are ye not carnal?"
Paul wrote many letters as inspired by the
Holy Spirit. He wrote to the churches in Corinth, Rome, Galatia, Ephesus,
Philippi, Colosse and Thessalonica. The only church to which he mentioned
tongues was the church at Corinth. These were the "tongue-talkers."
Now let's see if they had something that the other churches did not have. Let's
see if they were more spiritual than the other churches. Notice several things
in the first four verses of I Corinthians 3.
(1) They were carnal, which means
"fleshly." (Verse 1) It is obvious that they lived in the flesh. You
will find this same thing in verse 4 when Paul asks the question, "Are ye
not carnal?"
(2) They were babes in Christ. (Verse 1)
(3) They were not mature enough to eat
spiritual meat. (Verse 2) He had to feed them with milk.
(4) They were a church tilled with envying,
strife and division. (Verse 3) Notice, they are called carnal twice more.
(5) They walked as men. (Verses 3 and 4)
So here we have a church of fleshly people
who are babes in Christ; who could not bear to eat spiritual meat, but had to
be fed with milk; who were filled with envy, strife and divisions; and who were
followers of men.
So this is the church that was filled with
the tongue-talkers. Did they have something the other churches didn't have?
They absolutely did! They had carnality, envying, strife, divisions and were
spiritual babes. It doesn't sound like they had some kind of a second blessing
or a sanctification that others didn't have. Certainly they were not to be
envied, but rather to be pitied.
2. This gift of speaking in other languages
in order for people to be saved who could not understand the language commonly
used was the least important of all the spiritual gifts. I Corinthians
12:4-10, "Now there are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit. And
there are differences of administrations, but the same Lord. And there are
diversities of operations, but it is the same God which worketh all in all. But
the manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal. For to
one is given by the Spirit the word of wisdom; to another the word of knowledge
by the same Spirit; to another faith by the same Spirit; to another the gifts
of healing by the same Spirit; To another the working of miracles; to another
prophecy; to another discerning of spirits; to another divers kinds of tongues;
to another the interpretation of tongues." I Corinthians 12:28-31,
"And God hath set some in the church, first apostles, secondarily
prophets, thirdly teachers, after that miracles, then gifts of healings, helps,
governments, diversities of tongues. Are all apostles? are allprophets? are all
teachers? are all workers of miracles? Have all the gifts of healing? do all
speak with tongues? do all interpret? But covet earnestly the best gifts: and
yet shew I unto you a more excellent way."
Now notice several things:
(1) All were not given the same gifts. I
Corinthians 12:8 and 9 say that one was given the word of wisdom, another the
word of knowledge, another faith, another the gifts of healing, etc. The modern
tongues movement claims that this gift of tongues is available to all.
Absolutely not! God does give gifts to each of us, but does not give all of us
every gift.
(2) This gift of tongues was the least
important of all. Notice the list in I Corinthians 12:8-10. The last one
mentioned is the gift of tongues. Now notice the list in I Corinthians 12:28.
Once again, the last gift mentioned is the gift of tongues. Notice the word "secondarily"
in verse 28.
Also notice the word "thirdly" in
that verse. These are adverbs which modify the verb "set," which
means that these gifts are given in order of their importance. The apostles
were more important than the prophets, the prophets more important than the
teachers, the teachers more important than the miracles, the miracles more
important than the healings, etc. The last in importance is the gift of
tongues. This gift was last in importance because it was least needed.
(3) This gift was not earned. The fact that
it is called a gift teaches us that it is not earned.
3. There is no record that Jesus, our
example and pattern, ever had to use this gift. All Christians would agree that
our goal should be to be like Jesus. I John 4:17, "Herein is our love
made perfect, that we may have boldness in the day of judgment; because as he
is, so are we in this world." Philippians 2:5, "Let this mind be in
you, which was also in Christ Jesus." John
14:12, "Verily, verily, I say unto
you, He that believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also; and greater
works than these shall he do; because I go unto my Father."
There is not one record in all the ministry
of Jesus when He spoke in tongues, meaning He had no occasion to do so. His
entire earthly life was limited to one little country of just a few square
miles. It was not necessary for Him to speak in tongues. Now if He did not
speak in tongues, is a person less spiritual because he does not have that gift
or because his calling does not necessitate such a gift?
4. Jesus rebuked the Corinthian people
because of their perversion of this gift. Notice the following study of I
Corinthians 14.
Verse 1, "Follow after charity, and
desire spiritual gifts, but rather that ye may prophesy." The best
spiritual gift, and the one to be most desired, was to prophesy, which means
"to teach, to reveal truth," etc.
Verse 2, "For he that speaketh in an
unknown tongue speaketh not unto men, but unto God: for no man understandeth
him; howbeit in the spirit he speaketh mysteries." These people who
were speaking in tongues when no unsaved people were present and who were
causing confusion in the church were understood only by God and not by man. Of
course, God understands all languages, but the people couldn't understand, so
the "tongue-talkers" were rebuked for using this gift in the church.
Verse 3, "But he that prophesieth
speaketh unto men to edification, and exhortation, and comfort." Those
who were perverting this gift were not edifying. Notice that they could not
comfort, exhort or edify God's people with this gift.
Verse 4, "He that speaketh in an
unknown tongue edified himself; but he that prophesieth edifieth the
church." Notice the selfishness of those who spoke needlessly in other
languages, and the unselfishness of those who taught so they could edify the
church.
Verse 5, "I would that ye all spake
with tongues, but rather that ye prophesied: for greater is he that prophesieth
than he that speaketh with tongues, except he interpret, that the church may
receive edifying." Paul wished for every Christian that he would have
the opportunity someday to witness to a person in another language so that
person could hear the Gospel in his own language and be saved, but he plainly
says that the one who teaches the Bible is a greater person than he that talks
in another language.
Verse 9, "So likewise ye. except ye
utter by the tongue words easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is
spoken? for ye shall speak into the air." Notice he says that someone
who talks in other languages, unless there is someone there who can understand
that language who is not saved, is speaking into the air. He is wasting his
time.
Verse 12, "Even so ye, forasmuch as
ye are zealous of spiritual gifts, seek that ye may excel to the edifying of
the church." Notice Paul says that since you are wanting spiritual
gifts, you should seek the most important one; that is, edifying the church, or
of being understood so you can help people.
Verse 14, "For if I pray in an
unknown tongue, my spirit prayeth, but my understanding is unfruitful." Paul
rebukes the heresy of praying in tongues. Listen, it is a waste of time. God
knows English, and the gift of tongues was given so that people of other races
might be saved.
Verse 15, "What is it then? I will
pray with the spirit, and I will pray with the understanding also: I will sing
with the spirit, and I will sing with the understanding also." Paul
teaches here that to be spiritual is to pray or sing so one can be understood.
The modern "tongue-talkers" would lead us to believe that to be extra
spiritual is to talk in tongues. Paul says to be extra spiritual is to be
understood.
Verse 16, "Else when thou shalt
bless with the spirit, how shall he that occupieth the room of the unlearned
say Amen at thy giving of thanks, seeing he understandeth not what thou
sayest?" It has always been the common practice of New Testament,
soul-winning Baptist churches to say "Amen" in church. Paul wonders
how one could say "Amen" if he cannot understand what is being said.
Verse 18, "I thank my God, I speak
with tongues more than ye all." Paul told the people that he spoke
with tongues more than all of them did. Of course, this was necessary. Paul
traveled from country to country, and God enabled him to speak
in other languages so that the people of
different nations could understand the Gospel.
Verse 19, "Yet in the church I had
rather speak five words with my understanding, that by my voice I might teach
others also, than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue." Paul said
that when you go to church, it's 2000 times better to speak and be understood
than to speak and not be understood.
Verse 22, "Wherefore tongues are for
a sign, not to them that believe, but to them that believe not: but prophesying
serveth not for them that believe not, but for them which believe." Ah,
here is the clincher. It plainly says that tongues are for those "that
believe not." In other words, it is a tool for soul winning. The modern
tongues movement-I suppose I should not say "modern," for it is not
modern; it was used in the baby, un-spiritual, carnal church in Corinth - confuses the unsaved, and in some cases even frightens them away from
the Gospel.
Verse 26, "How is it then, brethren?
when ye come together, every one of you hath a psalm, hath a doctrines hath a
tongue. hath a revelation, hath an interpretation. Let all things be done unto
edifying." Paul is saying here that in church everything should be
done to edify. This totally eliminates the talking in tongues in church unless
there are unsaved people there who cannot understand the language being used.
Verse 33, "For God is not the author
of confusion, but of peace, as in all churches of the saints." Paul
explains to us that the tongues movement being used at the church at Corinth
(which was not a Bible tongues movement at all) was confusion, and God was not
the author of that!
Verse 34, "Let your women keep
silence in the churches:
for it is not permitted unto them to
speak; but they are commanded to be under obedience, as also saith the
law." Along with the perversion
of tongues and other perversions by the church at Corinth, the ladies were
speaking in these languages. Paul told them to be quiet in church. Notice also
verse 35, "And if they
will learn any thing, let them ask their
husbands at home: for it is a shame for women to speak in the church."
Verse 39, "Wherefore, brethren,
covet to prophesy, and forbid not to speak with tongues." Here is the
conclusion of the matter. Paul says that teaching is the best gift, but we
should not disbelieve the gift of tongues. This gift was begun on Pentecost.
Sometimes it is necessary.
The First Baptist Church of Hammond is
located in the metropolitan Chicago area. People from many parts of the world
have settled in Chicago. It is not unusual for people to come to our services
who cannot understand English, but speak other languages. For example, we have
a special ministry to the Spanish-speaking people. In our Spanish-speaking
department alone, it is not unusual for us to have over 2000 people to come to
hear the Gospel preached in Spanish. There is no need for anyone to have the
gift of tongues concerning the Spanish people, because we have people who can
teach them in their own language.
We also have a ministry to the Vietnamese
and Cambodians, so it is not necessary for one to have the gift of tongues to
reach them.
It is quite common for Romanian people to be
saved in our church. Fortunately, we have a businessman and his wife who speak
fluent Romanian, and often during the invitation time, we call upon them to
come and win Romanian people to Christ.
On occasion we have had people to come to
the altar who can understand only Arabic. Again, fortunately, we have a doctor
and his wife in our church who speak Arabic.
The same thing could be said concerning
German people and others.
However, one Sunday morning one of our young
businessmen came to the altar and said, "Pastor, I have a Chinese lady on
the back row of the lower section of the auditorium who is weeping and obviously
wants to be saved, but she cannot understand English. I have tried to witness
to her, but she speaks only the Chinese language. Please ask if anyone in the
auditorium can speak Chinese." I did ask for someone to come to translate
the Gospel into the Chinese language. There was no one. This young man was so
disappointed. He went back to his seat, and I forgot about the Chinese lady
because of the busy time during the invitation.
After the service this same young
businessman came forward. His face was as pale as a ghost. He said,
"Pastor, something happened back there a while ago that I could not
believe."
He continued to talk, stuttering as he did,
but this is what he said. "Pastor, I went back to the back row, and I told
this Chinese lady in English that I could not find anyone to tell her how to be
saved, but that I was going to tell her in English, even if she could not
understand. Immediately when I started presenting the plan of salvation, a
startled look of understanding came on her face. She pointed to her ears, shook
her head up and down as she was understanding what I said. I tested her. I
asked her to stand up; she did. I asked her to sit down; she did. I asked her
to raise her hand; she did. She was understanding my English, though she could not
speak or understand the English language. I told her how to be saved. She
received Christ as her Saviour, and immediately after she prayed and received
Christ, she pointed to her ears, shook her head from side to side as if she
could not understand me anymore. Pastor, I don't know what that is."
Now I did not say it; I'm just telling you
what the man said. It has never happened to me; I have never had an occasion to
have such a need, but this young businessman, not expecting it, not seeking it
or even desiring it, told me that story. You can
make your own judgment, but whatever
happened in this instance, it is exactly what happened on the day of Pentecost,
and it is exactly what the gift of tongues was to the New Testament church in
the book of Acts.
Chapter Ten
Where Are the Nine?
Recently an article appeared in a leading
conservative publication which I feel must be answered. I am a novice at this;
to my knowledge I have never done this before, that is, publish an answer to
someone else's article. It had the same title as does this answer, and it
appeared to me to be directed toward my good friend, Dr. Bob Gray of Longview,
Texas, whom I love and admire dearly. I feel I must rise in his defense and in
defense of all of those who feel somewhat under attack by the aforementioned
article, many of whom pastor some of the greatest soul-winning churches in
America. That article dealt with churches who are baptizing multitudes but are
seeing little or no church growth, and I feel it hit the jugular vein of
soul-winning churches, and it must be addressed.
First, let me say that I consider myself a
friend to the author of the article. I love him, respect him, and admire him
very much. I have no plan to attack him. I think he is a good, sincere, honest
child of God. He is one to whom our country owes a debt. He is a great
preacher, and I have some feeling that my dear brother did not mean for his
article to come across exactly as it did.
I do not think my brother is a compromiser.
If I understand the meaning of the word "compromise," it describes
someone who goes against what he believes for his own personal gain, whether it
be popularity, money or success. I do not think that my dear brother is a
compromiser. I think he is consistent with his pen and in the pulpit with what
he believes, and I do not think he is "selling out" for anybody.
There are many things in his article with
which I agree. I agree with him concerning revival and the need for real
revival in America. I agree with him that Christians across America should heed
II Chronicles 7:14. I believe that God's people in our country need to repent.
I also agree with him that soul winners should always present the plan of
salvation thoroughly and carefully. This is not in defense of shallowness. I
agree with him that numbers are not important for numbers themselves. I agree
that our soul winning should not be for numbers but to keep every person out of
Hell that we possibly can.
I have no desire to publicize my personal
differences or convictions or standards with my beloved brother or to air in
public the dirty linen of fundamentalists, but someone needs to rise in defense
of the great soul-winning churches and the great soul-winning pastors who felt
the brunt of this article.
1. Soul winning is not a method of church
building. It is a command from our Commanding General. Occasionally someone
will come to the Pastors' School at First Baptist Church of Hammond, spend a
week hearing and seeing the soul-winning emphasis here, and go home to win
souls and see his church grow. This growth may continue for several years, and
then it may level off. Often this same pastor will then go to someone else's
pastors' school to find other methods by which he can build his attendance.
Soul winning is not a method; it is a command. We are supposed to go soul
winning and do soul winning if our churches grow or if our churches decrease in
attendance. An increase in church attendance is simply a delightful product of
soul winning; but if such an increase does not occur, the command of the Great
Commission is no less valid.
We are likewise commanded to baptize people
upon their acceptance of Jesus Christ. If the church grows or not, the
Great Commission is still valid. We are to
win souls, baptize our converts, and train our converts to win souls.
2. Our command is not to build churches. I
know of no place in the Bible where we are commanded to build churches. Matthew
16:18 tells us that it is Jesus' place to build the church. It is our job to
obey His command. I am not in the church-building business; I am in the
soul-winning business, and I'm doing my best to conserve the results and to
build a spiritual hospital for the healing of wounded Christians and a dining
hall for the feeding of God's people. It is easy for us in obeying the Great
Commission to ofttimes enjoy church growth. Then our motives become wrong, as
we decide to build churches rather than win souls. The motto of my ministry is,
"I will not use my people to build my work; I will use my work to build my
people."
3. Where are the converts? In Luke 17:12-19
we have the story of the cleansing of ten lepers. Only one returned to express
gratitude, and our Saviour asked the question, "Where are the
nine?" (Luke 17:17) The answer is found in the same verse, "Were
there not ten cleansed?" Regardless of where the nine are, they were
cleansed. This is the big thing. It was nice for the one to return to express
gratitude; it would have been nicer for all ten to have returned, but the main
thing about this story is that all of them were cleansed. Now, I'm not saying
that all the people who walk the aisles in our churches to receive Christ are
sincere; but I do believe that the percentage of people who are genuinely saved
who walk the aisles in the churches under attack by our dear brother is just as
great as the percentage of the churches who have lesser numbers profess faith
in Christ.
Now let us discuss where the nine are and
where many of the converts go who are saved in these churches. Since these
churches are not primarily concerned about building churches but keeping people
out of Hell, they reach into many areas of society whose people can do nothing
for the church. Many of these are transient. For example, at our church we
reach thousands of bus people a year who live too far to attend First
Baptist Church regularly. Many of them are
children and teenagers whose parents will not let them return to First Baptist
Church.
Every Sunday we have sailors walking the
aisle professing faith in Christ. These men are stationed at a naval base about
80 miles from First Baptist Church. These are not men who are going to attend
our church regularly. They come and go; but, thank God, they are cleansed, if
they are sincerely receiving Christ.
We operate a rescue mission. Scores of these
mission men are baptized every year. Most of them are men whose lives have been
ruined and wasted, and they come from all over the country as transients. They
get saved and go back to their families or go to the next city. They cannot be
added to the attendance of our church; but, thank God, if they sincerely
trusted Christ, they are cleansed.
The churches under attack by our dear
brother are churches that preach on the streets and reach street people. These
people are transients. They are reached, they are brought to church, they are
baptized according to the Great Commission, but they do not live in our city.
They go their way. We try to do what we can to contact people in other cities
to help them; but if they are never seen again, they were cleansed if they were
sincere in their profession of faith in Christ.
Churches of our persuasion go to rest homes
and take the Gospel of Christ. When these people receive Christ, many are
allowed to come to church for one Sunday just to profess faith in Christ and be
baptized. We have baptized scores of people from rest homes this year who
cannot regularly attend our church and most of whom will never come to our
church again; but if they were sincere, they were cleansed.
Scores of our converts each year are
shut-ins. Our church and others like ours go to the highways and hedges, go to
the maimed, the halt, and the blind, and we do all we can to get people saved.
Our job is not to get them to help us build a church; our job is to get them
cleansed. After a person who is a shut-in is saved, we believe he should get
baptized. We make special arrangements for such people to come to church on at
least one occasion so they can be baptized. They do not increase our church
attendance; but if they were sincere, they were cleansed.
We have a ministry to the truck drivers.
Many of our people go to truck stops to do soul winning. Every Sunday we will
have from half-a-dozen to twenty (sometimes even more) truck drivers who sit
together on my right on the front. These men love our services. Many of them
receive Christ as Saviour. In obedience to the command given in the Great
Commission, we baptize them. They go back to their truck stops, get in their
trucks, and go on their way. They will not be shown on our future attendance
records; but if they were sincere, they were cleansed.
Our people bring their relatives to our
church, especially when they come to visit at vacation time. Hundreds of these
people are saved every year. They are baptized while they are here and then
return to their own homes. They do not help us increase our attendance on a
regular basis; but if they were sincere, they were cleansed.
Hundreds of people have come from the states
of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin to visit our services
because they have heard of our church. When they come, they bring their lost
loved ones with them because they know that we will do our best to get them
saved. Many of these unsaved loved ones receive Christ or at least say they do.
Then they return to their homes; they live too far to help us increase our
church attendance; but, thank God, if they were sincere, they were cleansed.
Every week we send many of our men to jails
across the area. We have an active prison ministry. Hundreds of these prisoners
are won to Christ each year. When they are discharged from prison, many come to
our church to get baptized
before they return to their homes in other
cities and states. This does not help us in our attendance; but if they were
sincere, they were cleansed.
In Luke 14:16-24 we find the parable of the
great supper. There are several places mentioned where we are to go to invite
folks to come. These places are the streets and lanes of the city. We are told
to bring in the poor, the maimed, the halt, and the blind. Then in verse 23 we
are told to go to the highways and hedges. Now most of the people you will find
in these places and under these conditions are not people who are going to
build your church, but we are to reach them. Then we are commanded when we
reach them to baptize them; and, praise God, if they were sincere, they are
cleansed.
Add to this the educable slow or retarded
people (we reach hundreds of these), the migrant workers, and many other groups
such as the Vietnamese, the Cambodians and the Chinese, and you will find that
a real soul-winning church that obeys the Great Commission will reach
multitudes of people that will never help their attendance; but, thank God, if
they are sincere, they are cleansed.
I sincerely believe that this is the heart
of the Saviour; and when He looks down and sees an unselfish group of people
who are obeying the Great Commission and are willing to reach multitudes who
cannot boost the attendance or boost the offering, I think the Saviour then
says, "I'm going to build that church. That church is a tool being used to
obey My commission, so I'm going to build it, keep it in good shape, send it
new members, and send it converts from nearby who are stable families."
So in answer to the question, "Where
are the nine?" the answer is, they are cleansed. That's the big thing-not
if they count in the attendance report. It is for this reason that the
soul-winning churches are the growing churches in most cases. However, I rise
in defense of a church that is not growing but is busy obeying the Great
Commission.
I pastored country churches as a young man.
In one place we had only seven prospects that we found in a church census. So,
we would go down to the next town 25 miles away on Saturday and win everybody
we could to Christ. Then we baptized them. They could not help our church
attendance; but if they were sincere, they were cleansed.
When I was a boy growing up in Dallas,
Texas, a church was started one block from the high school I attended. It was
called the Galilean Baptist Church. I will never forget the soul winning that
church did. They preached on street corners; they passed out tracts in shopping
areas. I can remember that on Sunday afternoon the pastor would go down to the
zoo and stand by the monkey cages where the crowds gathered and preach to the
people. This church reached thousands for the Lord, but it never became a giant
church. It was average-sized at best and was only a fraction of the size of a
church just a block away. They won thousands to Christ. They did not keep them
all or most of them; but all of those who were sincere were cleansed.
It is hard for people whose main desire is
to build a church to understand those whose main desire is to obey the Great
Commission and keep people out of Hell. We obey the Great Commission. Jesus
builds the church by sending us enough local people to keep the tool in good
shape so it can do the job for God in reaching others and in obeying the Great
Commission.
4. In a sense, the church that doesn't grow
or that decreases in attendance is growing. When a ministry first begins, there
is not much attrition, especially in the case of a new church. Most of the
growth in the first few months or years is net gain. However, as a church grows
older, she begins to lose people in certain ways. It is much like a lavatory in
a bathroom. There is a drain at the bottom, and there is a drain at the top.
When one wants to fill the lavatory, he plugs the drain at the bottom, and all
the water that comes from the faucet is net gain. There comes a time, however,
when water begins to reach the
top and flows out through the upper drain. A
church is like this. There comes a time in the life of a church when it begins
to lose people for various reasons. When such natural losses come, the church
must be reaching many people to take the place of the losses. The membership
and attendance must be replenished, so a church is actually growing when it
isn't growing. Death takes some; college takes others. Marriage takes some;
others move out of the area. Yes, sad to say, some become disgruntled and
leave; others become shut-ins; and others choose to go to smaller churches
nearby.
For example, when I became Pastor of First Baptist
Church of Hammond 33 years ago, you could hardly find a fundamental church in
our area within driving distance. Now there are 40 churches within driving
distance of my house that are soul-winning fundamental churches. Most of these
are pastored by people who at one time went to First Baptist Church, and some
are even our converts. Most, if not all, of these churches have members who
were saved at First Baptist Church of Hammond.
At one time there were six song leaders in
churches in our area who were saved at First Baptist Church. I remember one
time finding that there were three deacon board chairmen in our area who were
saved at First Baptist Church.
I was in the airport at O'Hare Field in
Chicago. My name was paged because an agent wanted to see me. A young married
lady who heard my name came up to me and told me how glad she was to see me.
She wanted me to know that she was saved at First Baptist Church and that she
was now going to another church in the area. Recently I was at a police department
in a suburb of Hammond. I was told that the captain there was saved at First
Baptist Church and was going to a church in the suburbs. A few years ago I
spoke at a Sunday school convention on the north side of Chicago; I counted 27
of our converts who were teaching Sunday school in other churches within an
hour and a half' s drive of the First Baptist Church of Hammond.
The converts of soul-winning churches
migrate over the entire country. There are hundreds of preachers from First
Baptist Church who are pastoring churches around America. Add to that hundreds
of church secretaries, assistant pastors, Christian school administrators,
Christian school teachers, etc., and you have a great host of people, many of
whom were saved here, who are scattered across the country.
Then there are those who have been saved at
First Baptist who have moved to other parts of the country. Often in San Diego
or Norfolk or Jacksonville or some other area near a naval base, I meet sailors
who were saved at First Baptist and who are serving in other churches.
The other day I was in San Antonio, Texas. I
met a Mexican lady who was saved at First Baptist Church. A few years ago I was
in Denver. A pastor came to visit the services to tell me that one of our
converts was a faithful member of his church. Almost everywhere I speak, laymen
come to me and say, "I was saved at First Baptist Church, and I'm serving
God here." I was on the airplane the other day. A stewardess told me she
was saved at First Baptist Church of Hammond.
Soul-winning churches have converts all over
the world. A missionary in the back country jungles of Mexico found a little
group of people who had never heard the Gospel. Very carefully this missionary
explained the Gospel. One little Mexican boy began to smile and shake his head
up and down. The missionary inquired as to why he was smiling and nodding. He
said, "I know all about that. I used to live in Chicago, and I went out to
the First Baptist Church of Hammond and got saved." Some preacher friends
of mine were in Korea. They went to an army base to eat a bite. The guard at
the guardhouse checked their identity. One of the preachers witnessed to the
guard, whereupon the guard replied, "I was saved in Hammond, Indiana,
several years ago."
Preachers all over America tell me that
while they are out soul winning they meet our converts. Likewise, I meet the
converts of other fundamental soul-winning churches while I'm out soul winning.
I was preaching in Longview, Texas. I had to
drive well over a hundred miles to get to the Dallas airport. I was in a rented
car. I got behind an accident, and for almost an hour I couldn't move. When the
roads were cleared, I found myself driving over the speed limit in order to
make my plane so I could get to my church in time for the service that night. I
was pulled over by a state trooper. He looked at my driver's license and began
to cry. He said, "You won me to Christ seventeen years ago."
You see, soul-winning churches have converts
everywhere. They are not attending our churches; they give no money to our
churches; but if they were sincere, they are cleansed.
5. There is a deadly accusation against us
that we believe "easy-believism." (Of course, I must confess that I
don't know what "hard-believism" is.) I simply believe in "believism."
Perhaps the folks who were bitten by the fiery serpents in the wilderness and
were saved from death by simply looking at the brazen serpent lifted on a pole
were accused of believing an "easy-lookism." I would imagine that
somebody accused the Ethiopian eunuch of practicing "easy-believism,"
and the same thing would be true of the Philippian jailor or the woman at
Sychar's well. Each of them was saved during one conversation in the matter of
a few minutes. I feel the term "easy-believism"is a term used by
those who are spasmodic in soul winning for those who are faithful in soul
winning. It may even be an excuse for their lack of soul-winning effort.
6. Was Jesus a failure after having spent 33
years on this earth after doing so many things that the Bible says the world
could not contain the books that would be written if all
He did was placed in print? He came to the
cross. At the time of His death, His follow-up program was seemingly a failure.
His board chairman was denying he belonged to the church or the faith of the
Lord. His treasurer was committing suicide. One of his board members was
doubting. The rest forsook Him and fled, and only a few ladies gathered around
the cross. Where were those that He had cleansed? I don't know where they were,
but I know one thing: They were cleansed!
Now I believe in a follow-up program. I
would compare our follow-up program at First Baptist Church of Hammond with any
follow-up program in America, but I'm afraid that too many churches are
following up on converts they are not having. I've often said that I would
rather conserve two out of a hundred than one out of one.
7. If one must criticize, why not be
critical of the churches who are not growing and not winning souls instead of
the churches who are not growing and yet obeying the Great Commission? If you
must criticize, why not criticize the churches who are baptizing ten and have
less in attendance than those who are baptizing 6,000 and have the same
attendance?
Why not reward the hard-working bus workers
instead of criticizing their churches? Why not reward and honor the folks who
preach on the streets and go to the jails, the rest homes, the streets and
lanes and highways and hedges to get the maimed, the halt, the blind and bring
them to Christ instead of criticizing their churches? Why not reward and honor
those who preach and reach the forgotten who cannot come to church regularly
but nevertheless have been cleansed? Why not honor and reward the pastors and
churches who reach so many who can in turn offer nothing to the church?
I commend my brother for these many years of
preaching the Gospel. I commend him for overcoming obstacles. I admire him and
love him deeply, and I cannot help but believe that he is more in agreement
with the churches that were the object of his article than he is with those
churches who spend less time
obeying the Great Commission and reaching
those who can give us nothing in return. I honor him, I respect him, I admire
him, and I appreciate his ministry.
Now let him and me both join in appreciating
the ministry of pastors and people who go day and night obeying the Great
Commission. It is sad that those who are called fanatics and who are fought by
city councils, police departments, newspapers, false teachers, ministerial
associations, businesses, atheists, and others because of their soul-winning
zeal, are also fought by a faithful servant of God who perhaps lapsed into a
moment of judging motives.
May God bless him for his years of service;
and may God bless those embarrassed by his article who preach the same Gospel,
exalt the same Saviour, and believe the same Book.
Chapter Eleven
Let's Be Baptists!
Matthew 16:16-1 8, "And Simon Peter
answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God. And Jesus
answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-jona:for flesh and
blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven. And I
say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my
church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it."
The word "church" here is the
Greek word which means "called-out assembly," which, of course,
refers to the local church, which is the only church in this age. There is a
so-called church called the "invisible church" or the "universal
church," which supposedly is composed of all believers, but all believers
cannot yet be a church and will not be until the rapture because all believers
have not yet become a called-out assembly. At the rapture all believers will
become a church. Hebrews 12:23, "To the general assembly and church of
the first born, which are written in heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and
to the spirits of just men made perfect."
The doctrine of the universal church
originated with the Catholic denomination - the word
"catholic" meaning "universal." Throughout history there
has been a battle between our Baptist forefathers and the Catholic church
concerning the heresy of the universal church or invisible church. I make an
issue of this because the church (local, that is) is the unit of battle in the
warfare against evil and for God and good. To bypass this unit of battle or
make light of this unit of battle is to lessen our effectiveness in the
warfare.
Now notice Hebrews 12:22 23, "But ye
are come unto mount Sion, and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly
Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels, to the general assembly and
church of the firstborn, which are written in heaven, and to God the Judge of
all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect." The general
assembly will be all the host of Heaven, and the church will be the called-out
assembly of God's people. Consequently, there is only one church on the face of
the earth today, and that is the local body of New Testament believers, like
the First Baptist Church of Hammond and churches of like faith.
Before we enter into this study or discussion,
let me say that I have the kindest feeling toward all believers, and I have no
desire to be offensive, though I have no doubt that this study will offend
some, perhaps many. However, if we reach the people we should reach for Christ,
we will have to revive the emphasis on the local churches! Because of that, the
eternal destiny of men, women, boys and girls will rest in our ability to
emphasize the institution that Jesus started for the perpetuation of the Gospel
and for the war against evil.
1. All believers do not form the bride of
Christ. Many have been influenced by the inter-denominational teaching that has
infiltrated our Baptist churches that all believers form the bride of Christ.
The simple truth is, there is no bride of Christ today, nor will there be until
the rapture.
The word "bride" is mentioned only
five times in the New Testament. First is John 3:29, "He that hath the
bride is the bridegroom: but the friend of the bridegroom, which standeth and
heareth him, rejoiceth greatly because of the bridegroom 's voice:
this my joy therefore is fulfilled."
Even a casual reading of this verse
shows that it has nothing to do with all Christians forming at this present
time a bride. This is the only time the word "bride" is mentioned in
the Bible until Revelation 18:23, "And
the light of a candle shall shine no more
at all in thee; and the voice of the bridegroom and of the bride shall be heard
no more at all in thee: for thy merchants were the great men of the earth; for
by thy sorceries were all nations deceived." It is also mentioned in Revelation 21:2 "And
I John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven,
prepared as a bride adorned for her husband." It is mentioned again in
Revelation 21:9, "And there came unto me one of the seven angels which
had the seven vials full of the seven last plagues, and talked with me, saying,
Come hither, I will shew thee the bride, the Lamb 's wife." Then, it is
mentioned again in Revelation 22:17, "And the Spirit and the bride say,
Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And
whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely."
Now follow me carefully. The only time the
word "bride" is mentioned before Revelation 18 is in John 3:29 which
has nothing at all to do with the church. In Revelation 18, the rapture has
already taken place. We have already been called unto the marriage of the Lamb.
No one is a bride until she gets married, and so we are not a bride now, and
all the verses except John 3:29, which even mention the word "bride"
in the New Testament, are mentioned after the rapture while we are in the air
at the marriage of the Lamb. An engaged lady is not a bride. She must be
married; then she becomes a bride, so all believers are not a bride until after
the wedding. The wedding takes place in the air after the rapture, so all
believers will not become the bride of Christ until the wedding takes place.
Again I make an issue of this because
Baptists are being led astray by inter-denominational people concerning the
doctrine of the local church. So, just as all believers will not become a
church until we become a called-out assembly, all believers will not become a
bride until this called-out assembly.
2. All believers do not form the body of
Christ. The local church is the body of Christ, as I am going to show you.
Notice Colossians 1:18, "And he is the head of the body, the church:
who is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead; that in all things he
might have the preeminence." Notice the words, "he (Jesus) is the
head of the body, the church...." Now the word "church" is
the called-out assembly. Since all Christians have not been called out to
assemble, then He is talking about the only church in existence now, which is
the local church. And since He is the head of the body, and the body and the
church are synonymous, then the body of Christ is the local church. He is the
head of the called-out assembly.
Now in what way is He the head? He is the
head in the sense that He owns it - like the president
of a bank is the head of the bank. Christ owns the church; He is to run the
church, and the church is His body in the sense of ownership of an institution.
The word "body" is used in many ways, but it is often used concerning
a group of people. This called-out assembly called the New Testament church is
a group of people. They are a body of people. He is the head of that body. The
word "head" means that He is the "Boss-man" of the church;
He is to run the church; He is the King of the church.
Notice Colossians 2:10, "And ye are
complete in him, which is the head of all principality and power." It
says here that He is the head of all principality and power. Now what is that
principality and power? It deals with government. Paul said that we wrestle not
against flesh and blood but against principalities and powers. Jesus is the
head of all principalities and powers, and the word "head" is the
same word that is used in Colossians 1:18 where it mentions that He is the head
of the church.
So God is teaching us here that Jesus
controls the affairs and destinies of the world. He puts up kings and sets down
kings. He is the One Who is going to end up as King of the entire world. Now in
the same way that He is the head of principalities and powers, He is the head
of the church, as is told us in Colossians 1:18. That means He runs the church;
He is the Boss of the church; He is to be the ruler of the church.
The church is His body like someone would
say, "That's my coat. This is my tie. This is my pulpit. This is your
microphone. This is your building. That's my home. This is my car. These are my
shoes." In the same way, the church is His church, His body, because He
owns it. It is a body of people who are owned by Him; it belongs to Him and He
is the head.
3. There are three basic groups of
fundamentalists today. Group one is what I call "American Baptist
fundamentalists." These are they who came out of the American Baptist
Convention; that is, the old Northern Baptist Convention. These fundamentalists
are basically your Conservative Baptists and General Association of Regular
Baptists. Both of these groups came out of the American Baptist Convention.
Group two I call "Protestant
fundamentalists." These people came out of the Protestant denominations.
They came from the Presbyterians, the Methodists, the Episcopalians, etc.
Basically they are the interdenominational people today. They have started many
Bible institutes, Bible colleges, etc. These are not bad people; they are fine
people. I'm not trying to criticize them; I'm trying to identify them and name
fundamentalism.
Group three is what I call "Southern
Baptist fundamentalists." These are they which came out of the Southern
Baptist convention or were influenced by someone who did. In this group we have
the Baptist Bible Fellowship, the World Baptist Fellowship, those who were
influenced by Dr. J. Frank Norris, Dr. Lee Roberson, and in latter years Dr.
Bob Gray, myself and others who were Southern Baptists who left the convention.
These are the main groups of fundamentalists
during this and the past generation.
4. Notice the identification of each of
these three groups. Group number one came out of the American Baptist
Convention basically because of the Bible. They got tired of the liberalism of
the American Baptist Convention and withdrew. This is true basically with both
the Conservative Baptist Association and the General Association of Regular
Baptists. This is certainly to be admired. They did not, however, pull out
because of formalism. They retained their formalism to a great extent.
Likewise, they did not pull out because of church organization. Therefore,
they, to a large degree, retained the same type of church organization as the
American Baptists.
Group number two likewise pulled out because
of the Bible, because of the liberalism in the mainline Protestant
denominations and not because of church organization or formal worship.
Group number three withdrew from the
Southern Baptist Convention not necessarily because of the Bible. Thirty, forty
and fifty years ago when group number three withdrew from the Southern Baptist
Convention, most Southern Baptists believed the Bible to be the Word of God. We
withdrew because we could not put up with the worldliness, the formalism and
the high church organization of the Southern Baptist Convention. We pulled out
because of differences on standards, pulpit leadership, prophecy, worldliness
and formalism!
This means that groups number one and two
have more in common today with each other than either does with group number
three. Group number three is the old-fashioned preaching crowd, the
hellfire-and-brimstone group. Because of this, the action in fundamentalism has
been basically in group number three. The emphasis on soul winning,
evangelistic preaching, standards, separation from the world and informal
worship services have come largely from group number three. Group three would
agree with groups one and two on the Bible, but would not agree on type of
worship, standards, separation, etc.
Since one of the main things that separated
groups one and two from group three is evangelism and soul winning, most of our
growing churches have come from group number three, because, whatever errors
the Southern Baptist Convention had,
they, at least, in years passed, preached
the Gospel; they did not have the high church organization; and they had, to
some degree, evangelism and soul winning.
Though there are many admirable things about
groups one and two, they, nevertheless, have not had the emphasis on the
old-time Gospel preaching, the old-time religion, informal services and strong
evangelism and soul winning as has group number three. Again, this does not
mean we should not love them or even like them, but it is far better that group
number three works within its own boundaries and circumference, loving and
appreciating groups one and two and thanking God for them, but basically
training its own preachers and doing its own work.
5. Group three built few schools in which to train their preachers. Because
of that, we sent our students to group number two to go to college and to be
trained for the ministry. They came back with a belief in the Bible, but with
formalism, different music on Sunday morning from that on Sunday night, error
concerning the universal church and with influence from group number two.
Because of this, an interdenominational influence has crept into our Baptist
churches. We got the people saved, got them called to preach, sent them to
schools in group number two only to see them come back, in many cases, to
criticize our informality, our type of music and our soul winning and
evangelistic zeal! Group number three has helped to populate the schools of
group number two.
However, in the last few years, group number
three has been building colleges. It is now possible for group number three to
train its own preachers, and while we should have a high regard and a sincere
love for those in groups one and two, we should, nevertheless, train our own,
thereby avoiding the influence of interdenominationalism, formalism and
oftentimes weak standards coming from the group one and two schools.
6. Group number three has failed to publish
enough books and literature. I was in a church recently pastored by a
fundamental preacher. He has one of the fine churches in America. I looked at
his library. I picked out 15 books. To my surprise, 13 of his books were
written by group number two. Two of his books that I picked at random were
written by one man in group three, and I am that man. We have sent our preacher
boys to group one and two schools to be trained. They have come back and
diluted our Baptist heritage. They have come back mixed up on the doctrine of
the church. They have come back having been taught a certain form of church
organization that we believe not to be scriptural. They have been taught that
churches should be operated by committees, and in some cases, they have been
taught to wear a gown while preaching on Sunday morning.
Let me emphasize that I am certainly not
angry, nor do I feel negative toward fundamentalists in group one and
fundamentalists in group two, but there are philosophical differences that
should cause each group to educate and train its own preachers and likewise to
write its own literature.
I came home from this church where the
pastor had 13 of the 15 books that I picked written by group two. I was
shocked! So at random I picked 15 books from my library. To my amazement, all
15 were written by group two! Consequently, I have encouraged our group three
brethren to write books and literature.
It's a natural thing that preachers in group
three do not write. Most of us are busy winning souls and building churches, so
we have left the non-aggressive people to write the books that train the
aggressive people to be non-aggressive.
I'm suggesting that we coexist, but let each
group stay within its own group as far as training is concerned. Let us
fellowship with each other, but not organize together! Let us keep peace from a
distance rather than up close.
Let me illustrate. One of the largest
churches in America became pastorless. The former pastor had served for
over 40 years and had built one of the great
soul-winning churches in America. He was one of the founders of group three,
having pulled out of the Southern Baptist Convention and having led many others
to do the same. The church sought another pastor. They chose a pastor from
group one. He was not a bad man. He believed the Bible, but his beliefs about
church organization, red-hot evangelism, etc. were different from his
predecessor, and the church was harmed greatly because of his ministry. The
church certainly should have had a warm feeling toward this pastor, though he
was a member of group one, but they would have been very wise to have called a
member of group three to be their pastor.
We must fill our next generation with
independent, New Testament Baptist churches that are informal in their
services, evangelistic in their fervor, soul winning in their practice, and
independent in their spirit.
At this writing I am 66 years of age. I have
pastored the same church for over a third of a century. I realize that before
many years I must step down. I constantly keep before my people the importance,
not only to call their next pastor from the ranks of a Bible-believing group,
but also from the ranks of a group that agrees with the First Baptist Church on
types of public services, the King James Bible, separation, standards, soul
winning, evangelism, the old-time religion and old fashioned preaching.
This church is a perfect example. First
Baptist Church of Hammond thirty-five years ago was a member of group one. It
was a church that had been influenced by the American Baptists and later by the
Conservative Baptist Association. These were good people; my predecessor was a
fine man who believed the Bible, but he preached in tails and striped pants.
The church services were ultra formal. There were 22 committees. The church was
highly organized, far beyond the New Testament pattern. I was not their type of
preacher. They contacted me. I felt led to come, but bedlam broke loose. I was
group three; they were group one. Because they loved me and believed in me, the
great majority of the people went with me, though not totally understanding my
position or philosophies. Now through the years we have had a strong group
three church, but it took a war to make it so.
When I was a young man in Texas, we were
proudly Baptists. We loved the interdenominational people but did not run with
them. We loved American Baptists but did not run with them. We loved the
General Association of Regular Baptists and the Conservative Baptist
Association, but did not run with them. We loved the fundamental Methodists but
did not run with them. We thanked God that they preached the Gospel, but the doctrine
of the local, New Testament church meant something to us back in those days,
and the doctrines of informality and separation and standards meant something
to us. We thanked God that they preached the Gospel and rejoiced at every soul
they won, but organizationally, we kept to ourselves.
7. This influence from groups one and two is basically
and historically a Catholic influence.
In about 313 A.D. the Catholic church was started, basically by Constantine. In
the years following 1530, there was what we call the Reformation. The
Protestants came out of the Catholic church. These Protestants included what we
now call Methodists, Presbyterians, Congregationalists, etc. However, Baptists
never came from the Catholic church. Baptists came from Jesus Himself, Who
founded Baptist churches, or should I say He founded the first Baptist church!
Though the Reformation was led by some great
men such as Calvin, Luther, Savonarola and others, these great men were not a
part of our Baptist crowd. In fact, they persecuted our crowd. In some cases,
our Baptist brethren were martyred, and in some cases they were martyred by
Protestants. I teach our Hyles-Anderson College preacher boys to read the lives
and biographies of the reformers but not to read the sermons of the reformers.
Find their work ethic; study their character; ready their biographies, but not
their doctrine. Read the doctrines of Baptist preachers!
As I understand Revelation 17 and 18, the
Roman Catholic church is the mother of harlots mentioned there. Now if you are
a mother, you have to have children. So, the Catholic church gave birth to some
children. Who are they? The Protestants. Now with the passing of the centuries,
the Protestants had some babies. Who are they? The interdenominationalists or
what I called previously the Protestant Fundamentalists. Now just as the
Protestants pulled out from the mother on the doctrine of justification by
faith, they did not pull out from the mother in many other areas. They still
favor their mother.
Now from these children of Catholicism were
born other children. These are the interdenominational churches, and though
they certainly are to be admired because of their stand and their withdrawal
from protestantism as it became liberal, they, nevertheless, still favor mama,
and in some cases, they favor grandmother!
So today we have the Baptists who have been
here since Jesus started the first Baptist church. We have the Catholics, the
mother of harlots; and we have the Protestants, her children; and we have the
interdenominationals, the children of the Protestants and the grandchildren of
Catholicism. So, as the interdenominational schools and literature have
influenced our Baptist churches concerning formalism, the doctrine of the
church, church organization, etc., so did the Protestant churches influence the
interdenominational churches, and likewise did the Catholic church influence
the protestant churches. So our formalism comes from the Catholics by way of
the Protestants and the interdenominationalists.
Again let me say that we should feel no
animosity toward these our brethren in Christ, and we should realize that we
are brothers and sisters. We should love each other, but as far as our church
affiliation and church relationship is concerned, we should stay with the
churches patterned after the church that Jesus started.
There are members of Baptist churches who
are at this very moment upset with me, even as you read this chapter, and I'm
not surprised. You have not been trained to be a Baptist, and you are living proof
of what I am teaching in this chapter.
We live in a nice neighborhood. We have good
neighbors. We speak to our neighbors. We are kind to our neighbors. We love our
neighbors, but we don't eat with our neighbors, live with our neighbors, or
sleep in the same house with our neighbors. Does that mean we don't love them?
Of course, it doesn't. In no way am I suggesting that we not love and thank God
for other Christians who are members of groups one and two, or for that matter,
another denomination, but we should be proud that we are Baptists, just like we
are proud of our families.
8. Churches should start schools; schools
should not start churches. The only institution that has been promised divine
perpetuity is the New Testament church. No school has been made that promise,
so if a school controls a church, there is no promise that that school can have
divine perpetuity. If the church controls the school, the school is under the
canopy of that promise. Christ is head of the church, not the school; so consequently,
if the church has a school, that school does not have to die. It may choose to
die, but it does not have to die. If a school starts on its own, it has to die.
It may live for a while and serve for a while, but it does not have the promise
of divine perpetuity.
Suppose a group of churches starts a school.
Again, it is outside the promise. The local church should start the school, not
only so it may live but because it may stay stronger. If ten churches start a
school, the school will be just as strong as the weakest link. Now I'm not
criticizing the school if it lives for just a while, but it does not have the
promise of divine perpetuity.
9. A fundamentalist is one who believes in
the faith and practice of the original purposes and doctrines of an
institution. To put it another way, a fundamentalist is one who returns to the
original faith and practice of any organization. You can have a fundamentalist
Mason, a man who is a Masonic lodge member who returns to the original faith
and practice of the Masonic lodge. You can have a fundamentalist member of the
Parent-Teacher Association. You have fundamentalists in Iran.
If you are a Catholic, you go back to
Constantine in 313 A.D. If you follow the faith and practice of the original
intents of the Catholic church, you are a fundamentalist Catholic and go back
to 313. If you are a Lutheran, you can be a fundamentalist Lutheran and go back
to 1530 and the original intent of Martin Luther and the Lutheran church. If
you are an Episcopalian, you can go back to the original faith and practice of
the Episcopalians in 1531 and be a fundamentalist Episcopalian.
If you are a Presbyterian, you can go back
to the original faith and practice of the Presbyterians when they were founded
in 1540 and be a fundamentalist Presbyterian. If you are a Congregationalist,
you can go back to the faith and practice of the Congregationalists when they
were founded in 1603 and be a fundamentalist Congregationalist. If you are a
Methodist, you can go back to the faith and practice of the Methodist church as
it was founded in 1765 and be a fundamentalist Methodist.
If you are a member of the Disciples of
Christ denomination, you can go back to 1812 to the original faith and practice
of the Disciples of Christ denomination and be a fundamentalist Disciple of
Christ.
So, if you are a Disciple of Christ, you go
back to 1812 to be a fundamentalist. If you are a Methodist, you go back to
1765. If you are a Congregationalist, you go back to 1603. If you are a
Presbyterian, you go back to 1541. If you are an Episcopalian, you go back to
1531. If you are a Lutheran, you go back to 1530. If you are a Catholic, you go
back to 313. I am a Baptist fundamentalist, so I go back to the faith and
practice of Baptist churches as founded by Jesus during His earthly ministry!
10. The perpetuity of Baptist churches does
not follow the bloodline of Baptist denominations; it follows the bloodline of
fundamental Baptists. The perpetuity of Baptist churches is not in the American
Baptist Convention. It may have been at one time, but when the denomination
grew liberal, the fundamentalists could no longer endorse its faith and
practice, so the ones who left carried the bloodline of independent,
fundamental Baptist churches. To be quite frank, that means that the bloodline
is in the split and not in the main body that has deteriorated and often even
died.
I am simply saying the hope for America is
in independent, fundamental Baptist churches that preach Heaven like it is,
preach Hell like it is, fight sin, go soul winning, and take a stand for what
is right and against what is wrong. That is the hope!
When I was a young man in east Texas, I
pastored the Grange Hall Baptist Church in the country outside Marshall, Texas.
Down the road from me was the Grange Hall Methodist Church. The pastor of that
church was a fine young man whose name was Edmund Robb. Ed Robb was a
fundamental Methodist, not a fundamentalist as I am, for I am a fundamental
Baptist who, as I see it, goes back to the time of Christ, but Ed Robb was a
good fundamental Methodist. He believed in salvation by grace. He did not
believe you could lose salvation. He had revival meetings. He believed in
separation. He and I were good buddies. We spent some time together. We fellowshipped
together. We prayed for each other. I liked him; he liked me, but he never
preached for me, and I never preached for him. Our church did our best to
follow what we thought the Bible taught; his church did the best to do what
they thought the Bible taught. We loved each other, we prayed for each other,
but we did not organize together!
I am not asking group one to become a member
of group three. I'm not asking group two to become a member of group three. I
am asking for us to love each other. I'm asking for us to love all believers
and, for that matter, love the souls of all men. I am asking, and using all the
influence I have, that each group train its own preachers, stick with its own
literature, maintain its own purity, train its own preachers, and study its own
literature, while loving others who disagree. Let's be loving toward all
believers, but let's be Baptists!
Chapter Twelve
Lifestyle Evangelism -
An Enemy of Soul Winning
Acts 5:28, "Saying, Did not we
straitly command you that ye should not teach in this name? and, behold, ye
have filled Jerusalem with your doctrine, and intend to bring this man's blood
upon us." Acts 5:42, "And daily in the temple, and in every house,
they ceased not to teach and preach Jesus Christ." Acts 20:20, "And
how I kept back nothing that was profitable unto you, but have shewed you, and
have taught you publickly, and from house to house."
In the beginning, let me make it plain that
I am for lifestyle evangelism, but I am unalterably against ONLY lifestyle evangelism!
There are those who have attacked personal soul winning. They love to use such
terms as "confrontational evangelism" as they make light of and often
even ridicule those who pass out tracts, witness from house to house, preach on
street corners, etc. These are enemies to the salvation of men, and certainly,
they are hindrances to the obeying of the Great Commission.
I have said before that I believe in
lifestyle evangelism, if it is accompanied by what we call confrontational
evangelism; that is, personal soul winning. Matthew 5:16, "Let your
light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glonfy your
Father which is in heaven." It is plain that we are to live in such a
way that people will want what we have and that they may glorify God because of
our good works. There are examples of this in the Bible. The best was our
Saviour Himself. John 3:1, 2, "There was a man of the Pharisees, named
Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews: The same came to Jesus by night, and said unto
him, Rabbi, we know that thou art a teacher come from God: for no man can do
these miracles that thou doest, except God be with him." Nicodemus, an
unsaved man, inquired of Jesus concerning his salvation, for he could tell that
He was a teacher come from God. How could he tell this? By the miracles that
Jesus did. In other words, we have an example of lifestyle evangelism. On the
other hand, our Saviour did not limit His soul winning to His life, but He also
was a confrontational soul winner, such as is found in the very next chapter of
John, when in a public place He won a woman to Himself.
I was in southern California preaching. The
pastor was driving me to the morning service. On the freeway, it was obvious
that a lady in a car behind us was following us. If we would change lanes, she
would change lanes. She made no attempt to pass us when we slowed down. We
turned onto a busy street from the freeway; she turned on that same street and
stayed right behind us. We again turned onto a little neighborhood street; she
likewise turned and continued to follow us. Soon she motioned for us to stop.
The pastor did so, got out of the car, thinking that perhaps something was
wrong with our car. The lady wanted to talk to us about her relationship with
God. The pastor asked her how she knew that we could help her. She said,
"I saw a Bible on the dash of your car. I thought perhaps you could help
me." The very placing of that Bible on the dashboard of the car was
lifestyle evangelism.
I was eating in a restaurant in Illinois
recently. As I was paying my bill, the lady cashier said, "You're a
reverend, aren't you?"
I said, "Yes, ma'am. I'm a pastor. How
did you know?"
She said, "I feel the Spirit."
On occasion people do notice our lives and
seek us out. I was in Garland, Texas, pastoring. One day I was driving north on
Garland Road. I noticed a policeman following me. I turned right onto Miller
Road. As I traveled east, I noticed the policeman was still following me. I
turned left on Fifth Street. To my surprise and disappointment, that policeman
was still following me. I turned left on a little neighborhood street. If I
remember, it was a dead-end street. The policeman turned left. I finally
decided once and for all that I was going to find if he were really following
me. I turned right up a little alley; he turned right up a little alley! I
stopped, got out of the car, wondering what I had done to warrant such
apprehension. He got out of his car and said, "I want to get right with
God; can you help me?" That man got right with God and today is pastoring
a Baptist church.
Many years ago when I was in college I
worked at J. C. Penney Company. I worked hard; in fact, I led the entire men's
department in sales, though I was only a part-time worker. I tried to be nice,
honest and courteous. Soon I was called to pastor a little church out in the
country. Within a matter of a few weeks, the secretary in the office was saved,
her mother was saved, her father was saved, her sister was saved, her sister's
husband was saved, the assistant manager of the men's department was saved, his
wife was saved, a salesman in the men's department was saved, his wife was
saved, the manager of the shoe department was saved, his wife was saved, a lady
who worked in the hosiery department was saved, and her son was saved. If I
remember correctly, and I think I do, 16 people were saved who worked in that
one store. I trust that my life before them had something to do with it.
Therefore, I have no axes to grind with
those who believe that we should live right and make folks want what we have.
The axe I do have to grind is that it is not the only way, and that you can't
have one without the other! If you don't love them enough to live it, you won't
love them enough to tell it. If you don't love them enough to tell it, you
won't love them enough to live it. If you live it, you can't help but tell it. Romans
10:11, "For the scripture saith, Whosoever believeth on him shall not be
ashamed." Acts 4:20, "For we cannot but speak the things which we
have seen and heard." These verses tell us that if we believe, we will
not be ashamed, and that we cannot help but speak what God has done for us.
Let us address the issue of lifestyle
evangelism by answering the many errors connected with this enemy of soul
winning.
1. The error of saying we should witness
only when the Holy Spirit leads. What
is meant by this is that the Holy Spirit will direct us in some mysterious kind
of way to know to whom we are to speak. The truth is the Holy Spirit does lead
us, but not in the way that the lifestyle evangelism folks would tell us. Notice
Matthew 28:19, 20, "Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them
in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: Teaching them
to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and lo, I am with you
alway, even unto the end of the world. Amen." This is a command for us
to go soul winning, to witness to all nations. Notice Mark 16:15, "And
he said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every
creature." Here we are told to preach the Gospel to every creature.
Now read John 6:63, "ft is the
spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profit eth nothing: the words that I speak
unto you, they are spirit, and they are life." Notice that the Word of
God is Spirit, so when God tells us to get the Gospel to every creature, this
is the Holy Spirit leading us. This lifestyle evangelism heresy that says God
will give you special direction when He wants you to speak a word for Him is
foolishness. It is very close to the fallacious "word of knowledge"
that people claim to have. Brother, the "word of knowledge" is the
Word of God, and when God says something in His Word, this is the Holy Spirit
leading, because the Holy Spirit is the One Who gave us the Word.
Oh, yes, I believe that God opens doors for
us. Just yesterday I walked into a gift shop at the hotel where I was staying.
There were several newspapers lined up in front of me. I wanted to buy a paper
and did not know which was the best, so I kindly asked the little lady in the
gift shop, "Which one of these papers is the one that has the good news in
it?"
She replied, "I haven't read it."
Then she said, "I don't know any good news, do you?"
Well, praise the Lord, it so happened that I
did know some good news, and it was not long until I explained the plan of
salvation to her and she prayed the sinner's prayer.
2. The error that "just the Bible is
enough." These advocates tell
us that the Bible is all that is necessary, as they criticize those of us who
practice personal soul winning, obey the Great Commission, and, yes, even
practice confrontational evangelism, as they call it.
Look at Acts 8:30, 31, "And Philip
ran thither to him, and heard him read the prophet Esaias, and said,
Understandest thou what thou readest? And he said, How can I, except some man
should guide me? And he desired Philip that he would come up and sit with
him." Notice especially the words, "except some man should
guide me." The Ethiopian was asked by Philip if he understood what he
was reading. He replied that he could not understand unless some man should
guide him. The Word of God was not enough. This man was reading the best part
of the Bible that was available then to deal with salvation. He was reading the
clearest book of that Bible concerning salvation. He was reading the clearest
chapter of that book concerning salvation. He was reading the clearest part of
that chapter concerning salvation, and yet he needed somebody to guide him.
Now read Psalm 126:6, "He that goeth
forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come again with
rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him." Notice the first word is
"he." Following that it says he should "go." Then it says
we should
weep and bear precious seed. Notice what the
enemy has done; he first takes off the "he." In other words,
"Let the Bible do its work." The deterioration starts when soul
winning stops, so it is not surprising that once we have taken away the
"he," we have taken away the "weepeth." When you stop your
confrontational evangelism or soul winning, it will not be long until the
burden is gone. Now the next line is "bearing precious seed." They
first take away the "he," then take away the "weepeth,"
then they take away the "precious seed." What is the precious seed?
The King James Bible, of course. The New International Version is not
precious seed. The New Scofield Bible is not precious seed. The New
King James Bible is not precious seed. Good News for Modern Man is
not precious seed. The Reader's Digest Bible is not precious seed. The American
Standard Version is not precious seed. The Westcott and Hort manuscripts
are not precious seed. The precious seed is the King James Bible, preserved for
us word-for-word, but, don't be surprised when they give us seed that is not
precious.
So, they first took away the "he,"
then they took away the "weepeth," then they took away the
"precious seed" and substituted for it seed that is not precious.
There are organizations that specialize in
placing Bibles in public places. Certainly I am not opposed to this, but it is
not enough. The Bible itself will not do its work without a soul winner. Oh,
yes, there are people who have been saved in motel rooms just reading the
Bible, but somewhere back yonder there was a human instrument who planted the
seed. As I travel across the country, I find in some places and in some motel
rooms the Precious Seed. Then there are times I find seed that is not precious,
but, it is not surprising. When you take away the sower, you will eventually
substitute for the precious seed.
3. The error of those who say, "If you live right, people will
initiate the conversation." How foolish! Look at John 4:7,
"There cometh a woman of Samaria to draw water: Jesus saith unto her, Give
me to drink." Here is the dialogue between Jesus and the fallen woman
at Sychar's well. Notice that Jesus initiated the conversation in verse 7 when
He said, "Give me to drink."
Now look at Luke 19:5, "And when
Jesus came to the place, he looked up, and saw him, and said unto him,
Zaccheus, make haste, and come down; for today I must abide at thy house."
Here is the story of the conversion of Zaccheus when Jesus won Zacckeus to
Himself. In verse 5 the first words that were spoken were spoken by Jesus. "Zaccheus,
make haste, and come down." Jesus initiated the conversation. He was
the soul winner and started the dialogue.
Now notice John 5:6, "When Jesus saw
him lie, and knew that he had been now a long time in that case, he saith unto
him, Wilt thou be made whole?" The Saviour was at the pool of
Bethesda. He was going to heal a man and win him to Himself. Notice who
initiated the conversation. In verse 6 Jesus said, "Wilt thou be made
whole?"
Now look at Acts 8:30, "And Philip
ran thither to him, and heard him read the prophet Esaias, and said,
Understandest thou what thou readest?" Here we have the story of
Philip, the soul winner, winning the Ethiopian eunuch to Jesus. Notice who
initiated the conversation. In verse 30 the soul winner, Philip, asked, "Understandest
thou what thou readest?"
Notice Acts 16:28, "But Paul cried
with a loud voice, saying, Do thyself no harm: for we are all here." The
jailor was about to be saved. Notice, the soul winner spoke first. The Apostle
Paul initiated the conversation by saying, "Do thyself no harm."
As mentioned before, there are isolated
instances when the conversation is initiated by the sinner, but for every one
case like that, there are thousands where the conversation is initiated by the
soul winner.
I was in the Dallas airport. It was near
midnight. I was catching a late-night flight to Chicago. I went to the gift
shop to
buy a newspaper. The gift shop was just
closing. One of the clerks was a young lady speaking to another clerk. She said,
"I'm so tired I could just die." She did not know I was there. I was
bent over picking up a newspaper. I said, "Then what?"
She said, "What are you talking
about?"
I said, "Then what?"
She said, "What do you mean?"
I said, "You just said you were so
tired you could die. I asked you, 'Then what?"' In a few moments she was
saved.
I was in the Charlotte, North
Carolina, airport. I stopped to buy a newspaper at a little newsstand
that was in the hallway. I was singing and whistling. The lady selling
me the newspaper said, "You sound like you are happy."
I said, "You never sold a newspaper to
a happier man than the one you're talking with now."
She said, "You must have a good
boss."
I said, "The best!"
She said, "Who is your boss?"
Well, praise God, in a few moments, my Boss
was her Boss!
I was walking down the concourse toward my
gate to catch a plane at O'Hare Field in Chicago. A man almost bumped into me
coming the opposite direction. Suddenly he said, "Oh, my lord."
Instinctively I said, "You must know
Him, too."
He said, "Who?"
I said, "You just talked about my
Lord." He had forgotten something on the airplane. I walked with
him to the gate and led him to Christ.
I have been winning souls for many,
many years. I could count on the fingers of my hands the numbers of times that
people have initiated the conversation, but thousands and thousands of times I
have initiated the conversation.
4. The error that says soul winning is
just for the preacher in the pulpit.
They love to use Mark 16:15, "And he
said unto them, Go ye into all the world,
and preach the gospel to every creature." The word "preach" simply means
"evangelize," and what they should do is read the entire verse where
it says every creature," which means that most of the people who are saved
are won to Christ by individual, personal soul winning. It is with the tongue
that people are saved as the soul winner tells them the story of Christ.
Matthew 28:19, 20, "Go ye therefore,
and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the
Son, and of the Holy Ghost: Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I
have commanded you: and, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the
world. Amen." The word
"teach" implies that it is the use of the tongue.
Notice again Mark 16:15, "And he
said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every
creature." You have the word "preach" which
necessitates the use of the tongue.
Luke 24:47, 48, "And that repentance
and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all nations,
beginning at Jerusalem. And ye are witnesses of these things." You have the word "preached" and the word
"witnesses." Both these require the use of the tongue.
Acts 1:8, "But ye shall receive
power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you: and ye shall be witnesses
unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the
uttermost part of the earth." You have the word "witnesses," which again
means the use of the tongue.
We are supposed to tell people how to be
saved. It is not enough to live a sweet, Christian life and expect people to
flock to us asking for what we have.
Apply the same thing to other truths.
Suppose the average pastor taught tithing by lifestyle tithing. In other words,
he says nothing about tithing, preaches nothing about tithing, teaches nothing
about tithing, but gets in front of his people with a collection plate and
drops his tithe into the collection plate, hoping that someone will get the
idea and follow suit. Of course, this is absurd.
Try the same thing about separation. Suppose
a preacher does not preach against the Hollywood movies. He just goes to a
movie house and stands outside. As people see him not going in, they will not
go in. This also is absurd. It is foolishness. We are supposed to speak the
things we have seen and heard.
Something wonderful has happened in our
generation. The New Testament church in the book of Acts was a soul-winning
church. Through the years we transferred the soul winning to evangelism, and
for these many centuries, there has been an emphasis on the evangelistic
church.
Now what is the difference between the
soul-winning church and the evangelistic church? In the evangelistic church,
the pastor stands behind the pulpit and preaches the Gospel to the unsaved
people whom the folks have brought to church. In the soul-winning church, the
people leave the church and go out into the highways and hedges, win them to
Christ, bring them to church to walk the aisle and make public their profession
of salvation. In our generation, we have seen the better churches turn from
evangelistic churches to soul-winning churches. This enables people to be saved
more than one day a week - every day of the week! It enables hundreds of people
to preach the
Gospel, rather than just one man on Sunday.
It also enables the man of God to preach to the Christian people on the Lord's
Day, realizing that they will be going into the highways and hedges and
bringing folks to Christ.
5. The error of saying, "Just be
Christlike." Yes, we are to be
Christlike. I John 4:17, "Herein is our love made perfect, that we may
have boldness in the day of judgment; because as he is, so are we in this
world." Philippians 2:5, "Let this mind be in you, which was also in
Christ Jesus." John 14:12, "Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that
believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also; and gre ater works than
these shall he do; because Igo unto my Father." Psalm 1 7:15, "As for
me, I will behold thy face in righteousness; I shall be satisfied, when I
awake, with thy likeness."
However, one cannot be totally Christlike
unless he is a soul winner. Jesus was a soul winner. Oh, yes, He did some
wonderful works. John 21:25, "And there are also many other things
which Jesus did, the which, if they should be written every one, I suppose that
even the worid itself could not contain the books that should be written.
Amen." However, He did more than just wonderful works. He also spoke
the message. He sought sinners. He did not wait for them to seek Him out; He
sought them out.
Notice Luke 19:10, "For the Son of
man is come to seek and to save that which was lost." He came not only
to save the lost; He came to seek the lost. He sought them out and won them to
Himself.
Let's read I Timothy 1:15, "This is
a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into
the world to save sinners; of whom I am chief" He came into the world
to save sinners. If we are like Him, we will have to do more than just be
sweet, kind and forgiving, though those things are a part also. We will
likewise have to speak the words of salvation.
Let's read again John 14:12,
"Verily, verily, Isay unto you, He that believeth on me, the works that I
do shall he do also; and
greater works than these shall he do;
because I go unto my Father." It
does not say here that we should just live the life that He lived, love as He
loved, though the Bible does say that. It does not say here that we are to
forgive as He forgave, though the Bible does say that. It says we are supposed
to do the works that He did.
What works did He do? He came to seek and to
save that which was lost, so we cannot be completely Christlike until we do
likewise.
Notice in this passage who it is that is
supposed to do the works that He did. "He that believeth on
me," said the Saviour. That means that every single believer is
supposed to be a soul winner.
6. The error that says we should not win
souls in public places and from house to house. We are to win souls in public places and from house
to house! Acts 20:20, "And how I kept back nothing that was profitable
unto you, but have shewed you, and have taught you publickly, and from house to
house." Then the street preacher is right! The person who goes from
house to house knocking on doors is right! The one who passes out tracts in
public is right! The one who practices confrontational soul winning is right!
Notice Acts 5:42 "And daily in the
temple, and in every house, they ceased not to teach and preach Jesus
Christ." There are those who teach that this means we are supposed to
preach salvation in the pulpit and then go to every house and preach salvation.
Now I have no problem with that, though when he is talking about the temple
there, he is not talking about a place where they went for preaching. The
temple was a place that was used several times a year, and was a place of
activity, a public place, if you please. These people were simply doing the
same thing that the people were doing in Acts 20:20 - they were witnessing in
public places and also in the homes.
7. The error that we should not persuade
people to be saved. One verse will
take care of this heresy: II Corinthians 5:11, "Knowing therefore the
terror of the Lord, we persuade men;
but we are made manifest unto God; and I
trust also are made manifest in your consciences. ' The word "persuade" means "to
prevail upon." We are supposed to
prevail upon people to be saved.
Now turn to Luke 14:16-24, "Then
said he unto him, A certain man made a great supper, and bade many: And sent
his servant at supper time to say to them that were bidden, Come; for all
things are now ready. And they all with one consent began to make excuse. The
first said unto him, I have bought a piece of ground, and I must needs go and
see it: I pray thee have me excused. And another said, I have bought five yoke
of oxen, and I go to prove them: I pray thee have me excused. And another said,
I have married a wife, and therefore I cannot come. So that servant came, and
shewed his lord these things. Then the master of the house being angry said to
his servant, Go out quickly into the streets and lanes of the city, and bring
in hither the poor, and the maimed, and the halt, and the blind. And the
servant said, Lord, it is done as thou hast commanded, and yet there is room.
And the lord said unto the servant, Go out into the highways and hedges, and
compel them to come in, that my house may be filled. For I say unto you, That
none of those men which were bidden shall taste of my supper."
First, notice where we are to go. Verse 21
says we are to go to the streets and the lanes. It says to bring in the poor,
the maimed, the halt and the blind. In verse 23 we are to go to the highways
and hedges.
Then notice that we are to compel them to
come in. The word for "compel" is a very strong word which means,
"to constrain by threat, force or persuasion." At the least it means
we are to plead with men to come to Christ.
Yes, we are to be a testimony through the
way we live, but that is not enough, and I believe it is impossible to do only
that. As was said before, if you don't love them enough to live it, you won't
love them enough to tell it; and if you don't love
them enough to tell it, you won't love them
enough to live it; and if you live it, you can't help but tell it!
8. The error of those who call personal
soul winning
"easy-believism." Those who are too lazy, too indifferent or too
embarrassed to go into the streets and tell about Christ and to go from house
to house knocking on doors telling about Christ have coined a wicked term and
attributed it to those who are soul winners. This term is
"easy-believism." (I always wonder what "hard-believism"
is!) These are often legalists who add things to belief and faith for
salvation. Often they are people who disobey the command to baptize Christians
as soon as they are saved.
When I came to Hammond in 1959, here at the
First Baptist Church before a person could be baptized, he had to appear before
a committee. The committee met at 6:00 on a Sunday night, right before the
evening service. At this meeting they questioned all the converts who wanted to
come into the church. Each convert had to give his testimony (in other words,
he had to be a public speaker) so the committee could decide whether or not he
was saved and ready for baptism. (Be reminded that on Pentecost they were saved
and baptized at the same time. The eunuch in Acts 8 was saved and baptized at
the same time. Over and over again in the Bible, baptism immediately followed
salvation!)
The first month that I was pastor of the
church, I did nothing to change this. Then it came time for the monthly
meeting. (We had 92 people that month who wanted to join the church because
they had been saved!) The committee met in my office, and in poured 92 people!
(Twenty people could fill my office.) The converts were lined up outside the
door, down the hallway and even out onto the sidewalk. The chairman of the
committee rushed up to me and said, "We won't have time to do this! What
can we do?" I said, "The best thing to do is obey the command of God
and follow the plan of the New Testament church and baptize them when they are
saved!" That is exactly what we did from that time on.
You see, this kind of a lackadaisical, half-hearted
attempt to get people saved along with this committee system just will not work
when God's people are obeying the Great Commission and going everywhere
preaching the Gospel!
I was in Jamaica preaching. We had a
question-answer session. A Jamaican stood up, and with perfect diction and
ministerial deliverance, he asked me about my plan concerning baptizing
converts. I knew what he was hoping to hear, so I gave him what he wanted to
hear. I said, "My plan is that when a person gets saved, we wait for about
6 months, check him out, have him approved before a committee, and then once we
feel he is sincere, we will baptize him."
Oh, the Jamaican liked that! He smiled and
said, "That's exactly my plan."
Then I said, "But since my plan and
God's plan differ, I decided to use God's plan instead of mine, so we baptize
them as soon as they profess faith in Christ."
To be quite frank, I do not know what
"easy-believism" means, but I do believe in "believism."
Look at some of the Bible conversions; for example, the conversion of the
Ethiopian eunuch. In Acts 8:36, the eunuch asked, "What doth
hinder me to be baptized?" In verse 37, Philip said, "If thou
believest with all thine heart, thou mayest." Later on in verse 37,
the eunuch said, "I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God." In
verse 38 he was baptized. This, my friend, is believism-the only way a person
can be saved.
Now notice the conversion of the Philippian
jailor in Acts
16. In verse 30, the question is plainly
asked, "Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" In verse 31, it is
answered plainly, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be
saved, and thy house." This, my friend, is believism.
Now read Acts 4:4 where 5,000 men were saved
by believing. "Howbeit many of them which heard the word believed;
and the number of the men was about five
thousand." This, my friend, is
believism.
Look down to Acts 4:32, "And the
multitude of them that believed were of one heart and of one soul: neither said
any of them that ought of the things which he possessed was his own; but they
had all things common." Notice that those who were saved were those
who believed. This, my friend, is believism.
Now noticeActs 8:13, "Then Simon
himself believed also:
and when he was baptized, he continued
with Philip, and wondered, beholding the miracles and signs which were
done." Simon believed and was
baptized. This, my friend, is believism.
Now turn to Acts 10:45, "And they of
the circumcision which believed were astonished, as many as came with Peter,
because that on the Gentiles also was poured out the gift of the Holy
Ghost." These Jews believed and were saved. This, my friend, is
believism.
Now readActs 11:17, "Forasmuch then
as God gave them the like gift as he did unto us, who believed on the Lord
Jesus Christ; what was, I that I could withstand God?" Notice
the words, "who believed on the Lord Jesus Christ." This, my
friend, is believism.
Now turn to Acts 11:21, "And the
hand of the Lord was with them: and a great number believed, and turned unto
the Lord." It says a great number believed and turned to the Lord.
This, my friend, is believism.
Now read Acts 18:8, "And Crispus,
the chief ruler of the synagogue, believed on the Lord with all his house; and
many of the Corinthians hearing believed, and were baptized." Crispus
was saved by believing, and many of the Corinthians were saved by believing,
and they were immediately baptized. This, my friend, is believism.
Now turn to the following passages in John
3. John 3:15, "That whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but
have
eternal life." John 3:16, "For
God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever
believeth in him, should not perish, but have everlasting life." John
3:18, "He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth
not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only
begotten Son of God." John 3:36, "He that believeth on the Son hath
everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the
wrath of God abideth on him." All
of these, my friend, are believism.
The word "believe" is the Greek
word which means "to depend upon" or "to roll up on." It
means faith. What it means is trust. As this chapter is being dictated, I am on
a 737 jet, flying to Chicago; in fact, we are close to making our approach at
this time. I am totally relying on this airplane to get me to Chicago. That is
believism. I believe it will get me there, and I am trusting it to do so. I am
sitting in a seat on that airplane. All of my weight is now on this seat. I
have just lifted my feet from the floor. I am trusting this seat to hold me up.
When a person realizes he is a sinner, realizes he is lost, realizes Jesus has
paid the price for his sins and was raised from the dead after three days and
three nights, and relies upon that Saviour because of what He did to save him,
he is saved! That, my friend, is believism.
It is sad to say that you will find these
enemies of soul winning (confrontational evangelism) in every fundamental
movement on earth, but there are several things that are normally associated
with them - formal worship services, a church controlled by committees, an
enslaved pulpit, etc. There is more to it than a fervent soul winner
criticizing fervent soul winners; it is a group of what I call "white
gloves" Christians who don't want to get soiled by old-fashioned personal
soul winning, building bus routes, etc.
Dr. John R. Rice used to say,
"Everybody wants to be in the army of the Lord, but everybody wants to be
in the quartermaster corps; nobody wants to be in the infantry."
These enemies of soul winning love to cast
reflection upon those who are obeying the Great Commission, and they have many
little cliches to try to put us in a bad light. It seems to me that if they were
going to fight someone, they would fight the liberals. The truth of the matter
is, these pacifist Christians seem to hate fundamental soul winners far more
than they hate the liberals, but, thank God, there are hundreds and hundreds of
great soul-winning churches in America who are obeying God's command to take
the Gospel to every creature - the halt, the maimed, the blind - to the
highways, the hedges, streets and the lanes of the city, etc. May their tribe
increase, and may they not be thwarted or hindered by those who like to coin
phrases to be used as a shield for their indifference.