"And
because lawlessness will abound, the love of many will grow cold." - Matt
24:12
We hear much in the news
about tensions in the Middle East or between the U.S. and Russia. All over the
news, the rhetoric between the political right and left is heating up. It seems
that in every sphere of life, people are dividing into camps and separating
from others at an unprecedented rate.
Even in the church, factions
are springing up and hostilities are on the rise between believers who disagree
on grey areas of biblical understanding -- where the Bible is not black and
white. Social media has become rather unsociable.
Old earth creationists and
new earth creationists bicker and villainize each other. Pre-wrath rapturists
and post-tribbers ridicule pre-tribbers and insult their intelligence --- and
vice-a-versa. King James-Only adherents belittle all those who read modern
versions of the Bible. Hyper-Grace name-call believers who promote moral
purity, labeling them as legalists and pietists. I could go on and on.
The arguing back and forth
has sent many Christians into isolation where they can be alone with just the
Bible, free of controversy. Alone with God’s Word to find encouragement, faith,
hope, and spiritual salve for festering wounds inflicted by well-meaning
brothers in Christ.
As the prophesied rise in
persecution of those who name the name of Christ heats up, somehow
denominations and institutions and their creeds fly out the window. When a man
cries out to Jesus, while a terrorist saws off his head, whether he has all his
doctrine in order pales under the circumstance. He, just by his new nature, as
who he is, in childlike faith calls on the name above all names (but don’t
argue whether that name is Jesus Christ or Yeshua Hamashiach) to receive him
into His Kingdom with his last breath.
Jesus rebuked the Jewish
leaders for laying heavy burdens upon the people. Are we doing the same thing
when we expect all Christians to be as advanced in Bible knowledge as we think
we are? The Apostle Paul wrote:
“Receive one who is weak in
the faith, but not to disputes over doubtful things.” - Rom 14:1
It’s time to re-examine our tone when contending
for the faith. We cannot give up on instructing the younger believers or
reasoning with those in opposition. But we must do so without judging the other
person’s standing in Christ. Each follower of Jesus is on a different place
along the narrow road -- some are stragglers.
In the Christian classic, “Pilgrim’s Progress,”
a character named ‘Little Faith’ is introduced who loses much based on his poor
decisions -- but he makes it to his journey’s end in spite of his lack of
knowledge. We must make sure we are a help to such pilgrims, and not a
hindrance.
“I will hear what God the LORD
will speak,
For He will speak peace
To His people and to His
saints;
But let them not turn back to
folly.
Surely His salvation is near
to those who fear Him,
That glory may dwell in our
land.
Mercy and truth have met
together;
Righteousness and peace have
kissed.
Truth shall spring out of the
earth,
And righteousness shall look
down from heaven.”
-- Ps 85:8-11
And a song for “Little
Faith.”
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