The Devil's Merchandise
Heresy in the Church
How has church dealt with heresy?
How is the church dealing with heresy right now?
The
Devil's Merchandise: Heresy
By
Dr. C. Matthew McMahon
A
perverse heart is what we call heresy or false doctrine, for they
pervert God’s Word and service. They turn the Word around and improve
it. - Martin Luther.[1]
Heresy
is - Humano sensu electa, Scripturae sacrae contraria, palam docta,
pertinaciter, defensa, - begot of a man’s brain, contrary to the Holy
Scriptures, openly taught, and peremptorily defended.
– Thomas Adams.
Deceitful
doctrine is a poison and venom which, under the taste and name of
verity, once drunk and received, with great difficulty can afterward be
purged. – John Knox.
They
deduce the truth by heretical adultery.
– Richard Vines
Though the church is physically persecuted or crushed by despotic
tyrants, pagan kings and apologetic religious factions, the greatest
destructive force to come against her is heresy.
The apostle Peter in his second general epistle makes mention of
these merchants of the devil who sell destructive wares to the church in
hopes that their cankerous sores will infect and culminate in the
gangrenous festering of damnable heresy.
2 Peter 2:3, “And through covetousness shall they with
feigned words make merchandise of you: whose judgment now of a long time
lingereth not, and their damnation slumbereth not.”
The words these heretics speak are “feigned,” or
“moulded and formed, as from clay, wax, or stone.”
They seem very much like the expression one would make of
idolatry – idols that are carved to detract from the glory of God.
Instead these plasto,j (plastos)
or molded words, are idols of the mouth, which detract from the glory of
the Scriptures and the truth set forth by the Bible as orthodox.
Such words arise from covetousness, which is for the most part a
companion of heresy. Such
covetousness false teachers, as the Geneva Bible notes, “makes trade
in souls. They will abuse
you, and sell you as they sell cattle in an auction.”
Such heresy is “making merchandise” as if these heretics are
attempting to gain a profit over the church.
The word “merchandise” (evmporeu,omai
emporeuomai) suggests that heretics are as a merchant traveling
for business and are using people for gain.
Whether it is done in pretense or by presumption makes little
difference, for the affect is the same.
Damnable heresies are brought into the church to subvert people
away from the truth. From
this sin of covetousness and pride all heresies have arisen: “ambition
is the mother of all heresies and sects.”[6]
Heresy comes in like a flood,
and takes years to purge. This flood arrives ultimately from the serpent’s mouth
(Revelation 12:15-16) and is a destructive force against the church of
Christ that will not ultimately prevail, but may inflict great damage on
unsuspecting people. It is
no doubt that heresy is decreed by God and sometimes sent for the
ultimate good of the church (2 Thess. 2:11).
Certainly, in the midst of the greatest trials from the
doctrinally deviant have creeds arisen to overcome the blows of the
devil and the flood of the serpent. But a more learned church will yield less and less to the
destructive heresies that continually plague her in every age.
It
may be helpful to deal specifically with the term “heresy”.
The root meaning of the Greek word ai[resij
(hairesis) revolves around
the act of taking, or capturing something.
It can also have connotations of choosing something, or in a more
base form, simply the act of “choice.”
Yet, by combining both of these definitions, it is more likely to
mean the various “dissensions arising from diversity of opinions or
aims.” Thus, one who is a
heretic is a person who espouses opinions which are contrary with the
views embraced by Christ’s Church as a whole and those which have been
traditionally handed down as the rule of faith.
Such views are divergent from the accepted interpretations of
Scripture, and the orthodox creeds of Christendom. “The heretical
spirit,” observes Dr. Plummer, “is seen in that cold critical
temper, that self-confident and self-willed attitude, which accepts and
rejects opinions on principles of its own, quite independently of the
principles which are the guaranteed and historical guides of the
Church.”[7] The
English word heresy is a version of the Greek noun heiresses,
originally meaning in English “party,” as if certain people made up
a certain “party” or faction. Though
the word had a relatively innocent beginning, it came to be used by
Jewish opponents of Christianity for Christians; and in the Christian
church, heresy was used of a “separation or split resulting from a
false faith (1 Corinthians 11:19; Galatians 5:20 ).
Thomas Adams states rightly, “Indeed heresy cannot possess a
church, but it gives a subversion to it.”
Heresy will not ultimately engulf the entire church as if to
render it non-existent, but it certainly will throw it into confusion if
it is not dealt with immediately and with great theological precision.
The
noun heretic is used only one time in the New Testament (Titus
3:10), and the adjective is used twice in 1 Corinthians 11:19 and in
Galatians 5:20. Titus 3:10-11 state, “A man that is an heretick after
the first and second admonition reject; knowing that he that is such is
subverted, and sinneth, being condemned of himself.” As Jonathan Edwards states, “This implies that the church
disapproves the person as a Christian. It cannot any longer
charitably look upon him as a saint, or fellow-worshipper of God, and
can do no other than, on the contrary, esteem him an enemy of God.”[10] In
another sermon, Edwards speaks to one who is self-condemned, a heretic,
when he says, “By this inconsistency with yourself, you are condemned
out of your own mouth in that you act contrary to your own conscience.
Your own conscience condemns you in your will and practice being
contrary to your own reason. Your own reason condemns you in acting
contrary to your profession. Your own profession condemns you in the
sense in which the apostle speaks of a heretic as being condemned of
himself. Tit. 3:10, 11, “A man that is a heretic, after the first and
second admonition, reject; knowing that he that is such is subverted,
and sinneth, being condemned of himself:” i.e. he in departing from
his former profession is inconsistent with himself.
His present heretical tenets are contrary to his former solemn
profession, and therefore that former profession condemns him.”[11]
Calvin states:
We
must now see what he means by the word heretic. There is a common and
well-known distinction between a heretic and a schismatic. But here, in
my opinion, Paul disregards that distinction: for, by the term
“heretic” he describes not only those who cherish and defend an
erroneous or perverse doctrine, but in general all who do not yield
assent to the sound doctrine which he laid down a little before. Thus
under this name he includes all ambitious, unruly, contentious parsons,
who, led away by sinful passions, disturb the peace of the Church, and
raise disputings. In short, every person who, by his overweening pride,
breaks up the unity of the Church, is pronounced by Paul to be
“heretic.” But we must exercise moderation, so as not instantly to
declare every man to be a “heretic” who does not agree with our
opinion. There are some matters on which Christians may differ from each
other, without being divided into sects. Paul himself commands that they
shall not be so divided, when he bids them keep their harmony unbroken,
and wait for the revelation of God. (Philippians 3:16.) But whenever the
obstinacy of any person grows to such an extent, that, led by selfish
motives, he either separates from the body, or draws away some of the
flock, or interrupts the course of sound doctrine, in such a case we
must boldly resist. In a word, a heresy or sect and the unity of the
Church — are things totally opposite to each other. Since the unity of
the Church is dear to God, and ought to be held by us in the highest
estimation, we ought to entertain the strongest abhorrence of heresy.
Accordingly, the name of sect or heresy, though philosophers and
statesmen reckon it to be honorable, is justly accounted infamous among
Christians. We now understand who are meant by Paul, when he bids us
dismiss and avoid heretics.
One
can only concur with a hearty Amen!
Though opinions are not heresies, those divisive to break up the
unity of the church which is bound by sound doctrine should be rightly
called heretics.
In
1 Corinthians 11:19 the idea behind “heresy” is used in much
the same way, “For there must be also heresies among you, that they
which are approved may be made manifest among you.”
Galatians 5:20-21 echoes this as well, “Idolatry, witchcraft,
hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies,
envyings, murders, drunkenness, revellings, and such like: of the which
I tell you before, as I have also told you in time past, that
they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God.”
Heresy here does not simply mean something that was opposed to
Christianity, but that which subverted the faith entirely, and made
faith “non-faith” for it directed the believer of such things away
from the Bible and toward a destructive opinion that shattered truth.
Heretics and heresies are things that keep people from entering
into the Kingdom of God and condemn them to hell.
Yet, even though heresy may infiltrate the church, and cause it
much harm, heretics and their heresies will never win the church over.
Christ is the final victor and will continue to uphold His people
even in the midst of heresy. No
matter how the word heresy is used, the old saying is that heresy
is the position held by the group that loses.[13]
The
early church apologist and polemicist Irenaeus employed two illustrious
analogies in understanding heresy and those who embrace subversive
doctrine. In the first he
compared the heretics’ treatment of Scripture to those who take a
beautifully crafted mosaic of a king and rearrange the pieces into a dog
or a fox, and then have the impudence to assert that the later
deformation was the authentic mosaic since it contained the same
fundamental pieces. Heretics, then, are those who arbitrarily rearrange
the poetry of Homer so that, while the verses themselves are original,
the genuine meaning has been grossly distorted.
Only by adhering to the apostolic tradition, the regula fide,
the “rule of truth,” will the Church avoid the hermeneutical
misrepresentations of heretics and not mistake kings for dogs or
trifling rewordings for the real words of Christ.
The Greek Latin father, Tertullian defined heresies as “human
and demonic doctrines that were opposed to the divine truth of faith.”
He says, “I have no use for a Stoic, Platonic, or dialectic
Christianity. After Jesus Christ we have no need of speculation…when
we come to believe, we have no desire to believe anything else.”
Such is the belief of the Second Council of Constantinople, “We
hold that faith which our Lord Jesus Christ, the true God, delivered to
his holy apostles, and through them to the holy churches, and which they
who after them were holy fathers and doctors, handed down to the people
committed to them.” Thus,
the regula fide, or rule of faith, or as in modern times it is
stated – the creeds and confessions of the orthodox church –
demonstrate for the church what she believes regarding sacred Writ.
This, on the other hand, is commonly referred to as Sola
Scriptura. Obadiah
Sedgwick affirms this when he states that “heresy” is heresy
when it is the opinion “contra fidem traditam, contrary to the
faith, to the doctrine of faith in the Scriptures.”
“Scripture and creeds serve as the bases for orthodoxy.
Scripture is norma nornians (norming the norm, the ultimate
standard) while the creeds are norma normata (normed norm,
standardized standard).” One would be foolish not to accept the wisdom
of the great orthodox thinkers of the past when establishing one’s own
theology. Though the historic creeds must be judged by the Scripture,
the creeds are not to be ignored in expressing the uniform teaching of
the Church and providing a safeguard against distortion of doctrine and
novelty of viewpoints. Failure to have continuity with historic
Christianity leaves one wandering apart from the communion of the saints
with the multitude of counselors.[17]
When
distinguishing the true apostolic faith from heresy, Vincent of Lerins
noted that while Scripture is “for all things complete and more than
sufficient,” even the heretics appealed to Scripture.
“It seemed,” Vincent said, that “owing to the depth of Holy
Scripture, all do not accept it with one and the same sense, but one
understands its words in one way, another in another; so that it seems
to be capable of as many interpretations as there are interpreters.”
Thus, in order to “detect the frauds and avoid the snares of heretics
as they rise, and to continue sound and complete in the Catholic
faith,” we need the authority of tradition, specifically, “that
which has been believed everywhere, always, by all.”
“This ecumenicity of time and space thus serves the reader of
Scripture with a hermeneutical prism so that, following Hilary and
Jerome, we do not merely read the text but understand it rightly.
For Vincent, as Florovsky notes, “Tradition was, in fact, the
authentic interpretation of Scripture. And in this sense it was
co-extensive with Scripture. Tradition was actually “Scripture rightly
understood.” And Scripture for St. Vincent was the only, primary, and
ultimate canon of Christian truth.”[19] Polycarp,
running along these same lines, stated, “Wherefore, forsaking the
vanity of many, and their false doctrines, let us return to the Word
which has been handed down to us from the beginning…”
And as Tertullian said, “For wherever it shall be manifest that
the true Christian rule and faith shall be, there will likewise be the
true Scriptures and expositions thereof, and all the Christian
traditions.”
Without the hermeneutical explanations that reside alongside of
the Holy Bible, there will never be any comment on the Bible, but just
the Bile itself. This is
not God’s intended mode of communication, but instead, pastors and
doctors should communicate the Word in such a way that continues the
traditions of the church and the meaning behind the Scriptures to ensure
the propagation of true doctrine.
Though
the church fathers strongly attacked the erroneous ideas of many of the
Gnostics, often they were viewed as really outside of the community of
the faithful. On the other hand, church leaders such as Marcion or Arius
were treated with biblical viciousness for their variation from the true
doctrines delivered to the church from the apostles. Part of the reason
for this was that the heretic was the graver threat to the Christian
than the pagan, for the pagan ultimately killed only the body while the
heretics’ actions and teachings threatened salvation itself.
Consequently the false teachers within the church were more dangerous
than the savage persecutors of the temporal Roman Empire. Harold Brown says, “The persecutors could and frequently
did—put Christians to death, but they could not deprive them of
eternal life, nor of the confidence they had in eternal life. This
heretics threatened to do, and therefore they were regarded with the
utmost loathing.”[22]
What
exactly, then, is “heresy?” Irenaeus
states, “Error, indeed, is never set forth in its naked
deformity, lest, being thus exposed, it should at once be detected. But
it is craftily decked out in an attractive dress, so as, by its outward
form, to make it appear to the inexperienced (ridiculous as the
expression may seem) more true than truth itself.”[23]
Obadiah Sedgwick states, “The word "heresy"
admits a threefold signification and use. 1) Sometimes it is
taken for any new and select opinion, contrary to the common and
usually-received opinions of other men; in which the word
"heresy" may sometimes bear a good construction, Acts 24:14,
"For after that which the Jews called heresy, did Paul worship the
God of his fathers." 2) Sometimes it is taken for any false
opinion whatsoever, wherein a person recedes from any divine truth, and,
thereby, creates division, sects, and contentions. 3) But strictly among
divines, it is taken for some notorious, false, and perverse opinion,
opposing and subverting the faith once delivered to the saints, as Jude
says, or overthrowing the form of wholesome words, as Paul says.”
It is the erroneous opinion, or falsum sentential or falsum
dogma, which extends into matters of faith.
“Heresy is usually a slight, though fatal, deviation from the
orthodox view due to the heretics attempt to resolve a misunderstood or
unacceptable element in the true view.”[25]
And it should also be noted that all heresies have been started,
or at least have been encouraged, by pastors and scholars. Martin
Luther gripes rightly, “If they were unreliable at a time when they
were better, more learned, and more diligent, why shall we trust them
now when they no longer even serve the church and have become secular
lords? Do we insist on being blind?”[26]
In the refutation of heresy, or expulsion of it from the church, there
must be a careful balance between admonition to bring the apostate back
to the fold in repentance, as well as the desire to purge the church of
leaven that infects the whole lump.
In this the church must be sure that they are not treating error
as heresy. Those in
error are people misinformed or ignorant in a certain teaching of a
professing Christian that are not actually in accordance with Scripture. For example, Amillennialism, Postmillennialism and
Premillennialism are three different views of eschatology.
All of them cannot be right.
Holding to one or the other in and of itself is not damning if
one was to hold to the wrong view. It is not heresy to hold to Amillennialism if it wrong; it
simply makes the Christian in error.
Heresy, on the other hand, is damnable.
It will send the one holding it to hell. It subverts the truth into eternal damnation by overthrowing
the Gospel, or some other key and important doctrine – such as the
Trinity, the Deity of Christ, the person of Christ, salvation, good
works, and the like. Heresy
is something that destroys a fundamental truth of the Bible that cannot
be taken away for the salvation of the Christian professor.
There may be diverse opinions on the manner of preaching, or
singing of certain songs during corporate worship, or perhaps the
meaning of eschatology. But
the difference between error and heresy must stand true – one is not
the other, and the other will damn while the one will not.
As the dictum has been attributed to both Augustine and
Chrysostom, its truth is most essential, “In essentials unity, in
non-essentials charity, in all things liberty.”
However, once “heresy” has been Historically, Confessionally,
and Scripturally established, there should be no question as to
its expulsion from the church. As Obadiah Sedgwick states, “it should be noted, that to
make the erroneous opinion to be heretical, it is necessary (as to the
person who holds it) that he be a professed Christian.”
This means that heresy resides in the church, and must be
expelled from the church.
Obadiah
Sedgwick, in a sermon given to Parliament in the 17th
century, made a list of present heresies that were plaguing the church
in his own day. Now it is
important to note that in the age of orthodoxy (the 16th-17th
century Reformation and Puritan influence) the pastors, divines, and
scholars of the day believed these points to be of the utmost danger
to the church, and blatantly heretical.
They are as follows (this is their list):
1) The Scriptures of the Old and New Testament do not bind us
Christians, not those of the New Testament either, and further than the
Spirit (for the present) reveals unto us that such a place is the Word
of God.
2) That God never loved one man more than another before the world, and
that all the decrees are conditional.
3) That there is no original sin.
4) That the will of man is still free, even to supernaturals.
5) That the saints may fall totally and finally from grace.
6) That Christ died alike for all, yea, that his salvific virtue of His
death extends to all the reprobates as well as the elect, yea, to the
very devils as well as unto men.
7) That Jesus Christ came into the world not for satisfaction, but for
publication; not to procure for us and to us the love of God, but only
to be a glorious Publisher of the Gospel.
8) That God is not displeased at all if His children sin.
9)
that sanctification is a dirty and dungy qualification.
10) That the doctrine of repentance is a soul destroying doctrine.
11) That fastings and humblings are legal and abominable.
12)
That the souls of men are not immortal but mortal.
13)
That there is no heaven to crown the godly and no hell to torment the
ungodly.
14)
That civil magistrate is anti-Christian, and but a usurpation.
15)
That the whole ministry of the land, as to their present ordination is
anti-Christian.
16)
That it is as lawful to baptize cats and dogs and horses (which some
have done for some of them, if not for all and more) as it is to baptize
the infants of believers.
17)
That there is not true ministry this day in all the world, nor was since
the general apostasy which, they say, began since the death of the last
of the Apostles.
18.
That there will be no ministry either until some apostles are raised up
and sent; and, when those apostles come, then there will be true
evangelists also, and pastors, and not until then.
These
heresies are what they thought were damnable according to the truth
given opposite to them in the Word of God.
And so it may be asked, which churches and which denominations
would still be left today if measured by the same rule of faith?
If the historical church, reformers, scholars and pastors of the
16th-17th century imposed the Scriptural standards
they had upon the church today, who would be left to stand?
Tolerance, then, seems to be today’s standard, while conviction
to Scriptural truth is a byword among “Evangelicals.”
Sedgwick again states correctly, “Consider us as covenanting
Christians. So we have, every one of us, bound our souls to God.
Can any mortal creature release us?
We have lifted up our hands to the Most High God in our several
places to extirpate heresies and false doctrine.”
There is no doubt that Sedgwick is referring to the Covenanting
done by the divines and Parliament along with the Scottish Church under
the Solemn League and Covenant. Yet, we find writers and preachers such as these battling the
serpent’s merchandising while heretic after heretic rears his ugly
head in modern Christendom without as much as word spoken to them, much
less the threat of excommunication.
Maybe it would do the Church good to come together again under a
new Solemn League and Covenant? Ah
- but that would press whole denominations to action, which, in
contemporary culture, would seem most unseemly overall.
It would be impossible that all denomination today agree since
schism is the norm. Denominations
would have to agree on the fundamentals of truth, when it is blatantly
apparent that they have yet to agree with Sedgwick’s short list given
above. In other
words, historically ancient scholars, pastors and divines agreed that
Gnosticism, Montanism, Patripassianism, Subordinationism, Monarchianism,
Adoptionism, Sabellianism, Arianism, Apollinarianism, Pelagianism,
Nestorianism, Eutychianism, Arminianism, Finneyism, and a host of other
“isms” were all heresies. How
then can the church tolerate such today?
What makes the church more tolerable than it was 250 years ago?
It is regrettable that
Christians today cannot seem to take a strong stance on the doctrines
that seemed to hold such convictions in earlier centuries.
The Scriptures charge sin, perniciousness, and damnation upon
heretics. Abstractly,
people have no problem with saying that heretics are in fact heretics.
But once people have to particularly point them out, such
convictions fall apart. Such
is the case with the New Perspectives on Paul and the like, or the
Federal Vision, which have corrupted many in the last 15 years.
Have the seminaries excluded them as heresies, or have they
bought into them, or made room for them?
Have ministers excommunicated them, or have they allowed them to
transfer to new pulpits and new congregations?
It is as if the serpent’s flood is overflowing upon the church
afresh with old lies repackaged. Peter,
as previously quoted, says that their damnation slumbers not (2 Peter
2:1-3). Paul says that such
heresies shut people out of the Kingdom (Galatians 5:20-21).
But for some reason, the Church will not shut them out of their
fellowship! The Church
seems to be forgetting that a man’s opinion makes him sinful,
as well as his practice.
Why, then, is heresy tolerated?
And why does it take so long for the pastors and doctors of the
church to do away with the wicked through the stated means of grace that
includes the processes of excommunication?
Have they forgotten that heresies are compared in Scripture to
gangrene or cancer (2 Timothy 2:17)?
Maybe they are simply ignorant of what cancer does to a man!
Sometimes heresies are compared to a shipwreck (1 Timothy
1:19-20). Christ Himself
calls heresy leaven, and Paul calls it bewitching.
This writer calls it leprosy of the brain!
Others call it a tempest overshadowing the church.
Scripture again calls it merchandising the serpent’s
wares (2 Peter 2:3). How
much heresy is enough? Or
rather, should there be a measure of grace and state it this way - the
church is being careful to a fault.
It is true, as Turretin rightly asserts, that heretics can be
coerced, and have been coerced back to the truth.
This everyone should pray. It
would be far greater for a man who taught false doctrines and a false
Gospel to be converted and to teach the truth.
The Apostle Paul comes to mind.
However, leniency at the expense of prudence is foolishness.
George Swinnock rightly states, as a consequence,
“If the poison be got into the glass, and you cannot wash it
out, the poison and glass too is to be thrown into the sink.”
We ought never to forget that it is “Christian wisdom to kill
serpents, wolves, foxes, bears, and the like…Song
of Solomon 2:15, “Catch us the foxes, the little foxes that spoil the
vines, For our vines have tender grapes.”
Christ, Paul and Peter gave
special attention to heretics. Mark 8:15, “Then
He charged them, saying, "Take heed, beware of the leaven of the
Pharisees and the leaven of Herod.”
Matthew 7:15, “Beware of false prophets, who come to you in
sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous wolves.”
Matthew 24:4-5, “And Jesus answered and said to them:
"Take heed that no one deceives you. "For many will come in My
name, saying, 'I am the Christ,' and will deceive many.”
Paul said in Philippians 3:2, “Beware of dogs, beware of evil
workers.” Peter said in 2
Peter 3:17, “You therefore, beloved, since you know this beforehand,
beware lest you also fall from your own steadfastness, being led away
with the error of the wicked.” Certainly,
there is a grave danger in allowing heresy to fester. But the danger gives way to the destruction of many souls and
the destruction of many men. Heresy
is not just a danger to the church, subverting the faith, but is
actually used by God to damn men. This
should cause the church to reflect on what she is going in allowing
heretics roam her halls. Is
she so ignorant of the halls of Church History?
What ought the Christian
church today do about heresy in the Church?
Taking cue from John Owen, “That heresies and errors ought not
to be tolerated; — that is, men ought not to connive at, or comply
with, those ways and opinions which they are convinced to be false,
erroneous, contrary to sound doctrine, and that form of wholesome words
which is delivered unto us as (next unto Christ) the greatest treasure
of our souls, — especially if credibly supposed to shake any
fundamentals of the common faith; but with all their strength and
abilities, in all lawful ways, upon every just call, to oppose,
suppress, and overthrow them, — rote root them up and east them out,
that they may not, as noxious weeds and tares, overgrow and choke the
good corn, amongst which they are covertly scattered.”
This may be well said in theory, but how, then, in practice is
this upheld? He says,
“Let, then, the Scriptures be searched, and all ways embraced which
the gospel holdeth forth, for the discovering, convincing, silencing,
reproving, confuting of errors and persons erring, by admonitions,
reproofs, mighty Scripture convictions, evidencing of the truth, with
fervent prayers to Almighty God, the God of truth, that he would give us
one heart and one way; and if these weapons of our warfare do not
prevail, we must let them know that one day their disobedience will be
revenged with being cut off, and “cast out as unprofitable branches,
fit to be cast into the fire.”
This requires something that is often neglected in modern
Christendom – study! Study
of the Scriptures, study of historical theology, study of systematics,
and study of church history should be, at the least, known in general by
every pastor, scholar and teacher that associates themselves with the
church. If such would have
a simple cursory understanding of these subjects, most of the heresy in
the church would be forcibly dispelled.
Satan attacks the church with pernicious errors and heresies –
with deformed words - and the church allows Satan’s helpers to preach
in their pulpits, teach in their seminaries, and write books for
publishing houses on theological topics.
Where is the conviction of truth in all this?
Thomas Adams calls heretics “monsters…in the wilderness.”
These are men with drunken minds.
The sin they propagate robs God of His truth.
They are thieves who cause dissention in the church toward the
weak minded that give into their pernicious errors.
Adams lists the Brownists, papists, Cerinthus, Arius, Manicheans,
Marcion, Nestorius and others among heresies in his own day and
anciently. How many would
the average Christian today be able to name?
Heresy should be expelled from
the Church. No one disputes
this, but few are able to act upon such a weak conviction of simply
stating it. The church must
be resolved to act. Witherspoon
comments, “A man that is a heretic, after the first and second
admonition, reject (Titus 3:10). Does
not this suppose that it is possible for a man to be a heretic?
Does not the apostle here ordain a sentence of expulsion to be
passed against him, and after the pains taken to reclaim him appear to
be fruitless? It is plain,
therefore, that if charity be the same with forbearance, it must have
limits for it everybody must be forborne then certainly nobody can be
expelled.”
Thus, the church must hold up the standard of the truth and fall
back upon the Word. Expulsion
and censure is outlined well in the Westminster Confession of Faith.
In chapter thirty it states:
I.
The Lord Jesus, as King and Head of his church, hath therein
appointed a government, in the hand of church officers, distinct from
the civil magistrate.[1]
1.
Isa. 9:6-7; Col. 1:18; 1 Tim. 5:17; 1 Thess. 5:12; Acts 20:17,
28; Heb. 13:7, 17, 24; Eph. 4:11-12; I Cor. 12:28; Matt. 28:18-20; John
18:36
II.
To these officers the keys of the kingdom of heaven are
committed; by virtue whereof, they have power, respectively, to retain,
and remit sins; to shut that kingdom against the impenitent, both by the
Word, and censures; and to open it unto penitent sinners, by the
ministry of the gospel; and by absolution from censures, as occasion
shall require.[2]
2.
Matt. 16:19; 18:17-18; John 20:21-23; 2 Cor. 2:6-8
III.
Church censures are necessary, for the reclaiming and gaining of
offending brethren, for deterring of others from the like offenses, for
purging out of that leaven which might infect the whole lump, for
vindicating the honor of Christ, and the holy profession of the gospel,
and for preventing the wrath of God, which might justly fall upon the
church, if they should suffer his covenant, and the seals thereof, to be
profaned by notorious and obstinate offenders.[3]
3.
1 Cor. 5:1-13; 11:27-34; 1 Tim. 1:20; 5:20; Matt. 7:6; Jude 1:23
IV.
For the better attaining of these ends, the officers of the
church are to proceed by admonition; suspension from the sacrament of
the Lord's Supper for a season; and by excommunication from the church;
according to the nature of the crime, and demerit of the person.[4]
4.
1 Thess. 5:12; 2 Thess. 3:6, 14-15; 1 Cor. 5:4-5, 13; Matt.
18:17; Titus 3:10
The
Westminster Confession of Faith
is quite helpful in the over arching understanding of how to deal with
one who is like the “leaven which might infect the whole
lump.” The keys of the
Kingdom of God (the power of the keys) were given to church offices,
which regulate the life of the church by proper discipline.
Discipline begins with a simple admonition. It may grow into a rebuke, suspension of the offender from
the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper known as lesser excommunication,
and greater excommunication that is deliverance over to Satan and a
loosing from the church. The
Confession calls it a “crime” to have come to that state in the
church. Such crimes are not to be tolerated except for the
admonitions granted as scriptural warrant.
Otherwise, the intention is to deliver such people over “to
Satan that they may learn not to blaspheme (1 Timothy 1:20).” Could it
be that divines of our own day, if any existed, would say with such
resolve that such men should be thrown the sanctuary of the church into
the devil’s arms? Williams
Ames once said, “And these may be those white Devils that would appear
in the shape of Angels of light, whilst indeed secretly and inwardly
they are nothing else but fiends of darkness.”
Is this the opinion of such men today?
Heresy abounds unscathed, so, to answer the question, apparently
not.
What might officers and
Christians do to fight the white devils that abound and sow the seeds
that bring swift destruction? Simply,
flee to the truth and hold fast to that which has been taught in the
Scriptures by the church for thousands of years. Jeremiah 6:16, “Thus says the LORD: "Stand in the ways
and see, and ask for the old paths, where the good way is, and
walk in it; Then you will find rest for your souls.” The old paths or the old teachings of truth and righteousness
are the only cure for novel treatises of white devils. Run to the Scriptures so eminently explained in the creeds
and confessions of the church. Doctrine
is not new and novel, it is tried and true.
It is set down and ready for the saints to reap a harvest.
It is not reinvented every generation, but passed down from one
to another. It is not
improved on, but more readily understood.
Hold fast to the truth. By
truth, and do not sell it. Scholars,
pastors and doctors should be masters at the truth of the Word.
They should not “give heed to fables and endless genealogies,
which cause disputes rather than godly edification which is in faith (1
Timothy 1:4). Instead, they
ought to be “established in the faith (Colossians 2:7),”
“grounded…and…not moved (Colossians 1:23),”
“steadfast (1
Peter 5:9),” “sound” (Titus 1:13),” having “great boldness (1
Timothy 3:13),” that it may be said of them that they “watch, stand
fast [are] brave, [and are] strong (1 Corinthians 16:13) in the Word.
Also,
the church must be reminded that the ministry of Christ as Intercessor
to His church is a great remedy against heresy since those appealing to
His judgment seat and which have authority to excommunicate may bind and
loose by Christ’s power. Richard
Vines says of church officers, these serve “to preserve the people
from being blown with every corrupt doctrine unto preservation.”
So the Scriptures certainly speak to church officers in this way,
as in Matthew 18:18, “Assuredly, I say to you, whatever you bind on
earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be
loosed in heaven.” The
Greek is to “forbid” and “allow.”
Such excommunication done in accord with divine prescription will
purge leaven from amidst the church.
This is the duty of the of the church, and should not be done
lightly, but also not be a means of procrastination.
Finis
Ephesians
4:14-15, “…that we should no longer be children, tossed to
and fro and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the trickery
of men, in the cunning craftiness of deceitful plotting,
but, speaking the truth in love, may grow up in all things into
Him who is the head -- Christ.”
We
Must Not Judge Rashly of Prematurely. Hence we must be very careful not
to judge before the time, nor undertake to exclude, reject or cut off
those whom the Lord does not want to have excluded or rejected, and
those whom we cannot eliminate without loss to the Church. On the other
hand, we must be vigilant lest while the pious snore the wicked gain
ground and do harm to the Church.
|
|

Back to
Puritan Worship
|