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Some
are asserting that there is sufficient latitude in the grace
of God to accommodate the various aberrations found in the
numerous groups considered a part of the Restoration Movement,
and this on the premise that God's grace pardons doctrinal
error. But when we study God's pattern for our service, the
epistles, we learn that such conclusion is unwarranted.
Paul was a recipient of grace and taught of God's magnificence
in it, yet one of his most emphatic censures concerns the
dissemination of doctrinal error. As an example, he castigates
Hymenaeus and Philetus, and their belief that the resurrection
was already past (2 Tim. 2:15-18). This is decidedly
doctrinal, not moral. Yet, Paul, the Spirit's chief exponent
of salvation by grace, would not tolerate the corruptive
influence of such upsetting ideas. And any concept tolerating
the advocates of corruptive error, simply because they have
been baptized into Christ, does not square with the necessity
for sound doctrine and speech laid upon us in I and 2 Timothy
and Titus. How can we tolerate what God does not?
In an attempt to lessen the menace of equally significant
doctrinal error, some, as Ketcherside, even have distinguished
between gospel and doctrine. To them, the gospel is
constituted only of truths as to the identity and function of
Christ, and how we are brought into grace; doctrine has to do
only with the beliefs and service of those who have been saved
by grace. Then in a classic example of arbitrary and non
sequitur reasoning, we are told that "gospel" error
is significant and damning, while "doctrinal" errors
are not especially so.
But that comprehended in the term, "the gospel," is
not so restricted as thus imagined. For, in the gospel is
revealed God's righteousness (Rom. 1: 16-17). In this revealed
scheme of righteousness there is instruction to the end that,
through Christ, right-wiseness is both imputed and retained by
our conditional submission and continued service. All this
being classified as God's righteousness (Rom. 10: 1-4; 6:19),
and that being contained in the gospel (good news), all of
this instruction must be included in the gospel. It is the
totality of the message that is good news, not just a few of
its wonderful facts.
To see further the contrast between Paul and some brethren in
their permissive ideas about doctrinal error, Paul did not say
of Hymenaeus and Philetus, "These are brethren whom we
love and who are saved by grace in Christ, and since there is
no condemnation in Christ, their error need not be condemned
or stand in the way of fellowship." (Admittedly, some
within the purview of these remarks would be more subtle.) He
did indicate that Hymenaeus and Philetus continued not among
those whom the Lord knew as his and labeled their doctrine,
“unrighteousness" (2 Tim. 2:19); it was opposed to the
righteousness of God, that contained in the gospel.
Why should not theistic evolution, premillennialism, and
institutionalism be considered just as insidious and
corruptive of God's order today, and call for the same kind of
response seen in Paul? I know the gospel teaches salvation by
grace: justification imputed as a gift through faith, or utter
yieldedness and trust. But I do not know of a single passage
in the gospel that tells me to overlook the corrupting errors
of someone because he is genial, was at one time saved by
grace, and still accepts the fact of Christ's deity.
But I have seen some flawed ratiocination to that end,
dividing truth into (1) that which brings us by grace into
Christ, and (2) that which sustains us there. That is all
right as an observation, but not as a basis for a creed of
permissiveness that seems to make moral degeneracy the only
part of sustaining truth which should prompt a disruption of
fellowship. The inference would be that the day and frequency
of the Lord's supper, the kind of music in worship, and the
type of organizational function utilized by churches, would
all lack temporal relevance and eternal consequence, and that
all variations should be tolerated.
I hope this is not the conclusion of very many, but any
principle that would make those things pertinent to fellowship
would be fatal to what they have concluded about whom they
have fellowship in Christ with on the basis of justification
by faith. Such is really only an application of Ketcherside's
creedal distinction between gospel and doctrine, just using
more careful terminology to refer to what is distinguished.
It would be better to divide error into that which is
inconsequential regarding action, and that which precipitates
disobedience and unfaithfulness. Using salvation by grace to
soft-pedal the significance of doctrinal error that has to do
with action is a fallacy. While thinking principally of grace,
of what God has done, such ones appear to have neglected the
concept of God's sovereignty; his right to require specific
service and the necessity of our giving it. It has been well
observed that one truth isolated from others becomes
perversion. So, it is here, for being saved by grace does not
diminish our loyalty to God and his word one whit. Having been
saved from sin on God's terms, the gospel of grace only
provides for our lapses and inadequacies, not for continued
intractability or incredulity. No, God has not required
perfection in his children, save in the matter love (agape,
Mt. 5:44-48), but he has required faithfulness (Rev. 2:10; 2
Cor. 4:2; Rev. 17:14), that is, reliability, trustworthiness.
Justifying behavior which the word of Christ does not justify,
and that is what one does when he accepts a practitioner of
error as just, makes one not a trustworthy servant of Christ,
and thus unfaithful. Being unfaithful to what God has
declared, how can one lay claim to trusting God, or being
justified by faith?
It is true that some have at times shown an unholy rancor
toward their brethren, and have evinced anger at any
disagreement with themselves. Some have been too ready to
break ties with others pettishly, unnecessarily, impetuously
and precipitately. Such in their smallness have desecrated
fellowship for the most trivial of matters, even when a
differing idea had nothing to do with essential conduct. But
repudiation of such must not vitiate the loyalty Jesus Christ
is due, and cause us to tolerate that which is intolerable to
his revelation. Such toleration will produce a doctrinally
emasculated brotherhood, standing for almost nothing. The
resulting lack of militance will further lessen respect for
the authority of revelation, and consequently lessen ardor for
converting sectarians who are not following it, and man's
being saved by grace will suffer an immense reversal as far as
its incidence is concerned.
Brethren are going to continue to differ. Where those
differences are of personal application, and not corruptive of
collective service, nor disruptive of our common faith and
hope, let us be longsuffering and forbearing. But let us
continue to try the spirits. And where the influence of a man
or doctrine is sinister and the error malignant, let us stand
with the word as a sword unsheathed. No, the answer to the
divisiveness of hypersensitive implacability and spiritual
paranoia is not permissive tolerance of doctrinal error which
is inimical to working righteousness (Acts 10:35).
Truth Magazine, August 1, 1974
Dale Smelser
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