I'm not sure what forum this topic best fits into..
I used to go by the old stand by, that is, if they have the essentials right, then the rest is just honest differences. But as the years go by I'm beginning to see how naive that way of thinking may be. The problem also arises in what to do with it.
I spent some years in a Pentecostal church. I didn't agree with their understanding of scripture, but as the stand by said, they had the essentials right, so no big deal, right? Paul's approach seems to be that if they reject the truth and hold onto lies, brush the dust from your feet and move on. "But if anyone is ignorant, let him be ignorant.". He told the church of Corinth that they were acting like children. Somehow, in this church that I was attending, all these rebukes became commands and good things. Basically what they did was recreate the mystery religions that had infiltrated the Church of Corinth way back then. I don't want to debate the doctrines. I've done it in the past and it doesn't do any good.
So, the problem at hand.
Just to put a number on it to make a point...
If a church has an 80% correct understanding of scripture. And all the essentials included. But the 20% that they have wrong, is 90% of their focus. And, I would almost go so far as to say that the 80% is only valuable to them because they mostly use it to advance the 20% that is false, is it a false church? They may not see it that way, but that's the way I seen it.
I remember a sermon that I was listening to by Alistair Begg. He was on a golf outing or something with other local pastors and one of them asked him, speaking of Alistair's church, "what's your "thing"? Apparently, every church should have a "thing". Alistair's response was classic. "Might Jesus be my thing?".
That's really all of it in a nut shell. When Jesus is only important to advance their "thing".
It seems to me that the true "honest differences" churches are usually well balanced in their teaching and Jesus is always their main focus. I avoid churches that have a "thing" for their main focus, because everything else is just used to advance their 'thing', including Jesus.
That's where I'm at.
Any thoughts?
Dave
I used to go by the old stand by, that is, if they have the essentials right, then the rest is just honest differences. But as the years go by I'm beginning to see how naive that way of thinking may be. The problem also arises in what to do with it.
I spent some years in a Pentecostal church. I didn't agree with their understanding of scripture, but as the stand by said, they had the essentials right, so no big deal, right? Paul's approach seems to be that if they reject the truth and hold onto lies, brush the dust from your feet and move on. "But if anyone is ignorant, let him be ignorant.". He told the church of Corinth that they were acting like children. Somehow, in this church that I was attending, all these rebukes became commands and good things. Basically what they did was recreate the mystery religions that had infiltrated the Church of Corinth way back then. I don't want to debate the doctrines. I've done it in the past and it doesn't do any good.
So, the problem at hand.
Just to put a number on it to make a point...
If a church has an 80% correct understanding of scripture. And all the essentials included. But the 20% that they have wrong, is 90% of their focus. And, I would almost go so far as to say that the 80% is only valuable to them because they mostly use it to advance the 20% that is false, is it a false church? They may not see it that way, but that's the way I seen it.
I remember a sermon that I was listening to by Alistair Begg. He was on a golf outing or something with other local pastors and one of them asked him, speaking of Alistair's church, "what's your "thing"? Apparently, every church should have a "thing". Alistair's response was classic. "Might Jesus be my thing?".
That's really all of it in a nut shell. When Jesus is only important to advance their "thing".
It seems to me that the true "honest differences" churches are usually well balanced in their teaching and Jesus is always their main focus. I avoid churches that have a "thing" for their main focus, because everything else is just used to advance their 'thing', including Jesus.
That's where I'm at.
Any thoughts?
Dave
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