By Dr. Jack Hyles
Chapter One
HAVE MERCY ON ME
A young man had committed a
misdemeanor and was appearing before a judge for the first time. He was fidgety
and nervous. The judge, in an effort to settle him down, said, "Son, don't
be nervous. I'll see to it that you get justice." The young man nervously replied,
"Yes, sir, Mr. Judge. That's what I'm afraid of, but please, could you
throw a little mercy in on the side."
This is a book on justice.
Its author pleads with the reader to please throw a little mercy in on the
side.
Now why do I plead for your
mercy? Because this book is different. This, like my books on prayer, the Holy
Spirit and others, comes from a series of Bible studies that I have taught to
the membership of the First Baptist Church of Hammond on Wednesday nights. My
custom has been to take the outlines from which I taught and spend many hours
dictating them for transcription and publication. Such is not the case in this
book. I simply did not have the time, for many reasons. There were more demands
on my time than ever. Because of that, I have simply had the Bible studies on
Wednesday night transcribed, edited, proofread and prepared for publication. As
you read, please consider yourself sitting in the auditorium of our church,
listening to a Bible study. I think you will find it easier to forgive me for
the repetition of statements and even illustrations.
I do not claim to be an
author; I simply want to leave all that I can for the following generation. At
this printing, I am 65 years of age, which means that I'm old enough for
Social Security. I have been preaching for over 46 years and pastoring for 44
of those. During these years of pastoring hundreds of thousands of people,
preaching over 51,000 sermons and having a personal acquaintance with thousands
of preachers, I have seen thousands of justices and injustices. One of the main
injustices that I have noticed is the injustice of misinterpreting Bible verses
concerning justice.
Please be lenient with me
as you read. Have mercy on me by avoiding the position of critique, and as you
give me justice, please, Judge, throw a little mercy in on the side.
Dr. Jack Hyles
Chapter Two
AREAS OF JUDGING
"Him that is weak in the faith
receive ye, but not to doubtful disputations. For one believeth that he may eat
all things: another, who is weak, eateth herbs. Let not him that eateth despise
him that eateth not; and let not him which eateth not judge him that eateth:for
God hath received him. Who art thou that judgest another man's servant? to his
own master he standeth orfalleth. Yea, he shall be holden up: for God is able
to make him stand. One man esteemeth one day above another: another esteemeth
every day alike. Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind. He that
regardeth the day, regardeth it unto the Lord; and he that regardeth not
the day, to the Lord he doth not regard it. He that eateth, eateth to the Lord,
he giveth God thanks; and he that eateth not, to the Lord he eateth not, and
giveth God thanks. But why dost thou judge thy brother? or why dost thou set at
nought thy brother? for we shall all stand before the judgment seat of
Christ." Romans 14:1-6, 10
"How can I myself alone bear your
cumbrance, and your burden, and yourst nfe? Take you wise men, and
understanding, and known among your tribes, and I will make them rulers over
you. And ye answered me, and said, The thin which thou hast spoken is good for
us to do. So I took the chief of your tribes, wise men, and known, and made
them heads over you, captains over thousands, and captains over hundreds, and
captains over fifties, and captains over tens, and officers among your tribes.
And I charged your judges at that time, saying, Hear the causes between your
brethren, and judge righteously between every man and his brother, and the
stranger that is with him." Deuteronomy 1:12-16
Moses had too heavy a load,
so God told Moses to choose judges in the land. Some men were capable of
judging thousands of people. Some men could not judge thousands, but they could
judge hundreds of people. Some men could not judge hundreds of people, but they
could judge fifty people. Some men could not judge fifty people, but they could
judge groups of ten people. Each judge was limited by his ability to judge. If
a man had fifty people to judge, he was not to judge anybody in one of the
other groups. That has always been God's plan, and that is still God's plan!
Judges are to judge only in their own particular areas.
Every one of you adults has
some area over which you are responsible. You are to judge in that area and not
in any other area. A school teacher judges in his classroom, but not in the
classroom next door. A principal judges in his school, but not in the school
down the street. A pastor judges in his church, but not in the church across
town. A father judges in his home, but not in the home next door.
Not only are you not to
take any action about things outside your own area, but you are not to make
mental judgments outside your own area. Each of us has some area or areas where
we are supposed to judge. I want to show you a few of those areas.
1. The husband is to judge
the household. Ephesians 5:22, "Wives, submit yourselves unto
your own husbands, as unto the Lord." The
household is the first area of judgment, and that is the husband's area.
2. Parents are to judge in
the home. Ephesians 6:1, "Children, obey your parents in the
Lord:for this is right." This is
another area of judgment. If God has given you children, He has given you that
area to judge. If you have children, it is your job to judge in your family. It
is not my job to judge in your family, because I am not in charge of that area.
3. The employer is to judge
at work. Ephesians 6:5, "Servants, be obedient to them that are
your masters according to the flesh, with fear and trembling, in singleness of
your heart, as unto Christ." That means
if you run a business, God has given you that business to judge. That is your
area of judgment. If someone else has a business, you are not supposed to judge
in his business. You are supposed to judge only in your area.
4. The pastor is to judge
in the church. Hebrews 13:7 says, '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." 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 gri ef
for that is unprofitable for you." There
is a responsibility for the pastor to judge in the church. That does not mean
the pastor is the dictator of the church. That means he is the leader.
"Ruler" means "leader," and a leader has followers. If you
don't have followers, you are not a leader. As pastor, I am to rule (lead), and
my followers or members are to follow.
5. Rulers are to judge in areas of government. Romans 13:1,
"Let every soul be subject unto the higher powers. For there is no power
but of God: the powers that be are ordained of God." This is talking about the government, because it
speaks of paying taxes a little later in the passage. We will just call them
rulers.
So far we have five who
have areas of judging — husbands, parents, employers, pastors and rulers. Each
one of these has his own area. None is to go into anybody else's area. It is
not the ruler's business to judge in the church, because that is not his area.
It is not my business to judge in Washington, D. C. because that is not my
area. When those in government talk about the separation of church and state,
they are talking about the church not meddling with the state; they are not
talking about the state not meddling with the church! But, God says everybody
is to have his own area of judgment, and nobody is to interfere with anybody
else's area.
Every problem we have in
our churches and homes, is a result of someone wanting to judge in an area that
has not been given to him. There are other areas that the Bible does not
specifically mention, and that is why it speaks of "higher powers."
Higher powers are those given to lead in certain areas.
Ephesians 5:21 says, "Submitting
yourselves one to another in the fear of God." This is one of the most important verses in the study
of justice. The first area of judging we discussed is that of husbands. Yes,
the wife is to submit herself to the husband, but then it says to submit
yourselves one to another. What does that mean?
That means that the wife
should submit herself to her own husband. The husband, knowing that he will
have the final decision, can then submit himself to the advice or counsel of
his wife.
In any area of
responsibility, when a leader has responsibility and the follower has submitted
himself to the decision of the leader, the leader can then seek advice from the
follower in making a decision. Whether it be a father, a mother, an employer, a
pastor, or a husband, once the follower has submitted himself to the final
decision of the leader, the leader has the liberty to submit to his follower's
counsel or advice.
There are people who are
under someone in one area and over that same person in another area. For
example, your son may be your employer. Let me use Attorney David Gibbs, Jr. as
an example. David Gibbs' father has some authority over David Gibbs as his
father, but the father works for his son, so when they go to work, David Gibbs
has the authority to judge, because that is his area. They submit themselves
one to another.
That is what a good church
is. It is God's people submitting themselves one to another, because in one
area you will be over somebody, and in another area that person will be over
you.
I was my mother's pastor.
As her son, I respected her advice and honored her as my mother, but when she
came to church, I was over my mother. So, we submitted ourselves one to
another. Sometimes a pastor has to work secularly besides receiving a salary at
church. He may work for a member of his church, so when the pastor goes to
work, he is under the member's judgment. When the member goes to church, he is
under the authority or judging of the pastor. They submit themselves one to
another.
In Garland, Texas, the city
manager almost ran the city. The mayor was more of a figurehead, and the city
manager ran the town. One of the deacons in our church was the city manager of
Garland. As a citizen of Garland, he was the judge over me, but as pastor of
the church, I was the judge over him.
This is the source of many
of our problems. We get accustomed to being over somebody in certain areas, and
we don't want to submit to authority in an area when we do not have the right
to judge. A person who has many areas of responsibilities and judging given to
him by God will find it more difficult when he comes to a place where he is to
follow. Every fundamentalist church in America that is having trouble has this
trouble because somebody does not want the pastor to have the authority that
God has given to him as the pastor! Usually it is caused by somebody who is
wealthy or powerful and leads almost everything else that he is in. He comes to
church but cannot take it, for he is to submit himself to the pastor at church.
There are certain areas where you have the judging responsibilities and
somebody submits to you. Then, there are areas where others have the responsibility
and you, in turn, submit yourself to them.
I will give you an example.
Brother Roy Moffitt is in charge of the "A" bus ministry in our
church. Brother Jim Jorgensen is Vice-President of Hyles-Anderson College.
Brother Moffitt teaches part-time in Hyles-Anderson College, so when he goes to
the college, he is under Brother Jorgensen, because Brother Jorgensen has been
given that area to judge. When Brother Jorgensen comes to the church and
attends a bus meeting, he is under Brother Moffitt. What are they doing?
Brother Moffitt is submitting himself to Brother Jorgensen, and Brother
Jorgensen is submitting himself to Brother Moffitt.
A church can have perfect
harmony if the people will go according to God's plan. A home can have perfect
harmony if the family will go according to God's plan. A nation can have
perfect harmony if the rulers go according to God's plan. It is not your job to
figure out what the pastor ought to do in areas of his responsibilities. You
are to judge only in your God-given areas.
A perfect example of this
is found in Romans 14:1-3. "Him that is weak in the faith
receive ye, but not to doubtful disputations. For one believeth that he may eat
all things; another, who is weak eateth herbs. Let not him that eateth despise
him that eateth not; and let not him which eateth not judge him that eateth:
for God hath received him." We had a
young man in our college who decided to pass out literature in the college on
how to eat. He let everyone know that if they did not eat the way he did, they
were of the Devil. He had not been given the area of telling students how to
eat! That was out of his area! God is saying not to judge in any place that is
not your area to judge.
Romans 14:4a asks, "Who art thou
that judgest another man servant?" If
a man judging back in the Old Testament had ten people whom he was responsible
to judge, it was none of his business what a man who had 100 to judge was
doing. That was not his area of judgment. It was none of his business to judge
in his heart, mind or actions those who were not in a constituted area given to
him by God Almighty.
Keep your nose out of
someone else's area. This would solve almost every problem that you have. God
has chosen different people for different areas.
Chapter Three
JUSTICE BETWEEN PEOPLE
"And judgment is turned away
backward, and justice standeth afar off for truth is fallen in the street, and
equity cannot enter." Isaiah 59:14
There is no way that you
can execute justice unless you know the truth. There are injustices being done
between parents and children. There are injustices being done between teachers
and pupils. There are injustices being done between administrators and
employees. These injustices almost always revolve around the fact that we do
not know the truth before we decide to execute a sentence.
All of us must judge.
Parents are judges. Teachers judge in the classroom. Administrators judge those
who are under them. Al-most all of us are in some way judges whether we like it
or not. I judge many times a week with thousands of judges judging my
judgments. Probably at least 100 times a week I must make some judgment about
someone, and it has a profound affect on each life. That means that many times
a week people can get upset with me because I do not judge like they think I
should judge.
I judge only when I have
jurisdiction over somebody. I do not try to figure out what the sentence should
be, what the crime is or what the judgment should be in someone else's area. I
have too much to be concerned about in my own areas of jurisdiction. I never
allow myself to draw an opinion about a judgment case unless I have
jurisdiction.
[am the Pastor of the First
Baptist Church and the Chancellor of Hyles-Anderson College. If there is a
judgment to be made between two staff members, I must make that judgment
because it is within my jurisdiction. There are many situations in which I must
make judgments over these institutions because they are within my God-given
jurisdiction.
It would change your life
if you would never consider what you would do if you were judging in someone
else's jurisdiction. You would be a happier person and would maintain a better
spirit. This is called "keeping your nose in your own business." It
would solve a great many problems if all people quit judging where they have no
jurisdiction.
What is judgment? Judgment
can be broken down to three basic areas. If you handle each of these three
areas properly, you will be a just judge.
1. Judgment is the right
assessment of guilt. It is not justice to punish without knowing the crime.
That is never just. Before you can make a judgment, you must have all the facts
of what the crime actually is. Let me break this down into several principles
dealing with the assessment of guilt. (1) You cannot make a judgment based on
what it looks like someone did; (2) You cannot make a judgment based on what
you think someone did; (3) You cannot make ajudgment based on what someone is
accused of doing; and (4) You can make a judgment based only on what you know
someone did! Now, let me illustrate these principles.
One night at Hyles-Anderson
College someone forgot to lock a classroom door. A faculty member found a
dating couple alone in that darkened classroom! This couple was not caught
doing anything wrong together. In fact, they claimed that they were only
praying together! Suddenly, I was placed in a position of making a judgment.
Now, what would most people
think they were doing? Most of us would think that they were misbehaving. What
did it appear like they were doing? It appeared like they were doing wrong.
Should they be judged on what we think they were doing? No, that would not be
just. Should they be judged for what it appeared they were doing? No, that also
would not be just. They can be judged only for what I know they were doing.
Could Ijudge them for appearing to be doing something wrong? Only if a rule
already existed stating that they could not appear to be doing wrong.
What do I know this couple
did? I know that they went in a dark room alone together. That is all I know
they did. Now, that does happen to be against the rules at Hyles-Anderson
College. My first impulse was to punish them for what I thought they were
doing, but in order to be just, I could not do what I wanted to do. Others
perhaps felt that I should punish them for what it appeared they were doing,
but once again, in order to be just, I could not do what others wanted me to
do. They were punished for being in a dark room together.
People should not be
punished for what we think they did, nor for what they even appear to be doing.
We are also not to judge them for what someone accuses them of doing. Teachers
and administrators must not be careless in judging a student merely because of
the accusation of another teacher. Sometimes people see things differently than
the way they really happened. As a result, a student can be punished unfairly
because we assume he is guilty. Justice must properly assess the guilt. I
refuse to punish somebody for a crime I do not know he committed or for
breaking a rule I do not know he broke. I will not use circumstantial evidence
because that would not be just.
2. Judgment is the
right sentencing of the guilty. The punishment of a crime must be equal to the
crime that was committed. A scale or balance is the symbol of justice.
Punishment is to balance out the weight of a crime. If there is no punishment,
there is no justice. If there is too much punishment, there is no justice. The
weight of the punishment must exactly balance the weight of the crime.
Now let's break this down
into several principles that will explain how to be just in the sentencing of
guilt.
First, punishment should be
predetermined. I do not like to make judgment calls. The Old Testament laws not
only stated the wrong but also established the punishment that accompanied the
doing of that wrong. Justice cannot stand many judgment calls. Sometimes we
feel good, and sometimes we feel bad. Therefore, we will not always execute the
same sentence for the same crime. So, in order to be just, the sentence should
be predetermined.
That is why Christian
schools often have problems. The leader makes judgment calls which can be
scrutinized by everyone. That is the reason many years ago I met with the
deacon board of the First Baptist Church and spent hours listing every possible
crime a student could commit in one of our schools and determining what the
punishment would be for committing each crime. That is justice. It also removes
the blame from the judge.
God uses that system
throughout the Bible. That is what He was doing in Romans 6:23 when He said, "For
the wages of sin is death...." God was
establishing the punishment for the crime.
Secondly, the knowledge of
the rule should be considered. A person should know the rule and its
consequences. That is why in our schools we give out a handbook that gives both
the rules and the consequences for breaking each rule. It is possible that at
times we are delinquent in getting out the word of a rule. This is the reason
the Bible tells us that it will be more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrha in the
day of judgment than it will be for Tyre and Sidon. Sodom and Gomorrha did not
have the Old Testament, whereas Tyre and Sidon did. They knew more; hence,
their consequences were more severe.
The Bible says that "the
times of this ignorance God winked at." (Acts 17:30a) People have asked me why it is wrong now to have more
than one wife but it was not wrong in the Old Testament. It was wrong then to have
more than one wife, but it is even more wrong now because we have been given
greater knowledge of the law. It is critically important in any area of our
jurisdiction that we make it clear to those under us what both the rules and
consequences are.
Thirdly, consider any
precedent. Before administering judgment, it is important to consider what has
been done before for the same infraction. When dealing with the administrators
of our schools, I often ask if there is any precedent on a matter. It is so that
we will not punish someone differently than we punished someone else in the
past for the very same infraction.
When establishing the
punishments for children, it is a good idea for the punishment to be in the
same area as the crime. For example, if a teenager uses the car without
permission, the punishment could be taking away his use of the car for a period
of time.
3. Judgment is the right
treatment after the sentence. Punishment for a wrong deed is the same as a
payment for a debt. Once the debt has been paid, it is forgiven! No more
reminders need to be sent. It is not just to continue adding sentencing after
the punishment has been paid. Do not continue mentioning it.
In this matter of justice
there are several principles that we must constantly remember. Without these we
are destined to have problems. These are the principles by which I have tried
to live for many years.
Basic Principles of
Justice
1. Only One has perfect
justice. God is always just, and only His justice is always perfect.
2. No two people will always agree on what is just. Good
people can differ on some things.
Many years ago Dr. John R.
Rice and the Sword of the Lord published my book, The Hyles Sunday
School Manual. I was so excited and proud about that book that I took it
with me to the barbershop to read it while I was getting my hair cut.
As I was reading the book
in the barbershop, I came to a place where several pages were missing! Quickly
I looked through the book, and I found those pages misplaced later in the book.
I rushed out of the barbershop and went to a pay phone to call Dr. Rice and
inform him of the problem. When he answered the phone, I said, "Dr. Rice,
you are going to be disappointed to find out that 20 pages of The Hyles
Sunday School Manual are not in correct order." There was silence on
the other end of the phone! I said, "Dr. Rice, what are we going to do
about it?"
Dr. Rice finally spoke, and
he said, "Dr. Hyles, we will print a sticker to be placed on the inside cover
of the book telling the reader where to find those pages."
I said, "But, Dr.
Rice, that is not fair."
He said, "I think it
is fair."
I did not think that Dr.
Rice was making a just decision. I felt that he should reprint the book, but
Dr. Rice felt we should put a sticker on the inside cover. I was sincere. So
was Dr. Rice. Yet we differed. This did not hurt our relationship at all. It
simply shows that two people, regardless of how sincere, do not always agree on
justice.
3. I must not require you
to reconcile your justice with mine. If I do require you to agree with me, then
I am acting as God. I always think that my judgment is right, but good people
can disagree. In any instance, I could be wrong and the other person could be
right. That is one reason we all should limit our judging to our own areas of
judgment.
Dr. Rice and I disagreed on
what was just, butl decided manyyears before, "Dr. Rice is a good
man." Although as a man he could be wrong on some things, I never required
him to agree with me because I also am human and could be wrong. Consequently,
I must not require others to reconcile their concept of justice to what I think
is justice.
4. I must decide if you are
sincere. If you are sincerely trying to be just, I must not get upset if you
disagree with me on what is just. If only God is always just, then sometimes I
will be sincerely wrong. So will you. If we disagree on what is just, I must
take into account the possibility that this is a case where I could be wrong.
Dr. Rice was sincere. Even though I disagreed with him, the possibility
remained that I was wrong.
5. Because you are sincere,
I must allow you to disagree.
6. I will not put you on
trial every day. Folks, decide once and for all if someone is sincere, and then
stop putting him on trial every day. The reason we do not get along with others
is because we are constantly putting them on trial. Decide once and for all
that a person is sincere, and then you will not struggle with him when you
disagree on what is just. Others will not do things the way you want them done,
but do not put them on trial for your disagreements.
There is a statement made
in the Bible three times with exactly the same wording, and a fourth time in a
slightly different way. Romans 1.~1 7, "... The just shall live by
faith." Galatians 3.~11, "... The just shall live
by faith." Hebrews 10:38, "...the just shall live by faith."
Habakkuk 2:4 says, "...the just shall by his faith."
What does this mean? Romans
1:17 says we live 'from faith to faith." It means that we live by our confidence in the justice
of God. That is also how we treat each other and get along with each other. We
have confidence in one another, not because any one of us has perfect justice, but
because we are sincere and seek to be just. We must accept the fact that even
in our sincerity all of us are sometimes wrong. We should not put each other on
trial nor condemn each other if we think the other person is not being just. If
we do, we become God because we think we are the only one who is right.
This truth could change
your life! It could keep you from destroying your marriage, your business, your
friendships and even your relationship with other leaders. Someone must be in
charge of every situation. Do not be another's judge. Do not make him agree
with your judgments. Allow others to disagree by accepting that they are
sincere. Do not put them on trial every day. You may be right and they may be
wrong, but they may be right and you may be wrong. Since you are not God, do
not play God!
Chapter Four
RESPONSE TO JUSTICE
"He hath shewed thee, 0 man, what is
good; and what doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love
mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?" Micah 6:8
When the Bible answers the
question, "What does the Lord require of thee?" the first thing
mentioned is "to do justly." The most important thing in the
Christian life is to be just. Justice is the balancing of the scale. It is
punishing an individual equivalent to the crime that was committed. It is
rewarding an individual equivalent to the deed performed.
Justice is more than the
sentencing of a judge in a courtroom, a teacher in a classroom or a parent in a
home. It is also the sentencing within our hearts toward others. A just person
has justice in the heart.
This chapter will be built
upon the foundation of the basic principles of justice discussed in the
previous chapter: (1) Oniy God has perfect justice; (2) No two people will
always agree on what is just; (3) I must not require you to reconcile your
justice with mine; (4) I must decide if you are sincere; (5) Because you are
sincere, I must allow you to disagree; and (6) I will not put you on trial
every day.
"To do justly"
means that we are only to punish when we know that a crime has been committed
and when we punish according to the degree of the crime. If money is missing
from your wallet or purse and you suspect that your child took it, it is not
just to punish that child until you are positive that he took it. It is tragic
that often we punish someone before we have all the facts. Suppose you punish
the child and then later discover that your husband or wife borrowed it. You
have treated the child unjustly because you made your judgment based on
suspicion rather than on fact.
Doing justly means that you
never punish somebody who should not be punished. That is the first thing the
Lord requires of you. In whatever area you have been given to judge, you are
first to make certain that you are just. The first responsibility of a
Christian parent is to do justly. The first responsibility of a school teacher
or principal isto do justly. The first responsibility of every person in a
position of leadership is to do justly. Those under our leadership have a right
to be treated justly.
It is wrong to jump to
conclusions and administer punishment before we have examined all the facts.
Suspicion is not a basis for punishment. Accusation is not a basis for
punishment. Fact is the only basis for punishment. The greatest perversion
taking place in America among Christians today is their perversion of justice.
We hear preaching about what is required to be a good Christian; yet we
virtually ignore what the Bible says. So, what does the Lord require of you?
1. "To do
justly." That is God's top priority. Pastors, be just to your members.
Teachers, be just to your students. Parents, be just to your children.
Employers, be just to your employees. God requires it. Punish only when you
know a crime has been committed.
2. "To love
mercy." This is a big part of doing justly. Mercy is not believing
something unless you know it is true. It means not jumping to conclusions and
not punishing until you have all of the facts. It means giving an individual
the benefit of the doubt if you do not know he is guilty.
At First Baptist Church we
have a rule stating that deacons must not smoke cigarettes. Several years ago
two of our deacons were accused of smoking. I met privately with each of the
two men to ask them whether or not it was true. I still did not believe it
because I did not yet have their side of the story.
One of the deacons admitted
that he was having a difficult time quitting his smoking, and he resigned the
deacon board. The other man denied ever having smoked a cigarette. I did not
have enough proof to convict him, so I gladly accepted his word. That is mercy.
I would rather show mercy and be wrong than to condemn someone without knowing that
he is guilty. Tragically, most Christians are more interested in execution than
in mercy; yet the Lord requires it of us to show mercy. We preach what we
require and ignore what God requires.
3. "To walk humbly
with thy God." Again, this is still an extension of the first requirement
of doing justly. We are not to think of ourselves more highly than those we are
investigating, nor are we to prejudge them in our minds. We are not to follow
our assumptions and judge without facts.
Oftentimes we have evidence
but no proof, so we go ahead and pronounce guilt without knowing the individual
is guilty. I refuse to punish someone based on my opinion or anyone else's
opinion. To do so is pride, because it is elevating your opinion to the level
of the law. A person is innocent until proven guilty. We Christians are the
worst in this matter of judging someone because we think he is guilty. Our
intuition is not always right. Never are we to judge an individual until we
know he is guilty.
There is a way we are to
respond tojustice. We need to understand this in order to be just. Romans
12:19 and 20, "Dearly beloved, avenge not yourselves, but rather give
place unto wrath: for it is written, Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the
Lord. Therefore if thine enemy
hunger, feed him; if he thirst, give him drink: for in so doing thou shalt heap
coals offire on his head." Those
instructions tell us what we are to do when we feel that we have been treated
unjustly.
"Avenge" and
"vengeance" are words that deal with justice. They deal with the way
we respond to justice when we think it is wrong. The word "avenge"
means our response to authority when justice has been performed. It is our
response to justice. It is not dealing with how people treat you, but rather
your response to justice when it is extended.
For example, your child's
school teacher disciplines your child, and you do not agree with his decision.
You are not to respond improperly by trying to slap the hand of authority. That
is God's responsibility, and we are to allow Him to respond. The word
"vengeance" means "out of justice." We are not to respond
improperly to the justice somebody else makes. Authority is to stick with
authority and allow God to straighten out the mistakes and injustices.
When I was a boy and I
received a spanking at school, I automatically received another one when I got
home. My mother automatically accepted the judgment of my teacher. Today,
parents attack the teacher's judgment. The Bible says that we are not to settle
the account with others in authority when we think they have judged wrongly. We
are not to be avengers of injustice. God will settle the account in His perfect
judgment.
All of us are human. Not
one of us knows perfect justice, so none of us will always execute perfect
justice. We are going to make mistakes. Therefore, we are to allow others in
positions of authority to execute justice as they see it without our
interference. God ordains and chooses authority to make judgments, and we are
to subject ourselves to their decisions without our efforts to avenge verdicts
with which we disagree.
Vengeance is anarchy. It is
every man deciding what he thinks is right and trying to enforce it outside of
proper authority. I may think you are wrong, but since I could be wrong, I must
leave the final verdict to God. He will balance the scales.
A parent came to me and
told me that his son was kicked out of a children's choir, and he did not feel
that it was right. He argued that I did not know all that happened; yet,
neither did this parent. He had based his opinion on the story his son told him
and not on all the facts. I trusted the judgment of the authority. That is what
the Bible teaches us to do.
God has chosen people for
positions of leadership. We are to allow them to be in charge without our
interference and scrutiny. If they carry
out something that is not just, God says that He will see to it that the scales
are balanced and justice is done. If the teacher wrongly disciplines your
child, God will intervene and bring about justice. That is His job, not yours.
God has given us the authority to judge, but not the authority to judge other
judges. The correction within justice is up to God.
This is why Christians
should not take other Christians to court. I Corinthians 6:1, 2, "Dare any of you, having a matter against
another, go to law before the unjust, and not before the saints? Do ye not know
that the saints shall judge the world? and if the world shall be judged by you,
are ye unworthy to judge the smallest matters?" I Corinthians 6:6-8,
"But brother goeth to law with brother, and that before the unbelievers.
Now therefore there is utterly afault among you, because ye go to law one with
another. Why do ye not rather take wrong? why do ye not rather suffer
yourselves to be defrauded? Nay, ye do wrong, and defraud, and that your
brethren."
In these passages we are
told that we ought to take care of our own problems without taking them to
court. It is wrong for a Christian to take another Christian to court. God's
Word says that we are to allow ourselves to be defrauded or cheated rather than
take a Christian to court. You have no rights other than to obey God's Word and
allow God to balance the scales of justice. It is NOT our responsibility to
enforce justice, except in our designated areas.
A church is an intricate
thing. Leadership overlaps and often places someone over you who, in another
situation, is under you. For example, I am the authority over our Christian
school teachers; yet my children were under their authority when they were in
school. I did not judge the way those teachers judged my kids and then avenge
my kids if a teacher was wrong in my opinion. Sometimes I did not like the way
they handled my child; yet, I left it to God to avenge the injustice.
God will avenge all
injustices. Vengeance is up to Him. All of us occasionally feel that we have
been mistreated or that someone in our family has been mistreated. Once
judgment has been executed by proper authority, we are not to try to correct
the situation in the way we think it should have been done. That is anarchy,
and it is disobedient to the Bible. That person is the authority in that
situation and has the right to judge in the way he sees fit.
Vengeance is taking matters
into your own hands and attempting to correct injustice. That is God's place,
not ours. You judge th area that God has given to you and defend the right of
others t judge their area as they
see fit. This will solve many of ou problems and help us to keep peace with
others. Let God be th avenger!
Chapter Five
JUDGING ANOTHER
MASTER'S SERVANT
"Draw nigh to God, and he will draw
nigh to you. Cleanse your hands, ye sinners; and purify your hearts, ye double
minded. Be afflicted, and mourn, and weep: let your laughter be turned to
mourning, and your joy to heaviness. Humble yourselves in the sight of the
Lord, and he shall lift you up. Speak not evil one of another, brethren. He
that speaketh evil of his brother, and judgeth his brother, speaketh evil of
the law, and judgeth the law: but if thou judge the law, thou art not a doer of
the law, but a judge. There is one lawgiver, who is able to save and to
destroy: who art thou that judgest another?" James 4:8-12
This chapter is going to be
built around ten statements. Most of what I will cover will be new, but some
will overlap things in a previous chapter.
1. Originally each man
judged and protected himself, his own family, his own property and his own
freedom.
2. As the population
centralized, we chose people from among us to protect the rest of us.
3. We have groups, and
appointed people lead each group. For example, we chose pastors to lead the
churches, a ruler to lead a nation, a governor to lead a state, a mayor to lead
a city and a principal to lead a school. Each has his own area where he is to
judge.
4. The body politic does
not judge. It is not the responsibility of a judge in one area to judge in
another area that is someone else's area to judge.
5. The body politic chooses
the one to lead or judge, and the one chosen does the judging or leading. For
example, our nation does not vote on how to punish every crime. We choose some
to do the judging, and they are responsible for judging those who commit
crimes. The same is true in a school or in a business. There are delegated
authorities whose responsibility it is to judge for the rest. That is God's
plan, and it has always been God's plan.
Christians desperately need
to learn this. We judge each other, criticize each other, slander each other,
and spread bad about each other, and in so doing, we despise the law! We are
entering into an area where we have appointed people to do that for us.
6. We vote about the
lawmakers, but not about the law. The lawmakers are chosen to create the laws
by which we live. It is not our job to decide the laws. If we do not like the
laws they make, we can choose new lawmakers. I may not like all of their laws,
but they make the laws.
7. If we take it upon
ourselves to enforce the law, we despise the law and go against those whom we
chose. Parents who go to their child's teacher to complain every time their
child gets in trouble are despising the law. The rules were already established
by those who were delegated by us to set them and are to be enforced by those
who were delegated by us to enforce them.
8. Most of us have an area
in which we are to judge. We have been chosen to judge in that area.
9. No one is to enter our
area, and we are not to enter anyone else's area. Romans 14:4, "Who art
thou that judgest another man's servant? to his own master he standeth or
falleth. Yea, he shall be holden up: for God is able to make him stand."
Who are you to judge
someone else's classroom? Who are you to judge someone else's church? Who are
you to judge someone else's family? You have no right to interfere in the
judgment of another's area. The master of that area is to decide; no one else
is to do so! We are not to sit in judgment of anyone who is outside of our
jurisdiction to judge.
A few years ago I submitted
an ad to The Sword of the Lord. Dr. Hutson sent it back to me and said that he
could not run the ad. That is his business, so I had no right to tell him how
to run his paper. That is his area. Every organization has to have a leader,
and that leader is responsible to judge that area. No one else is to interfere
with that judgment. The chosen authority must run the organization, and
authority needs to be supportive of other authority, lest all authority becomes
weakened.
You cannot succeed without
this principle. A family will fail without this. A country will fail without
this. A church will fail without this. A business will fail without this.
Somebody must be given the responsibility by the rest of us to rule and allowed
to do so without the rest of us interfering. This is why so many of our
churches are having trouble. We call a pastor to lead us, and then we want to
tell that pastor how to lead. We judge him for the way he leads. When he
doesn't do things the way we think he should, we cause trouble or leave the
church.
10. We are not to speak
evil or judge outside of our area. This is what we read in James 4:11 and 12.
James says we are not to speak evil of our brother. The words, "speak
evil," in the Greek are "katalaleo," which means "to speak
evil based on hearsay." James goes on to say not to judge our brother. The
word "judge" in the Greek is "krino," which means "to
judge based on facts." James was saying that we are not to make judgments
of each other based on hearsay or on facts, unless it is within our area of
judging. To do so, James says, is actually to speak evil and judge the law.
The Bible is telling us not
to go into the other person's area of judgment and criticize, even if we know
the facts concerning a situation. You are not actually criticizing or judging
that individual; you are criticizing and judging the law, and this is anarchy.
Judging by hearsay and judging by fact are both wrong if it is outside of your
area. This is the only way you can have law and order!
Chapter
Six
JUDGE NOT
"The L ORD your God hath multiplied
you, and, behold, ye are this day as the stars of heaven for multitude. (The
LORD God of you fathers make you a thousand times so many more asye are, and
bles you, as he hath promised you!) How can I myself alone bear you cumbrance,
and your burden, and your strife? Take you wise men and understanding, and
known among your tribes, and I will make them rulers over you. And ye answered
me, and said, The thing which thou hast spoken is good for us to do. So I took
the chief of your tribes, wise men, and known, and made them heads over you,
captains over thousands, and captains over hundreds, and captains over fifties,
and captains over tens, and officers among your tribes. And I charged your
judges at that time, saying, Hear the causes between your brethren, and judge
righteously between every man and his brother, and the stranger that is with
him." Deuteronomy 1:10-16
Moses looked out and saw
the multitudes of Israelites and realized that he could not adequately judge
them all. He knew he needed help. No man could make all the judgments that
needed to be made, so Moses chose men according to their ability to help him
judge.
What does the Bible mean
when it says that we are not to judge? Does that mean that we are never to
judge an individual in any situation? In this chapter I am going to explain
what the Bible means when it says, "Judge not."
In Deuteronomy God through
Moses gave men areas ofjudgment. There were three restrictions given to these
men or judges.
1. The judges were not
allowed to rule or judge in another area. Romans 14:4, "Who art
thou that judgest another man's servant? to his own master he standeth
orfalleth. Yea, he shall be holden up: for God is able to make him stand."
God has given us each an area where we are
supposed to judge. If we go outside that area, it is called "judging"
and that is wrong! Each of us is to judge inside our areas, but we are not to
make judgments in another's area.
We live in a society of
critiquing. Everyone thinks he has a right to critique everybody else. Our
universities teach students how to critique each other. Even in some Christian
colleges in homiletics classes the students are often taught to critique
preaching.
A teacher in a classroom
must judge his students. That is not wrong. If that teacher judges the students
in another classroom, that is judging, and it is wrong. It is up to the person
who has been given the responsibility of judgment to decide what should be
done. The Bible asks who we think we are to interfere. It's none of our
business! Matthew 7:1, 2, "Judge
not, that ye be not judged. For with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be
judged: and with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again."
Nobody can run anything
with the whole world trying to help him run it. In your areas of judgment
everyone would not always agree with the way you judge, but it is not their
business to interfere. Likewise, it is not your business to interfere with the
areas of others. If we judge areas that are not our responsibility, we have no
power to make changes in those areas. As a result, there are three things that
would begin happening to us. These are the three things that happen to all who
judge outside their own area:
(1) It brings anger. When
you judge outside of your area and it is not done the way you think it should
be done, you get angry because you have no power to change it. The best thing
for you is to not even know what is happening in another man's area. Keep
yourself focused on that which is in your area and on the judgments that you
must make.
People get angry because
they want their way and they do not get it. There is no need for you to have a
way if you do not judge, and there is no way for you to judge if you just mind
your own business.
(2) It brings frustration.
The human mind is so constructed that it needs to complete what is starts. No
one is as frustrated as the person who starts something and does not finish it.
When you judge something that is not in your area, you cannot complete the
cycle; therefore, you are going to be frustrated. Much of the mental illness
people have comes from the frustration of judging what other people do without
the ability to change it.
(3) It brings pride. When a
person begins to judge outside his own area, before he realizes it, he thinks
he can judge everything. I have to be careful all the time because people all
across America call or write and ask me what to do. If I am not very careful, I
will begin to think that I am always right, and I will want to tell other
preachers how to run their church or ministry. It is easy for a judge over much
to think he has the ability to judge better than the judge over little. It
would be easy for me to have an opinion on how one of our college graduates
should run his church. I am not to have an opinion or judgment unless he asks
me for my advice.
One reason it was wrong for
the Pharisees who caught the woman in the act of adultery to judge her was that
it was not their area of judgment. God had set up certain powers for the
judgment of the woman. Anything else is anarchy.
2. The judges could not
even consider a situation without two witnesses. Just like the Supreme Court,
they were not allowed to even take the case unless two witnesses came forward
at the same time. Two witnesses brought about a cause to investigate but not a
verdict of guilt!
We are to abstain from the
appearance of evil as Christians. However, if someone does not abstain from the
appearance of evil, we are not to make a judgment on that appearance. We are
never to judge according to the appearance. John 7:24, "Judge
not according to the appearance, but judge righteous judgment." We are to judge according to the fact. Never convict
people because it appears that they have done something wrong. This is what
causes much of the trouble in churches.
This is called mercy. Mercy
is not judging without truth. Truth is what you judge. Justice is when you
punish for what you know has been done. Mercy never judges by appearance. Proverbs 28:20, 'Mercy and truth preserve the king:
and his throne is upholden by mercy."
Let me give you five
statements that relate to this truth: (1) We must have righteous judgment; (2)
None is righteous, as we read inRomans 3:10, "As it is written,
there is none righteous, no not one"; (3)
So we cannot judge the inside. I Samuel 15:7 says that God looks on the heart.
Man cannot look upon the heart, so man cannot judge the heart. That means that
man cannot judge motives. It is time for us to quit judging people's motives;
(4) God is the final judge; and (5) We can judge only what we know, and that is
not the inside!
Over and over again the Bible
says that man is justified by faith, but James comes along and says that man is
justified by works. People have argued this point for years, yet both are true
because there are two forms of justification. Paul was talking about being
justified in the sight of God. James was talking about being justified in the
sight of man. God alone can judge the heart of man. Man can judge only what he
sees. Man's judgment is limited by actions, not motives.
3. The judges were not
allowed to seek for witnesses in an attempt to find guilt. Sometimes people
"get it in" for someone and begin looking for something wrong in that
person. When they find something, they rejoice over it. That is not justice.
There is nothing as awful as a person who spends his life looking for something
to justify the condemnation he already feels for someone. That is a miserable
man.
For the sake of your
friends, your family, your church, your class, your school and your life, do
not judge outside of your area. You can enjoy the peace of going to bed at
night knowing you are just.
I refuse to allow myself to
form opinions in areas for which I am not responsible. If all Christians
practiced these principles, there would never be another church split. We are
so prone to judge.
Chapter
Seven
SUBMITTING ONE
TO ANOTHER
"And be not drunk with wine, wherein
is excess; but be filled with the Spirit; Speaking to yourselves in psalms and
hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord;
Giving thanks always for all things unto God and the Father in the name of our
Lord Jesus Christ; Submitting yourselves one to another in the fear of God.
Wives, submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as unto the Lord."
Ephesians 5:18-22
"Children, obey your parents in the
Lord: for this is right. Servants, be obedient to them that are your masters
according to the flesh, with fear and trembling, in singleness of your heart,
as unto Christ." Ephesians 6:1, 5
There are ten points I am
going to cover in this chapter. Some will be repetitious from previous
chapters, but I will be building upon them to get across this particular
lesson.
1. God has given different
areas of judgment.
2. These different areas
are as much a part of the law as the law itself. The choosing of individuals to
carry out God's law is as much a part of God's law as the laws they are
judging.
3. God has given us several
different areas of judgment today. The home has been given a father and
husband. The church has been given a pastor. A business is given employers.
Almost everyone has been given at least one area over which they are to judge.
It may be a Sunday school class, a bus route, or a school room. Wherever you
are placed as the leader, that is your given area to judge. You are to judge only
in that area, not in someone else's area. You are not even to make mental
judgments in areas that are not your responsibility. Anytime you judge outside
of the area God has given to you, the Bible calls that "judging."
Itis wrong to judge outside of your area. Most of our problems come when we
violate that principle.
4. No leader of an area is
over the other except for the three purposes of the state. The state has been
given the responsibility to protect (1) our person, (2) our property, and (3)
our freedom. That is what government is to do. That is all the government is to
do. Other than that, no one is to interfere in the business of the other. The
government is not to interfere with the church outside of those three things.
Each entity is to be operated without interference of any other.
When I first became Pastor
of the First Baptist Church, a very powerful and influential man in Hammond
attended our church. He owned the largest department store in the city and was
extremely wealthy. He was the type of man who was accustomed to being in charge
of everything in which he was involved.
One evening Mrs. Hyles and
I had dinner in his home. It was an extravagant meal in a very elegant setting.
During the dinner his wife asked me if I planned toj oin the area's ministerial
association. Trying to be diplomatic, I told her that I had not yet decided.
She pressed me to state my decision right then and there. I told her that I
would join if it were fundamental. She informed me that it was not fundamental
and persisted to ask me if I planned to join. Her husband began to push me for
an answer as well. These were not bad people, but they were accustomed to being
in charge of so many things that they were trying to be in charge of me.
Finally, I told him that I would not tell him how to run his store unless he
asked me for advice, and that if I ever wanted his advice as to how to pastor
the church, I would ask him as well. I informed him that unless I asked for his
advice, I expected him to mind his own business. We were asked to leave. His
problem was that he did not know how to submit himself to the leadership of
someone in an area of which he was not in charge.
You have an area over which
you have been placed by God to judge. You are to judge that area only. Most of
the people who get angry and leave churches do so because they did not get
their way in an area that was not their business to judge. Pray for others who
are in charge, but do not try to make judgments for them.
5. When I judge outside of
my area, I am breaking the law. The law includes how it is to be enforced. Your
city has speed laws. Police officers are assigned to enforce those laws. It is
not your responsibility to enforce those laws, and if you do, you are breaking
the law. That is just as much a part of the law as the law itself. James
4:10-1 2 "Humble yourselves
in the sight of the Lord, and he shall lift you up. Speak not evil one of
another, brethren. He that speaketh evil of his brother, and judgeth his
brother, speaketh evil of the law: but if
thou judge the law, thou art not
a doer of the law, but a judge. There is one lawgiver, who is able to save and
to destroy: who art thou that judgest another?"
I carry in my wallet a pass
that admits me past the security guards at Hyles-Anderson College. Without a
pass, no one is allowed into the college. Even though I am the founder and
Chancellor of the college, I submit myself to those who are in charge of
security. I must humble myself so that I will do so. That is submission to
authority. God's Word even says that if you do not submit, you are violating
the law. If you make judgments against another leader, you are speaking evil of
the law.
There is a difference
between a lawgiver and a law enforcer. Congress makes laws but does not enforce
those laws. God is the giver of the law, and He places people in the position
of enforcer of those laws. When you speak evil of that person, you are speaking
evil of God because God put them there. God is the lawgiver. When you judge
another man's area of responsibility, you put yourself above God, and you
become guilty of idolatry.
Unless we submit ourselves
to God's system of laws and enforcement, our society will crumble. Not one of
us is perfect; therefore, we must even submit ourselves to the imperfect judgment
of man within the perfect system of God. Authority is authority even when it is wrong.
6. When I judge outside my
area and therefore break the law, I then put myself above the law of all other
areas. In reality I am putting myself above God because I have placed myself
above His appointed authority.
7. I have then become a
judge when not appointed.
8. In areas outside of
those over which I am in charge, I am simply to obey. Ephesians 5 and 6 speak of being filled with the Spirit and the
characteristics that accompany that Spirit-fullness. A part of the evidence of
being filled with the Spirit is submitting to other authority. If you do not
submit, it is a sign that you are not Spirit-filled. Sometimes that means that we
must submit to the authority of someone over whom we have authority in another
area. That is submitting one to another. This is God's plan and is a part of
His divine law as much as the law itself.
When I go to the campus of
our college, I submit to the authority of the security guards by driving the
speed limit. It is arrogance if I think that I am above the law, even though I am the boss of those security
guards. I must submit to their given authority just as much as I expect them to
submit to me as their employer. Too many Christians are haughty and are
unwilling to submit to other authority.
9. The only two ways to get
out from underneath a law are to die or to leave that area. God has placed me
where I am. In some areas I am the judge and in other areas I am not. In those
areas where I am not the judge, I am to submit myself to those who are. As long
as God leaves me in that place, I must obey those who are over me.
10. We are to be humble in
those areas outside our own authority. A church has many, many areas with many
different leaders in charge. If any of those leaders refuse to humble
themselves and submit to someone in charge of another area, trouble starts! It
is amazing how easy it is to judge another's area rather than simply judging
our own.
You are not a Spirit-filled
Christian unless you are willing to submit to others who have been given
authority over you.
Chapter
Eight
JUSTICE BEFORE THE
TRANSGRESSION
"And ye have forgotten the
exhortation which speaketh unto you as unto children, My son, despise not thou
the chastening of the Lord, nor faint when thou art rebuked of him: For whom
the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth. If ye
endure chastening, God dealeth with you as with son; for what son is he whom
the father chasteneth not? Now no chastening for the present seemeth to be
joyous, but grievous: nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of
righteousness unto them which are exercised thereby." Hebrews 12:5-7, 11
We have already determined
that there are three phases of justice, and in each of these three phases we
must make certain that we are judging justly: (1) We must be just in
determining the judgment; (2) We must be just in executing the judgment; and
(3) We must be just following the judgment. So, it could be said that Justice must be followed before, during and after judgment.
In this chapter I am going
to deal with justice before the transgression. This is before anybody has
sinned. Many people are unjust because they judge improperly. Let me give you
eight principles to follow preceding judgment that will prevent you from
treading a path of injustice.
1. Before there can be a
judgment, there must be a law. I cannot punish someone if there is no law for
what he has done. To do so is unjust. There must be a law or a rule.
Occasionally, someone will do something in one of our ministries that the
leader of that ministry does not like. Although there is no law against what
the person did, the leader is suggesting that the person be punished. What he
is suggesting is that we get a vigilante group to punish that person, but that
would be unjust because there was no law regarding what that person did.
Romans 3:20, "Therefore by the deeds
of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight:for by the law is the
knowledge of sin."
There is no doubt that Adam
and Eve did things that were wrong in the Garden of Eden, but they did not know
they were wrong, for they had not yet eaten of the tree of the knowledge of
good and evil. Their eyes had not yet been opened to know good from evil. So,
if there is no law, there is no knowledge of sin.
Romans 4:14, "Because the law
worketh wrath:for where no law is, there is no transgression."
The Bible tells us clearly
that if there is no law, there is no transgression. Over the years I have had
people who got mad at me and left the church because they expected me to punish
a person for a law that was not even made. I am not going to do that because
there must be a rule before I can justly punish a person. People must know
beforehand that what they did was wrong.
Romans 7. 7-13, "What shall we say
then? Is the law sin? God forbid. Nay, I had not known sin, but by the law: for
I had not known lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt not covet. But sin,
taking occasion by the commandment, wrought in me all manner of concupiscence.
For without the law sin was dead. For I was alive without the law once: but
when the commandment came, sin revived, and I died. And the commandment, which
was ordained to life, I found to be unto death. For sin, taking occasion by the
commandment, deceived me, and by it slew me. Wherefore the law is holy, and the
commandment holy, and just, and good. Was then that which was good made death
unto me? God forbid. But sin, that it might appear sin, working death in me by
that which is good; that sin by the commandment might become exceeding
sinful." Paul said that unless
the Bible had told him, he otherwise would not have known that lust was wrong.
Through Paul, God is telling us in this passage that before there can be a
transgression, there must be a law. So, you have no right to punish anyone
unless there is a rule that he has broken. You may not like what he did, and
you may not even like the person, but if there is no law, there is no
transgression. You may want to punish him, but you cannot, for no law has been
broken.
2. Punishment must not be retroactive. It is wrong for me to make a law
today and then punish you because you broke it yesterday. If there was no law
yesterday, you did not break the law yesterday. If there was no rule yesterday,
you broke no rule yesterday. Far too often, we judge according to our passion
and our anger. We also often judge according to the level of discomfort
something has given to us. We even judge according to whether or not we like
somebody. That is not justice. God is more concerned about justice than He is
about any other matter. Justice is His most important quality. God will not
execute injustice.
Adam and Eve enjoyed
perfect fellowship with God in the Garden of Eden, but then something happened.
They sinned. When man sinned, he turned his back on God. God said that sin
would bring forth death, so God had to turn His back on man also. God wanted
man back, but He could not accept man back until His justice was satisfied.
God conceived a plan to
come to earth, become flesh, live a sinless life, fulfill the law, go to
Calvary to pay for the sins of mankind, charging them to His own record, and
after 72 hours, rise from the dead for man's justification. As a result, God
can again turn to man and receive man back into fellowship.
Although Christ did die for
man, the main reason He died was for God! He died to satisfy God's justice so
that God could take man back to fellowship with Himself. If Christ had not died
on the cross, God could not have taken man back because that would have been
unjust! If God took man back into fellowship because man joined a church, God
would not be just. If God took man back because man got baptized, that would be
unjust. If God took man back because man confessed his sins to a priest, God
would will do something in one of our ministries that the leader of that
ministry does not like. Although there is no law against what the person did,
the leader is suggesting that the person be punished. What he is suggesting is
that we get a vigilante group to punish that person, but that would be unjust
because there was no law regarding what that person did.
Romans 3:20, "Therefore by the deeds
of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight: for by the law is
the knowledge ofsin."
There is no doubt that Adam
and Eve did things that were wrong in the Garden of Eden, but they did not know
they were wrong, for they had not yet eaten of the tree of the knowledge of
good and evil. Their eyes had not yet been opened to know good from evil. So, if
there is no law, there is no knowledge of sin.
Romans 4:14, "Because the law
worketh wrath:for where no law is, there is no transgression."
The Bible tells us clearly
that if there is no law, there is no transgression. Over the years I have had
people who got mad at me and left the church because they expected me to punish
a person for a law that was not even made. I am not going to do that because
there must be a rule before I can justly punish a person. People must know
beforehand that what they did was wrong.
Romans 7:7-13, "What shall we say
then? Is the law sin? God forbid. Nay, I had not known sin, but by the law: for
I had not known lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt not covet. But sin,
taking occasion by the commandment, wrought in me all manner of concupiscence.
For without the law sin was dead. For I was alive without the law once: but
when the commandment came, sin revived, and I died. And the commandment, which
was ordained to life, I found to be unto death. For sin, taking occasion by the
commandment, deceived me, and by it slew me. Wherefore the law is holy, and the
commandment holy, and just, and good. Was then that which was good made death
unto me? God forbid. But sin, that it might appear sin, working death in me by
that which is good; that sin by the commandment might become exceeding
sinful." Paul said that unless
the Bible had told him, he otherwise would not have known that lust was wrong.
Through Paul, God is telling us in this passage that before there can be a
transgression, there must be a law. So, you have no right to punish anyone
unless there is a rule that he has broken. You may not like what he did, and
you may not even like the person, but if there is no law, there is no
transgression. You may want to punish him, but you cannot, for no law has been
broken.
2. Punishment must not be
retroactive. It is wrong for me to
make a law today and then punish you because you broke it yesterday. If there
was no law yesterday, you did not break the law yesterday. If there was no rule
yesterday, you broke no rule yesterday. Far too often, we judge according to
our passion and our anger. We also often judge according to the level of
discomfort something has given to us. We even judge according to whether or not
we like somebody. That is not justice. God is more concerned about justice than
He is about any other matter. Justice is His most important quality. God will
not execute injustice.
Adam and Eve enjoyed
perfect fellowship with God in the Garden of Eden, but then something happened.
They sinned. When man sinned, he turned his back on God. God said that sin
would bring forth death, so God had to turn His back on man also. God wanted
man back, but He could not accept man back until His justice was satisfied.
God conceived a plan to
come to earth, become flesh, live a sinless life, fulfill the law, go to
Calvary to pay for the sins of mankind, charging them to His own record, and
after 72 hours, rise from the dead for man's justification. As a result, God
can again turn to man and receive man back into fellowship.
Although Christ did die for
man, the main reason He died was for God! He died to satisfy God's justice so
that God could take man back to fellowship with Himself. If Christ had not died
on the cross, God could not have taken man back because that would have been
unjust! If God took man back into fellowship because man joined a church, God
would not be just. If God took man back because man got baptized, that would be
unjust. If God took man back because man confessed his sins to a priest, God
would not be just. If God took man back because he took communion or the
sacraments, God would not be just!
The only thing that allowed
God to accept man back into fellowship was that His justice had been satisfied.
When Jesus paid the penalty for our sins on the cross, the justice of Almighty
God was satisfied, and God could turn to man and receive man back if he put his
faith in Christ. God's justice had to be satisfied!
If you want to be like God,
you must be just. God's justice will not be superseded by anything, including
His love, mercy and grace. We too must make justice foremost in our Christian
lives.
If a child in our Christian
grade school does something wrong for which there is no rule, that child cannot
be punished. I went to our deacons one night and told them that I no longer
wanted our school principals to make judgment calls. I no longer wanted the
principals or administrators to have to decide whether or not a student was
expelled. We decided instead to let the rules expel the student. That was one
of the greatest days in the history of our school system!
I listed everything that I
could think of that a student could do wrong. I took a list of 29 things to the
deacons and told them that we were going to decide the punishment for each one
of those things. When a student did something, we would already have decided
what the punishment would be. For example, one rule explains that students can
be in the building only during specified hours. The penalty for violating that
rule is five demerits. No longer could a teacher or principal make a ruling of
his own judgment, for now the law was given, stating both the rule and the
punishment for violating that rule. We did the same thing for every rule. If we
make a new rule today, we cannot justly enforce that rule on somebody who broke
that rule yesterday. I refuse to be unjust, even if it costs me church members.
I have a responsibility before God to be just.
3. The law must
be made known. The divine law of God has always
existed. The laws as given in the books of Moses are eternal. There was never a
time when those laws did not exist. Every word in the Bible always was, so
every law in the Bible always was. Men did not know the law because the law had
not yet been given to man until the time of Moses. God did not punish man for
what man did not know. Likewise, it is our responsibility to make known the law
before we should punish.
4. Punishment should be
made known as a part of the law. Deuteronomy
19:15-17, "One witness shall not ris e up against a man for any iniquity,
or for any sin, in any sin that he sinneth: at the mouth of two witnesses, or
at the mouth of three witnesses, shall the matter be established. If a false
witness rise up against any man to testify against him that which is wrong;
Then both the men, between whom the controversy is, shall stand before the
Lord, before the priests and the judges, which shall be in those days."
Here we have an example of
the Bible giving not only the transgression but also the punishment. God
reveals to us the three parts of the law: (1) the law, (2) the punishment for
breaking that law, and (3) the person responsible for enforcing that law.
It is wrong for a judge to
make a judgment call concerning the penalty a transgressor receives. That is
one of the things wrong with the criminal justice system in America today.
When our children were
small I made a list of the things they could do wrong, and I taught them the
penalty for breaking each rule. Most of us determine punishment on the basis of
the inconvenience we experience. No wonder we have a society that knows nothing
about justice! They have never seen justice in our homes. Unfortunately most
people do not care enough about their children to take the time to make rules
and determine what the punishment will be. I always tried to punish
consistently, and I tried to make the predetermined punishment a greater
sacrifice than the enjoyment they received in breaking the rule.
If you do not do this, you
will punish according to your moods. One time when the child breaks the rule
you will be in a good mood, so you will simply tell the child not to do it
anymore. The next time he does the very same thing, you may be in a bad mood,
so you severely spank him. The child learns that he has a chance of getting
away with breaking the rules, depending on what type of mood you are in. If you
are just, the punishment will not depend upon your mood but upon the law and
the predetermined punishment for breaking that law.
5. The judge must not have
a will in the matter. The most important thing in a jury trial is the selection
of the jury. Attorneys avoid choosing juries with preconceived ideas about the
case. First Baptist Church had a trial about a building we accidently tore
down. The trial was moved to another area because the attorneys felt a fair
trial could not be held in Hammond. It was felt that a judge would have no bias
somewhere else like a judge who lived in Hammond might have.
6. There must be no respect
of persons. Deuteronomy 1:16, 17,
"And I charged your judges at that time, saying, Hear the causes between
your brethren, and judge righteously between every man and his brother, and the
stranger that is with him. Ye shall not respect persons in judgment; but ye
shall hear the small as well as the great; ye shall not be afraid of the face
of man;for the judgment is God's: and the cause that is too hard for you, bring
it unto me, and I will hear it."
The Bible says that we must
be fair with the person being judged. Everyone must be judged the same way. I
always ask our school administrators if we have any precedent in a matter set
before us for judgment, so that we can be fair to everybody. We try to treat
everyone the same.
The Bible also says that we
ought not to be influenced by those who are watching us judge. If you judge out
of respect of the person you are judging, that is wrong. It is equally wrong if
you are influenced by the opinions of those who are around you and watching you
as you judge. I will not be influenced by anyone when it comes to judging the
way I feel is right.
People sometimes leave our
church over this, but they will just have to leave. It is my area to judge, and
I refuse to alter my judgment based on anyone's opinion, regardless of his
standing in the church. I must judge as I feel is right and fair in my areas of
judgment, and you must do the same in yours.
This entire society of ours
is built on critique, but the truth is, no one is to critique somebody else's
area of judgment. In your area, judge the deed, not the person. Judge by
principle, not by popular opinion.
7. Punishment must be for
the right motive. Nobody should ever punish anyone for punitive purposes. Hebrews 12:11, "Now no chastening for the
present seemeth to be joyous, but grievous: nevertheless afterward ityieldeth
the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto them which are exercised
thereby."
Every time you punish your
child, the purpose should be to make him behave properly, not simply to
"get back" at him. That is the purpose of it all.
When Mrs. Hyles and I got
married, we lived a while at her parents' home. We were in college at the time
right after my discharge from the army. Her mother had a black cat. In the
bathroom there was a little white heater. That black cat liked to sit on that
heater and watch me shave. Then one chilly morning I began to shave, and the little
cat jumped on that heater. It was so hot that the cat almost leaped to the
ceiling! That cat never again jumped up on that heater to watch me shave!
Justice means that every
time you punish, it inflicts a discomfort with a purpose of correction, not just
to make the person feel bad. That is what the word "chastening"
means.
8. Punishment should be
given according to maturity. Luke 12:48, "But he that knew not, and did
commit things worthy of stripes, shall be beaten with few stripes. For unto
whomsoever much is given, of him shall be much required: and to whom men have
committed much, of him they will ask the more."
You have been given an area
where you are to judge. Outside of that area, you are not even to judge in your
mind. You are to occupy yourself with judging your own area. When I go hear a
preacher preach, I do not judge his sermon. I search for a blessing. God has
not given me the responsibility of judging his preaching.
Establish the ground rules
for the area God has given to you. Use these eight principles to set up those
ground rules before an infraction is committed. That is justice!
Chapter
Nine
ADMINISTERING
THE JUSTICE
"The cloke that I left at Troas with
Carp us, when thou comest, bring with thee, and the books, but especially the
parchments. Alexander the coppersmith did me much evil: the Lord reward him
according to his works: Of whom be thou ware also; for he hath greatly
withstood our words. At my first answer no man stood with me, but all men
forsook me: Ipray God that it may not be laid to their charge. Notwithstanding
the Lord stood with me, and strengthened me; that by me the preaching might be
fully known, and that all the Gentiles might hear: and I was delivered out of
the mouth of the lion." II Timothy 4:13-17 7
We have decided the proper
punishment. We are inside our own area of judgment, and it is now time to
administer our judgment. How we administer that judgment is very critical. Let
me give you four things we ought to do in the administration of the punishment.
Some of these thoughts will perhaps surprise you.
1. Usually punishment should be given
with dignity, propriety and courtesy. This should be the case most of the time.
2. Harsh treatment
is usually reserved for a time when it is needed as a part of thejudgment. There are times when as a part of your
child's punishment you ought to get angry. This should never be because you are
mad. You should show anger only because the child needs you to do so never
because you lost your temper. Anger is a tool which sometimes needs to be used
as a part of the punishment of the transgression.
II Samuel 14:28, "So Absalom dwelt
two full years in Jerusalem, and saw not the king's face." David had a son named Ammon, who raped his sister,
Tamar. Absalom, another of David's sons, plotted and killed his brother Ammon
as revenge for the raping of Tamar. David punished Absalom by not allowing him
to see his father for two years. We also must sometimes use aloofness, anger or
harshness as a part of punishment.
3. We should use the
harshest treatment for the judgers. Unless harsh treatment is a part of the
actual punishment for the person who has done the wrong, we would be wise to
treat no one harshly except, of course, those who are guilty of the wicked sin
of judging.
What the Bible Says About Judging
1. Judging is inexcusable. Romans
2:1, "Therefore thou art inexcusable, 0 man, whosoever thou art that
judgest: for wherein thou judgest another, thou condemnest thyself for thou
that judgest doest the same things. But we are sure that the judgment of God is
according to truth against them which commit such things."
Who is inexcusable? The
drunkard? No! The harlot? No! The whoremonger? No! The thief? No! The murderer?
No! Who is inexcusable? "Whosoever thou art that judgest." This means you are not to judge outside of your own
area. If a man is given an area of judgment, but judges outside his own area,
the Bible says that is inexcusable.
Look at all the sins listed
here inRomans 1:24-32,
"Wherefore God also gave them up to uncleanness through the lusts of their
own hearts, to dishonour their own bodies between themselves: Who changed the
truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the
Creator, who is blessed for ever. Amen. For this cause God gave them up unto
vile affections: for even their women did change the natural use into that
which is against nature: And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of
the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that
which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompense of their error
which was meet. And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge,
god gave them over to a reprobate mind, to do those things which are not
convenient; Being filled with all unrighteousness, fornication, wickedness,
covetousness, maliciousness; full of envy, murder, debate, deceit, malignity;
whisperers, Backbiters, haters of God, despiteful, proud, boasters, inventors
of evil things, disobedient to parents, Without understanding,
covenantbreakers, without natural affection, implacable, unmerciful: Who
knowing the judgment of God, that they which commit such things are worthy of
death, not only do the same, but have pleasure in them that do them.
Look at all these wicked
sins listed here; yet, who is inexcusable? Those who judge those who commit
these sins yet who are outside their area of judgment. The judger, the
gossiper, the slanderer, the critic, the tattler and the babbler are
inexcusable. It is the only sin which is inexcusable!
Inside your jurisdiction,
it is proper to judge these people; but to judge outside your jurisdiction is
inexcusable! God will judge them. It is our responsibility to judge those
things only if they are in our area of jurisdiction.
2. Judging is the only sin that will get
you punished for another.
Deuteronomy 19:15-19
explains that a false witness was to receive the same punishment as would have
been inflicted upon the accused if he had been proven guilty. Haman accused
Mordecai of a capital crime punishable by death on the gallows. Haman ended up
dying on those gallows intended for Mordecai. Esther 7:10, "So
they hanged Haman on the gallows that he had prepared for Mordecai. Then was
the king's wrath pacified." The harshest
treatment mentioned in the Bible was given to those who judged. No other sin
demands such harsh retribution as does false accusation.
3. Judging is the
first step down. Once a person starts judging people
who are not in his area of jurisdiction, he is on his way down a terrible path.
4. Judging is the only sin that warrants public rebuke. I Timothy 5:17-20, "Let the elders that rule
well be counted worthy of double honour, especially they who labour in the word
and doctrine. For the scripture saith, Thou shalt not muzzle the ox that
treadeth out the corn. And the labourer is worthy of his reward. Against an
elder receive not an accusation, but before two or three witnesses. Them that
sin rebuke before all that others also may fear."
The only sin mentioned here
is false accusation. God is not instructing us to rebuke publicly everybody in
the church who commits a sin, nor is He giving us permission to do so. That is
foolishness! You could never do it, for everyone sins every day. In reality,
the only sin spoken of here is the sin of false accusation.
5. Judging is a sin Paul
rebukes someone for committing. We read in I Timothy 1:20, "Of whom
is Hymenceus and Alexander; whom I have delivered unto Satan that they may
learn not to blaspheme." II Timothy 2:17, "And their word will eat as
doth a canker: of whom is Hymenceus and Philetus."
In I Corinthians 5:1 there
is the mention of a man who was committing adultery with his stepmother. Paul
never mentions the man's name. He does, however, openly rebuke the blasphemers
and slanderers. The destroying of someone's reputation was considered worse by
Paul than many other sins. I wonder how many lives have been destroyed by
judgers. I wonder how many homes have been ruined by them. I wonder how many
ministries and churches have been destroyed. That is why it is so wicked.
II Timothy 4:14, 15, 'Alexander the
coppersmith did me much evil: the Lord reward him according to his works: Of whom be thou ware also; for he hath greatly
withstood our words." Alexander, the
coppersmith, was named in Scripture for his resistance to Paul. Yet, we do not
know the names of those who were guilty of adultery or other various sins. We
do know the names of judgers and slanderers. God lets us know in His Word.
6. Judgers are the
main people beloved John rebuked. III
John 9, 10, "I wrote unto the church: but Diotrophes, who loveth to have
the preeminence among them, receiveth us not. Wherefore, if I come, I will
remember his deeds which he doeth, prating against us with malicious words: and
not content therewith, neither doth he himself receive the brethren, and
forbiddeth them that would, and casteth them out of the church." Diotrophes was guilty of slander, or as John described
it, "prating against us with
malicious words."
If you saw a deacon in your
church drunk, or if you saw a deacon with a harlot, what would you do? Most
people would expose him. If you had a deacon come up to you and slander
someone, what would you do? Would you listen? Or would you treat him harshly
like John did?
Have you ever considered
that the Devil's main sin is that of accusing? Satan is called the
"accuser of the brethren." What does it really take to be as wicked
as the Devil? Accusing the brethren! I am not trying to minimize any sin, but I
am trying to put the emphasis where God does.
7. Make it your
goal to salvage wrongdoers. I do not
understand preachers who do not want to salvage their people. If one of my
people falls into any type of sin, I want to salvage him. I do not condone the
sin of King David, but I do want to remind you that he wrote some of his
greatest Psalms after his sin. God is in the salvaging business!
Abraham did wrong when he
got the Egyptian maid pregnant. I certainly am not condoning what he did; yet,
after that sin, God still performed the miracle of giving Abraham a son when he
was 100 years old.
Jacob was away from the
will of God for 20 years. I am not condoning that, but it was after that that
he was called a prince.
Moses killed a man, and
that was a terrible wrong! I am not condoning murder, but it was after that
sin, that God used him to lead the Israelites out of Egypt.
If you ever want to get
like God, then start looking at sin like God does. Hate it because of what it
does to those you love!
In my ministry I have been
accused of not hating sin. That is a filthy lie. I do hate sin. I hate the
liquor that destroyed my dad. I hate sin because of what it does to the people
Ilove, but I still want to salvage those people. With these thoughts in minds,
let me give you four principles by which I always try to live.
Four Principles By Which I Try to Live
1. I always defend the
accused (unless it concerns a broken civil law). I do not know whether or not the accused person did that which he is accused of doing,
but I do know that the accuser is doing what the Devil does. He is accusing the
brethren. The Devil is not a false accuser. He is a true accuser. If you accuse
someone to me, I am the witness to your sin of accusing.
A dear friend of mine who
had been a preacher for many years called me one day. Years ago he quit the
ministry, but I never knew why. He assumed I knew, so he started to tell me
about it. I stopped him and said to him, "I do not want to know what bad
you did. Ijust want to know about all the good you did." He began to cry
and said to me, "You are the only real friend I know I have."
I would rather someone say that to me than to be known as one who spreads
garbage about people. What real pleasure is there in that?
2. I try never to
believe criticism. You do not have to believe or disbelieve something that
is said to you. If someone comes to me accusing someone else of doing something
wrong, I do not believe it. I am not saying that the accuser is a liar because
I am not saying that the accused person did not do it; I merely refuse to
believe it is true until it is proven to be true!
3. I never investigate
outside my own area ofjudgment. I do not want
to know what someone did that was wrong. I do not want to know what a fellow
pastor did or was accused of doing. If it is in my area to judge, then I must
investigate. Otherwise, I do not want to know!
4. I do not spread
accusations even if they prove to be true. I do not want anyone to know
what someone has been accused of doing even if it is true. I get weary of the
Pharisees who say someone 15 covering sin
merely because they do not want to destroy someone's reputation. Jesus showed
the most compassion on those who had fallen into sin. He showed the least
compassion toward those who spread it.
It is time for Christians
to live like Christians in the way we treat sinners. If people have sinned, we
ought to discipline them with dignity, courtesy and love, unless we feel that
harshness will help them.
When I was a little boy, my
mother and I would go downtown to shop. There was a large "ten cent"
store there called Grand and Silvers that sold everything, including the best
malted milk I ever drank! Back them they cost only a nickel. We were so poor
that we could never afford to buy one, but I would go over and watch the people
drink their malted milks. Sometimes someone would leave a little in the bottom
of their glass and I would sip what was left!
I loved to look around in
that store, and I didn't stay by Mama very well. My mother would call me back
to her, but soon I would wander away again. Finally, she would hide from me so
that I could not find her! She could still see me, but I could not see her. I
would become very frightened because my mother was separating herself from me.
That was the punishment. It was harsh, but it was meant to teach me a lesson.
When it was over, she always lovingly made up to me because I had learned the
lesson. Harshness was a part of her judgment.
Most of the time our
harshness should be reserved for those who are harsh. Judgment should be
harshest on those who are judges.
If I damage your name, it
is a greater crime than robbing you of your possessions. The Bible says in Proverbs 22:la, 'A good name is rather to be chosen
than great riches."
I refuse to steal someone's
good name, because if I do so, the harshest judgment is reserved for me. I do
not ever want to be inexcusable!
Chapter Ten
JUSTICE AFTER
THE JUDGMENT
We are going to find out
what to do after the judging has
been done. A transgression has been committed. The penalty has been paid, and
judgment has been given. Now what are we to do? The child has been spanked.
Perhaps the student has been given 50 demerits. Judgment is all over now, so what are we supposed to do?
1. We are not to
publicize it. Revelation 12:10, "And I heard a loud voice saying in
heaven, Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and
the power of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which
accused them before our God day and night." This is talking about the Devil. The Devil is the accuser of the
brethren.
One day it dawned on me
that the Devil is not a false accuser. The Devil is accusing you right now
before God, but he is not just a false accuser. He is a true accuser; he is
telling the truth about you. Do you want to be like the Devil? If you accuse
someone falsely, that is like the Devil; but if you accuse someone truly, that
is also like the Devil! Unless it is in your area, you are of the Devil when
you decide to accuse or judge someone.
That word,
"accuser," is an interesting word. It means "speaking out loud
against." If it is not in your area, you are not supposed to judge it. If
it is in your area, you are not supposed to speak out loud about it. It is
always wrong to spread bad about anybody unless it is concerning reference for
a job, etc.
James 4:11, "Speak not evil one of
another, brethren. He that speaketh evil of his brother, and judgeth his
brother, speaketh evil of the law, and judgeth the law: but if thou judge the law, thou art not a doer of
the law, but a judge." "Speak not
evil one of another" means "Do not scandalize." It means that
you are not to tell a bunch of lies against somebody. You are not to tell
something that you do not know is true. It also means that you are not to judge
even when you know something is true, if it is outside your God-given area.
Why are we not to blab
about those who commit sin? I will tell you why. It is because they have
families who are innocent people. They have wives and children who do not need
to live their lives with a whole nation knowing what happened. I am not
covering up sin. I am just not for exposing sin. "Covering up sin is what
you do if you do not punish in
your area. Once the punishment is made, it is not covering up sin not to talk
about it. To tell the whole world about what happened is only going to hurt
children who have a right to grow up with a normal life. The family has a right
not to be crucified!
You may ask, "But
aren't we supposed to rebuke them before all?" I Timothy 5:17-20, "Let the elders that rule
well be counted worthy of double honour, especially they who labour in the word
and doctrine. For the scripture saith, Thou shalt not muzzle the ox that treadeth
out the corn. And, The labourer is worthy of his reward. Against an elder
receive not an accusation, but before two or three witnesses. Them that sin
rebuke before all, that others also may fear."
This is not saying that
anybody who commits a sin is supposed to be rebuked in front of the whole
church! The sin spoken of here is committed by those who make an accusation
without two witnesses. Those are the ones who are to be rebuked in front of
them all, because they are trying to destroy innocent people without proof of
anything. God does not intend for us to get up and rebuke everybody and expose
their sins. If someone sins, let him come to the altar, get right with God, and
try to do right. Then, let us try to help him do right! Do not talk about what
he did!
Let me tell you how I do
it. A man who worked for us committed what folks like to call "gross
sin." I called him into my office and said, "I love you. I have had
more than two people tell me that they witnessed your doing something that appeared
to them to be a gross sin." (If one witness had come forward, I would not
have called him in, because the Bible says I am not to receive the accusation
unless I have two or more witnesses.) I said to him, "I need to ask you a
question: Is it true?"
He said, "Yes, it
is."
I said, "You know what
that means. Why don't you go ahead and resign right now? I will personally help
you. I will keep your family fed while you can find employment. I suggest that
you leave the area. I promise you that I will be responsible to pay your salary
for several months until you find a job." Then the man resigned to me in
my office.
I am not going to tell you
who he was, because it is none of your business! He was in my area of judgment!
If we publicly rebuked everyone in the church who committed a sin since the
last Sunday, we would never be able to end a service. Why don't we use some
common sense?
A deacon of ours started
smoking, so I called him in and said, "I have two people who said they saw
you smoking down at Douglas Street and Hohman Avenue. Is it true?"
He said, "Yes, it
is."
I said, "You know what
that means. I suggest that you resign the deacon board."
On two or three occasions
deacons have committed what we call "gross sin." I called those
deacons in. If they admitted what they were accused of doing, I suggested that
they resign the deacon board. I did not "blab" it around! Those
deacons have lovely families who do not need to bear the stigma of their
daddy's sin, just because some preacher thought he was supposed to blab
everybody's sin in front of the whole church. That is the way I handle it. I am
not going to get up and broadcast everybody's sins. I am not going to call my
deacons together and reveal why that man resigned. This method is called
"loving people." You say, "Brother Hyles, that is hiding
sin." No, it is not! It is called "not exposing it." It is not
hiding it! I would be hiding it if I did not call him into ask him if he did
it. I did not hide it. I brought it out in the open and talked to him about it.
2. Balance the scale. Make the punishment equal to the crime. That is
justice. When a person commits a crime, the scale is not balanced. If that
person is not punished for that transgression, it is not justice, because the
scale is still not balanced. If that person is overly punished, that is not
justice either. So, what is justice? Justice is when someone commits a
transgression, and the punishment is equivalent to the transgression.
3. Do not require him to
pay more. Do not punish him more by
refusing to speak to him. Do not punish more by branding him. There are
probably five men who are among the best men in our church, and I know they
served time in the penitentiary. Those men committed a crime and were given the
punishment for their crime. They served their time. When I look at them, I look
at them like I look at anybody else. The scale is balanced. If you have not
committed a crime, then your scale is balanced. If they have committed a crime
and paid for it, they have balanced their scales. The debt is paid. Do not
"blacklist" them. Do not look down on them. The debt is paid!
We had a young man in our
church who kissed a woman 29 years ago. He did not plan to kiss her. They both
went to our church. They worked at the same place. They had a coffee break and
were talking to each other. She was a beautiful woman, and he was a handsome
man. In a moment of passion, he kissed her. As soon as he kissed her, he said,
"I am sorry. Forgive me for what I have done."
He got in his car, rushed
to the church, came to my office, and said, "Pastor, this is what I did. I
am sorry. I do not know why I did it." He walked down the aisle the next
Sunday night and asked God to forgive him. There are still some people who will
not trust that man because of what he did. Twenty-nine years ago he slipped for
just one moment. I am not saying you ought to let your daughter go steady with
him. That becomes your area of judgment. If your daughter is going to have a
date with someone, that becomes your area of judgment. You have a right to
judge in that situation. If he applies for a job in your employment, you have a
right to check his past, but outside of your area, it is not your business! Do
not require him to pay more.
4. Forgive him as Jesus
forgives. Ephesians 4:32, "And be ye kind one to another,
tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ's sake hath
forgiven you."
We are to forgive like
Jesus forgave. If we forgive like Jesus forgave, then we are also to forget,
because God has also forgotten our sins. As deep as the sea, our sins have been
separated from Him. That isn't all. When Jesus forgives us, He not only
forgets, but He looks at us with 'justified forgiveness," as if we have
never sinned at all. That means if you sinned against me, I am to forgive you
and forget that you did it. As far as your record is concerned, you are
supposed to be justified as though you never sinned against me.
You would be shocked how
many people have come to my office and said, "Brother Hyles, I want to ask
you to forgive me again for what I did to you three years ago." I did not
even remember the incident about which they were talking. That is 'justified
forgiveness." Once the transgression has been committed and the judgment
has been executed, I am not to publicize it; I am to balance the scale, making
the punishment equal to the crime; I am not to require them to pay more; and I
am to forgive as Jesus forgives.
You are not going to be
happy if you spend your life trying to decide what somebody outside your area
of responsibility 15 supposed to do. You have no way of bringing it to a
conclusion because it is not in an area where you are the judge. Not only are
you going to hurt somebody else, but you are going to hurt yourself.
Nobody is as frustrated as
people who know an answer but do not have the opportunity to give the answer.
If you do not have the responsibility to judge, then stay out of that area.
This may keep you from having a nervous breakdown. Do yourself a favor, and do
not make judgments in an area that is outside the boundaries that God has given
you.
Chapter Eleven
JUSTICE AND WITNESSES
"One witness shall not rise up
against a man for any iniquity, or for any sin, in any sin that he sinneth: at
the mouth of two witnesses, or at the mouth of three witnesses, shall the
matter be established. I/ a false witness rise up against any man to testify
against him that which is wrong; then both the men, between whom the
controversy is, shall stand before the Lord, before the priests and the judges,
which shall be in those days; And the judges shall make diligent inquisition:
and, behold, if the witness be a false witness, and hath testified falsely
against his brother; Then shall ye do unto him, as he had thought to have done
unto his brother: so shalt thou put the evil away from among you. And those
which remain shall hear, and fear, and shall henceforth commit no more any such
evil among you. And thine eye shall not pity; but life for life, eye for eye,
tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot." Deuteronomy 1 9:15-2 1
Let me begin with an
illustration. I will give you ten statements concerning a young man who comes
to attend Hyles-Anderson College. This can be applied to any ministry.
(1) When he first arrives
at college, he is in awe of Dr. Wendell Evans, the President of Hyles-Anderson
College. He sees Dr.Evans as a hero and has great respect and admiration for
him.
(2) Because of this young
man's hard work and humility, he is hired to work at Hyles-Anderson College.
(3) The young man does a
good job for a while and keeps his regard for Dr. Evans as his hero. He
continues to look up to him with great respect and admiration.
(4) The young man begins to
get more self respect as he begins to grow. Suddenly he also begins to have
problems as he begins to measure himself improperly. He starts thinking he is
bigger than he actually is.
(5) This young man's ego is being built by students who were given to him.
He personally had nothing to do with drawing them to the school. Not one of
these students came because of him.
This can happen in any
given situation where someone is in a new area of growth. There is no one who
knows so little as someone who knows a little! There is no one who thinks he
knows as much as someone who knows a little!
(6) This young man fails to
realize that his hero, Dr. Evans, has been growing too. He thinks that he is
growing to Dr. Evans' level until suddenly he thinks that he knows more than
Dr. Evans. He even begins to sit in judgment of Dr. Evans.
(7) The young man is still
as far behind Dr. Evans as he was in the first place. Dr. Evans is still as
much his superior as he was the first time he met him because Dr. Evans has
also continued to grow.
(8) The young man does not
realize that his hero is still as superior to him as he always was. Tragically
the young man deprives himself of his hero.
I still feel the same awe
toward Dr. Lee Roberson as I did the first time I met him. The fact is that Dr.
Roberson has grown even as I have grown. I do not assume that I have caught up
to him, so he is still my hero!
I was with Dr. John Rice
for many years, and I knew he had feet of clay. I could have found his
weaknesses if I had wanted to, but I did not want to because I wanted Dr. Rice
to remain as my hero. In fact, I tried to avoid seeing his faults. I feel sorry
for people who think they have grown to the level of their heroes. If you ever
lose your heroes, you lose your security.
(9) The young man begins to
judge the judge. When that happens, he loses his chance to grow. When you catch
up with the person above you, there is no one left to pull you up. You will not
learn any more because you think you know all which that person knows. When you
know all your teacher knows, you will not learn more.
(10) The young man
immaturely uses some verses that he does not understand to prove his point.
This illustration can be
applied to any ministry and in any place. In most of the places where I find a
disloyal assistant pastor, he is almost always young. Rarely do I find a
50-year-old assistant pastor who is being disloyal. It is usually the young man
who does not know enough to know he does not know much. Invariably these
disloyal young men are fueling their mutiny with some scriptural misapplication.
Let me show you two of the passages often used in these situations.
1. II Corinthians 13:1, "This is the third time lam coming to you. In
the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word be established."
These young theologians
like to use the logic that this means anytime two people say they saw
something, we are supposed to believe it. That is not at all what the Scripture
is saying!
Let's use for an example a
man who is a school teacher. Suppose he fails two young ladies in his class,
and then they get together and decide to get revenge. They claim he made sexual
advances toward them, and they begin to spread it around. Most preachers would
have fired that man simply because those two girls accused him. This situation
actually happened in one of our schools, and eventually one girl admitted that
she and the other girl had lied to get back at him for failing them.
What if you were the one
being falsely accused by two "witnesses"? What if that one being
accused were your husband? Would you want people to take the word of two false
witnesses? What if it were somebody else's husband who was being falsely
accused?
Is God saying here that we
are to accept the accusations of two homosexuals who have decided to destroy
the ministry of a preacher by accusing him of committing homosexual acts? What
about two sex perverts or two prison inmates? If two of these people falsely
accuse a person, are we to accept their accusations as truth? Absolutely
not! Yet, that is exactly what most
Christians do. In fact, most people do not even require one witness. We just
believe it because "someone" said it.
In immaturity, someone
grabs this verse and uses it to defend, believing something against someone
simply because two people say they saw him do it. People have criticized me
because they think I do not punish the way they think I should punish; yet,
they do not know the facts that I know. I am not going to punish someone whom I
do not know to be guilty. I do not have a quick-trigger finger, and I am not
going to believe irresponsible witnesses!
2. I Timothy 5:19, 20, "Against an elder receive not an
accusation, but before two or three witnesses. Them that sin rebuke before all,
that others also may fear." The key
word in this passage is the word "receive." These verses do not say
not to "believe"; they say not to "receive." The Supreme
Court of the United States makes two decisions concerning a case. The first
decision is whether or not to take the
case. The second decision is how to judge the case. The word "receive"
is the same word that describes that first decision the Supreme Court makes. We
are not even to consider a case against an elder unless there are at least two
witnesses. This does not means he is guilty; it only means that we will at
least consider it. The guilt is not to be presumed, and if there are not at
least two witnesses, we are not even to receive the accusation for
consideration. We are never to receive gossip or hearsay. Refuse to accept it!
Far too many people know too much gossip that goes around our churches.
I will receive the case
only if there are at least two witnesses and then only if it is in my
jurisdiction or area of judgment. In law they call this "probable
cause," which means they investigate it, but it does not
mean the person is guilty! Do not assume guilt, even if there are a hundred
witnesses. If there are two or more witnesses, and if the matter is in your
area, receive the case, consider the possibility and investigate it carefully.
Immature Christians use
this Scripture to defend publicly rebuking people before the entire church.
That is ridiculous! Everyone sins from Sunday to Sunday, so every Sunday
everyone would have to be rebuked publicly. Yet that is how these young,
immature "theologians" think. In fact, there are only a few sins they
personally have selected for which they want public rebuke. They do not want to
rebuke all sin. What most of them want to rebuke is sexual immorality; yet that
is only one of the ten commandments and not even the first one mentioned. For example,
have you seen anything lately that you wished was yours? If so, you need to be
publicly rebuked for coveting!
What is this Scripture
teaching? There is only one sin mentioned here, and that is the sin of being a
false witness. God is teaching us in His Word that false accusers should be
rebuked before everybody. The New Testament is built on the foundation of the
Old Testament, and this passage comes from an Old Testament passage,
Deuteronomy 19:25-21.
A false witness in the
Bible is not a talebearer but is someone who claims he saw something that he
really did not see. If a person is found to be a false witness, notice what the
Bible says is to be done to him. He is to be punished with the same punishment
that goes with the crime he falsely accused another of committing. The same
punishment that would have been inflicted on the accused was to be inflicted on
the accuser! Murder was a capital crime, punishable by death. If a man falsely
accused someone of murder, the accuser was to be sentenced to death, according
to the Scripture. Why was this the case? The Bible says it was done to put away
the evil. What evil? The evil of falsely accusing someone in an attempt to
destroy that person's life.
The sin discussed in I
Timothy 5:19 is not the sin of the accused but the sin of the one doing the
accusing. Both of these passages state the same reason for this. I Timothy 5:20
says, '...that others also may fear." Deuteronomy 19:20 says, "And those
which remain shall hear, and fear...." In
both cases, the Bible is speaking of false accusations and the rebuking of
those who falsely accuse. So, we are taught to deal harshly with false
accusers.
There are very few things
any worse than falsely accusing someone. Imagine a person falsely accusing
someone just so that person will be wrongly punished. That is a terrible thing!
By the
way, just because you have
a gut feeling about someone does not give you the right to accuse him. That
would never stand up in court. God forbids this type of accusation and treats
it as the most severe crime!
Your life is not going to
be rich if you lose your heroes. That is what is wrong with America. America
was great when America had heroes. When you lose your heroes, you lose your
security and forfeit your chance to grow. When you lose your heroes, you cannot
be taught more. The best preacher will be the one with a hero. The best
musician will be the one with a hero.
Years ago when our Sunday
school attendance surpassed Dr. Roberson's Sunday school attendance, I
personally did not surpass Dr. Roberson! He is still my hero because even
though I have grown, I have not outgrown him! I feel sorry for people who think
they know as much as those who were once their heroes. None of us have
"arrived." There are many people in this world who know more than we
know. Do not deprive yourself of having heroes to whom you can look.
Colleges and seminaries all
across this nation are training "knowit-all" preachers. It is easy
for the hero of some not to have any heroes. It is easy for the hero to think
that he has arrived. In many cases, the hero has never really built anything on
his own; yet he begins to think he knows more than the one who built the area
where he became a hero. So, he takes verses like these and begins to show his
true level of ignorance.
Chapter Twelve
AN EXAMPLE OF JUSTICE
"It is reported commonly that there
is fornication among you, and such fornication as is not so much as named among
the Gentiles, that one should have his father's wife. And ye are puffed up, and
have not rather mourned, that he that hath done this deed might be taken away
from among you. For I verily, as absent in body, but present in spirit, have
judge already, as though I were present, concerning him that hath so done this
deed, In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, when ye are gathered together, and
my spirit, with the power of our Lord Jesus Christ, To deliver such an one unto
Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that the spirit may be saved in the day
of the Lord Jesus." I Corinthians 5:1-5
Several people had brought
to Paul's attention that there was an act of fornication being committed by a
man in the church of Corinth. To make it even worse, it was being committed
with the man's own stepmother. Notice how Paul reacted to these accusations.
Paul never mentions the
man's name. In I Corinthians 5:1 he
refers to the man as "one." In verse 2 he merely uses the pronoun,
"he," and again inverse 3, the pronoun, "him." Inverse 4 he
refers to the man as "such an one." Not once did Paul refer to the
man by his name. I believe that Paul did not know who the man was because Paul
was not responding to gossip that he had heard about somebody. Paul was
responding to a situation.
When I was preaching out of
town once, a man wrote me a note asking me how he should handle a situation in
his church. A man had been stealing money out of the offering plate at his
church, and he wanted to know how to handle the situation. I met with him and
told him what I thought he should do. I did not ask him the man's name because
I did not need to know his name. I was not interested in judging the person. I
was interested only in judging the situation. Many years ago I established a
policy of how to handle this situation.
Likewise, Paul did not hear
an accusation about a person, but about a situation. He was wise and
experienced and had faced almost any possible situation, so he had already judged
the situation without even knowing the person involved. Paul was not trying
this individual, but was applying his principles and policies as he had at
other times when he faced similar situations.
Paul's writings taught
against gossip and slander. Do not take Bible doctrine from an example or
illustration. Take doctrine from Bible teaching. If you are not careful, you
will begin to think that Bible characters were perfect. You cannot always do
everything like Paul did. For example, Paul once had his head shaved and took a
Jewish vow, even though twice he spoke against those very things in Scripture.
Paul did wrong!
Esther married a heathen
king. That king had a drunken party and asked his wife, Vashti, to strip and
display her body to all those at the party. Vashti refused to do it; yet Esther
agreed to marry him. Yes, Esther was a courageous woman. Once she had made her
mistake, she did save Israel, but Esther still should not have married that
king. Do not take Bible doctrine from illustration. The Bible teaches not to
marry the heathen, so Esther should not have married that heathen king. God
often uses people who make mistakes to do something great.
Daniel made a horrible
mistake. When the Jews had been in captivity for 70 years, everyone who wished
to do so was allowed to return to rebuild the temple and later to rebuild the
wall. Daniel did not return perhaps because he was influenced by the heathen
university which he had attended in Babylon. It was not right that Daniel did
not return; yet God still chose to use him. It is important that we not look
for our doctrine in the illustrations of the Bible, for many of them reveal
God's working in spite of men's disobedience.
I have heard many preachers
use I Corinthians 5:1-5 as basis
for revealing an individual's sin and telling people to deliver that individual
to the Devil so that the Devil could kill him. That is not what Paul said; nor
is it God's form of justice! If God wants someone killed, you do not need to do
it. Paul was not speaking here of punitive or destructive judgment. This was
remedial judgment. He was talking about allowing the Devil to have him for a
little while to shake him up a bit.
When the Israelites had
neglected God, God called Nebuchadnezzar "His servant." This wicked
vile king was called God's servant so that God could deliver His people to him
for a little while to allow him to rough them up to destroy their fleshliness
so that they would get right with God. Paul is speaking of the same thing here.
He is instructing them to deliver the man to the Devil to rough him up and
teach him that sin does not pay. Why? So that his spirit could be saved.
I Timothy 1:20, "Of whom is
Hymenaeus and Alexander; whom I have delivered unto Satan, that they may learn
not to blaspheme." Why did Paul
deliver Hymemeus and Alexander to Satan? He did not do it to kill them, but to
teach them not to blaspheme. That is synonymous with I Corinthians 5:5. Paul is
not speaking of allowing Satan to destroy the man's body, but of destroying the
man's carnality by delivering him to the Devil so that he could punish him. God
has a chain on the Devil. The entire purpose is remedial, not punitive.
Too many Christians like to
reject sinners and watch them suffer and die. That is NOT New Testament
Christianity! God never tells us to deliver anyone to death. He is a corrective
God. Hebrews 12:6a, "For whom
the Lord loveth he chasteneth."
Paul did not end his lesson
there. In his second letter to the church at Corinth he mentions the situation
again. II Corinthians 2:1-8,
"But I determined this with myself that I would not come again to you in
heaviness. For if I make you sorry, who is he then that maketh me glad, but the
same which is made sorry by me? And I wrote this same unto you, lest, when I
came, I should have sorrow from them of whom I ought to rejoice; having
confidence in you all, that my joy is the joy of you all. For out of much
affliction and anguish of heart I wrote unto you with many tears; not that ye
should be grieved, but that ye might know the love which I have more abundantly
unto you. But if any have caused grief, he hath not grieved me, but in part:
that I may not overcharge you all. Sufficient to such a man is this punishment,
which was inflicted of many. So that contrariwise ye ought rather to forgive
him, and comfort him, lest perhaps such a one should be swallowed up with
overmuch sorrow. Wherefore I beseech you that ye would confirm your love toward
him.
Paul grieved over this
man's sin, but only in part. He did not lose his joy. I understand how Paul
felt. I carry an immense amount of grief and heartbreak, but I sorrow only in
part, for my name is written in Heaven, and I am still God's child! That is
what God is speaking of in I Corinthians 2:5b when He says, '...that
I may not overcharge you all." Paul did
not want to burden the people and to pull them down, so he tempered his grief.
Paul went on to tell them
to leave the man alone who had committed fornication with his stepmother
because he had been punished enough already. When the sentence is over, we are
to accept people back, and we are not to leave a stigma on them. Paul told them
that he had been punished sufficiently.
Tragically, most of us are
not like that. We keep on punishing people for what they did in the past. This
man committed a horrible sin of committing fornication with his stepmother;
yet, Paul told them that they had punished him enough already. Most Christians
would never speak to him again.
Paul told them that they should
forgive him. I have received many letters in my ministry because of the way I
handle sinners. Imagine the letters that would have gone to and about Paul for
telling the people in Corinth to forgive this man who had committed fornication
with his stepmother. He even told them to comfort the man, using the same word
for "comfort" used to describe the Holy Spirit as our Comforter. He
was telling them to pick him up, strengthen him and to get him back on his feet
so that he could be used of God again. Paul wanted to correct and restore him.
Every sermon preached about
sin ought to be corrective, not punitive! Every single action taken in the
church concerning sin ought also to be corrective, not punitive!
A great artist once said
that anytime someone paints a picture of a forest, he ought to paint a pathway
out because people who look at that painting will be stifled if they see no way
out. Anytime we discipline a sinner, we ought to provide a pathway out, a way
back!
Paul did not wish for this
man to live a life of grief and sorrow. He instructed them not to make him live
sorrowfully the rest of his life for the sins he committed. He even commands
them to confirm their love toward that man. The word "confirm" means
to "underline it" or "emphasize it." Paul wanted them to
make certain that the man knew they loved him.
Let me give you ten
principles we learn from the way Paul dealt with this situation.
1. People did not tell Paul
the man's name. If you want to spread juicy gossip, why don't you leave out the
individual's name? I will tell you why you don't! It is because you tell it to
hurt somebody. Slanderers do not have fun by telling their story, but by
destroying somebody.
2. Paul already had a
principle by which he judged, and he judged the principle, not the person. The
course of action was not the main thing. The result was the main thing.
3. Paul gave his advice
because he had been asked for it. It is not our job to give our opinion on how
others should do things unless we are asked.
4. Paul did not accept an
accusation against a specific individual in this passage.
5. Paul sent them a policy
in his reply.
6. Paul never said that he
believed the accusations. He said that it was "commonly reported,"
but not that it was true.
7. Paul did not punish to
hurt but to salvage.
8. Paul taught that
punishment is to have an end, not to go on indefinitely.
9. Paul taught them not to
allow the sins of people to take their joy away.
10. Paul showed us that the
type of punishment is not the main thing. Correction is the main thing!
Chapter Thirteen
"TWO WITNESSES"
DOES NOT CONVICT
"Let the elders that rule well be
counted worthy of double honour, especially they who labour in the word and
doctrine." I Timothy 5.17
I have heard preachers say
for many years that two witnesses upheld a conviction in a Jewish court. That
is not true. Two witnesses made a cause worthy of investigation, but it did not
convict a person as guilty. Any time two or more people accused someone of
being guilty of something, it simply meant that they would investigate the
matter to find out if the person was truly guilty. It does not mean that they
were automatically assumed guilty. In this chapter I am going to use several
passages of Scripture to prove that to be true.
II Corinthians 13:1, "This is the
third time I am coming to you. In the mouth of two or three witnesses shall
every word be established." The
word, "established," means "strengthened." It is not saying
that in the mouth of two or three witnesses something is true. If one person
makes an accusation, that is weak; but if two or three say it happened, the
case is strengthened, and an investigation follows.
No one should be considered
guilty until it has been proven beyond the shadow of a doubt that that
individual has done what he was accused of doing. I would rather allow ten
guilty people to go free than to convict one innocent person. As long as God
gives me breath, I refuse to declare anyone guilty unless there is positive
proof that the person is guilty. I refuse to declare recklessly that someone is
guilty just because it appears that way.
I believe that it is wrong
to have the appearance of evil. However, if a person has the appearance of
evil, that is the wrong; it is not proof of the evil actually being committed.
The Bible says that the appearance of evil is to be avoided, so the sin
actually committed is appearing to be evil. We must not automatically assume
that another evil was committed.
If two people witness
something, that means it is strong enough to take into consideration the
possibility of it being true, but it does not mean that it is automatically
true.
Deuteronomy 19:15, "One witness
shall not rise up against a man for any iniquity, or for any sin, in any sin
that he sinneth: at the mouth of two witnesses, or at the mouth of three
witnesses, shall the matter be established." The word, "established," used in this
passage is the same word we found in I Timothy 5:17. Here again the Bible is saying that if only one person
rises up as a witness against somebody, we are not even to consider it or
investigate it. I am amazed at the way people believe things because one person
says it's true. Even if you say that you saw it with your own eyes, I am not to
believe it or even investigate it, according to the Bible.
I am not surprised when the
pastor of a soul-winning church is accused of terrible things, for the Devil is
not going to ignore a great ministry. I trembled right before I announced to
our church that we were going to have a big Pentecost Sunday and try to have
more than 3,000 people saved. In some ways I did not want to do it because I
knew that all havoc would break loose! I knew Satan was not going to overlook that!
Right after Pentecost in
the book of Acts, persecution began. Later, when 5,000 people got saved, things
got even worse. The Devil will not ignore a church that means business and is
trying to get souls saved. Jesus came to earth, lived, died and rose again to
get people saved, so anytime a person, a preacher or a church give themselves
to what Jesus died to do, persecution is going to follow quickly!
Stephen did incredible
things for Christ, and then trouble came. Acts 6:8-15, 'And Stephen, full offaith and power, did great wonders and
miracles among the people. Then there arose certain of the synagogue, which is
called the synagogue of the Libertines, and Cyrenians, and Alexandrians, and of
them of Cilicia and of Asia, disputing with Stephen. And they were not able to
resist the wisdom and the spirit by which he spake. Then they subomed men,
which said, We have heard him speak blasphemous words against Moses, and
against God. And they stirred up the people, and the elders, and the scribes,
and came upon him, and caught him, and brought him to the council, And set up
false witnesses, which said, This man ceaseth not to speak blasphemous words
against this holy place, and the law: For we have heard him say, that this
Jesus of Nazareth shall destroy this place, and shall change the customs which
Moses delivered us. And all that sat in the council, looking stedfastly on him,
saw his face as it had been the face of an angel."
The key word in this
passage is the word, "then," at the beginning of verse 9. Stephen did
great things for Christ; then false accusations came. The word,
"suborned," in verse 11 means "to secure a person to take a
false oath." These men, under oath, claimed that they heard Stephen speak
blasphemous words. Did Stephen speak blasphemous words? NO! Yet, these
witnesses said that he did, and they even claimed under oath to have heard it
with their own ears! They were lying!
Stephen was wrongly stoned
because those people judging him were like many Christians today who take as
fact the accusations of two false witnesses and condemn an individual as being
guilty. You can reject this, or you can wake up and accept what God says in His
Word!
Matthew 26:57,59-61, "And they that
had laid hold on Jesus led him away to Caiaphas the high priest, where the
scribes and elders were assembled. Now the chief priests, and elders, and all
the council, sought false witness against Jesus, to put him to death; But found
none: yea, though many false witnesses came, yet found they none. At the last
came two false witnesses, And said, This fellow said, I am able to destroy the
temple of God, and to build it in three days."
There were at least two
false witnesses who accused Jesus of blasphemy for saying that He could destroy
the temple of God and rebuild it in three days. Jesus was talking about His
body; yet these false witnesses were accusing Him. If two witnesses convict a
person, then Jesus was guilty, deserved to be tried and deserved to die. Yet we
know that He was falsely and wrongly accused, tried and convicted!
The Bible does not teach
that an accusation is true just because two witnesses say it is true; it merely
means that that makes it solid enough to look into it further.
In I Kings 21 we have the
story of Ahab, the king who was married to Jezebel. Ahab wanted Naboth's
vineyard, but it was sacred to Naboth because he had inherited it from his
father. Naboth refused to sell it or to trade it to Ahab. Ahab was so angry
that he went home, went to his room, laid on his bed and pouted, refusing to
eat anything.
Jezebel came to Ahab and
asked him what was wrong. Ahab told her what had happened. When Jezebel heard
the story, she promised Ahab that she would get him Naboth's vineyard.
People who will spread
slander and lies have no conscience! Jezebel wrote letters sealing them with
Ahab's seal! She had Naboth put on trial for blaspheming God and the king, and
she secured two sons of Belial to witness falsely against him. Naboth did not
blaspheme. All he did was to refuse to sell his vineyard to the king because it
was sacred to him.
Ahab was the king. He had
the entire kingdom; yet, he wanted one small vineyard that he could not have!
Naboth was guilty of nothing, but because of two false witnesses, he was stoned
to death. Was that just? Did that mean that Naboth was guilty? After all, they
did have two witnesses. No, he was not guilty! Each one who convicted Naboth
was guilty of being unjust! Every time a Christian mentally convicts someone
today merely because two people say something happened, they also are guilty of
being unjust!
God made sure that the same
penalty which Jezebel caused to be inflicted on Naboth was later inflicted on
Jezebel.
All three of these cases
involved situations where two or more witnesses accused someone who was
innocent. That is not justice. Stephen was wrongly stoned because of two
witnesses; Jesus was wrongly tried because of two witnesses; and Naboth was
wrongly tried because of two witnesses.
Tragically most Christians
do not even need two witnesses to believe an accusation is true. They only need
someone to tell them that he heard something, and they accept it as truth. It
is wicked to take an individual's reputation in your hand because of something
you heard! The Bible teaches that you are not to even investigate it without
two or more witnesses, and you are not to believe it until it has been proven
to be true. Nothing is more tragic than for someone to ruin another
individual's reputation because of hearsay.
Deuteronomy 19:18, 19, "And the
judges shall make diligent inquisition: and behold, if the witness be a false
witness, and hath testified falsely against his brother; Then shall ye do unto
him, as he had thought to have done unto his brother: so shalt thou put the
evil away from among you." The
Bible teaches that whatever the punishment would be for the crime an individual
is falsely accused of committing, that same punishment should be inflicted
instead upon those who accused him and sought his hurt. Let me give you a
couple of examples.
Daniel 6:24, "And the king
commanded, and they brought those men which had accused Daniel, and they cast
them into the den of lions, them, their children, and their wives; and the
lions had the mastery of them, and brake all their bones in pieces or ever they
came at the bottom of the den." Daniel
was falsely accused and thrown into the lion's den. God protected him from
harm, but notice what happened to those who falsely accused him! They were cast
into the lion's den as were their wives and children! The king was obeying the
law by punishing the false accusers in the same fashion they intended for
Daniel to be punished when they falsely accused him.
Esther 9:25, "But when Esther came
before the king, he commanded by letters that his wicked device, which he
devised against the Jews, should return upon his own head, and that he and his
sons should be hanged on the gallows." Haman falsely accused Mordecai and conspired to have him put to death.
He persuaded the king to build gallows upon which he could hang Mordecai. One
night the king was reading and came upon a story about a certain man who had
saved his life. He discovered that it was Mordecai, the man he was about to
hang. As a result, Mordecai's life was spared, and because Haman falsely
accused Mordecai, Haman was hanged on those gallows! Again we see God's law
being enacted.
It is time for Christians
to give people a fair chance. It is time for all to quit delighting in hearing
bad about someone. The Bible says that love believes good reports, not bad
ones. It is time for us to give our neighbors, our families and our Christian
brethren the benefit of the doubt. It is time we decided to be just!
Chapter Fourteen
DELIVER US FROM EVIL
Evil is not the same as sin
in the Bible. Evil is always sin, but sin is not always evil. The two words are
never the same and are not interchangeable. "Sin" means "to miss
the mark." "Evil" is "to use sin to injure." Sin is an
individual act of doing wrong. Evil is an alliance to bring harm upon another
individual.
Smoking a cigarette is sin,
but the involvement of promoting or selling cigarettes is evil because it is a
system that brings harm to someone else. If you drink liquor, it is a sin; but
if you sell liquor, it is evil.
Sin is what destroys you.
Evil is when you join someone to destroy someone else. Sin is what injures you.
Evil is when you join some one to injure another. No Christian should ever
desire to injure anybody. We should never enter into an alliance of people with
the purpose of injuring someone else.
Sin is criticizing someone.
Evil is joining in an alliance to slander or hurt someone. Let's look at some
examples in the Bible.
Nehemiah 6:12-14, "And, lo, I
perceived that God had not sent him; but that he pronounced this prophecy
against me: for Tobiah and Sanballat had hired him. Therefore was he hired,
that I should be afraid, and do so, and sin, and that they might have matter
for an evil report, that they might reproach me. My God, think thou upon Tobiah
and Sanballat according to these their works, and on the prophetess Noadiah,
and the rest of the prophets, that would have put me in fear."
God's people were back in
Jerusalem rebuilding the wall around the city. Two men, Tobiah and Sanballat,
decided to hinder their progress, so they formed a system of opposition. That
was evil because they formed an alliance to damage the people of God. They used
every method they could to discourage the building of the wall. It is evil when
people campaign to destroy anyone for any reason. Evil is worse than sin!
Genesis 37:1,2, "And Jacob dwelt in
the land wherein his father was a stranger in the land of Canaan. These are the
generations of Jacob. Joseph, being seventeen years old, was feeding the flock
with his brethren; and the lad was with the sons of Bilhah, and with the sons
of Zilpah, his father's wives: and Joseph brought unto his father their evil
report.
Genesis 37:17-19, "And the man said,
They are departed hence;for I heard them say, Let us go to Dothan. And Joseph
went after his brethren, and found them in Dothan. And when they saw him afar
off even before he came near unto them, they conspired against him to slay him.
And they said one to another, Behold, this dreamer comet h."
Joseph's brothers conspired
against him to kill him. The Bible calls that an evil report. It is bad to
drink liquor, but it is worse to sell it. It's a horrible sin to give yourself
to an alliance that is committed to injuring anyone.
Acts 14:1, 2 'And it came to pass in
Iconium, that they went both together into the synagogue of the Jews, and so
spake, that a great multitude both of the Jews and also of the Greeks believed.
But the unbelieving Jews stirred up the Gentiles, and made their minds evil
affected against the brethren.
Here again we see a
conspiracy to injure someone. The unbelieving Jews formed an alliance to hurt
Paul and the others who were preaching the Gospel. The Bible calls it evil
whenever we join in an effort to injure someone for any reason. Our job is not
to tear down, but to build up, even if someone is trying to tear us down. It is
wrong to try to tear down someone, even if you know bad about him. The Lord
told us to pray that God would "deliver us from evil." He was instructing us to pray that God would prevent
us from seeking to hurt someone else. God never wants His children to be
involved in evil or in attempts to hurt others.
The Bible says that in the
end-time there would be an increase in evil. II Timothy 3:12, 13, "Yea, and all that will live godly in Christ
Jesus shall suffer persecution. But evil men and seducers shall wax worse and
worse, deceiving, and being deceived."
All of those who attempt to
live godly lives will suffer conspiratorial persecution at the hands of evil
men. Never in my entire ministry have I seen that to be more true than it is
right now. Soul-winning pastors all across America are under vicious attacks by
people trying to destroy them and their ministries. It is always done to
soul-winning preachers. The Bible tells us that it shall happen. All across
America the Devil is forming alliances of evil people who are committed to the
destruction of godly Christians who do good.
During the greatest days of
soul winning in the history of First Baptist Church the Devil launched the most
vicious attacks on our church and people. One of our people can be falsely
accused of something, and it is
spread all across America; yet, we saw 5,000 people saved on one Sunday, and
hardly anyone talked about it! Why? Because evil men "wax worse
and worse." James 3:8, "But the tongue can no man tame; it is an
unruly evil, full of deadly poison." The
Bible does not call the tongue sinful. The Bible calls the tongue "evil,
full of poison." When a person decides
to join a conspiracy to hurt someone, he is doing evil. Are you using your
tongue for evil? Evil men always do their work in groups so they can hide
behind the group to spread their poison. They rise up to judge someone who,
they feel, is doing something wrong; yet the Bible tells us that we are to lift
up the fallen, not conspire against them!
Sin happens to all of us.
We fall into sin and do damage to Ourselves. Evil is planned and carefully
constructed. Evil people purposely damage others.
What are we to do to avoid
joining an evil alliance? Proverbs 4:14, "Enter not into the
path of the wicked, and go not in the way of evil men." The Bible says that we are not to even associate with
them. That means we should totally avoid those who are seeking to injure
another individual, even if they do not do it in your presence. Do not be with
them!
I was driving down the
street in a city in Maryland one day and was moved by something I saw at the
side of the road. There were two would-be houses side by side. One had
obviously once been a home, but had been destroyed by fire. The other was a
mere foundation of a house that had never been finished. I saw a beautiful
lesson in that sight. The house that had been burned once fulfilled the purpose
for which it was created. Yes, it has burned and was no longer useful, but at
least for a while it had served its intended purpose. The foundation of the
other had never been burned and scarred by fire; yet, it also had never enjoyed
a moment of usefulness. I would rather be a house that was useful for a little
while than to be a house that was never useful.
Too many Christians who
have never done much for God are critical of those who fell from a life of
usefulness into a life of sin. Most evildoers are self-righteous critics of
people who at least tried to serve God. Why don't we help our fallen rather
than participate in their destruction? Christians ought never to criticize
another Christian for any reason. Let's form alliances to lift the fallen, not
to criticize them. Stay away from people who seek to destroy others.
Jesus was a friend of
sinners, but rebuked those who accused others. That is what all of us should
do. We should lift up the fallen sinner and flee from those who seek to do
damage to anyone.
What does the Bible say to
do if someone is trying to do evil to us? Romans 12:21, 'Be not
overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good." Just keep doing good! Stay on the course of doing good
just like Jesus did. The best defense against evil accusations is to keep on
serving the Lord and helping others. I have never helped myself by answering
the accusations of my critics, but my ministry of doing good has been my
defense. God has kept on blessing my efforts to reach the lost and help the
hurting. That will be your best defense as well!
When evil men conspire to
hurt you, just keep doing good. Do not allow them to draw you into the wrong
fight. Just overcome their evil with good. Do not seek revenge. Seek the lost.
Fallen sinners do not know your hurt. They just need someone who will help them
and love them. They do not care what people are saying about you; they need
your help!
Nehemiah just kept on doing
good. Joseph just kept on doing good and even provided food for his brothers.
The Apostle Paul just kept on doing good in spreading the Gospel of salvation.
That is what this hurting world needs us to do. Just keep on doing good. Let
others do their evil. Do not join them even to fight them. Overcome their evil
with good.
Chapter Fifteen
THE MOST COMMON
METHOD OF INJUSTICE
"And they that had laid hold on
Jesus led him away to Caiaphas the high priest, where the scribes and the
elders were assembled. But Peter followed him afar off unto the high priest's
palace, and went in, and sat with the servants, to see the end. Now the chief priests,
and elders, and all the council, sought false witness against Jesus, to put him
to death; But found none: yea, though many false witnesses came, yet found they
none. At the last came two false witnesses, And said, This fellow said, Jam
able to destroy the temple of God, and to build it in three days. And the high
priest arose, and said unto him, Answerest thou nothing? what is it which these
witness against thee? But Jesus held his peace. And the high priest answered
and said unto him, I adjure thee by the living god, that thou tell us whether
thou be the Christ, the son of God." Matthew 26:57-63
The most important
attribute of God is His justice. God will not be unjust. We are to be like
Jesus, so if justice is God's most important attribute, then it is also to be
our most important attribute. Justice should be the most important thing to
God's People. Justice is rightness. It is doing the right thing. This is why
this chapter is so important. I am going to list the twelve most common ways
Christians are not just. It is just as wrong for us to be wrong in our areas of
judgment as it is for a judge who sits on the bench in a courtroom.
1. Not liking someone. That
is judging! God shows no favorites. We are to become conformed to the image of
His Son. If you do not like someone, it is usually because you are prejudging
them. This is what prejudice is. When you decide that you do not like something
about someone, you have stepped outside of God's plan for justice because you
are judging outside your area of responsibility.
John 15:25, "But this cometh to
pass, that the word might be fulfilled that is written in their law, They hated
me without a cause." They hated
Jesus without a cause. We have no right to dislike anyone. That is not just!
2. Listening to one
witness. If a person tells you he saw someone drinking liquor, you are not to
accept it as truth. In fact, you ought to try to avoid listening to it. Never
accept an accusation without two witnesses. I am not saying that you should
call the person a liar, but the Bible says not to receive the accusation. The
philosophy I live by is never to receive any accusation against someone if it
is not in my area of responsibility.
If one person comes
accusing a person, do not listen unless he is an eyewitness and has a second
eyewitness with him. If someone comes to you and tells you something bad he
heard about someone, you are disobedient if you listen to it! If two witnesses
come to you, and if it is inside your jurisdiction, you must then investigate
it. These two witnesses should come to you together and present their account
together.
We are not to read
accusations against individuals in magazines or newspapers. We are not to
listen to them on the radio or television.
I was with Dr. John Rice in a
restaurant in Claremont, California. Dr. Rice was reading in the sports page
about Richie Allen, a controversial baseball player who played for the
Philadelphia Phillies and the Chicago White Sox. Dr. Rice said,
"Dr. Hyles,
isn't Richie Allen awful?"
I said, "How do you
know, Dr. Rice?"
He said, "Well,
haven't you read what the papers say about him?"
I said, "Dr. Rice,
have you read what the papers say about you?"
Dr. Rice looked up at me over
his glasses and said, "You are preaching to me, son!"
That is the way we all are.
We read an article by a liberal writer who is paid to dig up smut and garbage
against people, and then we believe what he says simply because he said it.
That is not right!
3. Listening to two people
who are not witnesses. You are not to receive two accusers who heard something.
The Bible says not to receive it unless there are two or more witnesses, but
still, you should not receive it as truth. Receive it like the Supreme Court
would receive a case. Receive it to be reviewed in order to hand down a
decision based on all of the evidence presented, but do not receive the case if
two people come to you who are not eyewitnesses!
4. Telling others what one
witness told you. God in Heaven is holding us accountable for what we say about
people. This destroys more churches than all the dope and liquor combined. You
are not to "pass on" stuff that is bad.
5. Having an opinion because of what one witness says.
6. Believing two witnesses.
Just because two witnesses say they saw something does not give us the right to
believe it is true. It allows me only to receive it and investigate it. Most of
the time we want to believe it. In fact, if two witnesses make something true,
Jesus was guilty because He had two witnesses accusing Him. The fact that two
people say something does not make it true. I have seen situations where people lied about what they saw.
I've seen other situations where the individual was really not sure about what
he saw!
7. Investigating without
two witnesses. Often a person will come to me to tell me something he saw, and
I will tell him that I refuse to receive it unless he has another witness. It
is wrong to investigate something you heard if it did not come from two or more
Witnesses. In our investigating, we end up spreading the garbage. Wouldn't you
rather spread the message that Jesus died for sinners? If we preachers across
America spent as much time spreading the message of Christ as we do trying to
destroy each other, we could win this world to Christ. Often the same preacher
who will spread slander will also criticize the church that is trying to
aggressively spread the Gospel of Jesus Christ to sinners.
8. Seeking witnesses or
seeking a second witness. If you hear gossip or slander, it is wrong for you to
begin an investigation to see if you can find a witness or witnesses. It is
wicked and unscriptural, for in doing so, you begin to spread the accusations.
The Bible says they are to come to you, not that you are to seek them.
We live in a world of
investigation. One of the greatest tragedies of our day is investigative
journalism. The average reporter is nothing more
than a second-class detective. The press is not interested in the facts unless
they contain something bad. Say, don't criticize the press if you are doing the
very same thing!
9. Making the decision and
then seeking for proof. Matthew 26:4, 'And consulted that they might
take Jesus by subtilty, and kill him." This
is what happened to Jesus. They had already decided to kill Him, so they had to
find some way to do it legally. They had already made their decision as to what
they were going to do. They were interested only in finding a reason to do what
they were going to do anyway. That is wrong!
I always pull for
innocence. I always hope that the accused individuals are not guilty. They are
fellow human beings, and I do not want to have them guilty of the things they
were accused of doing.
Do you pull for innocence
or guilt? In every case of accusation, you ought to pull for innocence — not
the guilty to be acquitted, but for the accused to be innocent! Always pull for
innocence, not guilt. If a judge in a courtroom pulled for guilt, we would say
that was unjust; yet, that is no different than when we pull for guilt. We
prejudge and then we investigate to prove what we have already decided!
Luke 19:47, 'And he taught daily in the
temple. But the chief priests and the scribes and the chief of the people
sought to destroy him." They "sought
to destroy" Jesus. The word,
"sought," means, "a plot by inquiry from His worst
enemies."
There are people all over
America who have sought to destroy preachers. They are not trying to find the
truth. They have already decided that they would consign them to guilt. Whom do
they question? Loyal friends? Staff? No! They question enemies and those who
hate them the most!
Many of us are guilty of
doing the same thing; however, the sentence is to be handed down after the
trial, not before!
10. Seeking only the negative.
John 11:47, "Then gathered the chief priests and the Pharisees a
council, and said, What do we? for this man doeth many miracles." The enemies of Jesus got together to form a plot
seeking only the negative against Him. They hoped it would divert the attention
of the people away from all the good things He had done. It is wicked if we do
the same thing!
11. Wanting to find guilt.
12. Seeking only one side.
Those who accused Jesus could have called for the blind man Jesus healed in
John 9. They could have called for Bartimaeus, whose sight Jesus restored in
Mark 10, or the man whose son was healed in Matthew 17, and gotten their
opinion of Jesus. They were not seeking the truth. They wanted only to find
something for which they could accuse Him!
What do you do when you are
standing in line at the grocery store and you see a smut magazine with some
awful accusation against a famous person? Do you sneak it into your groceries
so you can read it later? We need to reach a point where it is not fun to hear
bad!
The mob that tried Jesus
reasoned the same way most of us do, but we are not to judge the way that mob
judged Jesus. This applies to your friends and neighbors also. It is time for
God's people to stop being crooked judges; yet, we often do these twelve unjust
things! Sadly, there is more unjust judging going on in churches than in the
courthouses of most of our cities.
Do you understand why they
judged Jesus unjustly and why they sought to kill Him? The Bible says that they
did it because of envy. That is also why we judge people unjustly. It is
because we envy someone who is doing more than we are doing or someone who has
more than we have.
I was preaching in a church
in Virginia where I had preached before, but which then had a new pastor. When
I arrived, the new preacher said, "Brother Hyles, I know you have probably
heard all kinds of bad things about the former pastor. I want to tell you the
truth of what really happened."
I said, "No, you're
not!"
He said, "I need to
tell you the truth."
I said, "No, you
don't!"
He said, "Dr. Hyles, I
am going to tell you."
I started to get out of his
car and go back to the airport. He said, "What are you doing?"
I said, "I did not
come to hear bad news. I came to spread good news." For the three days I
was there, no one told me a negative word because I decided I would not listen
to it!
Later I was in North
Carolina, and that former preacher drove up to see me. In tears he told me that
he heard I had refused to listen to any "talk" about him. He said,
"Brother Hyles, you are the best friend I have." I spent several
hours counseling him, trying to help him get back on his feet and serving God
again. He had not done anything to forfeit his right to be in the ministry, and
a couple of years later he was back in the ministry. Now God is using him more
than ever!
Let's be just! Let's pull
for the innocence of people, not for their guilt. Try it! You'll like it!
Chapter Sixteen
GOOD AND EVIL
"The elder unto the well-beloved
Gaius, whom I love in the truth. Beloved, thou doest faithfully whatsoever thou
doest to the brethren, and to strangers; which have borne witness of thy
charity before the church: whom if thou bring forward on thy journey after a
godly sort, thou shalt do well." III John 1, 5, 6
"I wrote unto the church: but
Diotrephes, whom loveth to have the preeminence among them, receiveth us not.
Wherefore, if I come, I will remember his deeds which he doeth,
prating against us with malicious words: and not content therewith, neither
doth he himself receive the brethren, and forbiddeth them that would, and
casteth them out of the church. Beloved, follow not that which is evil, but
that which is good. He that doeth good is of God: but he that doeth evil hath
not seen God. Demetrius hath good report of all men...." III John 9-12
There are several words
which are used for sin in the Greek, but not one of them is ever translated as
"evil." Likewise, the words for evil are never translated
"sin." It is very plain that the words "sin" and
"evil" are not the same. Evil and sin are not Synonymous! Evil is
always sin, but sin is not always evil.
"Sin" is
"missing the mark." "Evil" is a sin which injures another
person. Losing one's temper is sin. Taking a drink of liquor is sin. Committing
an immoral act is sin. However, selling or making liquor is evil. Gossip or
slander is evil. Distributing pornography is evil. Evil is the sin of bringing
harm to others when you sin.
Evil is a conspiratorial
type of sin. It is usually an alliance of people trying to injure someone, or a
conspiracy to bring harm to an individual.
Psalm 51 deals with David's
confession of his sin against Bathsheba and against Uriah, her husband. In
Psalm 51:4a he says, "Against
thee, thee only, have I sinned." David
was referring to his act of adultery with Bathsheba. David goes on to say, '... and done this evil in
thy sight." The evil David confesses is
his conspiracy to have Uriah killed. David's sin was his passionate act of
adultery with Bathsheba. His evil was his planned act of having Uriah killed.
It was worse for David to conspire to kill Uriah than it was for him to fall
into adultery. Both were terrible sins, but the evil was the most wicked
offense.
Evil is the worst of sins.
Thirty-four times in the
Bible you will find the words, "good" and "evil," mentioned
side by side. Every time they are mentioned together, the word,
"good," has a beneficiary. It is speaking of doing good to someone.
It does not mean being a good person but doing good deeds, such as feeding the
hungry, sheltering the homeless, encouraging the discouraged, or winning the
lost. It is used in these cases as an act of benevolence toward someone.
In this chapter I am going
to give you seven truths concerning this matter of evil and good.
1. Evil is worse
than other sin. Even if a person deserves to be
hurt, we are never justified in hurting him. Vengeance belongs to God, not to
man. When you try to hurt someone, that is evil and is the worst type of sin.
Gossip is worse than cursing because it has the intent of injuring someone. We
have our own sets of standards by which we define right and wrong, but God has
a different set of standards. God does not want us plotting or conspiring to
hurt or injure anyone. That is the worst type of sin, and God calls it evil.
We are not to treat people
who sin in the same way we treat people who do evil. I often preach about
salvaging people who have gone into the depths of such sin as alcoholism, drug
addiction, fornication or adultery. Jesus was a friend to people like these,
but He was not a friend of evil people. He was a friend of sinners, but in no
place in God's Word do we find Him associating with evil people. In fact, He
rebuked them. He spoke very harshly to the scribes and Pharisees because they
were evil and conspired to hurt others. It is evil to conspire to hurt anyone.
So bad are those who do evil that we are to avoid them totally. Romans 16:17, "Now I beseech you, brethren, mark
them which cause divisions and offenses contrary to the doctrine which ye have
learned; and avoid them."
There are three men
mentioned in III John. Gaius and Demetrius were good men, but Diotrephes was an
evil man. John said that Diotrephes "prated" against him which means
"to bring false accusations." Even the beloved John had someone in
the church who was maliciously accusing him. Every church has its good men like
Gaius and Demetrius, but every church also has evil men like Diotrephes who try
to destroy others with their evil and malicious words and works.
John, under the authority
of the Holy Spirit, instructed the rest of the people as to how they were to
respond. "Beloved, follow not that which is evil." (III
John ha) Diotrephes was evil because he was
the one who was falsely accusing the others. He was trying to injure other
Christians. John warned them not to follow him.
Do not follow accusers! You
are much safer following the accused than you are following the accusers. We
are never to follow the accusers. We are to avoid them entirely. In fact, we
are to mark them and avoid them.
So, whom are we to follow?
The Bible tells us to follow those who are doing good to others. Often, those
are the ones who are being attacked. You are not to follow those you like the
most. You are to follow those who are living their lives doing things that are
beneficial to others. Follow people like Gaius and Demetrius, not those who
maliciously accuse people, as did Diotrephes.
2. Evil comes because of
good. The most criticized people in the world are people who are doing
something. Our media is dedicated to the tearing down of individuals who seem
to be having a positive influence on the lives of others. Show me a church busy
reaching the lost and fallen, and I will show you scandals. Evil people plot
against those who are doing the most good. Romans 7:21 says, "I find then a law, that, when I would do good;
evil is present with me."
Evil always follows good — not
just being good, but the actions of doing good. The connection is always there.
Evil comes because of good and is an organized plot to stop it. The Devil is
behind it all. He does not want people to be helped. The prophet Jeremiah bemoaned
the fact that even though he gave himself to the doing of good, evil was recompensed to him. Jeremiah 18:20a, "Shall evil be recompensed for good? for they have
digged a pit for my soul."
Many evil people do not
realize that it is the Devil who is inspiring them. They naively are being used
to attack good works. The Devil is much more vicious toward doing good than he
is toward being good. Why? Being good affects only you. Doing good affects many
others. That is why soul-winning churches are under such vicious attack, but
"deeper life" churches are not. They are not getting anyone out of
Hell. They are just sitting there being good. They don't run buses or have
Sunday school campaigns. Evil does not attack the "be-gooders." It
attacks the "do-gooders."
3. Good is what overcomes
evil. Good is both the cause and the cure for evil. Evildoers attack those who
are doing good, yet the greatest weapon against evil is more good. Romans 12:21, "Be not overcome of evil, but
overcome evil with good."
If someone conspires to do
evil against you, you are commanded by God's Word to overcome it with good. You
can have victory over evil only by doing more good. Do not attack the evil. Do
not organize a warfare against the evildoer. If you do, you have joined them in
their sin. I Peter 3:8, 9a,
"Finally, be ye all of one mind, having compassion one of another, love as
brethren, be pitiful, be courteous; not rendering evil for evil." I
Thessalonians 5:l5a, "See that none render evil for evil unto any
man."
The Devil is trying to
destroy you. Evil men cannot destroy you unless they can cause you to begin
doing the same thing they are doing. Do not render evil for evil, hurt for
hurt, or conspiracy for conspiracy! Keep on doing good. Keep on helping the
needy and reaching the lost. That is the only way to conquer evil.
4. More good causes more
evil. The more good you do the more evil will come. Do not be surprised when
people try to destroy you. Evil will come to those who are doing good, and more
evil will come to those who overcome evil with more good.
5. Doing good will always
overcome evil, but evil cannot overcome doing good.
6. Evil can be the
motivation for doing good. Evildoers force us to do more good just so we can
continue to overcome them. The more people have attacked First Baptist Church
the greater the work of reaching the lost has become. We have done more good
because of the evildoers. That is Biblical. It is warfare! When one side
escalates its efforts, the other side automatically escalates its efforts. God
always means for His people to turn evil into good. That is exactly what Joseph
did. Genesis 50:19, 20, "And
Joseph said unto them, Fear not: for am I in the place of God? But as for you,
ye thought evil against me; but God meant it unto good; to bring to pass, as it
is this day, to save much people alive."
7. Evil can make you or
break you; it is up to you. Evil can be the best
thing that ever happened to you, or it can cause you to self destruct. It is up
to you. Evil people can destroy you or help you. They can lead you to greater
good or to evil, destroying the good you are doing. I Corinthians 10:13, "There hath no temptation
take you but such as is common to man: but God is faithful, who will not suffer
you to be tempted above that ye are able; but will with the temptation also
make a way to escape, that ye may be able to bear it."
God will never allow you to
be tested more than you are able to bear. I am able to bear the evil that is
against me because God enables me. I may choose not to bear it, but I am able.
God never allows more evil to come to you than you can bear. God will not allow
evildoers to hurt you more than you can take.
How can you bear the evil
that comes from doing good? Go out and do more good. Do not cry or seek for
pity. You don't overcome evil with sympathy or pity. You overcome evil
with good! Do not resort to evil to overcome
evil because it will never work, and you
will become evil in the process. You will hurt only yourself. Overcome evil
with good.
Good causes evil. Good
overcomes evil which causes more evil which causes more good. The more good you
do, the more evil will attack you. The measure of good most of us do will in
large measure be a result of the evil that is done to us.
Chapter Seventeen
THE SUBCONSCIOUS —
OUR COMPUTER
"When thou sittest to eat with a
ruler, consider diligently what is before thee: And put a knife to thy throat,
if thou be a man given to appetite. Be not desirous of his dainties: for they
are deceitful meat. Labour not to be rich: cease from thine own wisdom. Wilt
thou set thine eyes upon that which is not? for riches certainly make
themselves wings; they fly away as an eagle toward heaven. Eat thou not the
bread of him that hath an evil eye, neither desire thou his dainty meats: For
as a man thinketh in his heart, so is he: Eat and drink saith he to thee; but
his heart is not with thee." Proverbs 23:1-7
The conscious is the mind.
The subconscious is the heart. The mind is like a computer. The subconscious
mind is like that which is programmed into a computer. When you type something
into a computer, it shows up on the screen. There is a key you can press that
will delete that material and thus prevent it from being stored in the
computer's memory. The typing of that material is similar to our conscious
minds. Sometimes you cannot stop something from being entered onto the screen
of the computer, but you can keep it from being stored in the memory of the
computer. There is a way you can delete it!
I have tried for many years
always to keep my mind on what is fair and right. I want to share with you some
of the things I have used to keep unjust or judgmental thoughts from being
stored in the subconscious memory of my mind and heart.
When a thought enters your
minds, it can either be stored in your heart or deleted before it gets
there. That is why the Bible says, "For
as he thinketh in his heart, so is he." No
one actually thinks with the heart, but the heart is the subconscious mind. How
can you protect your heart in this area of justice?
1. Get a reputation for not
listening to bad things. It is better not to allow something onto the screen of
the computer that you do not want stored inside the memory of the computer.
There are people who do not listen to bad, and those people are two steps away
from thinking about things that they should not. It's not in their mind because
they refuse to listen to it. There are very few Christians who live this way.
Years ago, Dr. Curtis
Hutson was experiencing a rebellion at The Sword of the Lord. Some people were
trying to get him removed as editor. Dr. Hutson called me and told me that he
was in trouble if I did not come and help him. I flew there to fight for him,
and we were able to overcome the rebellion. I met with some of those who were
against Dr. Huts on, but who were still my good and loyal friends. I asked them
why they did not come to me for advice before they rebelled. They told me that
it was because they already knew where I would stand. They knew I would defend
God's man! Because of my reputation, the bad things they were saying about Dr.
Hutson never got on the screen of my mind. If you get that kind of reputation,
people will seldom bring gossip and slander to you. This will help you the rest
of your life.
2. Stop people in their
conversation if you see bad coming. I want to keep bad things from getting to
my subconscious mind. If I cannot keep it off the screen of my mind, before all
of it gets put there, I am going to try to stop it from being finished. I am
going to avoid as much of it as I can. Often people will ask me if I heard the
news about someone. I ask them if it is good or bad. If it's bad, I stop them
from telling me any more. I do not want to hear it. If it is in my area of
judgment, and if there are two witnesses, I must listen. Otherwise I try to
stop it when I see it coming.
If you cannot stop it and
it gets on the screen of your mind, immediately say, "It isn't true!"
or "I don't believe it!" Then the next time you see that person or
think of him, you will have those
words entered right beside
the accusation. If you do think of the accusation in your subconscious mind, it
will be accompanied by the fact you do not believe it and that it is not true!
You must come to the place in your life where you do not want bad to get into
your mind, or you will soon have an evil subconscious mind. Protect your heart,
or you will become evil as well. You must fight to prevent evil thoughts from
being stored in the computer of your mind.
3. If you have heard it, immediately talk about
something else. Before those words are
allowed to be stored, change the subject to get your mind off the evil and on
something good. Before the thought lodges in your heart, you must quickly shoot
it back out. The best way to do that is with another thought. The best way to
get another thought is to say something else. If you want to change your
thought process, start talking! Talking occupies your mind more than just
thinking. Talking aloud will change the way you think. It is difficult to think
of one thing when talking about something else.
Every place I go I have
things planned to talk about because almost everywhere I go somebody wants to
tell me something bad. Sometimes I even take along some notes so I am prepared
to change the subject if someone begins to tell me bad. I would rather be rude
than to allow my mind to be filled with garbage.
Your subconscious mind will
judge a person to be guilty if you allow the accusation against that person to
enter your subconscious. The most effective way to destroy someone is to
bombard people with lies about them. Every time the bad enters their minds, it
will by association cause people to condemn the individual. Tragically it gets
into the subconscious mind of most people, and the subconscious mind convicts the
accused.
4. Do not allow your mind
to picture it. You can put pictures in your mind, or you can keep them out of
your mind. If you do not keep that picture out of your mind, your subconscious
will have stored a picture of someone doing something bad that they have been
accused of doing, even if they did not do it. You must not let that happen! You
cannot serve God with that type of mind. Eventually that is what you will
become.
5. Do not read about it. Anytime
you read something, it is programmed in the subconscious mind, and you cannot
get it out of your mind. Avoid reading materials that will tell you things that
you do not want stored in your subconscious mind.
6. Do not think about it a
second time. The second time you think about something it is in the
subconscious mind. Control your mind. Paul tells us to think on certain things.
Why? To keep control of your mind and to avoid the polluting of your
subconscious. You would be amazed how much becomes stored in your subconscious
mind, including the negative. It is there, and you will never get it out, but
you can fix your mind on the right thoughts so that the bad thoughts will not
enter your mind.
7. Do not believe it, and
do not disbelieve it. When something is said, do not make any judgment whatsoever!
That is called "no decision." It is the third position: (1) guilty,
(2) not guilty, and (3) no decision. There is a place in your mind that allows
you not to make a judgment of guilty or not guilty. Let me tell you when you
should use this concept of "no decision."
(1) Any time it is
something that is not in your area of responsibility. If you hear something bad
about someone who is not in your area, you are to make no judgment.
Fundamentalism is infested with negativism. We have come to the place where we
seem to like garbage. We hunt for it. We relish in it.
(2) When it is information
that someone heard.
(3) When there is only one
witness.
(4) When there are two
witnesses and I still cannot prove it to be true.
You have one mind, and you
can either fill it with evil or you can protect it from evil. If you fill your
heart with evil, you will become evil. Fill your mind with good reports of
people instead of bad reports. The reason why I have been a happy person is
because every day of my life I protect my mind. I refuse to allow my mind to be
a garbage dump!
Chapter Eighteen
AN EXAMPLE OF EVIL
"And it came to pass after this,
that Absalom prepared him chariots and horses, and fifty men to run before him.
And Absalom rose up early, and stood beside the way of the gate: and it was so,
that when any man that had a controversy came to the king for judgment, then
Absalom called unto him, and said, Of what city art thou? And he said, See, thy
matters are good and right; but there is no man deputed of the king to hear
thee. Absalom said moreover Oh that I were made judge in the land, that every
man which hath any suit or cause might come unto me, and I would do him
justice! And it was so, that when any man came nigh to him to do him obeisance,
heput forth his hand, and took him, and kissed him. And on this manner did
Absalom to all Israel that came to the king for judgment: so Absalom stole the
hearts of the men of Israel. And it came to pass after forty years, that
Absalom said unto the king, I pray thee, let me go and pay my vow, which I have
vowed unto the LORD, in Hebron." II Samuel 15:1-7
For 40 years Absalom spread
his rebelliousness to the people one person at a time! For 40 years he
undermined the authority of his own father, David!
This is a Biblical example
of evil. We will see some characteristics that almost always accompany evil. I
am not speaking of sin; I am speaking of evil! I am speaking of some type of
conspiracy between people to hurt somebody else. The example is the sad story
of a son, Absalom, and his father, David. There are twelve things that usually
accompany evil.
1. Evil is usually
committed by attractive people. II Samuel 14.25, "But in all
Israel there was none to be so much praised as Absalom for his beauty: from the
sole of his foot even to the crown of his head there was no blemish in
him." The Devil knows that if he is
going to try to destroy people, he will need people with charisma to be used in
that destruction.
2. Usually the evil is
caused by hurt feelings from a long time ago. II Samuel 14:28, "So Absalom dwelt two full years in Jerusalem, and
saw not the king's face."
Absalom's brother, Amnon,
had raped his sister, Tamar, so Absalom plotted to have Amnon killed. For two
years David would not allow Absalom to come before his throne. Forty-two years
later, Absalom culminated his revolt against his father!
In almost every person
trying to do evil, I can find something in the distant past for which they were
offended. That is why it is important not to allow your hurt feelings to
linger. Get it out immediately before it leads you to do evil.
3. Evil is usually a
lifelong task. When David told Absalom that he could not come before his throne
for two years, it festered in the heart of Absalom. For 40 years he went from
person to person to spread his vicious lies concerning David. He did it one man
at a time for 40 years, just like most bitter people do.
4. Evil usually begins with
private conversations. So often the person who wants to injure someone else
starts his campaign with one or two individuals. He may even make them feel
that he is confiding in them.
5. Evil is usually against
someone who helped to build the one who is telling the lies and spreading the
tales. Absalom was the king's son. It was David who fed him, clothed him,
trained him, loved him and educated him. Absalom got another man named
Ahithophel on his side against David. Ahithophel had been a childhood friend of
David. David had taken him from being a "nobody" to being his top advisor
and a famous man in the land. Yet, Ahithophel turned on David — the
very man who had made him what he was! Even worse than that is the story of
Mephibosheth, the crippled son of Jonathan and grandson of Saul. David sent his
servant, Ziba, to Lo-debar to bring Mephibosheth back to the palace in honor of
Saul and Jonathan. David adopted him as his own son, let him live in the
palace, let him sit at the king's table and made him an heir of all that David
had. Yet, Mephibosheth turned on David and conspired to do him evil!
Every pastor will tell you
that the ones who turn on you are usually the ones for whom you have done the
most. These evil ones will hurt you with people they would not have known
without you. We have hired young men at Hyles-Anderson College who were not
known outside of their own dormitory rooms. Eventually we have allowed them to
speak in front of the nation at Pastors' School or Youth Conference and
literally helped make the young men famous. Then they have tried to hurt us
with the fame they would never have known without us. We lifted them up, so
that they could kick us down!
6. It is usually against
someone who has helped you in the past. Several years ago a man came to me who
was experiencing serious financial problems. I helped him by making his car
payment for five years; yet, that man turned on me. I could tell you story
after story of people throughout my ministry whom I have helped, yet who have
turned against me and who have tried to do evil to me. I am not bitter because
it is what God has called me to do, but it has been that way throughout my
ministry.
7. It is usually against a
former hero. The very person who was the object of his admiration becomes the
focal point of his evil intent.
8. Usually it is their evil
that brought the conspirators of evil together. Their common cause is
destruction. Wouldn't it be tragic to spend your life with a group of people
with a common goal of doing nothing but destroying someone? I am thankful that
the causes of my life and of those around me are to keep people from going to
Hell, lift up the fallen, reclaim those who have fallen away and bring back
those who have gone away!
II Samuel 15:12, "And Absalom sent
for Ahithophel the Gilonite, David's counsellor, from his city, even from Giloh,
while he offered sacnfices. And the conspiracy was strong; for the people
increased continually with A bsalom." It was their common desire to do
evil to David that brought Absalom and A hit hop hel together.
9. They usually do it
again. Folks are not evil because they do evil; they do evil because they are
evil. When you get into the habit of doing evil, you will do it again and
again. That is why it is important that you keep on doing good when someone
does evil to you. The Devil would like nothing more than for you to join his
crowd of evildoers. He wants you to start fighting back. You may have to defend
yourself, but you can defend yourself without attacking somebody else. When
evil comes your way, overcome the evil with more good!
When they do it again, they
usually do it to each other! I have seen churches all over America where the
pastor was attacked by some evildoers who caused the church to split. They
start a new church, and within a few years, the very group that split off into
another church had split again! Why? Because they are church splitters. They
are evildoers!
10. Usually you will hear
very little about them again. Ahithophel is not spoken of in the Bible again,
nor is Mephibosheth. After Korah's rebellion he was not mentioned in the Bible
anymore. Even after Barnabas left Paul, nothing he did was ever mentioned
again.
You had better check and
see what happened to the last batch before you ship out. In the history of
Hyles-Anderson College we have had several people who were totally unknown
before they came to work here. They left as nationally known people, but almost
no one knows where they are now!
Before you sit down and
listen to evildoers or become one yourself, you better check on what has
happened to others before you. Look at what happened to Absalom. Absalom died
by getting his hair caught in a tree.
11. They usually think they
have outgrown their leader. A student comes to a college and sits at the feet
of a great Christian leader who teaches him. He admires and respects that
leader. He looks to him as a hero. Then that student gets to the place where he
thinks he knows more than his teacher knows. What happened? The student failed
to realize that while he was growing and learning, so was that teacher! That
teacher still knows far more than the student!
I am never going to outgrow
the people who got me where I am. Neither will you. You will never feel as
lonely as you will feel that first night you go to bed after you have tried to
destroy your leader. You will have lost a security that you will never
understand until you lose it. Every person needs somebody to whom they look. If
you stick with that person, you will go farther under him than you will ever go
by yourself without him. You will become a greater person.
I know men who were once
great "second men" in America and were known nationwide. They came to
a point where they thought they had outgrown their leader and even did evil to
their leader. They have gone out thinking they were going to build a great ministry,
but have totally disappeared from the scene!
Many years ago I decided
never to betray those who have made me what I am. I never betrayed my mother. I
never betrayed my pastor. I never betrayed those who helped to put me where I
am!
12. It is usually those who
have built nothing on their own. So often a person thinks that if he tears down
someone else, it will make him taller. However, that never works! So the person
who has built nothing on his own now trys to tear down what another has
successfully built.
You will not have a full,
rich life by doing evil to people. You will have a full, rich life only by
doing good. I could list the names of godly, good, soul-winning men who were
viciously attacked and then rendered evil for evil. It destroyed their ministry.
It is hard not to do. However if you will just keep on doing good, the
evildoers will not cause you to lose the blessings of God by also becoming an
evildoer.
There is no way you can
live above sin, but you can live above evil. In the Lord's prayer, it does not
say, "deliver us from sin," but from "evil." You cannot be
delivered from sin, but you can be delivered from evil!
Chapter Nineteen
STOP THE SIN BEFORE
IT BECOMES EVIL
"Let no man say when he is tempted,
Jam tempted of God: for God cannot be tempted with evil, neither tempteth he
any man: But every man is tempted, when he is drawn away of his own lust, and
enticed. Then when lust hath conceived it bringeth forth sin: and sin, when it
is finished, bringeth forth death." James 1:13-15
There is a space of time
between when a person sins and the time a person does evil. During that time we
can stop ourselves from the doing of evil. We cannot live above sin, but we can
prevent it from becoming evil. Let me give you six statements concerning the
process of sin becoming evil.
1. Sinful people can
administer justice; evil people cannot administer justice. A sinful man
can get forgiveness for his sin and then properly administer justice. A man who
is part of a conspiracy, who plans to do evil, who is bent toward doing evil,
and plots and prepares to do evil is so torn up by prejudice that he will not
be able to administer justice. You cannot be just if you are evil. You can be
just if you are sinful.
2. Evil
is sin when it is finished. A preacher who once followed me in a pastorate
became very bitter at me because the people kept comparing everything he did to
the way I had done things. I could understand his feelings of anger and why he
would be upset with me. His anger was sin, but I could understand how that
could happen. Then the man decided that he was going to try to destroy me. It
was sin when he became angry at me, but it was evil when he decided to try to
destroy me.
The Bible says that
"sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death." That pastor did not
die physically, but he was soon forced to leave the church which led to the
death of a great ministry. It brought forth the death of his marriage as he and
his wife divorced. It brought forth the death of his ministry because he was
forced to leave the ministry. It all happened because he allowed sin to become
evil.
When you lose your temper,
that is sin; yet, it will not destroy you. When that anger turns into a plot to
hurt someone, that becomes evil and will bring forth death to your joy, your
testimony, your effectiveness and your blessings. All of this happens when sin
becomes evil.
3. Sin left alone
will eventually become evil. The minute you realize that you've sinned, you
ought to run to your prayer closet, ask God to forgive you, and then forsake
that sin. If you leave that sin unconfessed, it will fester and will eventually
lead you to evil. That is what happened to Absalom after 40 years.
4. You have a period of time
after you sin before you become evil. There is a time between your initial
anger at a person and the time you want to hurt him. If you lose your temper
and hit somebody, that is sin, but it is not evil. Evil is plotted or planned.
Evil will sooner or later come if you do not get that sin forgiven. God allows
you a certain amount of time between the act of sin and the time that sin
progresses to becoming evil sin. Let us look at some examples.
Saul
I Samuel 18:6-11, "And it came to
pass as they came, when David was returned from the slaughter of the
Philistine, that the women came out of all cities of Israel, singing and
dancing, to meet king Saul, with tabrets, with joy, and with instruments of
musick. And the women answered one another as they played, and said, Saul hath
slain his thousands, and David his ten thousands. And Saul was very wroth, and
the saying displeased him; and he said, They have
ascribed unto David ten thousands, and to
me they have ascribed but thousands: and what can he have more but the kingdom?
And Saul eyed David from that day and forward. And it came to pass on the
morrow, that the evil spirit from God came upon Saul, and he prophesied in the
midst of the house: and David played with his hand, as at other times: and
there was a javelin in Saul's hand. And Saul cast the javelin; for he said, I
will smite David even to the wall with it. And David avoided out of his
presence twice."
The young David fought and
killed Goliath. King Saul should have done so because he was the king and was
head and shoulders above the people. When the women began to sing greater
praises to David than to Saul, he became angry, which was sin. Finally an evil
spirit came upon Saul.
Instead of repenting of his
sin, Saul became angry, began to eye David carefully, and finally decided to
kill him. Saul developed a plan to kill David, and as a result, he lost not
only the spirit of God, but also his kingdom, his power and eventually, his
life. It did not have to happen. If Saul would have corrected his sin before it
became evil, it could have been avoided. Instead, it brought forth death to his
power, his kingdom, and his usefulness to God. All of this happened because
Saul let sin become evil.
Sin in one's life will
fester until it becomes evil. Go to your prayer closet, fall on your face, ask
for forgiveness, and forsake it before it becomes evil and brings forth death.
Absalom
II Samuel 15:4-7, "Absalom said
moreover, Oh that I were made judge in the land, that every man which hath any
suit or cause might come unto me, and I would do him justice! And it was so,
that when any man came nigh to him to do obeisance, he put forth his hand, and
took him, and kissed him. And on this manner did Absalom to all Israel that
came to the kingfor judgment: so Absalom stole the hearts of the men of Israel.
And it came to pass afterforty years, that Absalom said unto the king, I pray
thee, let me go and pay my vow, which I have vowed unto the Lord, in
Hebron."
Absalom began by committing
the sin of covetousness. He wanted his father's kingdom; his father's throne;
his father's sceptre, and his father's crown. He coveted until he reached a
point when he I decided that he would plot to get it. That is when it became
evil. Covetousness may seem insignificant, but like every sin, if it is left I
unconfessed, it will eventually become evil. In the end, it brought forth death
to Absalom.
David
Psalm 51:4, 'Against thee, thee only,
have I sinned, and done this evil in thy sight: that thou mightest be justified
when thou speakest, and be clear when thou judgest."
David stayed home one day
and saw Bathsheba bathing. In a moment of passion and lust, David committed
adultery. When he found out that Bathsheba was pregnant, he realized he had to
do something. To cover his sin, he arranged for Uriah to come home to sleep
with his wife, Bathsheba. Uriah refused to enjoy his wife while his fellow
soldiers were dying on the battlefield, so David plotted Uriah's death.
Suddenly, David's sin had become evil. David realizing this, not only confessed
his sin of adultery but also his evil against Uriah. Whatever sin you let lie
will eventually lead to evil and then death.
Joseph's Brothers
Joseph's brothers committed
the sin of hatred and envy. They did not confess it, and so they began to hate
him even more. Sin will always grow if you do not confess it. Their hatred
intensified until they envied him and even plotted to kill him. That which
started out as sin became evil. There was time to stop it before it happened,
but they allowed it go to unconfessed. Tragically, it is almost impossible to
stop it once it becomes evil.
5. Justice and evil are
alike in one respect. They are both deliberate. True justice is deliberate
because it requires careful study and contemplation of what is right. True evil
is the same way because it also requires the contemplation of a plot to carry
it out.
6. You can live above
evil. Someone has said that you cannot stop a bird from landing on your
head, but you can stop it from building a nest there. You are going to stumble
into sin, but you do not have to wallow in evil. You can be delivered from evil
if you want to. Psalm 121:7, "The Lord shall preserve thee from
all evil: he shall preserve thy soul." The
Bible does not say that the Lord will preserve you from all sin. You do not
have the power never to do wrong, but you do have the ability within God's
power to be delivered from evil.
John 17:15, "I pray not that thou
shouldest take them out of the world, but that thou shouldest keep them from
the evil." Jesus was praying in
the Garden of Gethsemane. He asked the Father to keep His people from evil. He
knew that in our passion and impulsiveness we were going to sin, so He did not
pray that we would not sin. He prayed that we would be kept from evil. We do
not have to allow sin to lie dormant in our lives and become evil. You can be
delivered out of evil, but by that time you will have already done harm to
people and hurt them.
II Thessalonians 3:3, "But the Lord
isfaithful, who shall stablish you, and keep you from evil." The Bible does not say that God will keep us from sin,
but it does promise that He will keep us from evil. Gossip comes from an evil
heart because it is planned. It comes about because of an unconfessed sin.
How to Stop Sin from Becoming Evil
1. Ask God to give you His love.
I Corinthians 13:5, "Doth not
behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked, thinketh
no evil." Love does not think evil. Love does not plot. You can love
someone and get angry at him. That is sin. You cannot love someone and plot
against him. Sin usually is not thought out when it is started. It is usually
passionate. When it is finished, it is plotted and planned. To keep away from
evil, we must ask God to give us His love because love thinketh no evil.
I have become angry at
people, yet wanted no evil to come to them, because I have asked God to give me
His love. If the love of Christ indwells my heart, I will not do evil, although
I will sin.
2. Pray. In the Lord's
Prayer it says, "...deliver us from evil...." The lesson is that as
soon as you know you have sinned, you should pray and ask God to keep it from
becoming evil.
I realize that there are
many people in this world who hate me and who would like to destroy me, but I
have no desire in my hear to hurt any of them because I beg God not to allow my
sin to germinate into evil. I beg Him to protect my heart from evil.
3. Do not be around evil
people. Psalm 140:1, "Deliver me, 0 LORD, from the evil
man...." You cannot associate with
somebody who is plotting to hurt someone else and not be affected. You are not
to fellowship with evil people. You are not to allow them to preach for you nor
are you to preach with or for them. Proverbs
2:12 "To deliver thee from the way of the evil man, from the man that
speaketh froward things."
The men who come to our
Rescue Mission are not evil men. They are sinful men. Those who sold them the
liquor are evil men, because they willfully conspired to hurt someone else and
to do them evil. You are to avoid that evil person totally. To be in fellowship
with evil people is to be disobedient to God!
There are men who claim to
love me; yet they refuse to disassociate themselves from others who are trying
to do me evil, although I never ask them to do so. I know that eventually they
are going to be affected because God specifically warned them to stay away from
evil men.
Proverbs 4:14-16, "Enter not into
the path of the wicked, and go not in the way of evil men. Avoid it, pass not
by it, turn from it, and pass away. For they sleep not, except that they have
done mischief; and their sleep is taken away, unless they cause some to
fall." God is crystal clear here
that we are to avoid evil men. They are trying to do mischief to someone, and
we are to avoid them totally. Do not travel with evil men. Run from them. If
you do not want to become evil, do not get around evil men. The Bible does not
say to avoid sinful men. It tells us to lift them up, but no place in the Bible
does it tell us to lift up an evil man. Even if you think you can help evil
men, you are to avoid them. Evil men will affect you long before you could ever
change them!
4. Run with the crowd that
is not evil. Hebrews 3:12 13, "Take heed, brethren, lest there
be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief, in departing from the living God.
But exhort one another daily, while it is called To day; lest any of you be
hardened through the deceitfulness of sin." God is telling us to take
heed to our own hearts, lest we become evil. To do that we must be with those
who are not evil. As soon as an evil person tries to spread his evil to you,
find someone who is not evil to exhort you. Do not spread the evil to this one,
but seek his good.
5. Ask a friend to help
you when he sees sin lingering. Choose a good Christian friend and ask him to
come to you and lovingly exhort you if he sees a sin lingering in your life. Be
careful that you do not volunteer to do that for everybody else!
I have seen it happen over
and over again in my ministry. There is a look in the face of a person that is
not a sinful look but an evil one. Sin has festered, and an evil spirit has
come upon him. He ought to go ahead and leave the church at that moment because
he has gone too far! Sin is finished! Evil is come! Death is near!
Check the end of evil people,
and you will see how tragic their end was. You will never hurt anyone as much
by trying to hurt him as you will hurt yourself!
Chapter Twenty
THE WAR BETWEEN
GOOD AND EVIL
'Recompense to no man evil for evil.
Provide things honest in the sight of all men. If it be possible, as much as
lieth in you, live peaceably with all men. Dearly beloved, avenge not
yourselves, but rather give place unto wrath: for it is written, Vengeance is
mine; I will repay, saith the Lord. Therefore if thine enemy hunger,feed him;
if he thirst, give him drink: for in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on
his head. Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good." Romans
12.1 7-21
Let me define several of
the words in this passage. "Recompense" means "giving
back." If someone does you evil, you are not to give it back to him.
"Avenge" means "justice." We are not to seek our own
justice. "Vengeance" has the same root word as "avenge,"
and so it also means "justice." Justice is up to God.
"Repay" refers back to the word "recompense," which means
"to give back."
God is saying that we are
not to give back evil to those who do evil to us. Justice is not our
responsibility, but God's. He will repay or give back evil to those who do evil
to us. We are not to take it into our hands to do so. It is up to us to let God
take care of justice.
I was in a church in
Pennsylvania where a youth pastor decided to rebel against the preacher. He
took about 50 people and started a
church across town. The week prior to that, I was in another church where 40 or
50 people took off and started another church because they were disgruntled
with the pastor. Three weeks earlier I was in a church where about 30 people
had become upset and left to start a church. In most cases, the people involved
were sorry, and the churches that they started have done almost nothing! One of
those three churches no longer has a pastor.
Who are these evil people
that caused trouble in these churches? They are people just like you and me.
They are people who were once happy with their church. They are people who
followed the Devil's progression of evil and did not win the battle against
evil. These are not usually wicked people. They once loved their church and
their pastor, but something happened, and they lost the battle between good and
evil.
Evil is that which injures
someone else. Good is that which benefits someone else. You are not a good
person because of what you are. You are a good person because of what you do.
There is a battle going on now between good and evil. It is a battle going on
in your life.
1. This battle has been
going on since the Garden of Eden. In fact, it started in the Garden of Eden
when God said to Adam and Eve not to eat of the tree of the knowledge of good
and evil. That means that Adam and Eve did not have the knowledge of how to
hurt anybody. They knew only how to benefit each other. Adam could only benefit
Eve, and Eve could only benefit Adam because they had no knowledge of anything,
but of benefitting each other.
2. Satan promised in
Genesis 3:5 that if they ate of the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good
and of evil, they would know both good and evil. Satan was trying to introduce
them to know how to do evil. They had not had that capacity before, but by
eating of the tree, they would know how to hurt each other and to do evil.
3. God saw it. Genesis
3:22, "And the LORD God said, Behold, the man Is become as one of us, to
know good and evil: and now, lest he put forth his hand, and take also of the
tree of life, and eat, and live forever." God
realized that they had eaten of the tree and had the capacity to do evil. The
war between good and evil began in the Garden of Eden, and from that day until
now, everybody has had the capacity to either benefit each other or hurt each
other. There is a constant warfare in your life either to be of benefit in
people's lives or to hurt them.
4. Joseph fought the battle
between good and evil benefitting people or hurting people. Of course, he did
good to his brothers, even though they had done evil to him.
5. When entering the
Promised Land, God told His people that those who knew good and evil would
never see the Promised Land, so no adults ever saw it, except for Joshua and
Caleb.
Deuteronomy 1:35, "Surely there
shall not one of these men of this evil generation see that good land, which I
sware to give unto your fathers."
6. David fought the battle
between hurting people and helping people. I Samuel 25:21, "Now David had said, Surely in vain have I kept all
that this fellow hath in the wilderness, so that nothing was missed of all that
pertained unto him: and he hath requited me evil for good."
7. Paul fought a battle
between benefitting people and hurting people. He did not say that it was a battle between sin and
righteousness but between good and evil. Romans 7:21, "I find then a law, that, when I would do good, evil
is present with me."
8. The battle between good
and evil increases. Hebrews 5:14,
"But strong meat belongeth to them that are of full age, even those who by
reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil."
9. The battle continued in
the New Testament church over whether to hurt people or to benefit them. III John 11, "Beloved, follow not that which
is evil, but that which is good. He that doeth good is of God: but he that
doeth evil hath not seen God."
Sin is not evil. Evil is a
form of sin, but all sin is not evil. Evil is that part of sin which wants to
hurt somebody. We know that good causes evil. We know that good is the only
thing that overcomes evil, and that causes more evil and creates a need for
more good. It keeps going. Now consider these three things: (I) Evil cannot
conquer you. I John 4:4b, "...greater is he that is in you, than
he that is in the world." Ultimate good
will conquer ultimate evil; (2) No one can destroy you, except you; (3) No
one's actions can destroy you; only your reactions can cause you to
self-destruct. You are the only person who can destroy you. Someone can provoke
you to self-destruct. You self-destruct when you lose the battle between good
(helping people) and evil (hurting people). Only you can cause that to happen.
As long as you keep on doing more good when evil comes your way, evil can never
destroy you, for doing evil has a limit, but doing good has no limit!
Let me show you how Satan
works to cause you to react in a way that will cause self-destruction. If you
can figure out how to react, you can never be destroyed by evil. Satan has
certain ways he uses to get you to react wrongly. If you can find out what he
does and correct it, you can keep from being destroyed by his evil.
The Progression of Self-Destruction
1. First comes the
"outside evil." Can the outside evil destroy you? No! Only you can
destroy yourself. However, if the evil can cause you to do evil, then you have
rendered evil for evil. That is when you must do good. As soon as evil comes
from the outside, that is the time to stop it. If you do not stop it, the Devil
has other evil to follow it. That is the time to pour on the good, not just on
them but on everybody. If you render evil for evil, you have self-destructed. Your reaction to evil's action is all
that can destroy. Nobody can destroy a church except the church.
If you are doing good, there
are several things the Devil cannot do. He cannot defeat you from within
because "greater is he that is in you, than he that is in the world."
Satan cannot conquer you. You are doing good. In response to your doing good,
people will try to do harm to you. One reason is, you put them in a bad light.
You make them look bad. If a church is experiencing great success, another
church that is struggling may begin to do harm to the successful church,
because the church that is succeeding is making the other church look bad. The
evil comes from the outside to try to destroy you. Remember, overcome evil with
good.
This may shock you, but the
Bible does not say to overcome evil with prayer. I am for prayer, but the way
you overcome evil is with good or by benefitting people. The Bible does not say
to overcome evil with Bible study. It does not say overcome evil with
meditation. You overcome evil by doing good. Good not only conquers evil, but
you will be so busy doing good that you will not have the time to do evil. The
time you would have used to do evil will be used up for good.
2. Next comes the
"inside evil." If you wait before you do good in order to conquer
outside evil, evil will gain a partner — inside evil. You will be tempted to
render evil for evil. A desire to do evil will come if you do not quickly do
good in order to conquer the evil. When someone does you evil, QUICKLY rush for
the good to overcome it. The longer you go before doing good to quench evil,
the harder it is going to be to quench it.
I know good Bible students
and teachers who have evil in their hearts and are trying to hurt people. The
Bible alone is not the answer in this case. I have known brilliant Bible
teachers who have tried to destroy men of God. They did not do good to benefit
people, and they did not overcome the eternal evil that makes them want to hurt
somebody.
3. Next comes "spoken
evil." It will come if the previous one is not overcome with good. It
begins by whispering evil too often about someone. The same person who once
would have taught a Sunday school class against speaking evil and would have
been against those who did speak evil suddenly is speaking evil. What happened?
He did not overcome evil with good. It came inside, and he began to hate, envy,
get angry, and then he began to speak evil himself. Many good people are now
speaking evil of someone because they rendered evil with evil instead of with
good.
4. Next comes "group
evil." When you get to the group evil, it is almost always too late to
overcome. Your time for doing good is used in doing evil. You have attempted to
destroy someone else, and in so doing, you have helped to destroy yourself. You
are the one who is going to be destroyed, unless you can cause the person you
are trying to destroy to self-destruct.
You do good, and evil
comes, so you do more good, and more evil comes. You keep doing good to keep
yourself from self-destructing. The destruction will not come by those trying
to do you evil. You can prevent your destruction entirely if you can keep yourself
from self-destructing.
Wherever you are in this
progression, stop before you self-destruct! The progression will either be
good, evil, more good, more evil, more good, more evil, more good, etc. Or, it
will be good, outside evil, inside evil, spoken evil, group evil! If you are in
the wrong progression, quickly get busy doing much good. It's your only way out
of evil!
Do you know why it is
almost impossible to cure someone involved in group evil? Before it is evil,
you can change it by yourself. Once it becomes group evil, you have to go
against your peers to change. That is almost impossible to do!
Chapter Twenty-one
THE PROGRESSION OF EVIL
"But thou hast fully known my
doctrine, manner of life, purpose, faith, longsuffenng, charity, patience,
Persecutions, a ictions, which came unto me atAntioch, at Iconium, at Lystra;
what persecutions I endured: but out of them all the Lord delivered me. Yea,
and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution. But evil
men and seducers shall wax worse and worse, deceiving and being deceived. But
continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and hast been assured of
knowing of whom thou hast learned them." II Timothy 3:10-14
We already know that there
is a difference between sin and evil. In this chapter let me give you seven
statements concerning the progression of evil.
1. We know that we all are
sinners. Romans 3:23, "For all
have sinned, and come short of the glory of God."
2. Nobody wants to become
an evil person.
3. We cannot live above
sin, but we can live above evil.
4. Becoming an evil person
is like becoming addicted to any sin. Sin is the drink. Evil is the alcoholic.
Evil is the result of constant sin. Nobody chooses to be a drug addict. A
person chooses to take drugs one time. Nobody chooses to be an alcoholic. A
person chooses to take one drink. Nobody chooses to be "hot headed."
A person chooses to lose his temper one time. Becoming an evil person is to be
addicted to evil like one of these is addicted to his sin.
5. As with all of the other
sins, becoming an evildoer does not happen
overnight. A person does not become a drug addict overnight. It takes a long
time of trying the drugs over and over a little at a time to become addicted.
The same is true in becoming evil. You do not become an evildoer overnight. You
sin and sin until it becomes evil and you want to hurt somebody.
6. No one plans to become
an evildoer. Nobody takes a drink to
become an alcoholic. Nobody takes drugs to become a drug addict. Nobody sins to
become an evil person. It never starts out as the intent.
7. As with other sins,
there is a progression in becoming an evildoer. Therefore, for the rest of this
chapter I want to explain how this progression takes place. I am going to
explain how you begin as a sinner and end
up as an evil person, or as the Bible calls it, "an evil man." There
is nothing worse than that. None of us want to do evil, but there is a road to
becoming an evil person just as there is a road to becoming alcoholic or drug
addict. Let me tell you how it happens.
Stages in the Progression of Evil
1. You are a sinner.
Everybody is even at this point. Everything we do that is righteous is tainted
by sin. We cannot help but live there. Even the Bible says that all of us are
there. This is where we are trying to stay. At this point we are trying to keep
from becoming evil. We cannot help being where we are. We cannot help being
sinners, but we can keep from becoming evil.
A sinful man is one who
misses the mark, stumbles and falls and makes mistakes. An evil man is one who
is bent on hurting someone and who has a lifestyle of injuring others. No
Christian should ever want to hurt anybody. Consequently, we want to avoid
becoming evil. If you do not want to get to a destination, the best thing to do
is to avoid the road that gets you there. Every evil person at one time was
just a sinner. What is the next step from where we are as sinners to where we
do not want to be as an evil person?
2. You start being with evil men. The first step you will
take toward becoming an evil man will be to be around evil men. If you spend
your time with people who criticize and hurt people, you are on the road to
becoming an evil person.
Proverbs 4:14-1 6, "Enter not into
the path of the wicked, and go not in the way of evil men. Avoid it, pass not
by it, turn from it, and pass away. For they sleep not, except they have done
mischief; and their sleep is taken away, unless they cause some to fall."
3. You hear the evil
report. This is what you will get around evil men — evil
reports. If you are around evil men, they will criticize or slander and try to
destroy somebody. The Bible says that we are to be the friend of sinners, but
it never says we are to be friends with evil men! It says to stay away from them!
Being around evil men is the first step to being like them.
When people try to tell me
evil about someone, I tell them I do not want to know because I do not want to
get on the road that leads to becoming evil. These evil men may act like they
are trying to help the person they are slandering, but what they really want to
do is to give you their evil report. You had better run from them!
4. You will have an evil
heart. Somehow we think that we can get around evil men and listen to evil
reports without getting an evil heart. Eventually it will get inside of you,
and you will start thinking about the evil report and wondering whether or not
it is true. Finally you begin to logic it into being true. Soon you become a
suspicious and judgmental person. Jeremiah
3:17, "At that time they shall call Jerusalem the throne of the LORD; and
all the nations shall be gathered unto it, to the name of the LORD, to
Jerusalem: neither shall they walk any more after the imagination of their evil
heart."
You do not want to be the
kind of person who hurts people. You want to help people, but you are on the
road to evil because your heart is beginning to be affected. It is not good
enough to guard yourself from their reports; you should guard yourself by
staying away from the evil people! Just as God's Word can be hid in your heart,
evil reports likewise can be hid in your heart. When you hear evil, it does not
leave. It is stored in your mind and heart!
5. You then start evil speaking. Evil speaking is not
cursing someone; it is saying something that is going to hurt another person. I Peter 4:4, "Wherein they think it strange that
ye run not with them to the same excess of riot, speaking evil of you."
Evil men will think that it
is strange that you will not associate with them. They assume that you think
you are better than they are. You are better. A sinner is better than an evil
man! You are too good to run with them! The wise thing for you to do is to
worry about getting your sin forgiven and not to speak evil of what you see or
hear about somebody else.
You do not have to want to
hurt somebody to do evil. You can simply repeat what someone who is evil told
you. People who do not want to hurt often hurt more than others because of a
desire inside of us that makes us want to be the first one to tell something
bad about another person.
6. Then you do evil deeds.
II John 11, "For he that biddeth him God speed is partaker of his evil
deeds." The Bible says that if you even
put a blessing on the evil man, you become guilty of partaking in his evil
deeds. You are not evil yet, but you are on the way by partaking in the evil
deeds of others. Do not say, "God bless you," to the evil man, for
his deeds are cursed, not blessed!
7. You now walk an evil
way. Now that you are on the path toward becoming evil, evil begins to be a way
of life for you. Evil has become a habit, even though you never intended for it
to happen. Maybe you started out only intending to help an evil person. He does
not need your help. He needs you to shun him.
Proverbs 8:13, "The fear of the Lord
is to hate evil: pride, and arrogancy, and the evil way, and the froward mouth,
do I hate."
8. You then walk in evil
ways. Soon you will not just be involved in hurting one person. You will be
trying to hurt many people. You never intended to give your life to hurting
people, but you started hanging around evil men and listening to their evil
reports. That evil report lodged in your heart; you told itto others, joining
the evil men in tiying to destroy that person, and it became a way of life.
Now, you are the type of person who actually enjoys hurting people.
II Kings 17:13, "Yet the Lord
testified against Israel, and against Judah, by all the prophets, and by all
the seers, saying, Turn ye from your evil ways, and keep my commandments and my
statutes, according to all the law which I commanded yourfat hers, and which I
sent to you by my servants the prophets."
9. Then you become an evildoer. I Peter 4:15, "But let none of you
suffer as a murderer, or as a thief, or as an evildoer, or as a busybody in
other men's matters."
Do you want to run around
with an unrepentant murderer? God puts evildoers in the same bracket with
murderers and thieves. I would enjoy running around with a bank robber as much
as I would with a critic. If you have ever really been slandered, you know that
it would be no worse for a man to take a gun and shoot you than to slander you.
Yet, now you have become one of these evildoers, and you never intended for it
to happen!
10. You are now an evil person.
You did not have to become evil, but you followed the progression. Think about
your heart. Are you trying to hurt anybody? You may justify it because he tried
to hurt you first, but the Bible says not to render evil for evil. You are to
render good for evil.
Where in this progression
are you? Once you get started on this road, it becomes harder and harder to
stop because one leads to the next.
11. It will become worse
and worse. II Timothy 3:13, "But evil men and seducers shall wax
worse and worse...." Once you have
become an evil person, you will not stop. You will get worse and worse. It will
never stop!
For your Christian
testimony and for your own spiritual growth, stay only a sinful person. Every
time you sin, confess it, ask God to forgive you, and forsake it immediately!
Do not allow that sin to lead you to evil. You cannot start down the road
without arriving at the destination!
Where are you in the
progression of evil?
Chapter Twenty-two
THE DOCTRINE OF SIN
AND EVIL AS IT AFFECTS
OTHER BIBLE DOCTRINES
No doctrine will change
your outlook on the Bible more and throw more light on other Bible doctrines
than an understanding of the difference between sin and evil. The words for
"sin" are never crossed with the word, "evil," in the
Bible. If you understand that, it will drastically affect almost all of the
other doctrines in the Bible. Let me show you 12 examples.
1. It will change your
outlook toward sin in the garden of Eden. Genesis 2:9, 'And out of the ground made the LORD God to grow every tree
that is pleasant to the sight, and good for food; the tree of life also in the
midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil."
Genesis 2:17, "But of the tree of
the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that
thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die." Genesis 3:5, "For God
doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and
ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil."
Genesis 3:22, 'And the LORD God said,
Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil: and now, lest he
put forth his hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live for
ever."
Notice that it was not the
tree of the knowledge of "good and sin," but of "good and
evil." Satan wants you to sin, but much more than that, he
wants you to keep sinning until you begin to do evil by conspiring to harm
others. He wants you to do wrong to others, not just to yourself.
2. It will change your
outlook on David's sin. Psalm 51:4, 'Against thee, thee only, have I
sinned, and done this evil in thy sight: that thou mightest be justified when
thou speakest, and be clear when thou judgest." In a moment of passion, David sinned with Bathsheba;
yet, in a premeditated act, he plotted to do evil by having Uriah killed.
3. It will change your
outlook toward the flood. Genesis
6:5, 'And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that
every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually."
God saw the wickedness of
men on the earth. That was sin. Yet, God also saw that the imaginations of
man's heart were evil continually. God chastens sin to correct man, but He
hates evil even more. In churches all across America, an evil is committed
against those who sin. God hates the sin; but even more, He hates the evil
committed against the one who sinned.
Consider the story of the
woman who was caught in the act of adultery. The Pharisees brought her to Jesus
and accused her to Him. She had sinned, but they were trying to have her
killed. Their act was evil and was worse than her sin.
Jesus saved His most
scathing remarks for those who were doing evil and trying to hurt somebody. He
severely reprimanded the Pharisees!
Why did God send the flood?
He did so for two reasons: sin and evil. Anytime God destroyed a people, He did
so, not because they were sinning, but because they were doing evil. If they
had just been sinning, they would not have been destroyed.
4. It will change your
outlook toward ecclesiastical or church separation. Revelation 2:1, 2, "Unto the angel of the
church of
Ephesus write; These things saith he that
holdeth the seven stars in his right hand, who walketh in the midst of the
seven golden candlesticks; 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."
The stars are the
preachers, and the candlesticks are the churches. The word, "bear,"
means "to hold up." They could not hold up under the load of those
who were evil. The church at Ephesus would not associate with those who were
evil. They would not allow them to be deacons or Sunday school teachers. They
could not bear them! The Bible says that we are to be the friend of sinners;
yet we are told not to tolerate those who are evil.
The church is to reach
every sinner we possibly can. We are to lift up all of the fallen we can. We
are to reach every drunkard, harlot, drug addict and fallen sinner we can, but
we are not to bear those who are evil nor associate with them.
God commended the church at
Ephesus for refusing to bear those who are evil. Those who are trying to hurt
people should not be respected by the church; yet there are pastors by the
hundreds who are trying to hurt each others. That is always wrong. Even our
chastening is to be for the sake of correction.
Romans 16:17, "Now I beseech you,
brethren, mark them which cause divisions and offenses contrary to the doctrine
which ye have learned, and avoid them." We are to avoid people who cause divisions. A dear, sweet, Christian
lady who was a member of our church in Garland, Texas, ran into an evil couple
one day who had slandered our church, spread vicious lies and left the church.
They said to her, "We understand that you have lost some members
recently."
She replied to them,
"We do not consider everybody who leaves our church to be a loss."
She turned and walked away from them. That is exactly what the Bible teaches us
to do!
5. It will change your
outlook toward fellowship. Proverbs 2:11, 12, "Discretion shall
preserve thee, understanding shall keep thee: To deliver thee from the way of
the evil man, from the man that speaketh froward things." Discretion and understanding should deliver you from being
associated with evil people. The Bible says that if you have any common sense,
you will not run with them. That is clear enough; you should not have to be
told again!
Proverbs 4:14-1 6, "Enter not into
the path of the wicked, and go not in the way of evil men. Avoid it, pass not
by it, turn from it, and pass away. For they sleep not, except they have done
mischief; and their sleep is taken away, unless they cause some to fall."
Who are these evil men?
These are people trying to hurt somebody for whatever reason. That is evil and
we are not to associate with those types of people.
6. It will change your
outlook toward child discipline. If your child loses his or her temper, that is
sin. However, if your child tries to hurt another child, that is evil. When
your child does wrong, decide if it was sin or evil before you punish him. If
it is evil, you have probably not punished him properly for sin. Always punish
evil more severely than sin.
7. It will change your
ideas about sanctification. A person cannot live above sin, but he can live
above evil. That is a great goal for us. We cannot reach the place in our lives
that we do not sin, but we can determine not to do evil!
II Timothy 4:18, 'And the Lord shall
deliver me from every evil work and will preserve me unto his heavenly kingdom:
to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen."
9. It will change your
ideas on the unpardonable sin. In Mark 3, these
men knew that Jesus did not have an unclean spirit. They had seen Him feed the
5,000; yet they said that the Devil made Him do these works. It was a
premeditated desire to hurt the Saviour. Jesus stopped them and proclaimed it
to be the one thing that would not be forgiven in this world, nor in the world
to come.
10. It will give you hope
when you have sinned.
11. It will give you
incentive to forsake sin quickly before it becomes evil.
12. It will give you hope
in your thought life. If you have an evil thought that harbors in your mind,
soon it will lead you to do something premeditated which makes it evil. Get all
sinful thoughts out before that happens!
The conclusion of all these
things is simple: (1) Forsake all sin immediately; and (2) Do not associate
with evil people.
Chapter Twenty-three
THE PART MERCY PLAYS
IN JUSTICE
'Mercy and truth are met together;
righteousness and peace have kissed each other. Truth shall spring out of the
earth; and righteousness shall look down from heaven. Yea, the Lord shall give
that which is good; and our land shall yield her increase. Righteousness shall
go before him; and shall set us in the way of his steps." Psalm 85:10-13
"Justice and judgment are the
habitation of thy throne: mercy and truth shall go before thy face." Psalm
89:14
Most people think that
mercy is an evasion of justice. They think that mercy is not giving a person
what he deserves. That is totally untrue! Mercy has nothing to do with evading
or avoiding justice. Justice and truth go together, and truth and mercy meet
together. They do not conflict with one another.
Mercy does not replace
justice. If you show mercy to your child, it does not mean that you do not
punish the child when he has done wrong. Mercy does not take away punishment,
nor does it take away justice. Mercy is a part of justice. Let me give you six
truths concerning mercy. These statements are almost synonymous.
1. Mercy does not operate
in the place of justice.
2. Mercy and justice never
oppose each other.
3. Mercy always operates
within the boundary of justice.
4. Mercy is not overlooking
or withholding punishment. If mercy were overlooking judgment, then mercy would
not be just. God is never for anything that is not just. The greatest
characteristic of God is not His love, but His righteousness and justice. If
mercy were the withholding of punishment, then mercy would be unfair to all of
those who had been punished for the same deed.
God never acts unjustly!
An unenforced rule is no
rule at all. Friends of mine will sometimes ask me to help get their child out
of some trouble at the college. I cannot do it because it would not be just. It
would be unfair to others who had been punished for the same offence. I cannot
break a rule in order to do someone a favor.
5. Justice always comes
before mercy. Micah 6:8, "He hath shewed thee, Oman, what is
good; and what doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love
mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?" Notice
how the Christian life is wrapped up into one package in that passage. God
requires three things of us: (1) Do justly; (2) Love mercy; and (3) Walk
humbly. Justice comes first. It always does!
6. Mercy and truth always
go together. Mercy never operates outside the boundary of justice. Mercy is the
proper treatment one receives when justice is administered. Mercy is the adverb
that describes the way justice is given. Mercy is the method. It is the way you
do right.
How Mercy Works Within the Framework of Justice
1. Mercy is a guard to
prevent punishment when there is no law or rule. When I first came to pastor
the First Baptist Church of Hammond, there was no rule against Sunday school
teachers or deacons smoking. Soon after I came, a rule was instituted that they
could not smoke. There were already those who smoked who were deacons or Sunday
school teachers before the rule was made. It would not have been just to
enforce that rule upon them because there was no such rule when they were
enlisted. I allowed them to continue in their positions, although no new
deacons or teachers were enlisted who smoked. Soon, the others quit smoking or
drifted away.
Mercy is that which
prevents us from inflicting judgment on someone for a rule which was created
after the offence was committed.
2. Mercy is that which does
not automatically believe an accusation made against someone. When someone on
my staff comes to me with an accusation against another staff member, I always
defend the accused. Why? I want to be merciful.
3. Mercy prevents premature
punishment. Mercy gives someone a chance for a fair trial before he is
punished. It is what causes us to follow a process of fairness before
administering punishment. It is what gives a child an opportunity to tell his
side of the story before being spanked. Mercy gives a teenager an opportunity
to explain why he came home late before being yelled at. Mercy is the restraint
that makes you wait to make your decision until the trial is over. It prevents
you from "blowing your stack" at someone. Mercy gives someone who has
been accused of doing something wrong a fair trial before judgment is passed.
4. Mercy does not want to
punish.
5. Mercy does not look for
guilt. Anytime a public official is accused of doing some wrong, or is on
trial, I hope he is innocent.
An accusation is not a
guilty verdict! Mercy gives the accused the benefit of the doubt. Mercy does
not believe it just because an accusation has been made. Mercy does not condemn
someone until that person has had a fair trial and has been proven to be guilty.
Mercy does not anticipate guilt or desire guilt.
6. Mercy watches to prevent
excessive punishment. Mercy prevents you from punishing your child too severely
for doing something wrong. Mercy keeps you from reacting harshly in anger. If a
child breaks a vase, the cost of that vase should have nothing to do with the
punishment of the child. If you told the child not to touch it, then touching
it is the crime, not breaking it. The punishment should be the same whether the
vase is expensive or inexpensive. The value would not be an issue in the
judgment.
Mercy is what restrains you
from over punishing because you are personally offended, and it keeps you from
overreacting while you are offended.
7. Mercy is kind and loving
treatment while justice is being administered. It is the way justice is
administered. It is a weeping parent spanking a disobedient child and then
hugging him after the punishment has been finished. It is the manner and method
that justice is inflicted.
8. Mercy is helping the
punished one during his punishment. It is not forsaking a person during his
time of punishment.
9. Mercy allows for
self-inflicted punishment when no law has been broken. Elaine Colsten is the
proofreader at our church. There is no law concerning making a proofreading
error; yet, if she makes a mistake, she inflicts severe discipline upon
herself. I never need to correct or judge her because she inflicts judgment
upon herself. There are others who make mistakes and do not repent that
quickly. I have to go to them and seek repentance for their mistake. Mercy
allows for self-inflicted repentance when an error has been made but no law is
violated.
10. Mercy is the restoring
of the punished after the punishment is complete. Mercy is not branding a child
for the rest of his school years for something he did in the second grade.
Mercy is the restoring of an individual after the punishment is complete.
Hosea 6:1-3, "Come, and let us
return unto the LORD:for he hath torn, and he will heal us; he hath smitten,
and he will bind us up. After two days will he revive us: in the third day he
will raise us up, and we shall live in his sight. Then shall we know, if we
follow on to know the LORD: his going forth is prepared as the morning; and he
shall come unto us as the rain, as the latter and former rain unto the
earth."
The writer is saying that
we have sinned and God has torn us; yet, after He has torn us, He will heal us.
He has smitten us for our sin, but He will bind us back together. God punishes
us for sin, but when that punishment is over, God heals that which He has
broken.
Mercy keeps you from
holding it in your heart. It gives the child who has been expelled from school
a chance when he returns. Mercy is not always pronouncing judgment on someone
for a crime or a sin for which he has already been punished.
11. Mercy ends the
punishment when the payment is complete. One of the greatest injustices in
America's history is the way President Nixon has been treated. He paid the
penalty for what he did; yet, people continue to beat him like a dead dog. He
did many good things, and he should be judged for all he did, not just for his
mistakes. When I saw him say good-bye to his staff, get into the helicopter,
and fly away, I said in my heart, "He has paid the penalty! Now, we should
forgive him." He should not be consigned to exile for the rest of his
life. That is not mercy!
God wants everyone to
receive justice, but never out of the vengeance and hatred of men's hearts. As
long as a person can be handled decently and respond properly, we are to judge
him with love and dignity.
At Hyles-Anderson College
we have a system called "the host system." We did not always have
that plan in effect. Several years ago a group of area young men decided to
infiltrate our college in an attempt to ruin our young ladies. Somehow they got
onto our campus and began to hang around some of the girls. I did not know
about it until we had to expel a young lady for misbehaving with one of the boys.
The expelled young lady's
father was a pastor, and shortly after she was expelled, I was to preach in his
church. I really dreaded going and having to face this pastor whose own
daughter we had expelled. When I arrived, I had lunch with the pastor and his
daughter. She had already been punished and did not deserve to be punished
more!
After we finished eating, I
asked the pastor if I could talk to his daughter. He excused himself and left
me alone with his daughter at the table in the restaurant. I told her that I
wanted her to help me by telling me how she got into trouble and how we could
prevent it from happening to others. That young lady helped me draw up the
initial plans for the host system designed to protect the young ladies at our
college. Mercy allowed me to turn her punishment into a positive plan of
action.
People who have made
mistakes must be penalized, but they deserve to be treated with mercy. Mercy is
a wonderful Saviour Who looks down and says in I John 2:1, 'My little
children, these things write I unto you, that ye sin not. And if any man sin,
we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous." God in His mercy will run to our side, pick us up and
love us, even after He had to knock us down.
Chapter Twenty-four
THE WAY I, AS PASTOR, AM TO BE JUST
TOWARD THOSE WHO
WORK WITH ME
"Let the elders that rule well be
counted worthy of double honour, especially they who labour in the word and
doctrine. For the scripture saith, Thou shalt not muzzle the ox that treadeth
out the corn. And The labourer is worthy of his reward. Against an elder
receive not an accusation, but before two or three witnesses. Them that sin
rebuke before all, that others also may fear." I Timothy 5:17-20
If this lesson were heeded,
it would solve many of the problems in our churches. There are people in every
church who think that they have been chosen by God to discipline the staff
members of that church. I believe that the Bible teaches that the pastor and
the pastor only is responsible for the disciplining of the church staff.
When I first became Pastor
of First Baptist Church, the pulpit committee met with me and asked me what
things would cause me to leave a church. I told them three things over which I
would leave a church if they were not followed: (1) The pulpit is mine; (2) The
office of moderator is mine; and (3) The staff is mine.
Churches all over America
are having trouble with situations involving the church staff. We need to have
an understanding of what the Bible teaches concerning this matter of handling
the church staff.
1. Paul wrote to Timothy,
who was the Pastor of the church. We can get into trouble when we try to apply
Scripture to those for whom it was not meant. Paul was telling Timothy to give
double honor to those elders who ruled well.
When our children were
growing up and one of them needed to be disciplined, it was my responsibility
to carry out that discipline. We never had a vote to decide what everyone
thought we ought to do. It was my job to decide. I took the child alone to his
room and carried out whatever form of punishment I believed was just. It was a
private matter between myself and that child. When I was finished disciplining
the child, I did not ask the rest of the family if they felt I did what was
right. In fact, I did not allow them to offer their opinions either.
Similarly God has given the
pastor the responsibility to discipline those who work with him. When God spoke
through Paul to Timothy about the elders, He was referring to Timothy's staff.
There are three words used in the Bible that refer to the same position of
pastor of a church: (1) pastor, (2) elder, and (3) bishop. Some churches were
very large and had several pastors. When Paul went to Ephesus, he called for
the elders of the church, and they met together. He was not talking about the
pastors in the area. He was referring to all the pastors of that local church.
Paul was telling Timothy how to deal with his staff members. He was admonishing
Timothy to treat them properly.
2. There were many elders.
The word "elder" means "leader of the congregation." God
raised up elders to help in the leading of the church. That is basically what
we now call "assistant pastors" in our churches today.
3. All charges were to be
directed to Timothy. They were not to be taken to the deacons or other church
members. If a church member has a charge against an elder or pastor, that
church member should take it to the pastor only and allow him to handle it.
4. Timothy was responsible
for the action. This is a Bible principle. The pastor has the responsibility of
disciplining his pastoral staff, and it is his sole responsibility to do so.
5. Timothy was to give
double honor to those who ruled well. That is why I praise the men on my staff
often! I am giving them honor. Every great work of God requires more than one
man to carry out the work that must be done.
6. Notice the word
"rule." That is a strong word. God expects the pastor to be the
leader of the staff. That does not give the pastor the right to act as a cruel
dictator. It does mean, however, that God has given the pastor the job of
making decisions and leading the staff in the proper direction.
7. Timothy was not to
receive an accusation against any elder unless it came from two eyewitnesses.
The Bible teaches that even then we are only to receive the accusation, not to
convict the individual as guilty until fully tried.
Preachers all over America
are attacked by church members and mishandled because they are unjustly
convicted by the church members. That is not the Bible method. The word
"receive" means "to entertain or admit." Paul was telling
Timothy not even to entertain an accusation without two eyewitnesses. That did
not mean that the accusation was true, but that he should further investigate
it. Second-hand accusations were not to be accepted!
8. Timothy was not to
believe it just because there were two witnesses. He was only to receive it.
The very basis of the Biblical legal system is that no one is to be convicted
of a matter unless he has been proven guilty. The pastor of that church was to
investigate it carefully without interference, and he was not to charge the
person until he was certain the individual was guilty.
9. Timothy was to
investigate it. If a church member thinks a staff member is not doing right,
that person is not to go to another preacher or another church member and tell
them. He is to take it to the pastor who, in turn, will investigate it.
10. Timothy was to judge.
The pastor has the responsibility to make the judgment in any disciplining
situation regarding his staff. That is a Bible principle, and it is time for
our fundamental churches to operate that way. I would not pastor a church any other way.
Many years ago a man came
to me and accused one of my assistant pastors of having some pornographic
literature. I asked him if he personally had seen it, and he said that he had
not. I told him that I did not believe it and that I would not even investigate
it without two eye witnesses who come to me together. A deacon came to me with
the same accusation, but again he did not witness it. I was accused of covering
up a man's sins simply because I was being just and followed Biblical
principles. Two days later, that pastor died. I was so glad that I had defended
him and treated him justly. When I preached his funeral, I had the peace of
knowing that I had treated him justly.
Many businessmen attend our
church. I am not to interfere with the way they judge their employees, nor are
they to interfere with the way I judge my staff.
11. Timothy was to rebuke
false accusers. Paul was not teaching Timothy to rebuke all sinners publicly.
He was teaching Timothy to rebuke the false accusers. Many preachers, especially
young men, misuse this passage and do terrible damage to the church. The only
sin mentioned here is false accusation. God was placing a double ring of
protection around His servants to protect them from evil men who would destroy
them.
A judge in a courtroom has
the responsibility to make judgments. I may not agree with him all of the time,
but I cannot interfere.
You may not always agree
with how a pastor handles his staff, but you are not to interfere. Let's use
God's plan of honor and discipline and prevent unnecessary tragedies of
injustice!
Chapter Twenty-five
THE POSITIVE SIDE OF JUSTICE
"But when thou doest alms, let not
thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth: That thine alms may be in secret:
and thy Father which seeth in secret himself shall reward thee openly. And when
thou prayest, thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are: or they love to pray
standing in the synagogues and in the corners of the streets, that they may be
seen of men. Verily I say unto you, They have their reward. But thou, when thou
prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy
Father which is in secret; and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward
thee openly." Matthew 6:3-7
"But thou, when thou fastest, anoint
thine head, and wash thy face; That thou appear not unto men to fast, but unto
thy Father which is in secret: and thy Father, which seeth in secret, shall
reward thee openly." Matthew 6:17, 18
When we think of justice,
most of us think of punishment. We think of a courtroom where someone is
sentenced for a crime. Justice, however, is just as much positive as it is
negative. If someone does something deserving of honor or reward, yet does not
receive it, that is an injustice. Justice is not only the equaling of punishment
to transgression, but it is also the equaling of reward to good work.
When I taught justice in
the First Baptist Church, I began to feel guilty because for many weeks I
taught from the negative side of justice without getting to the positive side
of the ledger. Justice is the balancing of the equation, balancing the
punishment with the transgression; but it is more than that; it is also the
equaling of reward to good works.
Although most of us think
of the negative side of justice, God does not. For example, in Galatians
6:7-9 the Bible speaks of God rewarding our good
efforts. "Be not deceived: God
is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. For he
that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption; but he that soweth
to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting. And let us not be
weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not.
God has two judgments. The
Great White Throne Judgment is that judgment which will determine the degree of
punishment for the unsaved. There is also the Judgment Seat of Christ, where
justice will be given to the saved in the form of rewards for the good which
has been done.
Revelation 22:12, 'And, behold, I come
quickly; and my reward is with me, to give every man according as his work
shall be." Revelation is a
panoramic view of the second coming of Christ. There are two great mountaintops
of His coming. First, there is the rapture when He comes for His own. Secondly,
there is the revelation when He comes with His own to establish His kingdom. It
is interesting to discover that Jesus brings with Him His reward, not
punishment. Jesus is more excited about giving rewards than He is about giving
punishment.
Our sins were judged at
Calvary, but our works will be judged at the Judgment Seat of Christ. One
thousand and seven years later, the unsaved will be judged at the Great White
Throne Judgment. The positive side of judgment comes first with God. Justice to
the doers of good is more important to God than punishment to the doers of bad.
Wouldn't it be wonderful if we could all be like that! All of us should be more
excited about rewarding good than about judging the bad.
II Corinthians 5:10, "For we must
all appear before the judgment seat of Christ; that every one may receive the
things done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or
bad."
The Apostle Paul is speaking here about saved
people being judged for their works. Rewards are given for good works and taken
away for bad works.
I Corinthians 3:8, "Now he that
planteth and he that watereth are one: and every man shall receive his own
reward according to his own labor."
You will not receive
rewards by being associated with a church that does good works. You will
receive rewards because of what you personally do that is good. Each of us will
be judged individually for our own good works. The word "reward"
means "wages." What does this mean? It means that although we will
get to Heaven free of charge, we will earn our enjoyment of Heaven. We are now
earning the wages (the rewards) we will be given later which will determine our
degree of enjoyment in Heaven.
I Corinthians 3:9, 'For we are labourers
together with God: ye are God's husbandry, ye are God's building."
For what labor will we
receive these wages? We will receive wages (rewards) for the labor we do with
God. If we labor in our own flesh, we will receive no rewards. To labor
together with Him, we must labor in that which He labors. Christ came to save
sinners, so the labor of God is the saving of souls. To labor with Him, our
labor must be in the harvesting of souls.
The word
"husbandry" means "God's tilled land." God wants to work in
each one of us to bring Himself a "crop." We are the ground God tills
to bring forth fruit. That is how we labor with Him, and that is how we receive
rewards.
I Corinthians 3:10-13, 'According to the
grace of God which is given unto me, as a wise masterbuilder, I have laid the
foundation, and another buildeth thereon. But let every man take heed how he
buildeth thereupon. For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid,
which is Jesus Christ. Now if any man build upon this foundation gold, silver,
precious stones, wood, hay, stubble; Every man's work shall be made manifest:
for the day shall declare it, because it shall be revealed by fire; and the
fire shall try every man work of what sort it is."
The grace of God is our
masterbuilder or architect. God is the architect Who draws the plans for our
life and work. The way we get His rewards is when we labor with Him in the plan
He has drawn up or designed for our lives. We get rewards for laboring in God's
designed plan for our lives, which is to build upon the foundation of the grace
of God.
Every work we perform will
be made "manifest," which means "to put it under a light and
judge it for its motive." If we build with wood, hay and stubble, it will
burn; but if we build with gold, silver and precious stones, it will stand up
to the fire. To receive a reward, our motive must be able to withstand the fire
of judgment. We will get rewards only for the labor which we do with God and
for God. We will not receive rewards for labor which is not done with Him and
for Him.
I Corinthians 3:14, 15, "If any
man's work abide which he hath built thereupon, he shall receive a reward. If
any man's work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss: but he himself shall be
saved; yet so as by fire."
If our work or labor is
done with the right motive, we will be rewarded. If our labor is done with the
wrong motive, we will suffer the loss of a reward. That is exactly what Jesus
was teaching in Matthew 6. If our praying and fasting is done to impress men,
our reward will be taken away at the Judgment Seat when our motive is put under
the light and judged. If we fast and pray with a sincere heart to God and hide
it from the eyes and attention of man, we will be rewarded at the Judgment Seat
when our motives are put under the light of judgment.
The words, "suffer
loss," mean "to lose something we already have." We can lose
rewards that we have already earned by doing things in the flesh. In God's
system of justice, we can earn rewards for works we do and then lose those
rewards by doing other things in the flesh. We can also do things for God's
glory that will earn back rewards that we have lost.
Let me tell you two ways we
can lose our rewards.
1. Having fellowship with
someone who does not believe in the doctrines of Christ can cause the loss of
rewards. II John 8-11, "Look to
yourselves, that we lose not those things which we have wrought, but that we
receive a full reward. Whosoever transgresseth, and abideth not in the doctrine
of Christ, hath not God. He that abideth in the doctrine of Christ, he hath
both the Father and the Son. If there come any unto you, and bring not this
doctrine, receive him not into your house, neither bid him God speed: For he
that biddeth him God speed is partaker of his evil deeds."
If a person went out soul
winning and led people to Christ, but had fellowship with someone who does not
believe the doctrine of Christ, he would lose his reward for soul winning.
2. Not treating the
insignificant servants of God right can cause the loss of rewards. Matthew 10:40-42 "He that receiveth you
receiveth me, and he that receiveth me receiveth him that sent me. He that
receiveth a prophet in the name of a prophet shall receive a prophet's reward;
and he that receiveth a righteous man in the name of a righteous man shall
receive a righteous man's reward. And whosoever shall give to drink unto one of
these little ones a cup of cold water only in the name of a disciple, verily I
say unto you, he shall in no wise lose his reward."
When the Bible speaks of
"little ones," it is not speaking of children. It is speaking about
God's servants. If we show a small kindness to insignificant servants of God,
we will not lose our reward.
In conclusion, let me
summarize the material in this chapter: (1) You can earn rewards; (2) You can
lose those rewards; (3) You can counteract the loss; but (4) There is no sin to
counteract. As a Christian, you will not be judged for your sins; yet you will
be rewarded for your good works. The greatest damage of sin is that if you are
doing what you should not be doing, you cannot be doing what you should be
doing.
Our sins were judged on the
cross, and we will never face them. Although we will not be judged for them,
they will keep us from being colaborers with God and from receiving rewards at
the Judgment Seat. Sin hurts the Christian by causing us not to do the good
works that would bring us rewards.
Four Practical Principles
of the Positive Side of Justice
1. We should do the same
with our children. One of the greatest sins of justice is that we punish for
wrong without rewarding for right. My mother was the expert at giving positive
judgment. She would praise me into doing right. It is God's plan to reward for
good as much as punishing for bad. That is justice!
2. We should do the same
for our pupils in school. Tragically, we label a young person as a "bad
kid" for something he did that was wrong. We judge that child every time
he does wrong, but we fail to be just each time he does right.
3. We should do the same
thing with our families.
4. We should do the same
thing with our friends.
I am glad that when I do
something to lose a reward, there is something I can do to earn it back. That
is what justice is really all about. Justice is equaling the punishment to the
crime, but it is also equaling the reward to the good works.
Why should we want to get those rewards? Revelation
4:10, 11, "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."
We should want rewards so
that we can cast them at His feet.
Chapter
Twenty-six
YOUR BIGGEST AND MOST DANGEROUS ENEMY
"The words of a talebearer are as
wounds, and they go down into the innermost parts of the belly." Proverbs
18:8
"The words of a talebearer are as
wounds, and they go down into the innermost parts of the belly." Proverbs
26:22
It is very, very rare in
the Bible to find a verse that is repeated word for word in the same book of
the Bible; yet here we find the same 19 words repeated twice in Proverbs. That
must mean that their message is extremely important.
Let me begin by giving a
brief word study on these verses. The word, "words," can be
translated "a tasty, deadly morsel" or "words of sport."
Some people make sport out of gossip. The word, "talebearer," means
"spice peddler." The word, "wounds," means "deadly
wounds." The word, "belly," means the "entire human
cavity." Even science now is discovering that your spirit has much to do
with your health. The Bible already makes that clear.
What is being said in these
passages is that the tasty deadly morsels (words) of a spice peddler (talebearer)
are as deadly wounds to the entire human body (belly). Notice that it does not
say that these words cause a deadly wound, but they are deadly wounds. Now let us notice what happens.
1. Someone is going to die.
2. This passage speaks of
someone being deathly ill. There are only three different people mentioned in
these verses: (1) the talebearer, (2) the hearer of the tales, and (3) the
object of the tales. One of these three is the one who has the deadly wounds
and is going to die. Which one of these three possesses the deadly wounds?
3. When a talebearer gives
his tasty deadly morsels to the hearer, he thinks that he is destroying the
object of his tales. In reality, it is the one who hears or accepts the tasty
deadly morsels who is being poisoned and destroyed. The talebearer has already
been destroyed or poisoned, but does not realize it. Although he is trying to
destroy the object of his tales, he is actually destroying the hearer and is
already destroyed himself. So, the object of the tales who is the one whom he
is trying to destroy, is the only one who is not destroyed!
When I try to stop someone
from being a talebearer, I am trying to prevent him from poisoning the hearer.
The talebearer is already destroyed. You cannot destroy an individual with evil
tales about him, but you can destroy the person you are telling. There are five
truths here to remember: (1) The talebearer is trying to destroy the object of
his tales; (2) The hearer is the one who is being destroyed; (3) The talebearer
has already been destroyed; (4) The object is the only one who is not
destroyed; and (5) Therefore, the only one not destroyed is the one the
talebearer is trying to destroy.
When someone comes to you
with a tasty deadly morsel of gossip, you are the one who is being poisoned,
and you are the one who is going to be destroyed. Most Christians would not
consider themselves to be gossips, but they are careless about the things they
allow themselves to hear. That is self destruction! A Christian should run from
talebearers like he would run from a loaded pistol or a knife in the hands of
someone who is trying to kill him. We would not consider drinking poison; yet,
we take in deadly tasty morsels!
There are hundreds and
probably thousands of people who have been destroyed by a few talebearing
enemies of mine; yet those enemies have not destroyed me. Those who have taken
in the poison have been destroyed. A talebearer is trying to hurt you even
though he does not know it.
4. The pitiful one is the
hearer of the tales. The talebearer is already evil because he is trying to
destroy the object of his tales. The one who hears the tales is usually a good
person who simply did not have the courage to rebuke the talebearer. As a
courtesy, he listens to the tale, and the poison is poured into him. Once it
goes in, it goes into the innermost part of his being, and he begins being
destroyed! Do not listen to tales, for you are the one who will be hurt! If you
do listen to them, you will be destroyed. Run from gossip. Run from the talebearer!
Run from the slanderer.
5. The hearer must learn
that he is the one who must die.
Talebearing kills us. When
you listen to someone gossip, you are spiritually killing yourself. Do not
listen. It is poison.
6. The hearer must realize that
the talebearer is trying to kill him. The talebearer does not know it. He thinks he is
trying to kill the object of his tales, but in reality he is trying to kill the
hearer. Would you be friendly to someone who is trying to kill you? That
talebearer is a murderer who is trying to kill you. Do not drink one drop of
his poison, no matter how tasty it is! It's deadly! It will spiritually kill
you and destroy your spiritual effectiveness!
7. God gave us warnings not
to listen. These are warnings to potential hearers not to listen. We better
take heed to the warnings of God. Good people are destroyed because they do not
fear the talebearer. If we believed this, we would flee gossip with great fear.
Gossips are deadly to the hearer, not to their intended object. Proverbs 18:14, "The spirit of a man will
sustain his infirmity; but a wounded spirit who can bear?"
Things
That Listening to Gossip Will Kill
1. It will kill your
spirit. The spirit of a man can sustain him in the most difficult situations,
but once a man's spirit has been wounded, he cannot bear the difficulties of
life. The wounded spirit comes from accepting poison about others. You will
spiritually destroy yourself if you accept those tasty deadly morsels.
Once a person comes to me
with a tale about anybody, I look at him like a person pointing a loaded gun to
my head. They want to hurt me even though they do not know it. I do not want
anyone to destroy my spirit. I will not allow deadly poison to enter my mind.
Once the spirit has been destroyed, it is almost impossible to get back.
2. It will kill your trust. How do I stay upbeat with so many enemies
who are trying to destroy me? I ignore them! I do not read their letters or
take their phone calls. I do not want them to destroy my spirit and prevent me
from helping those people who need me.
One of the saddest
statements I hear over and over again is, "I have just about lost all of
my confidence in preachers." The reason that has happened is because you
have been drinking poison. You are the one who is being destroyed. Most
preachers are good and godly men; yet, your trust in them has been damaged by
the poison.
3. It will kill your joy. I
can look out at my people and spot the ones who have been listening to poison.
Their spiritual joy is gone, and I can see it in their faces. Tragically, the
joy of the Lord is hard to restore. I have remained full of joy because I have
refused to drink the poison. People worry about me because I am so criticized
and slandered; yet, I am not the one who drank the poison. The hearers of the
slander are the ones who are in danger of losing their joy.
Even if I hated someone, I
would not want to know anything bad about him because it would poison and
destroy me. That is why I still am so happy. I do not know bad about people
because I refuse to listen. That is the secret to keeping your joy!
Fundamental churches are
all fighting the same battle because the Devil hates soul winning. Pastors have
been destroyed because they listened, but they would not have been destroyed if
they had been the objects of slander instead of the hearers!
Chapter
Twenty-seven
THE TONGUE AND JUSTICE
"Even so the tongue is a little
member, and boasteth great things. Behold, how great a matter a little fire
kindleth! And the tongue is a fire, a world of iniquity; so is the tongue among
our members, that it defileth the whole body, and setteth on fire the course of
nature; and it is set on fire of hell." James 3:5, 6
Notice how many times the
word "fire" is used in that Scripture. God says that the tongue is a
fire, and the fire which the tongue gets comes from the fires of Hell! That's
exactly what He says. The Bible says that when someone misuses his tongue, he
is using his tongue as a fire, and that fire comes from Hell. The word used for
Hell in this passage is the word "Gehenna," not "Hades."
Gehenna is the final lake of fire that comes after the Great White Throne
Judgment.
Proverbs 26:20, "Where no wood is,
there the fire goeth out: so where there is no talebearer, the stnfe
ceaseth." What is the
"fire" talked about here? The fire is the tongue. The fire that flows
from an evil tongue comes from Hell. Notice, "Where no wood is, there the
fire goeth out." That means we must keep the wood away from the fire! In
order for the fire to go out, keep the wood away from it!
In the Bible, good words
are often referred to as "incense being burned," the odor of which
goes up to God. Revelation 5:8 speaks of ". . .golden vials full of odours, which are
the prayers of the saints." The prayers
of Christians are sweet perfume to God.
On the altar of incense,
spices were burning all the time. The fire came from the altar that was out in
the courtyard of the tabernacle.
The altar of incense was in
front of the veil which covered the area called the Holy of Holies.
Notice again, Proverbs 26:20, "Where no wood is, there
thefiregoeth out: so where there is no talebearer, the strife ceaseth."
The word
"talebearer" means "spice peddler." Did anyone ever tell
you a spicy tale? That is where it comes from. That person was a spice peddler!
So in order to stop the fire, we must keep the wood away from it. In order to
stop the fire of the tongue, we must keep the spice away from the fire! The
Bible says that the fire will go out if there is no wood. Likewise, we must
keep the spice away from the fire. Somewhere along the line, somebody must
decide not to spread it or pass it along.
Let me tell you how gossip
goes. As gossip keeps being passed along, it keeps on burning and burning.
Nobody passes it along just to one person. Gossip gets passed to several
people, and they each tell several more people. The farther it goes, the more
hundreds of people hear the spicy news. This is talebearing. People who carry
it are spice peddlers!
We must stop the spice from
getting on the fire, for there it will burn and burn and never stop. Well, we
should want to stop it. Every time the Lord rebukes us for being talebearers,
He is rebuking us for being spice peddlers. God says that is sin! We are not to
be spice peddlers or talebearers. How are we going to keep that spice from
getting on the fire where it will burn and burn and never stop? We must keep it
from getting there!
Proverbs 20:19, "He that goeth about
as a talebearer revealeth secrets: therefore meddle not with him that
flattereth with his lips" The
Bible says that the same person who flatters with his lips is also the
talebearer. The talebearer has a way of saying it; he often says something like
this: "Pray for so-and-so. He is a good man, but...." Then he
"buts" him to death for a while! The "but" then leads to a
tale or a bad report and is always preceded by flattering lips. A talebearer is
often not openly malicious. He is smart enough to want to appear spiritual. He
tries to look as though he is trying to help someone.
How can we avoid this awful
activity ot spice peddling? How can we keep the spice from the fire?
1. Do not associate with
spice peddlers. You cannot get their spice if you do not associate with them.
Proverbs 22:10, "Cast out the scorner, and contention shall go out; yea,
strife and reproach shall cease." God says not to associate with a
talebearer. Do not associate with a spice peddler — that person who likes to
tell you something spicy, true or false! Do not run with people like that. Do
not hang around them. Do not take them out to eat. Do not go out to eat with
them. Do not be good friends with them. Be courteous to them, but tell them you
have no use for their spices! The odor of that spice would spread everywhere.
Stay away from
it. Do not let that juicy
gossip get on the fire.
So, the first thing God
says is not to associate with them. You ask, "If we do not associate with
them, how will we help them?" Not one place in the Bible are we told to
help a talebearer! The Bible says to help the drunkard, the adulterer, the
thief, the liar, the crooked, but you cannot show me one place in the Bible
where anyone is told to lift up the talebearer! Why? When you see a drunkard
staggering down the street vomiting in the gutter, you know that is bad, and he
knows it is bad. He knows he is in deep sin. It looks bad to everyone, and you
can lift him. However, a talebearer does not look that bad, and he will affect
you!
I was at a church, and the
Pastor showed me a letter that one of his members sent out to the other
members. The letter said, "Pray for our pastor. He is a good man, but he
has done...and needs our prayers." Do you see what that crook did? He was
appearing to be spiritual by asking prayer for the pastor. He did not say to
pray for him as he preaches; he did not say to pray for God to give Him power;
he said for them to pray for him because he (according to the spice peddler) did
something wrong.
If we associate with the
spice peddler, before we know it, we will become one also. Maybe we did not
know he was a talebearer. Perhaps we had never seen or heard him bear spicy
tidbits before, but now we know, so we should not be with him!
2. Do not take the spice.
You should not even have been with the spice peddler, but maybe you didn't
know, so as soon as you recognize his conversation as something negative, you
should say, "I really don't need to know that! I don't need to know, and I
don't want to know!" Don't take the spice! By the way, you ought to be
vigorous in your rejection. If you take it, you become a talebearer!
"Bearing" means "to hold something up." You are now holding
the spice or the tale because you accepted it!
We must keep that spice
from getting on the fire, for if there is no wood, there will be no fire. If
the incense gets by, the odor is going to fill the whole place.
Proverbs 25:23, "The north wind
driveth away rain: so doth an angry countenance a backbiting tongue." Be absolute in your rejection of the spice. Drive it
away!
People who listen to the
spicy stuff are affected by it. The spice peddler has a terrible affect on the
one who receives the spice. In many cases, people who take the spice end up
leaving the church. Most of them do not end up in a fundamental church! The
talebearer is destroyed!
I can tell you about people
who told spicy lies, and in many cases, they are not doing much of anything for
God, but the people against whom they lied — well, they are doing
fine and going right on for God! For your sake, do not become a spice peddler,
and do not take spice when it is offered to you!
3. Be disturbed if the
spice peddler has given you his spice. You listened to it, so you already have
it. You are sorry you have it, but you can't give spice back. You can give back
something you steal, but you can't give spice back.
Once you have the tale,
what should you do? Give him an angry countenance, and let him know you do not
appreciate it! Let him know that you do not believe that it is true!
It is an awful thing to be
a custodian of something bad. I hate for someone to tell me something bad about
somebody else because then I know it, and in a moment of weakness, I might say
it! I do not want that responsibility, so I do not want that spice. I have to
do everything I can not to know it.
By the way, after a while
folks will know that you will not take spice. We have had folks who have worked
for me who thought they knew something bad about someone, so they got mad, quit
their jobs and left the church because they thought I allowed it to go on. What
they did not know is, I am not a spice peddler like they are, and I did not
know that stuff was going on. Usually it was not even going on at all!
4. Break your association
with the spice peddlers. Some of you are there right now. Some of your best
friends are spice peddler. You say, "Brother Hyles, what should I
do?" Break your friendship. Just tell them, "I am sorry. I love you.
I will be your friend until I die as far as helping you is concerned, but it is
not good for me to be around you. I cannot do it."
5. Do not deliver the
spice. Proverbs 20:19a, "He that goeth about as a
talebearer revealeth secrets." The
secret is the tale, the spice. Do not associate with one who has spice. If you
do get the spice from someone, though you tried to avoid getting it, do not
pass it on!
Ladies and gentlemen, I
promise you, that is the hardest thing known to mankind. You know what I am
going to say right now. Don't trust yourself with spice. Don't trust yourself
with it. I don't care who you are. You will tell your wife, and if you do, you
are a spice peddler. You will tell your husband, and if you do, you are a spice
peddler. Please do not trust yourself with spice. Do everything you can not to
get spice in your hand. You should even avoid certain people!
I have preached with some
spice peddlers around the country. There are pastor who are spice peddlers. Do
you know what I do when I get with them? I plan what we are going to talk
about. When I am met at the airport, I keep asking questions until I get to the
motel. Why? I am trying to keep from getting spice. I am trying to keep from
being rude. If I have to be rude and not take the spice, I will be rude. I will
tell them that I do not want to hear it.
A pastor picked me up at
the airport when I went to preach in a city out East, and before he put the car
in the second gear he said, "Did you hear about so-and-so?"
I said, "Is it good or
bad?"
He said, "Bad."
I said, "I do not want
to hear it."
He said, "You are
going to hear it while you are here."
I said, "I am not
going to hear it, and I am not going to hear it from you right now
either."
He said, "I am going
to tell you, because I want you to know what the truth is."
I said, "Stop the
car!"
He stopped the car, and I
got out.
He said, "Where are
you going?"
I said, "I am going
back to the airplane and back home to Chicago. I did not come to hear bad news.
I came here to spread good news."
He said, "I promise
that I won't tell you. Now will you get back in the car?"
I said, "I will get
back in the car." He did not tell me. Nobody else did either. I still do
not know what it was that he was trying to spread.
I am not trying just to
keep you from hurting other people. I am trying to keep you from hurting
yourself. If you never tell it, you are still going to smell like it. I used to
smell like tobacco whenever I got off an airplane. I never smoked a cigarette.
Once you hear that spicy stuff, it is going to be on you. It is a part of you.
It is already programmed in the computer.
5. Do not deliver what you
have not seen. If you did not see it, do not tell it to anybody! Obviously, you have absolutely nothing to
tell.
6. Do not deliver what you
have seen to anybody but the authority over that area. Let us suppose that Brother Evans saw Brother Young's
daughter out drinking. Should Brother Evans tell Brother Young? Yes, I think he
should. He shouldn't tell him if he heard it. He should tell him only if he saw
it. If he saw it, he should not tell Brother Lapina; he should not tell Brother
Mc-Kinney or Brother Boardway; he should tell only the one who has the
authority over that person. Deliver it to someone responsible for that
individual. Do not deliver it to the wrong person!
7. Conceal it. Proverbs
17:9, "He that covereth a transgression seeketh love; but he that
repeateth a matter separateth very friends." Proverbs 11:13, 'A talebearer
revealeth secrets: but he that is of a faithfulspirit concealeth the
matter." What does it mean? It means
you are to conceal it from everybody except the one who can do something about
it. That is exactly what it means.
Proverbs 12:16, 'A fools wrath is
presently known: but a prudent man covereth shame." I know what you are thinking. The Bible says that you should not cover
sin. You should not tell people about someone else's sin, except the one
responsible for the group that person is in. If you see one of our deacons down
at a Calumet City tavern drunk tomorrow night, you let me know. If you only
hear about it, do not bother me telling me anything. Do not tell anybody else.
Do not tell your husband or wife, your brother or sister, or anybody else. I am
not saying to cover it up. I am saying to uncover it only where it is supposed
to be uncovered. Then, forget it!
People come to my office
with a problem. They have done something terribly wrong. They will come to my
office again six months later about something else. They will say,
"Brother Hyles, I am doing better about my problem." I want to say,
"What problem?" for I have forgotten it. I really have. When someone
tells me something bad, I do not put it in a deep groove in my memory. That is
what the Bible means here. Each one of us should be "a prudent man"
that "covereth shame." When someone has given you some spice, conceal
it from yourself.
Do not be a spice peddler.
Do not let that spice get on the fire so that the odor will not fill the place.
Let your tongue practice justice!
Chapter
Twenty-eight
YOUR GOSSIP MAKES
ME DESTROY THOSE I LOVE THE MOST
'And the tongue is afire, a world of
iniquity: so is the tongue among our members, that it defileth the whole body,
and setteth on fire the course of nature; and it is set on fire of hell."
James 3:6
The tongue defiles the
entire body. What we see and hear defiles the tongue. When you tell me
something evil, you defile my ear, which defiles my tongue, which defiles my
entire body. I must therefore not allow anyone to tell me something which can
defile my entire body. That is what I covered in the previous chapter.
In this chapter we are once
again going to draw our lesson from James 3, but this time from a different
angle.
When you give me something
that could destroy my character, not only are you hurting me, but you are also
forcing me to hurt others. Not only have you destroyed my character, but you
have forced me to destroy someone else's character because what you tell me in
my ear, I cannot help but speak. You not only destroy me, but you cause me to
become a destroyer. Whom will I destroy? The answer is obvious: I will destroy
the very ones whom I love the most, for they are the likely ones to hear
anything I tell.
I am going to make eight
observations in this direction.
1. When you hear, you must
tell.
2. When you tell me, I must
tell. I cannot help it, for it has been planted into my mind. Then I corrupt
the person I tell. That makes me a destroyer. You can promise not to repeat
what you are told, but you cannot help it. If you do not have enough resistance
not to listen, you will not have enough resistance not to tell. When you tear
down the wall by listening, you tear down all the discipline to avoid defiling
your entire body. Tragically, you also become a destroyer of other people's
character.
3. We are going to tell the
people we love the most. Therefore, we destroy the character of the people we
love the most. When you listen, you put at risk the people you love the most.
If you do not listen, you cannot tell it. If you can keep it from entering
through your eyes or ears, you will not know it to tell it, and then the ones
you love the most won't hear it either!
4. They must tell. Those
who I love the most must tell what they have heard, so if I tell them, they
must tell.
5. I become an enemy to
those I love the most. Near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, is a place called Three
Mile Island, where they had an atomic contamination. I went to that area to
preach, but I did not get near the contaminated area. If I had gone to the
contaminated area, not only could I have become contaminated, but I could have
brought it back and contaminated those who are the dearest to me.
There are some contaminated
people whom we ought to avoid! If we do not avoid them, we risk being
contaminated and then contaminating those we love the most. We ought to avoid
those contaminated people like we would avoid a person with a highly contagious
incurable disease. Stay away from them!
When I was a child, they
quarantined people because they did not have all the miracle drugs we have
today. My sister contacted scarlet fever. A sign was placed on her door warning
people to stay away. She was quarantined. Gossips and slanderers ought to be
quarantined so that they do not contaminate you and cause you to contaminate
those you love the most.
A man who once taught at
Hyles-Anderson College used his tongue to take 40 students with him to start
his own college. He never got his college started, and his ministry failed.
Tragically, he destroyed the lives of those 40 students. That kind of man ought
to be quarantined!
6. For the sake of those I
love the most, I must not hear. What I hear, I must speak, because it enters my
mind.
7. If they hear it, they
must tell it. If I tell one person a week the garbage I know, and if they each
tell one person a week, in six months we will have corrupted 65,050,400 people.
Imagine! Sixty-five million people defiled because I knew something that I
should not have known and would not have known if I had refused to listen! I
would rather spend a day with a person with AIDS than with a person with an
evil tongue, because I would rather die with character and AIDS than live with
no character!
The person who is trying to
hurt someone with slander actually defiles each and every person who hears the
slander and all the people they love. It does not defile the person being
slandered. It defiles those who hear it and then must speak it. It has been
said that we always hurt the ones we love. In this case, it is true!
If you cannot prevent
getting it yourself, you can avoid spreading it to those around you. For your
sake and for the sake of those you love the most, flee from the words of evil
men!
Chapter Twenty-nine
GOD'S
"GET CHARACTER QUICK"
PLAN
'My brethren, be not many masters,
knowing that we shall receive the greater condemnation. For in many things we
offend all. If any man offend not in word, the same is a perfect man, and able
also to bridle the whole body. Behold, we put bits in the horses' mouths, that
they may obey us; and we turn about their whole body. Behold also the
ships, which though they be so great, and are driven of fierce winds, yet are
they turned about with a very small helm, whit he rsoever the governor listeth.
Even so the tongue is a little member, and boasteth great things. Behold, how
great a matter a little fire kindleth! And the tongue is afire, a world of
iniquity: so is the tongue among our members, that it defileth the whole body,
and setteth on fire the course of nature; and it is set on fire of hell. For
every kind of beasts, and of birds, and of serpents, and of things in the sea,
is tamed, and hath been tamed of mankind: But the tongue can no man tame; it
is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison. Therewith bless we God, even the
Father; and therewith curse we men, which are made after the similitude of God.
Out of the same mouth proceedeth blessing and cursing. My brethren, these
things ought not so to be." James 3:1-10
I believe with all of my
heart that this chapter could literally transform your life. Character is the
subconscious doing of right. It is in your reflexes. It is doing right by
reflex which is the safest way for a Christian to be. I am going to give you
the way for your entire body to be self-disciplined. The Bible gives us a way
to develop character and self-discipline quickly.
The Bible tells us in James
3 that we can bridle the whole body. That is what character really is. When you
say, "No!" to temptation and "Yes!" to doing right, you
have bridled your whole body. The Bible tells us in James 3 how we can do that.
Let me give you several observations from this passage.
1. You can be mature. That
is what the word "perfect" means. The Bible tells us that it is
possible for us to be mature.
2. You can have character
to control all of your body's passions.
3. If you lose control of
the tongue, you will lose control of the entire body. It's like a wall being
broken down in order for a city to be conquered. Your tongue is that wall. If
you can conquer your tongue, you can conquer all of the other enemies you have.
The tongue is the hardest part to conquer. There is no passion that you cannot
conquer if you conquer the tongue. If you can keep yourself from saying what
you should not say, you can keep yourself from doing what you should not do.
4. The key to discipline is
not speaking wrong. Acts 4:19,20, "But Peter and John answered and
said unto them, Whether it be right in the sight of God to hearken unto you
more than unto God, judge ye. For we cannot but speak the things which we have
seen and heard."
The Bible says we cannot
help ourselves from speaking those things which we both see and hear. It is
humanly impossible not to do so. That is the method whereby you gather the
things that you are going to say. What you see and hear will always come out of
the mouth.
If we are to control our
bodies, we must control our tongues, but we first must get the character to
control our tongues. The tongue will not be controlled if we do not control
what we see and hear.
5. It is impossible not to
speak wrong if you know wrong. You cannot help but speak what you know. We
must, therefore, find a way to avoid knowing wrong.
6. The entire key to
character is the discipline not to hear wrong. If you will follow that logic,
it will change your life. If you want the discipline to control your bodily passions, you must have the
discipline not to hear that which is wrong. Since you cannot restrain talking,
you must restrain hearing! If you get control of your tongue, you will have the
power to overcome every passion you have. Your problem is not your passions;
your problem is your tongue! Our nation has no character because our nation has
not learned to control our tongues. You cannot control what you say, but you
can control what you hear! As a result, you will control what you say.
7. When you tell me wrong,
you are tempting me to destroy my entire character. Do not make me the custodian
of the poison that could destroy my entire character. The hardest thing to do
in life is to keep quiet a juicy morsel of gossip, for we will speak what we
hear. In so doing, we lose control of our bodily passions.
The person who calls you on
the phone to tell you some gossip is trying to destroy your character, for he
is making you the custodian of something bad which you cannot help but speak.
You must not allow that gossip to enter into your ears. If you do, you will
speak it! If you can get the character to control it, you will have the
character to control your tongue and then your passions!
8. You offend me, if you
tell me. When you speak bad to me, you offend me because you are trying to
damage my character. The word "offend" in James 3:2 means "to
cause someone to stumble and fall." That is exactly what we do when we
tell someone something wrong. We are causing them to hear, which will cause
them to speak, which will tear down their ability to control their passions.
Most of us are more careful
about what we eat or drink than we are about what we hear. A juicy bit of evil
is more dangerous than a bottle of beer. Restrain the hearing if you want to
restrain the speaking!
9. You are not destroying
my character, but you are handing me something that will. When you tell me some
juicy gossip, you give me the poison with which I can destroy my entire
character. That is why I always say that I do not want to hear it. I refuse to
hear poison, just like I refuse to drink liquor. I will not drink your liquor,
even if it offends you; and I will not hear your gossip, even if it offends
you. I would rather offend you than to allow the poison that could destroy my
character to enter my mind. You are offending me by daring to offer me that
destructive poison!
The tongue defiles the
whole body. If you do not want your body defiled, do not allow yourself to hear
that which you cannot help but speak. Most people have no character because
they are being destroyed by what they see and hear.
10. Bad talk comes out of
Hell. The Bible says so. Evil talk does not hurt the person being slandered. It
hurts the talker because it breaks down his character. The way not to be the
talker is not to be the hearer. Whatever evil you bring to tell me came from
Hell.
Do you want to be a
delivery person for Hell?
11. The greatest character
is not to hear or see what you should not hear or see. If you want character,
control your tongue. If you want to control your tongue, control what you hear
and see.
Every character weakness you
have comes from an uncontrolled tongue. If you get the steering wheel messed
up, you will not be able to control the car. Get the tongue fixed, and you will
fix all the rest of your problems. Let it be defiled, and it will defile
everything else!
The great secret to
character is for you to control your tongue, but you cannot control your tongue
if you do not control your ears and your eyes!
Chapter Thirty
SATAN'S PRIMARY
OBJECTIVE IS
TO DISTORT JUSTICE
"Finally, my brethren, be strong in
the Lord, and in the power of his might. Put on the whole armour of God, that
ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil. For we wrestle not
against flesh and blood, but against principalities, a$ainst powers, against
the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high
places." Ephesians 6:10-12
The great work of Satan is
to disrupt justice. The way he disrupts justice is by accusing. This causes
people to judge others based on the accusation, not on the reality.
Everyone is a judge. Maybe
it's as a parent or employer, but in some capacity, each of us has a position
of judging. If the Devil can cause us to judge falsely, then he has totally
paralyzed God's system of justice. That is exactly what Satan is trying to do.
Daniel 10:12 13, "Then said he unto
me, Fear not, Daniel:for from the first day that thou didst set thine heart to
understand, and to chasten thyself before thy God, thy words were heard, and
Lam come for thy words. But the prince of the kingdom of Persia withstood me
one and twenty days: but, lo, Michael, one of the chiefprinces, came to help
me; and I remained there with the kings of Persia."
The angel came to give
Daniel the answer to his prayer. The Devil has a system of fallen angels or
demons who have different levels of authority. Satan has assigned a certain one
of these angels to every nation of the earth. We do not wrestle against flesh
and blood. We wrestle against principalities and powers. The United States of
America has a prince assigned by Satan to try to make our nation do wrong.
The Devil is not
omnipresent; nor is he omniscient. He discharges his demons to do his work at
different levels. This prince was sent to stop the angel who was trying to
deliver this message to Daniel. He withstood him for 21 days. Michael, the
archangel came and fought the prince of Persia. He defeated that prince so that
the angel could go on with his message to Daniel.
Notice, there is a power
structure. Daniel was the weakest. The angel was stronger than Daniel, but the
prince of Persia was stronger than the angel. Michael was stronger than the
prince of Persia. That is as far as the progression goes here, but in Jude we
see it go even further. Jude 9,
"Yet Michael the archangel, when contending with the devil he disputed
about the body of Moses, durst not bring against him a railing accusation, but
said, The Lord rebuke thee."
Michael, the archangel, was
no match for the Devil. The Devil had more power than he had. The fact is, Michael
admitted that he was no match for the Devil, but God is more powerful than the
Devil! That is God's system of power. Man is the weakest, but God is the most
powerful. As long as we do things in the power of the Holy Spirit, we can
overcome Satan!
Ephesians 6 tells us that
there are four powers against which we wrestle. Our battle is not against flesh
and blood, but against these four powers. We cannot change America by fighting
flesh and blood. What are these four powers? Let me explain what they are.
1. Principalities. I
believe that is Satan himself.
2. Powers. I believe those
are the generals or captains of Satan's armies.
3. Rulers of the darkness
of this world. These are the princes which are appointed over each country.
4. Spiritual wickedness in
high places. These are all of the demons that work individually against us.
Let me show you the Devil's
purpose for this structure of power. Revelation
12:9, 10, 'And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the
Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was cast out into the
earth, and his angels were cast out with him. And I heard a loud voice saying
in heaven, Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and
the power of his Christ: for the accuser of the brethren is cast down, which
accused them before our God day and night."
This passage is talking
about the tribulation period. Until the middle of the tribulation period, Satan
will continue to have access to God to accuse us to God. At that time he will
be cast out of all access to God and will come to earth and center all of his
attention on the earth. He will become the Devil incarnate (the Antichrist) for
a period of three and a half years. His angels will also be cast out of Heaven.
The Devil is accusing.
Right now he is accusing and trying to get us to believe things that are not
true. He is attempting to disrupt the entire order of justice on the face of
the earth by causing people to be accused of things falsely and being wrongly
judged by others.
The word "Devil"
means "accuser." When you say, "Devil," you are saying
"accuser." Thirty-four times Satan is called an accuser. Once he is
called a murderer. Never is he called a thief or an adulterer. Satan's main
work on this earth is to accuse and disrupt our system of justice.
The entire system of the
Devil is designed from the top to the bottom to cause us to accuse.
Consequently, the worst work of Satan is not drunkenness, adultery, murder or
lying. The worst work of Satan is accusing. That's what his name means.
Satan appeared only three
times in the Bible. He first appeared in Genesis, then in Job, and finally in
Matthew 4 to Jesus on the Mount of Temptation. All three times he appeared for
the purpose of accusing. In Genesis he came to accuse God to man. In Job he
came to accuse man to God. The Devil is trying to get man to treat God
unjustly, and he is trying to get God to treat man unjustly. The third time he
came to accuse the God-Man. His entire system is accusation.
So, one of the greatest
sins a Christian can commit is accusing! Most of us do not believe that, and
most will refuse to accept that; yet it is the one thing we can do that is most
like the Devil! If we believed that accusing was the worst sin, we would not
associate with accusers. The Devil wants all of us to be accusers. The worst
form of demon possession is gossip. That is what all the angels in Satan's
system are committed to doing. The epitome of diabolic action is being an
accuser or slanderer. That is the fulfillment of the work of the Devil. The
entire Satanic structure revolves around it.
Satan is trying to get the
Christians of our fundamental churches to accuse one another. The demons of
Hell are the ones who tell you to gossip. The demons of Hell are the ones who
tell you to listen to it. God's people ought to have something better to talk
about than to gossip about each other. Let's talk about Jesus! Let's talk about
the Gospel! Let's talk about the good things people do!
The Devil's entire system
of power is dedicated to ruining the reputation of God and man. If you are
involved in ruining someone's reputation, you are used of the Devil, and you
are doing his work. Satan is out to destroy people's reputations, and he is
working with all his power to get us to help him.
God never tells us to avoid
sinners such as alcoholics, drug addicts or adulterers, but He does tell us to
shun vain babblers. He never tells us to separate ourselves from derelicts, but
He does say to avoid those who cause division. God does not want us to
associate with those who are involved in doing what Satan is most actively
doing. When you gossip, you have become a part of Satan's power structure, and
he has performed in you his supreme work.
If Satan came to your town
to show you his most prized accomplishment, he would not take you to the area
of taverns or sleazy places of prostitution or the drug trade. He would not
take you to some fallen sinner or skid row. He would take you to a classroom
where a professor in some seminary is saying the Bible is not totally true, or
he would take you to the home of some Christian who is gossiping on the
telephone.
One day while preaching on
the Devil, I received the shock of my life. It dawned on me that the Devil does
not just falsely accuse us to God. He often tells the truth about us. It is not
only false accusation that makes us like the Devil; it is also true accusation!
We are not to be accusers!
My enemies enjoy stressing
that I like to cover up sin. I never cover up sin. I simply do not go around
the country telling about everybody's sins. I am in the business of restoring
people, not destroying people! I am in the business of reclaiming, not
defaming!
You
will never be more Satanic than when you tell something true or false about someone
else. The entire structure of the system of Satan is accusation in order to
destroy God's system of justice. I do not want any part of Satan's system. I
want to be involved in carrying out the work of the perfect justice of God!