THE CULT OF THE HEAVY SHEPHERDS.
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2 Corinthians 11:16-21 "I repeat: Let no-one take me for a fool. But if you
do, then receive me just as you would a fool, so that I may do a little
boasting. In this self-confident boasting I am not talking as the Lord
would, but as a fool. Since many are boasting in the way the world does, I
too will boast. You gladly put up with fools since you are so wise! In
fact, you even put up with anyone who enslaves you or exploits you or takes
advantage of you or pushes himself forward or slaps you in the face. To my
shame I admit that we were too weak for that!"
What was happening in Corinth was that a Christian sect or even a cult was
developing in the congregation. This little group was in the process of
breaking away from the church under some dynamic leaders. The outstanding
characteristic of this gang was their boasting. What blessings they had
come to know! What experiences of God they had had! They had gone higher
and deeper than any could imagine possible. Were there claims to visions,
or raptures, or healings, or ecstasies, or feelings of the nearness of God?
It seems likely that these were their claims. What mighty deliverances they
had known. Their whole lives had been revolutionised, they said, since they
had come into this special knowledge. "Look at our spiritual designer
labels!" How breathlessly exciting was their life, and they bragged to
everyone about their blessings.
Where do cults start? They generally start in the heart of evangelicalism,
in gospel churches not unacquainted with the teaching of the apostle Paul.
Sun Myung Moon, founder of the Unification Church, was reared in a
Presbyterian home. Jim Jones, founder of the People's Temple, at one time
attended a Nazarene church; later he pastored an interdenominational church
and a Disciples of Christ congregation. Moses David (David Berg), founder
of the Children of God, is the son of evangelical parents. He actually
served as a minister in a Christian and Missionary Alliance church, and was
involved for a time in a Christian television ministry. Victor Paul
Wierwille, founder of 'The Way', came out of the Reformed Church where he
had served as a pastor in a number of active congregations. Mary Baker
Eddy, founder of the Christian Scientists, and Charles Taze Russel, founder
of the Jehovah's Witnesses, were both raised in markedly Christian homes
and churches.
So from the time of the apostles until today, cults have been started by
members of congregations which professed to believe in the inspired
writings of Paul. The cults are not "them". No! Many of "them" used to be
"us", and the question I must ask us today is whether some of "us" one day
will become "them"? It is not impossible.
The Lord Jesus once felt it necessary to warn a group of his disciples, "if
anyone says to you, 'Look, here is Christ!' or, 'There he is!' do not
believe it. For false Christs and false prophets will appear and perform
great signs and miracles to deceive even the elect - if that were possible"
(Mk. 13 21&22). So in Corinth a religious group had started secretly to
meet together on the fringes of the church led by these men whom Paul calls
"super-apostles" (v.5). Their aim was to take over the whole congregation.
To do that they needed to discredit the apostle Paul, and they were in the
process of doing this, claiming, through their own self-appointed apostles,
to have the authority of Christ for what they were believing and doing.
We cannot dismiss such a phenomenon as totally remote from anything we will
ever experience in our own lives. Don't you believe that this is
irrelevant. Don't think you are unique, as someone utterly incapable of any
susceptibility to sectarian deception. The Lord Jesus says to you, "Reckon
on it!" Be on guard! It may be your favourite preacher who is leading you
astray! How will you recognise these errorists? They will not wear
uniforms, buttons, armbands, or headbands to announce that they have
another Jesus, a different spirit, a different gospel. That's why I admire
the openness of the Hare Krishna group, dressed in their saffron robes,
their heads shaved, shuffling along the streets in a group beating drums
and cymbals and chanting. They are immediately recognisable as members of
another religion. I wish them no harm. It is a free country. I worship a
better Lord. The Mormons too are generally upstanding young men and by
their clothes and badges they say, "We are not ashamed to be Mormons." I
like them as men, though I do not agree at all with their understanding of
the Bible. I have to grudgingly admire the persistence of the so-called
Jehovah's Witnesses as they ring my doorbell with their literature. They
stand by what they believe.
So we can readily define certain groups by their activities and even
appearance. They are up front. Some are much more sensationalist than the
Hare Krishna folk, and it is easy for us to focus on bizarre behaviour and
dismiss them with a shrug. But generally speaking those with cultist
tendencies don't set out with any trace difference from anyone here,
neither do they sound very different. In other words, they don't pour forth
a stream of weird teaching. Most of the time they say nothing outrageous at
all. Paul has written, "Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light. It
is not surprising, then, if his servants masquerade as servants of
righteousness" (vv 14&15). The Lord Jesus himself has warned us, "Beware of
false prophets who come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are
ravenous wolves. You will know them by their fruits" (Matt. 7:15). What you
generally meet in the heretic, says Jesus, is a fellow sheep.
Their fruits are the key to their danger. What are the fruits of these men?
It is fascinating to see how Paul describes them here. The most damning
analysis in the entire New Testament of the behaviour of cultists is found
in verse 20. Paul does not evaluate them theologically here. He does that
elsewhere with the Judaizers in his letter to the Galatians, and morally as
he explains to Timothy how men will behave in the last times. Here Paul is
giving more of a sociological definition, that is, he is emphasising the
common sectarian characteristics such as authoritarian leadership patterns,
and the manipulative and totalistic demands which cult leaders make on
their followers. A New Testament definition of a cultist is someone who in
the name of Christianity - see the exact words of Paul in the twentieth
verse - "enslaves you or exploits you or takes advantage of you or pushes
himself forward or slaps you in the face." Let's examine this strange
fruit, the actual behaviour of these false religionists.
i] They enslave people.
If you join a cult you are going to end up a slave. Make no mistake about
that. That is the goal of every cult, and that is why there is a huge
turnover of people who join for a while and then escape. "This is sheer
slavery," they think to themselves, and quit. Parents will not need to
enlist some cult-busting group to kidnap their daughter from the group. The
child will come to see the bondage she is in. So, will your first contact
with members of a cult be of a cowed broken people with manacles on their
hands, and irons on their legs? Will you hear in an adjoining room the
sound of the lash and the shriek of the beaten slave? No, you wont. Let a
woman called Jeannie Mills, a former member of the Jim Jones cult and a
survivor of the Jonestown massacre, tell you what she first discovered:
"When you meet the friendliest people you have ever known, who introduce
you to the most loving group of people you've encountered, and you find the
leader to be the most inspired, caring, compassionate, and understanding
person you have ever met, and then you learn that the cause of the group is
something you never dared hope could be accomplished, and if all of this
sounds too good to be true - it probably is too good to be true! Don't give
up your education, your hopes, and ambitions to follow a rainbow."
She did not meet obvious slaves, she met angels of light, people who gave
visitors and inquirers an overwhelming sense of acceptance, belonging and
significance. That is the pattern. Here are people who are interested in
you; they flatter you and feed you and touch you and hug you. To them you
have become the most exciting person in the whole world. How different your
staid church back home compared to this! But the end of it all is your
slavery.
What is this slavery? They will demand your total commitment to 'the
organisation.' The longer you stay you will become increasingly isolated
from your family, old friends, newspapers, TV and CDs. You will be subject
to intense persuasion by members of the group. You will not be left alone
to collect and recover your thoughts. Your resistance may be broken down by
long meetings and extended work hours as you sell literature or religious
knick-knacks on the streets. You will dress in the same style as everyone
else to suppress individuality. Complex games will be played for the
purpose of creating a sense of dependence on the rule-giving leader. You
will be conditioned to stop thinking and to accept without question the
revelations and teaching of the group. Your independence and self-respect
will be broken down through being persuaded to share your innermost secrets
with the group. One man said, "They pushed me into saying that I lusted
after my little daughter. Their idea was that only when you recognised your
total depravity could you let Jesus go to work." You may even be given
inadequate food so that your physical resistance is broken down and you
become more vulnerable to suggestion. Any negative thoughts or the
slightest criticism of the group or its leader is said to be
soul-threatening. Anyone who leaves the group is warned about the terrible
consequences. You will sing and sing and sing the group's own songs until
rational thought processes are blocked. The leader is increasingly pumped
up in authority and influence. All the group accept without question his
revelations and interpretations, while every religious leader outside the
group is said to be satanic, or at best, deceived by an evil conspiracy.
You have now entered a state of bondage. You think of nothing but your
involvement with the movement and the demands of its leader. Like a fly you
have moved into the web and the spider coming. Soon the height of religious
maturity will be for you to know before anyone else around you what he said
in his Bible Study last Thursday night in Ontario.
The cult has become everything. Your enslaved mind can think of nothing but
its activities. This is not surprising when the organisation itself is
represented as synonymous with the Kingdom of God. So, the Jehovah's
Witnesses pressurise their followers into an irrational neglect of natural
and family responsibilities, in order to serve the cause. In every one of
their Kingdom Halls, all over the UK, on each Sunday, the same study
material is being taught, and the same literature bought and sold. The same
is true of Christian Science meetings, and virtually every cult.
Dave Breese points out, "The Christian has been delivered from all such
nonsense. He knows that the word 'loyalty' is only applicable in a final
sense to our relationship with Jesus Christ himself. The devotion that
Christians have for one another is in loving response to the indwelling
Holy Spirit, not submission to an enslaving external organisation. It is a
truism that the less truth a movement represents, the more highly it must
organise. Truth has its own magnetism producing loyalty. The absence of
truth makes necessary the application the bonds of fear" (Dave Breese,
"Know the Marks of a Cult", Victor Books, Wheaton, 1975, p.102). So the
first mark of the cult is that it enslaves people.
ii] They exploit people
In other words, the cults devour your time, your gifts, your energy and
your goods. You are their meal. They feed off you. Consider the words of
God to the false prophets who lived at the time of Ezekiel: "'Son of man,
prophesy against the shepherds of Israel; prophesy and say to them: "This
is what the Sovereign LORD says: Woe to the shepherds of Israel who only
take care of themselves! Should not shepherds take care of the flock? You
eat the curds, clothe yourselves with the wool, and slaughter the choice
animals, but you do not take care of the flock. You have not strengthened
the weak or healed the sick or bound up the injured. You have not brought
back the strays or searched for the lost. You have ruled them harshly and
brutally."'" (Ez. 34:2-4).
What examples those false shepherds had - Moses, David, Samuel, Elijah -
true prophets, but they did not follow those men. They were unfaithful and
self-seeking pastors. Think of the Pharisees in Jesus' day. The Saviour
looked bleakly at them and said, "They devour widow's houses ... Such men
will be punished most severely" (Mark 12:40). These ultra religious men
sponged on widows, sometimes offering to arbitrate at time of financial
dispute and always in their own favour, pressurising these lonely women to
leave their money to themselves. It is a practice that still goes on. There
is a fascinating chapter in Father Chiniquy's book, "Fifty Years in the
Church of Rome" describing life in North America in the middle of the
nineteenth century. It is suggestively entitled, "The Priest, Purgatory and
the Poor Widow's Cow."
Harold L. Bussell was the Dean of Chapel of Gordon College in
Massachusetts. He says, "I counseled one young woman and over a period of
time uncovered difficulties making decisions, troubles with severe
depression, doubts concerning her faith, and an inability to cope with
life. She related to me her background: raised in a prominent Evangelical
church, knew the Scriptures, led Bible studies, had introduced many friends
to Jesus Christ. But then her problems began. Her family became involved in
an Evangelical community with cultic leanings. They were not alone in their
decision, as many members of their church, including the pastor, joined the
questionable group. They sold their homes. They dropped close friends.
Eventually children were separated from their parents, and reared by 'more
spiritual' parents. In group sessions, individuals were pressured publicly
to confess attitudes, sexual fantasies and past sins. For this young woman,
these years were full of confusion, pain and hurts that caused her journey
back to stability to be long and treacherous" (Harold L. Bussell, "Unholy
Devotion," Zondervan, 1983, p.14, single quotes mine).
But it is an almost universal characteristic of a cult that it has an
insatiable financial appetite. The key to wealth, devotees are told, is to
give more money to the cult, that is, to plant so-called 'seed-faith.' That
is a religious sounding way of saying, "Gimme your money." "Give the Lord a
thousand and he will give you ten thousand." Good psychology, bad theology.
Serve the Lord for absolutely nothing at all, but the honour of being
Christ's servant. The way to the healing of your terminally ill daughter is
to give money to the healer. "Isn't she worth it?" penniless parents from
the Third World are cruelly asked by millionaire speakers. To be delivered
from centuries of purgatory you buy indulgences or you pay for masses to be
said. "Don't you want your mother out of purgatory?" The fires of hell are
also dangled before these slaves for not giving larger amounts of money to
the cause. In the financial pressures of the cult you may be asked to hand
over all you possess to the leadership, or to give to them all you earn
from selling literature each day. They will give you pocket money as a
dependent minor. Tithing is but the beginning of the demands made upon you.
The stories are legion of wives and children being brought to exhaustion
because of the head of the family giving so much to the leaders. He has
become their slave, rather than the servant and head of his own family: "If
any provide not for his own, and specially for those of his own house, he
has denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel" (I Tim. 5:8).
Exploitation is of course bigger than the realm of finance. It can be
subtle and it can sound very 'spiritual.' A friend was having a solid
period of closeness to the Lord and then one day, after a service, his
minister began to talk to him. "How is it going?" he asked him. "Fine," he
said. But that wasn't the answer the minister wanted. He put his hand on my
friend's shoulder and he said to him, "How is it really going?" Suddenly my
friend felt guilty. He wasn't being serious enough, nor examining his
spiritual state as he should have been. He began to think he was such a
superficial person for enjoying life that day. Then the minister said to
him, "Your cold is getting to you, isn't it?" Well, it wasn't, but he was
having pressures put on him to look for a number of things that were wrong
and inform his minister. That pastor had become an expert at playing the
game of one-upmanship. He had come to believe that that was what being a
pastor was all about, making people pay homage to your insights and
concerns. Pastoring was probing. There are people in church who think that
their pastor knows more about them than they know about themselves. That is
far from true. Such gentle persistent interrogation is another kind of
exploitation.
iii] They take advantage of people
Paul is talking about controlling people, having them in your power. The
word is sometimes used of snaring a bird or catching a fish. In John's
gospel, chapter 9 there is the classic example of religious leaders seeking
to control a man. There was a man in Jerusalem who had been born blind, and
the Lord Jesus healed him on the Sabbath day. The Pharisees immediately
sought to investigate the matter. Notice the way they sought to keep a
tight control over this man (cp. Walt Chantry's essay, "Caution in Church
Discipline" in the book "Shepherding God's Flock", Sprinkle Publications,
1988).
a) As this had been done outside of their control they interviewed the man
in an atmosphere of intimidation. It is apparent that the witnesses they
summoned testified under fear. The tone of voice of the Pharisees, the
sense of menace in their questioning could have been enough. They expected
complete agreement from the common people in their own condemnation of
Jesus. Anyone who took a different approach would be thrown out of the
synagogue. So the natural joy of the blind man's parents was immediately
quenched by this threat. They must toe the Pharisees' line concerning - of
all men - the One who had given light and health to their dear boy, or they
were in trouble, even though they had been faithful members of this
congregation all their lives. No matter if they had never caused any
trouble in the assembly. They must agree with the rulers' attitude to
Jesus, or else the most severe measure would be brought against them.
People like that had to be controlled!
b) Again, they took advantage of them by cruelly dividing family and
friends. They called on family members to testify in hope of using their
words against the man born blind and against the Lord. Through the tactics
of the Pharisees the parents were pressured into abandoning their boy. In
all those early bewildering days of his seeing everything for the first
time, when he most needed them, they were forced into estranging themselves
from him. What consequences would that have had on their relationship? What
a blow to their family solidarity that parents were forced to abandon both
their son and the Man who had given the best of all gifts to him! These
rulers were using private conversations and confidential family information
to justify their disciplining Jesus and the boy. There were no grounds for
their acting as they did. If there is secret sin in the life of church
members the Lord will bring it to light without an inquisition gang out
there busily drilling for it.
c) Again, the use of lengthy sessions to break a suspect or to establish
his guilt is another evidence of extreme control. Very often the Pharisees
turned over the story of this man's healing. They were determined that
their interpretation of the events would be believed by all the synagogue
as the right one. They were certain that Jesus of Nazareth was a sinner. So
they reviewed the whole event, and made cold statements, and pressed down
on the seeing man, harassing him. The man eventually had enough of this. He
was provoked by their relentless questions and he became ironic: "I have
told you already, and you do not listen. Why do you want to hear it again?
Do you want to be his disciples too?" (v.27). The Pharisees snapped and
hurled insults at him, but he grew in stature. He spoke up boldly for Jesus
and rebuked them. Then they thought they had him! The provoked response was
used by his inquisitors as evidence that his heart attitude has been wrong
all the time!
d) Again, the synagogue leaders grew so indignant that a mere member would
question them. "How dare you lecture us?" (v.34). "At the beginning the
Pharisees were searching for grounds to accuse Jesus and the beneficiary of
his work. In the end the issue was this man's daring to stand in opposition
to them. A subtle shift had taken place. No longer was discipline used to
oppose heresy and scandalous immorality. Discipline was now employed as a
defence of the officers and their reputation. Now no sin was considered
more grievous than that of criticizing the synagogue's leaders, no matter
how valid that criticism might be. They had become paranoid, believing that
nothing threatened the church more than a challenge to their authority, no
matter how much that authority was being misused" (Walter Chantry).
e) Again, the Pharisees relentlessly persecuted the one who disagreed with
their opinion and policy. "When the healed man dared to grow more insistent
in spite of their pressure, and when he refused to concede to their unfair
position, he was driven from their fellowship. Severe measures of
discipline were employed for entirely insufficient reasons. Although no
heresy or shocking sin was found in the man, the ultimate measures of
exclusion and social ostracism were employed against him" (Walter Chantry).
Those five marks of abusive people control were witnessed by the Lord Jesus
Christ. Tyranny was used as the corrective to a joyful response to the work
of the Lord.
iv] They put themselves forward
Literally, they 'lifted themselves up' in a superior way. There was an
infamous man in the early church named Diotrephes. How is he described? "He
loves to be first" (3 John 9&10). Not only did he refuse to welcome the
brothers, but, "He also stops those who want to do so and puts them out of
the church." Diotrephes was a tyrant. He ruled the church with an iron
hand, but the sad reality was that many were happy to have a 'strong
leader', or they would have dispensed with him long ago, without the need
of the apostle John writing about him. There are two strong forces pulling
at the human heart, one is the desire to be another's pope, and the other
is the desire to have someone as your pope.
The mark of every cult is that it elevates to a divine level some human
figure. A sinner who is bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh is invested
with divine authority and honours. The Roman Catholics have their Pope. The
Baha'is have their Bahulah. The Mormons had their Joseph Smith, and the
Unification Church have their Mr. Moon. The Exclusive Brethren had their
Mr. Jim Taylor. Either by their personal charisma, or the power of their
propaganda, these self-styled messiahs succeed in imposing their will and
stamping their name on their devotees in a remarkable way, until they
become indispensable to people's faith. They say, "My people need me, and,
bless them, they can have me ... at a price." By cunningly promoting an
image of humility they succeed in dominating totally their followers.
Examples of such religious leaders abound. Little wonder that men have
taken them as role models for what a successful minister really is, a man
of power. Such men have begun to believe their own promotion. They have
stamped their names on everything in the church. They have pushed
themselves to becoming utterly indispensable to the faith of their
followers. They have an, "Aw, shucks, I'm just an ordinary guy" posture,
which they conjoin to their names in lights over the giant building and
starry-eyed followers all over the place who pronounce their names with a
sigh! How many such 'great men' of the Old Testament had the briefest era
of greatness and then died fools. The stories of Noah, and Gideon, and
Samson, and Solomon and other more recent men of religious history are the
stories of humanity in its saddest, truest forms. That which is born of the
flesh is flesh, and no attempt at deification by others or self-deification
will make it different. Do you seek great things for yourself? Seek them
not!
Hear this description of how one woman came under the spell of such an evil
man. "In 26 years she had never heard anyone talk like this man. The first
time she heard him speak, she was convinced that he was a real prophet. His
deep-set eyes searched his listeners, and when they met hers, she felt that
he was looking right through the doubts and cynicism she had
brought to the meeting.
"He seemed to speak with authority. He didn't merely quote the Bible - as
did so many pastors she had heard - he seemed to be quoting God Himself.
That very first night he told them of a revelation he had received about
the future of the secularized, prostituted church of America. He told the
group that God had spoken to him, revealing an amazing end time scenario.
'Don't doubt God,' he had said. 'Those who do shall not see what God has
revealed to those who trust.'
"This religious leader offered direction, not compromise. He had the
courage to call sin 'sin.' He didn't pull any punches. He told the group it
was not possible to sit on the fence, with one foot in the world and one in
the kingdom of God. In one meeting after another he described a new age
that would dawn after God had judged the commercialized church. 'Follow
me,' he said. 'Together we'll see God do miracles the like of which have
not been seen since the days of Christ.'
"To show their trust in his oversight, the group members were told to call
him 'Father.' He was the one who made the group decisions, and they became
entirely dependent upon him. Before long they were afraid to turn back.
Those who left the group were said to have returned to the kingdom of
Satan. This man offered religious leadership."
But what was happening? "Somewhere the switch was made to tyranny. Jesus
had made it clear that no man deserves the title of spiritual father or
teacher (Matthew 23:8,9), but this man seemed oblivious to that truth.
Instead of leading by example, he led by intimidation. Instead of showing
the gentleness of the Spirit, he was brash and demanding. Instead of being
careful not to go beyond the Bible, he mixed his own opinions with
Scripture. Instead of helping his members grow in personal maturity and
discernment, he encouraged them to regress into childlike dependence on
him. Instead of recognizing that God provides many leaders for his church,
he claimed to have the sole authority to speak in behalf of God. Instead of
teaching his group about the concept of the priesthood of all believers, he
retained the roles of prophet, priest, and king for himself. Instead of
sacrificing his own interests in behalf of the group, he used them to feed
his insatiable appetite for admiration. Yes, it appeared that he was
offering reliable spiritual leadership, but he was offering religious
tyranny instead" (Martin R. De Haan II, "What About Those Dangerous
Religious Groups" 1986 Radio Bible Class, Grand Rapids, Michigan, pp.
15&16). This would have been precisely the kind of influence the
super-apostles were having in Corinth.
v] They slap you in the face
How wonderfully blunt Paul is. The verb found here is used of flaying the
skin of an animal. Paul uses it when he remarks how seriously he takes the
task of mortifying remaining sin. He is not someone with an imaginary drum
and drumsticks 'beating the air', but he is spiritually and really
pummeling indwelling sin and keeping it in subjection (I Cor. 9:22). By
using this verb 'to strike' Paul might be referring to an actual incident
in the church at Corinth long remembered when one of these 'super-apostles'
actually hit someone in rage. Or perhaps Paul is thinking of the general
way in which these leaders humiliated their followers.
There is the warning the Paul gives to Timothy about church overseers that
they must not be violent (I Tim. 3:3). There is a fascinating example of
this recorded in Canticles 5:7. Did this incident really happen? It might
have. Or is it to be understood not literally but allegorically? What is
described for us is this: it was late at night, and the Shulamite was going
up and down the streets of the city seeking her Beloved whom she had
offended, and plaintively she is calling to him. Then, she says, "The
watchmen found me as they made their rounds in the city. They beat me, they
bruised me; they took away my cloak, those watchmen of the walls!" They
made no inquiry as to who she was and why she was out alone at that late
hour. They jumped to the conclusion that she was a woman of ill repute on
some mischievous errand, and they treated her accordingly. They hit her,
bruising her, and seizing her cloak, but she, like Joseph, left it in their
hands, and escaped into the darkness.
It was their duty to be on guard and watch for thieves and invaders. That
was their vocation, to keep the city while its inhabitants slept, and sound
an alarm if any danger appeared. They were performing their duty with zeal,
but theirs was untempered zeal. Their heavy handed policing was focused
upon a harmless, heartbroken young woman searching for the husband she had
petulantly repulsed and caused to go from her presence. It is no new thing
for the loyal subjects of the King to be misrepresented and roughly treated
by those who are Zion's guardians. They discourage instead of encourage.
They heap injury onto insult.
There is another example of godly Hannah praying silently in the temple,
her lips moving but no sounds coming forth. Eli the priest spotted her and
he snarled at her, "How long will you keep on getting drunk? Get rid of
your wine." (I Sam. 1:14). How nobly and gently she protested her
innocence: "...I was pouring out my soul to the LORD ... I have been
praying here out of my great anguish and grief" (I Sam.1:15&16). It is too
easy for any preacher to jump to hasty conclusions about people's downcast
eyes, and frowns, and bowed heads as they glance down from the pulpit at
them in a sermon. They are probably not expressing their disagreement or
boredom with us at all. Our hearers have been stirred to think by what they
have heard. We can too frequently make errors of judgment about the motives
and actions of people who are under our oversight. The best thing a
preacher ever does is to apologise to those whom he thinks he has wronged.
There is a violence, unaccompanied by repentance, just below the surface of
self-appointed religious leaders. Jesus did not say that in sheep's
clothing there would be sheep. "Wolves!" he said, that tear and destroy.
There is danger, let it be very plain, if you come under the influence of
cult leaders. There are threats and intimidation. If the Pharisees murdered
the Lord Jesus by crucifixion, and stoned young Stephen to death, then why,
when we read the history of the church, should we be surprised at the stake
and the gibbet, the rack and the thumbscrews, and hanging, drawing and
quartering blameless people? Such machinery of violence was set up by
ecclesiastical authorities. Think of what has happened within the memory of
many of us, on November 18, 1978, in a cleared-out patch of Guyanese
jungle, when the Reverend Jim Jones ordered the 911 members of his flock to
kill themselves by drinking a cyanide poison, and they did. Have there not
been other smaller examples since that time in Switzerland, Uganda, the
USA, and Japan? Don't you think that whenever there is the abuse of
children and women, and the psychological manipulation of men, all done in
the name of God, that physical violence resulting in bloodshed and death is
just around the corner? The false teachers flay you, says Paul. I was
speaking to a man last year, who had publicly disagreed with the leader of
their denomination, and a few weeks later, when he returned to his manse he
found all his furniture on the front lawn, the locks on his house all
changed, and his wife weeping sitting in one of the chairs in the garden.
The elders had been sent in and he was evacuated from his home. That
happened in the UK. Violence is very near the surface in a sect.
I want to say two more things and then I'll be done:
1. YOU CAN BE COMPLETELY DELIVERED FROM THE CULTS AND THE HEAVY SHEPHERDS.
Many have! If you or your parents have come under the pernicious sway of
such men and movements then you can be delivered, and have an undamaged
useful future in an ordinary limping congregation of saved sinners like
ours. Let me give you an example of one such man and his salvation. He says
this:
"I was born into a family that had been dominated by a powerful religious
group for three generations. My personal beliefs in the group were
confirmed while I was a young man. I held a number of important positions
in this group's church, including several key teaching posts. I studied its
doctrines continuously, reading all of its literature I could - some of it
several times. I guess you could say I was thoroughly indoctrinated. Its
beliefs and laws were the dominant force in my life. But I was not at
peace.
"When my wife and I visited some friends, I saw a book about our group
lying on their coffee table. Because my host was a high official in an
organisation reputed to have connections with our religious group, I was
curious about it. When I began to leaf through the book, however, I found
out that it was a piece of bluntly written literature exposing the lives of
the leaders of our group and its doctrinal inconsistencies. I was shocked,
yet I was fascinated by what I read. I wanted to find out more.
"A few months later, I happened to park my car in front of a Christian
bookstore. Remembering the book I had read earlier, I went inside to see if
I could purchase a copy. They didn't have that book, but they had many
others. (I was supposed to find them in a section labeled "cults.") I
purchased several, took them home, and began to read. I was dismayed and
angered by the things I discovered. When I showed the books to my wife, she
became upset with me and told me they were from Satan.
"About that time I came in contact with a group of people who had left our
beliefs to follow Christ. At their suggestion, I purchased a commentary and
began to study the Bible. I was amazed at what I discovered. I was
profoundly influenced by Luke 10:27, "Jesus said, 'Love the Lord your God
with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and
with all your mind' and 'Love your neighbour as yourself.'" Proverbs 14:12,
"There is a way that seems right to a man, but in the end it leads to
death," and many other passages. The shortcomings of my group's teachings
became glaringly obvious when compared to the Bible. I began to read about
the false prophets in 1 Thessalonians 5:21 "Test everything. Hold on to the
good. Avoid every kind of evil;" 1 John 4:1 "Dear friends do not believe
every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God,
because many false prophets have gone out into the world;" and Deuteronomy
18:20 "But a prophet who presumes to speak in my name anything I have not
commanded him to say, or a prophet who speaks in the name of other gods,
must be put to death."
"I wept as I read. I thought honestly about our group's founder. I realised
that he had neither lived nor died as a prophet. I recalled some of his
wild claims, and his boast that he had accomplished what the apostles Paul,
John, Peter, and the Lord could not do. I saw him as a far greater deceiver
than someone like Jim Jones ever was. Most wonderful of all, I found the
answers I had been searching for in the Bible. I trusted in Jesus Christ as
my Saviour and I was finally free! When I asked that my name be removed
from the church records, the trouble began. I came home one day and found
all my belongings on the front lawn. My friends from the group said that I
was demon-possessed, and my wife divorced me.
"Now, for the first time in my life, I have new life in Christ and true
freedom. My search is over. In the Bible I found what I had been looking
for all along." This man can be you! There is no need why you should not be
delivered from the post traumatic stress of a cultic experience. Men and
women like that man are found in our congregation. They have been sweetly
and completely from such cults and sects. They are not ex-anythings. They
are the humble servants of the Lord Jesus and our brothers and sisters.
2. WE CAN BE KEPT AS A PEOPLE FROM BECOMING A "SUPER-CHURCH."
We don't need super-apostles, and we don't need "super-churches." Four
truths believed and loved will deliver us from becoming a cult (cp.,
"Shepherding God's Flock", pp. 116-120).
i] The Lordship of Christ.
Ultimately we do not answer to any man for out attitude and our actions.
Paul said, "But to me it is a very small thing that I should be examined by
you, or by any human court ... but the one who examines me is the Lord" (I
Cor. 4:3&4). We naturally desire human approval, and ministers, as much as
any Christians, dread the censure of fellow believers. But for us Christ's
approbation is the great object. What a deliverance that is from the
enslaving influence of the hopes and fears which spring from an exaggerated
estimation of the good opinion of men. Christ is the Lord, and the one who
judges us is the Saviour who has died for us on Golgotha. To him we shall
answer in that tremendous day.
ii] The Priesthood of All Believers.
How God has used this truth through the history of the church to deliver
his people from spiritual tyranny. We have a great High Priest by whom we
can immediately come into the presence of God. Our heavenly Father has,
through his Son Jesus Christ, made all believers - men and women, children
and the elderly, slaves and masters - priests unto God. We can come into
his presence and worship and love him. We can leave his presence and take
his message to the world around us. God himself gives each Christian the
authority and blessing to do that. Each of us can exercise the gifts God
has given to us, and, having bowed to the Lord of hosts, need never bow the
knee to human spiritual overlords. Over-dependence on powerful men produces
passivity. Subjection to their dictates leads to unwarranted control.
Slavery to the precepts of men creates gospel hypocrites who know how to
keep the rules and stay on the good side of their slave masters. Firm
submission to the lordship of Christ brings true freedom and lives of
usefulness.
iii] The Blessedness of Divine Adoption.
We may all, as mere believers, run eagerly into God's presence and cry to
him Abba Father! Every Christian has that filial spirit. We are no longer
slaves but adopted sons and joint heirs with Christ. Every single Christian
on the same level exactly. No super-Christians at all. We are all sons
positionally and dispositionally. The Spirit of adoption enables us to
serve God and do what his pleasing to our dear Father in heaven. What
religious man has the right to bring Christ's freedmen back under bondage
again? Let us sound an alarm at the first signs of a yoke of bondage being
placed on the necks of the robust children of the King!
iv] The Example of our Good Shepherd.
See how patient was the Lord Jesus with his disciples. His whole ministry
was clothed in divine power. He raised the dead, cleansed the leper, and
when he spoke the winds and waves obeyed him. But in the New Testament our
great Leader is revealed to be tender, courteous, forgiving, and a servant.
He was never bossy or overbearing. His yoke was easy and his burden was
light. He sought out the victim of the heavy-handed authoritarian
Pharisees. He comforted that man interrogated by the Pharisees whose sight
he had restored. He spoke such tenderness to the woman who had been caught
in adultery, though telling her to go and sin no more. His authority
enhanced the purity and growth of others. He never used them for his own
ends. He fed the multitudes; they never fed him. He sought to lift the
burdens from the weary and heavy-laden and to prevent such burdens being
placed on the lives of those who followed him. That is the example the Lord
gives to every under shepherd.
The gift of preachers and elders, the provision of godly oversight, is
Christ's personal expression of his love for his people. Every Christian
needs a shepherd. Christ has so made us, and has provided these men for us
all. Such pastors must speak to men's consciences, and men will obey them,
but only in so far as their own private judgment agrees that what they are
receiving is there in the Bible. The sceptre the preacher wields is God's
Word. To wield God's sceptre is nothing more than to teach the Bible to
every man in the sight of God. But it is the saddest Christian life to be
taught what is in the Bible and to respond by saying, "Oh, that is your
opinion!" That is the first step in loosing anyone's links to a gospel
church and his heading away in the direction of a cult. It all begins when
a man begin to be restless and distrusts historic Christian teaching
concerning the plain meaning of the good news of Jesus Christ.
24th February 2002 GEOFF THOMAS
Please email the site editor Michael Keen (M.Keen@alfredplace.org.uk) if you:
- prefer strongly or VERY STRONGLY this change to a sans-serif font
- prefer strongly or VERY STRONGLY the previously used serif font
A serif font is better, I believe, for print on paper. Jakob Neilsen, an interface design guru, advocates a sans-serif font for screen reading. Verdana does occupy a little more space: a long sermon may require an extra screen or two and an extra page of printout! But, a study of screen reading speed done at Carnegie-Mellon found no performance difference between the two. Compare this sermon with last week's to see the difference. Do, please, email me if you feel strongly about this, and I'll note on a sermon page what this informal survey produced, in about six weeks time.
Michael
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