7.6 " Who should I fellowship?" : Christadelphian
Divisions
The average person who comes into contact with
Christadelphians will have met up with the main, Central body of
Christadelphians, numbering about 50,000 world-wide. However, there
are a further 2,000 or so Christadelphians, divided up between a
number of mutually exclusive 'fellowships'. Each of these fellowships
believe the same, distinctive Christadelphian doctrines, but has
chosen to place great emphasis on one or two non-fundamental issues,
often relating to aspects of Bible teaching concerning marriage.
They all disfellowship any of their members who break bread with
members of any of the other groups, even if the individuals broken
bread with do not themselves hold a different view to what they
hold. The whole situation can become very confusing for those who
are baptized by members of one of the smaller groups. The following
chart illustrates the degree of fragmentation which has developed.
It must be emphasized that the main, central body of Christadelphians
(numbering around 50,000 and accounting for the vast majority of
Christadelphians) is not divided in this way. The sad picture
presented below is, unfortunately, incomplete. There are literally
dozens of small break away groups, none of them numbering more than
20, who have separated from the above fellowships. These also preach,
eager for converts. The smaller the fellowship and the more earnest
the belief that only they are right, the greater the desire for
members. This may account for the observation that the smaller the
fellowship, the greater the emphasis on preaching. Sadly, as things
stand at the moment, the Lord will find His household divided at
His return. We each have a solemn duty to do all within our power
to bring about at least some unity in the body, before that time
comes.

The question arises: How ever did this fragmentation develop? The
answer lies in the fact that all the break away groups have a view
of fellowship which results in this kind of thing being inevitable.
They insist that every member of their group believes the same thing
even on matters which are not fundamental to the basic Gospel, and
they disfellowship anyone who breaks bread with anyone who breaks
bread with anyone who breaks bread with someone who may be in error.
So, let's say there is a brother in South Africa in isolation, baptized
by one of the smaller groups. He finds that living next door to
him there are Christadelphians from the main, Central group, believing
exactly as he does. He breaks bread with them, and is visited by
a brother from (say) Kenya, who breaks bread with him. The small
fellowship would disfellowship the South African brother, plus the
Kenyan brother, and then anyone who would break bread with the Kenyan
brother. If some Kenyan brothers won't agree to this, then they
are disfellowshipped. If they then travel over the border to Uganda
and break bread there, then the Ugandan brothers are disfellowshipped,
etc. etc. This view of fellowship is bound to cause world-wide division-
as it has done. You will notice from the above chart that nearly
all of the break away groups have subsequently sub-divided, e.g.
the Dawn subdivided into the Purley group, the Antipas and the Watchmen
(and many other smaller groups). This endless subdivision is inevitable
if the theory of 'guilt by association' is held- i.e., that the
guilt of one erring member passes to another through the breaking
of bread, and then from him to another, from him to another, etc.
Not only is this view of fellowship unworkable, it is never
taught in Scripture. Whoever is baptized after believing the doctrines
of the true Gospel is our brother or sister- regardless of who baptized
them, or what name they go under. Titus was Paul's son " after
the common (Gk. koinos) faith" (Tit. 1:1). The faith,
the doctrines which he had been taught by Paul and been baptized
upon believing, were what had made him Paul's son; and therefore
that faith was what bound them together in fellowship. The Faith,
as in the basic doctrines which make baptism valid, are the basis
of our commonality, our fellowship, with each other. All
Christadelphians are united in understanding what those doctrines
are. Most ecclesias meet on the basis of the BASF, a statement of
faith which lists the basic doctrines of the one Gospel. If someone
is validly baptized, we have a solemn duty towards them. If we cannot
love our brother whom we have seen, we cannot claim to love God
our common Father, who is manifested through that brother (1 Jn.
4:20). Even if we think that there may be some bearing the name
'Christadelphian' who are not validly baptized, this doesn't
take away from our unity with those who are validly baptized.
One Body
There is one body- this is a very common theme in the
New Testament. But it has strong Old Testament antecedents. There
was one chosen nation, one land, one tabernacle, one altar, one
covenant, one temple- unity was God's evident intention for His
people even in Old Testament times. Israel were redeemed from Egypt
as one family (Am. 3:1). The earliest anticipation of the
one body was the fact that man and woman become one flesh / body
in the marriage process (Gen. 2:17). If we are all members of the
one body, this fact requires us to strive for unity with each other.
We can't just sit back and think 'OK, so there's one body'; rather
like a married couple can't just say they are one because they are
" one flesh" . They must work on it if they want to be
truly one. And likewise with the one body of Christ. Throughout
the Law of Moses, the unity of Israel was emphasized. Moses in his
last great speech as recorded in Deuteronomy seems tp have purposefully
confused his use of “ye” [plural] and “thee” [singular] in addressing
them; as if to show that they, the many, were also one body (e.g.
Dt. 10:12-22; 11:1,2). Although God created the division between
Israel and Judah as a punishment for their apostasy (cp. how He
gave Egypt and the Shechemites a spirit of disunity likewise, Is.
19:1,2,14; Jud. 9;23), He never essentially recognized that division;
for there was one Israel, one body. Indeed, He said that the division
was the greatest tragedy to come upon His people (Is. 7:17). The
way the new garment of Ahijah was torn up to symbolize the division,
reflects the utter waste (1 Kings 11:29). For an outer cloke was
a garment a man could wear for life; to have a new one was something
significant.
There is much emphasis on the ultimate union of Israel and Judah
at the second coming (e.g. Jer. 3:18; Ez. 37:16,19; Hos. 1:18; 10:11;
Zech. 9:13:). The division was evidently a source of concern to
the faithful at the time of the prophets, and the sadness of the
division was deeply felt; as it is in the present body of Christ.
There are many passages where God emphasizes the essential unity
of Israel and Judah through the device of parallelism. Two examples:
" In Judah
is God known:
His name is great
In Israel" (Ps. 86:1).
" For the vineyard of the Lord of Hosts
is the house of Israel,
and the men of Judah
His pleasant plant" (Is. 5:7).
By Judah and Israel working together, the whole people of God could
have brought forth spiritual fruit: “Ephraim is an heifer that is
taught, that loveth to tread out the corn…I will set a rider on
Ephraim. Judah shall plow, Jacob [i.e. Ephraim, the 10 tribes] shall
break his clods. Sow to yourselves in righteousness…break up your
fallow ground”” (Hos. 10:11,12 RV). Ephraim, the 10 tribes, were
the heifer, Judah the plough, and Messiah the rider. But both Ephraim
and Judah would not. And so an environment for spiritual fruit wasn’t
possible, and Messiah at that time could not unite them in His service.
In the nations around early Israel, the extended family was the
basis of ‘fellowship’. But this was not to be so amongst them. “Better
is a neighbour that is near than a brother far off…there is a friend
closer than a brother” (Prov. 27:10; 18:24). This was all in specific
contradiction of the prevailing idea that your blood brother was
the closest to you, no matter how far he was. All Israel were to
see themselves as one family, one body. It was a radical idea. Our
Christadelphian way of calling each other brother and sister ought
to imply the same. For us, blood needn’t be thicker than water.
It all depends whether you have your brother or sister in Christ
near at hand.
There is one fold, in which are all the true sheep (Jn.
10). If we all respond to the voice of the same Shepherd, we will
be gathered together unto Him (Ez. 34:5). The most serious problem
in the Corinth ecclesia, Paul said, was that they were divided (1
Cor. 1:18 Gk; and notice how he begins his letter by addressing
this problem, not the incest, the drunkenness at the breaking of
bread, the false doctrine...). We are all grafted into the same
olive tree (Rom. 11). There is one vine, and we are the branches
(Jn. 15). It's not that Christ is the trunk and we are the branches.
We are the branches, we make up the vine, we make up the Lord Jesus.
He spoke of " we..." to mean 'I...' in Jn. 3:11, such
was the unity He felt between Himself and His men. He asked Saul
" Why persecutest thou me?" (Acts 9:4), again
identifying Himself with His people. The term " Christ"
is even used of the believers, such is His unity with us (1 Cor.
12:12). Christ is not divided, and therefore, Paul reasons, divisions
amongst brethren are a nonsense. Christ is not divided, and
therefore neither should we be (1 Cor. 1:13; 3:3). Let's remember
this powerful logic, in all our thinking about this issue. Paul
even goes so far as to suggest that if we do not discern the body
at the breaking of bread, if we wilfully exclude certain members
of the body, then we eat and drink condemnation to ourselves. This
is how serious division is. The devil’s house is divided (Mt. 12:25,26);
Christ is not divided (1 Cor. 1:13 s.w.). We were called to the
Gospel so that we might share in the fellowship of the
Lord Jesus Christ- i.e. fellowship with Him and His Father, and
with all the others within His body (1 Cor. 1:9,10). If we accept
that brethren and sisters are validly baptized into and remain within
His body, then we simply must fellowship with them. Should
we refuse to do this, we are working against the essential purpose
of God- to build up the body of His Son now, so that we might exist
in that state eternally. Causing division within the body is therefore
a sin which may exclude us from the Kingdom (1 Cor. 11:19 alludes
Mt. 18:7). To refuse to fellowship a brother is to effectively say
that he is not within the Lord's body; for when we break bread,
we show that we are one bread and one body (1 Cor. 10:16,17). And
as we condemn, so we will be (Mt. 7:1). The purpose of the cross
was to gather together in one all God's children (Jn. 11:52), that
the love of the Father and Son might be realized between us (Jn.
17:26). If we support division, we are denying the essential aim
of the Lord's sacrifice.
The Lord Jesus spoke of how “I am come to send fire on earth [after
the pattern of Elisha against apostate Israel]...I am come to give...division”
(Lk. 12:49,51). He parallels the fire of condemnation with division.
And yet He says that this figurative fire is “already kindled”.
If we are divided willingly, of our creation, then we stand self-condemned.
This is how serious this matter is. I fear, really fear, that in
the day of final account it may be that a brother or sister has
lived separately from the world, believed all the right things,
and yet his or her divisiveness means that they are condemned together
with the immoral and the worldly. A divided house is the characteristic
of Satan’s house or kingdom, and it will fall- just as the house
built on sand fell at the day of judgment (Lk. 11:17,18). This doesn’t
mean, though, that just because our community is divided therefore
the Christadelphians are ‘satan’s kingdom’. Those who leave us in
despair at our divisiveness never find an undivided church, until
they fellowship only with themselves. The Lord taught that an inevitable
by-product of His Gospel was that He would send division, often
within families (Lk. 12:51-53). To be unwillingly caught up in a
divided house / family is not, therefore, a sin or a sign of our
personal condemnation. There must be schisms amongst us, that they
might make manifest who the faithful are, by their attitude to them.
If there are divisions, then it is evident that they only exist
in the minds of Christadelphians- not in that of God, for whom there
is only one body. If we admit that our brother is validly
baptized and in Christ (i.e. a Christadelphian), then we
are intimately connected with him, regardless of what his background,
colour, language, geographical location etc. may be. This is one
of the finest mysteries of fellowship in Christ: that we are so
inextricably linked: " We, being many, are one body in Christ,
and every one members one of another" (Rom. 12:5). We enter
into the one body by correct baptism into the body of Christ. Our
baptism was not only a statement of our relationship with the Lord
Jesus; it is also a sign of our entry into the body of the Lord
Jesus, i.e. the community of believers, the one ecclesia (Col. 1:24).
Members are added to the church through baptism (Acts 2:41,47; 5:14;
11:24); thus baptism enables entry into the one body of Christ.
Consider carefully how that whoever is properly baptized is a member
of the one body, and is bound together with all other members of
that body: " As the body is one, and hath many members, and
all the members of that one body, being many, are one body: so also
is Christ. For by one spirit are we all baptized into one body...for
the body is not one member, but many" (1 Cor. 12:12-14). Paul,
in his relentless manner, drives the point home time and again.
He goes on to reason that just because the hand says it isn't of
the body, and won't co-operate with the feet, this doesn't mean
that it therefore isn't of the body. And so it is with
those like the Dawn fellowship who say they have broken away from
Christadelphians; because they say they are not of the body doesn't
mean they are not of the body. We are called to the hope of the
Kingdom " in one body" (Col. 3:15); all who receive the
call of the true Gospel are in the same one body. There is one body,
based around sharing the one faith, one hope, understanding of the
one Father and Son, having participated in the one baptism (Eph.
4:4-6). So whoever believes the doctrines of the basic Gospel and
has been baptized and walks in Christ, we have a duty (and should
have a desire) to fellowship. The need for unity amongst us is so
very often stressed (e.g. 1 Cor. 1:10; Rom. 15:5,6; Phil. 2:2; Eph.
4:31,32; Col. 3;12-15). The essential divide is not between Christadelphians,
but between Christadelphia and the world. James urged the divided
church of the first century to remember that God had visited the
Gentiles to take out of them a people; he said this in the context
of a conference seeking to unite factions within the brotherhood.
His idea was clearly to put the whole debate into perspective- the
Gentile believers were called out of the world, and therefore ought
to be fellowship by those who had likewise left the world.
Fellowship In The Body
The declaration that we are in the one body is shown in terms of
breaking bread together. " The cup of blessing which we bless,
is it not the communion (the sign of sharing in) the blood of Christ?
The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of
Christ? For we being many are one bread, and one body: for we are
all partakers of that one bread. Behold Israel after the flesh:
are not they which eat of the sacrifices partakers of the altar?"
(1 Cor. 10:16-18). All who share in the saving work of the Lord
Jesus by true baptism into Him ought to break bread together. In
the same way as the Jews were connected with the altar by reason
of eating what was upon it, so all who are connected with the Christ-altar
(Heb. 13:10) show this by eating of the memorial table. If we deny
the breaking of bread to brethren, we are stating that they are
outside covenant relationship with God, that they have no part in
Israel. The Lord Jesus reconciled all true believers unto God "
in one body by the cross" (Eph. 2:16). All who are reconciled
by the Lord's sacrifice are therefore in the one body, and therefore
we have a duty to fellowship with others in the one body. If we
refuse to do this, we in some way attempt to nullify the aim of
the cross. He died in the way that He did in order that the love
which He had showed might be manifested between us (Jn. 17:26).
To break apart the body is to undo the work of the cross. And yet,
as a sad, wise old brother once remarked under his breath, "
it's a shattered cross" .
It is God's intention that " there should be no schism in
the body" (1 Cor. 12:25). If we refuse to break bread with
validly baptized, good living brethren- then we are working against
God. And if we then go on to disfellowship anyone who will not agree
with our opinion on a brother, we are doing just what Diotrephes
is condemned for doing: " Diotrephes, who loveth to have the
pre-eminence...receiveth us not...and not content therewith, neither
doth he himself receive the brethren, and forbiddeth them that
would, casting them out of the church" (3 Jn. 10,11).
Now this is exactly the position of the minority fellowships. If
a member breaks bread with someone in another fellowship, even if
they believe the same things, then they are disfellowshipped. And
if another member will not accept this disfellowship, then they
too are " cast out of the church" . This is the
big mistake: a sincere brother breaks bread with another brother,
who doesn't hold or live false doctrine- and he is disfellowshipped.
We should never hold a view of fellowship which allows this to happen.
The bread which we break is a symbol not so much of the blood-covered
body which hung on the cross, as of the body of Christ, the one
ecclesia. The physical body was not broken; but we break the loaf
to show how we being many each have our part in that one loaf of
Christ. Paul lays down quite clearly the blasphemy of breaking bread
without respecting the Lord's body. In the context, the Corinthians
were divided and hateful against each other. When they broke bread,
therefore, they were abusing the Lord's body. Whenever we break
bread, we show our fellowship with all members of the body- both
geographically, and also over time. To accept that a brother is
a valid member of the body but not to break bread with him is therefore
a contradiction in terms.
It is worth reflecting that all who will be in the Kingdom are
in the one body. Therefore that body exists, in God’s eyes, not
only over space, but also over time. Both Moses and Jesus were faithful
in God’s house, “whose house are we” (Heb. 3:5,6), as if we were
actually His house then as much as now. We will all be saved through
our identification with Christ’s body. The Law encouraged each man
to “enjoy the inheritance of his fathers” through only marrying
within the tribe, to encourage this sense of unity with earlier
believers (Num. 36:8). There are even examples of where the individual
Israelite had the actions of the body of Israel in the past imputed
to him (Dt. 1:26; 5:2; 29:1). This isn’t ‘guilt by association’,
but rather an example of the ineffable unity of all God’s people,
wherever and whenever they lived. Thus the most lonely individual
can read the historical records of God’s people in the past and
feel a true sense of community with the people of God, knowing that
these things are his very own personal legacy and spiritual inheritance.
The full beauty of unity will only be appreciated fully in the Kingdom;
Zechariah was given the vision of the unified candlestick after
awaking from a figurative death (Zech. 4:1,2). And yet there is
also wonderful evidence of the height of unity that was achieved
amongst some even in this life. Paul sincerely felt the joy of others
as being his personal joy (Rom. 12:15 cp. 1 Cor. 15:31; 2 Cor. 2:3).
Because we are in one body, we rejoice with those who rejoice. “We
are partakers of your joy”, Paul could write. The comfort
which Titus felt was that which Paul felt (2 Cor. 7:6,7,13); Corinth’s
joy was Paul’s (2 Cor. 7:13). This should ensure a true richness
of experience for the believer in Christ, sharing in the joys and
sorrows, the tragedies and triumphs, of the one body on the Lord.
“He that separateth himself seeketh his own desire” (Prov. 18:1
RV). This says it all. Any separation from our brethren, whether
it be from personal dislike of them or for fear of losing friends
amongst others who order us to separate from them…is all ultimately
selfish.
Dealing With Error
There is, however, another side to the question of fellowship.
Light has no fellowship with darkness. Therefore there is an urgent
need to separate from those brethren who in their doctrine or way
of life have openly rejected the way of God's Truth, despite repeated
and extensive dialogue with them. However, our responsibility for
withdrawing fellowship cannot go beyond our local context. Each
individual Israelite had to ensure that there was no leaven in his
or her immediate area on Passover night (Dt. 16:4- " thee"
singular). And it must constantly be stressed that we also have
a responsibility to fellowship with all who believe
and live the one Faith. Most importantly, we must not slip into
a mindset which is endlessly concerned with the supposed weaknesses
of others; if we must rebuke another, let us do it considering our
own weaknesses (Gal. 6:1). And let us beware of the tendency to
think that our brother has a splinter in his eye, when we have a
plank in our own (Mt. 7:5). This little parable surely teaches that
it is likely that whenever we see something wrong with
another believer, we are similarly guilty; for a splinter is also
made of wood like a plank is. The Lord is saying that it's highly
likely that we are failing in a much greater manner in the very
area where we see a slight weakness in our brother.
There are different levels of being out of fellowship with other
believers. Any analysis of the NT teaching about ecclesial discipline
will make this clear. Some brethren should be simply avoided,
kept away from, not necessarily because they themselves
are teaching any false doctrine (Rom. 16:17 Gk.). More seriously,
2 Thess. 3:15 speaks of some cases where we should not count a brother
as an " enemy" , 'an opposing one', but admonish him as
a brother, while separate from him; whilst Mt. 18:17 describes
other cases where the errant brother should be treated as we would
a worldly Gentile (although note: “Let him be unto thee”
singular; this is talking about personal decisions, not ecclesial
withdrawal); and, going a stage further, 1 Cor. 5:11 suggests we
should not even keep social company with a brother who is involved
in sexual perversion. These different levels of being 'out of fellowship'
can be applied to the different level of separation there may be
in practice between us and a false teacher, and those who perhaps
in a misguided view of 'love' still tolerate him in fellowship.
Even if we insist that Mt. 18:7 should be applied to someone, it
must be noted that the Lord’s attitude to tax collectors and Gentiles
was to mix with them, even share table fellowship with them, with
a burning desire to win them for His cause (Mt. 9:9; 10:3; 11:19;
28:19). It is no accident that all these passages in Matthew have
some reference to Matthew the tax collector being called and saved
by the Lord. Matthew is effectively saying under inspiration that
we should treat the person we decide to relate to as a tax collector
and Gentile just as he had been treated by the Lord’s saving, calling
grace.
| "
It is not my province to issue bulls of excommunication,
but simply to shew what the truth teaches and commands.
I have to do with principles, not men...All whom the apostles
fellowshipped, believed [the truth]; and all in the apostolic
ecclesias who believed it not - and there were such-
had not fellowship with the apostles, but opposed their
teachings; and when they found they could not have their
own way, John says, 'They went out from us, for they- the
antiChrist- were not all of us' (1 Jn. 2:19). The apostles
did not chase them out, but they went out of their own accord,
not being able to endure sound doctrine (2 Tim. 4:3). Then
preach the word etc., and exhort with all long-suffering
and teaching. This is the purifying agent. Ignore brother
this and brother that in said teaching; for personalities
do not help the argument. Declare what you as a body believe
to be the apostles' doctrine. Invite fellowship upon that
basis alone. If upon that declaration any take the bread
and wine, not being offered by you, they do so upon their
own responsibility, and not on yours" .
John Thomas, 1870.
Compare this with the Lord's rebuke of the
immature disciples when they effectively demanded that John's
disciples be disfellowshipped:: " Forbid not: for he
that is not against us is for us" (Lk. 9:49). |
However, all such separations are not in any sense judging.
We learn from the parable of the tares that the Lord alone will
uproot the tares, at the judgment. That same parable reveals that
the Lord foresaw how His future servants would have a tendency to
uproot other believers who were in fact acceptable to Him- and therefore
they should be willing to allow the wheat and tares to grow together,
even if they have misgivings about some in the ecclesia. Likewise
Rom. 14:1 counsels us to receive him that is weak in the faith-
as long as he is in the faith. Ecclesial discipline is not, therefore,
'rooting up' our brethren and condemning them. We dare not
do anything of the sort- for the sake of our own eternal destiny,
if nothing else. What we are doing is obeying the very basic Biblical
command to separate from that which is wrong. Any such separations
are brought forth from much sorrow; Corinth ecclesia were told that
they should have mourned as they withdrew from one who had
left the faith (1 Cor. 5:2). " The whole house of Israel"
were commanded to " mourn" the necessary destruction of
Nadab and Abihu (Lev. 10:6). Samuel mourned and God repented when
Saul was finally rejected (1 Sam. 15:35). Paul wept when he wrote
about some in the ecclesia who had fallen away (Phil. 3:17-19).
It must be said that 'block disfellowship'- the cutting off of hundreds
of brethren and sisters because theoretically they fellowship a
weak brother- hardly enables 'mourning' and pleading with
each of those who are disfellowshipped.
The Necessity Of Separation
The Law taught, time and again, the vital need to make a difference
between clean and unclean (Lev. 10:10)- on pain of death.
Leaven (a symbol of false doctrine) within the house (cp. the ecclesia)
at Passover time (cp. the breaking of bread) meant death
(1 Cor. 5:7,8). The man who sacrificed an animal to Yahweh at a
place other than " the tabernacle of the congregation"
had to die (Lev. 17:4). This might sound rather severe: he was worshipping
Yahweh, but he was to die because what he had done might encourage
other Israelites to offer sacrifices to other gods (Lev. 17:5).
So someone was disfellowshipped, not just because of their own physical
action, but because of what it might lead to in its effect on others.
Eli, although apparently righteous himself in many ways, was rejected
specifically because " he frowned not" upon his sons'
apostasy; he personally was counted as 'kicking' at God and profiteering
from His sacrifices, even though he himself seems to have truly
loved God (1 Sam. 2:29; 4:18). Because Eli wouldn't exercise ecclesial
discipline, he was somehow seen as committing those very things
which he failed to rebuke. The man who wouldn’t discipline his wayward
ox was to be treated like as if he had committed the crime the ox
did, and therefore must die if the ox killed a man (Ex. 21:29).
False doctrine is likened to leaven (Mt. 16:6); and the classic
characteristic of leaven is that it spreads and influences. It must,
therefore, be removed, Paul says (1 Cor. 5:8), in order
to prevent others being influenced. However, note how he commanded
the 'leaven' of the erring brother to be removed, not for his own
sake- Paul couldn't be defiled by 'guilt-by-association' with him-
for the brother's sake, and that of the others in the ecclesia (1
Cor. 5:7-9,12; 2 Cor. 7:12).
Separation is taught right through the type of Israel leaving Egypt
through the waters of the Red Sea (cp. baptism). It is possible
that Jn. 12:11 implies that the Lord's early converts left the synagogue
membership roll of their own volition, once they perceived the Truth
of Christ. And yet on the other hand, the Lord predicted that His
people would be cast out of the synagogues, as if He was happy that
Christianity remained a sect of Judaism until such time as Judaism
wouldn’t tolerate it. His prediction that His people would be beaten
in synagogues (Mk. 13:9) implies they would still be members, for
the synagogues only had power to discipline their own members, not
the general public. It is sometimes wrongly suggested that
we can stay with another church until we are pushed out of it. But
according to so much Bible teaching, separation is a stage in our
redemptive process, it is something we must work together with God
to achieve; we can't, for the sake of our very salvation, remain
in fellowship with the apostasy. Anyone who properly understands
the true Gospel will know of themselves that they must leave an
apostate church; they know this themselves, almost without
having to be explicitly told. To argue that we are free to fellowship
with the apostasy indicates a sad lack of understanding of the basic
doctrines of the true Gospel. The danger of returning to the apostate
religions was almost an obsession with Paul (Acts 20:31; Hebrews;
and so many other letters). Yet he was inspired by the Spirit to
have this attitude. If we allow false doctrine into our midst, we
will not be held guiltless. The ecclesia is the temple of God. In
the past, gatekeepers checked who came in (2 Chron. 23:19). Yet
as time went by, the gatekeepers let Gentiles in, people who were
not in God's covenant: and this was the basis of their condemnation
(Ez. 44:7,8). Probably they did so in a misguided conception of
" love" towards the surrounding world.
By nature, we are slow to accept that sin is serious, that it spreads,
and that we must separate ourselves from it. Jeremiah and Ezekiel
were both amazed at the extent of doctrinal corruption within Israel
when it was revealed to them (e.g. Ez. 8:9; 13:22). Phinehas' wife
honestly thought that her apostate husband and father-in-law were
" the glory of Israel" (1 Sam. 4:21). Paul told Timothy
to shun, to turn away from false teaching. He was shy to correct
others, he didn't want to break fellowship when he should have done,
his own awareness of his own sins held him back; whereas Paul says
that these things should not stop him rebuking and upholding the
Faith. We as spiritual Israel have just the same tendencies. The
classic example is in the events of Num. 16. In an ecclesia of 2
million, only a dozen or so saw the depth of apostasy to which they
had sunk (v.41). They found it hard to accept that Korah, Dathan
and Abiram were as bad as God knew they were. Even Moses and Aaron
struggled with it: " Shall one man sin, and wilt thou be wroth
with all the congregation?" . God's answer was basically: "
Yes" . He told Israel to separate themselves from these men,
or else they too would die. In similar vein, the prophets warned
that not only the false teachers but those influenced by them would
face judgment (Ez. 14:10; Hos. 4:5).
Had Phinehas not killed the man who was teaching that marriage
out of the Faith was quite acceptable, God would have punished all
the people of Israel (Num. 25:11). God is a jealous God, and
Phinehas is commended for his jealousy for God in terms of
separating from that false teacher. We naturally turn away from
the seriousness of these things. Within our humanity, we would rather
God were not like this. But there is a harder side of God, a side
which we come to know, to respect, understand and appreciate as
we grow spiritually. However, all this said, we must seriously ask
whether the Christadelphian community has sunk to the level of apostate
Israel. Even if we feel that some have, and we must separate from
them, then those others who have not done so are still our brethren
whom we ought to fellowship. We must speak out against weakness
and corruption in the ecclesia. " They that forsake the law
praise the wicked: but such as keep the law contend with them"
(Prov. 28:4). We must earnestly contend for the defence of the Faith
(Jude 3). " Thou shalt (frankly, NIV) rebuke thy neighbour,
that thou bear not sin for him" (Lev. 19:17 AV mg.). But if
we do contend with our erring brother- this doesn't of itself mean
that we forbid him the emblems of the Lord's gracious forgiveness.
And neither does it mean that we should disfellowship many other
brethren who also are willing to contend with the weak brother,
but would still share bread and wine with him.
It must also be remembered that although in some ways all
Israel were guilty for the sins of some of them (e.g. Daniel and
Ezra describe themselves as guilty members of a guilty nation),
this 'guilt by association' could not be 'escaped' by leaving Israel,
the covenant people. And neither did God ever hold any individual
Israelite personally guilty of the sin of another Israelite (Dt.
24:16 etc.). Ultimately, God will not destroy the righteous with
the wicked (Gen. 18:24), although the righteous in Israel sometimes
suffered the effect of the nation's wickedness (cp. our
suffering the effect of Adam's sin without being personally
guilty of it). However, punishment for sin was not given indiscriminately.
There was a time when one wicked city was punished by drought, but
a more righteous city had rain (Am. 8:4). Let's ever remember what
is the end, the goal, of the commandments to resist false teaching
and practice: love out of a pure heart, a good conscience, and faith
unfeigned (1 Tim. 3:3-5)- not bitterness, self-righteousness, smugness
that we are pure and others aren't, thanking God that we are not
sinners as other brethren are.
The Impact On The Ecclesia
Our attitude to the doctrines of the one Faith is our attitude
to the body of Christ. Paul recounts how he destroyed " the
faith" and also destroyed (same Greek word) " the church
of God" (Gal. 3:13,23). If we weaken the doctrines of the One
Faith, we are hurting our brethren and sisters, and therefore hurting
the Lord Jesus. If new converts are not taught the Truth properly
or taught with little emphasis on the importance of doctrine, the
people they convert will not know the Truth, their baptisms will
not be valid, and the Truth will be lost; but there will still be
a community bearing the name " Christadelphian" . If we
do not disfellowship those with false doctrine, " many (will)
be defiled" (Heb. 12:15); not 'run the risk of being defiled';
they will be defiled, and lose the Hope of the Kingdom.
This is serious. Again, these principles were laid down in the Law:
Dt. 29:22-28 threaten that because of the toleration of
false teachers (v. 18-21), the land / Kingdom would be destroyed,
the Truth would be lost, and Israel would no longer be God's Covenant
people. Think about it. If a group of believers, on their own admission,
tolerate false teachers, they will lose the Faith because of it.
Silence means consent (Num. 30:12,15). Can you at least appreciate
why we are so serious about rebuking false teachers? The
sad story of natural Israel is written for our learning.
Let's summarize the last few paragraphs:
-
We must separate from false doctrines and those who teach them.
We each have a responsibility in this. But this must be balanced
against a principle which is given even more Biblical emphasis:
that we must fellowship all brethren who believe and live the
One Faith, whatever their attitude to a third party may be.
-
If we allow the Truth to be lost, we are harming our present
and future brethren and sisters.
-
However, on no account can we judge each other or even speculate
as to the outcome of the judgment seat. But we each have a duty
to separate from what is false.
-
We cannot be responsible for the disfellowship of false teachers
in areas outside our immediate concern.
A Balance
And yet we must be balanced. It is inevitable that there will be
moral and doctrinal weakness in the ecclesia. The parable of the
wheat and tares teaches this; and it is not for us to be over-concerned
with identifying and rooting up the tares. That's surely the basic
lesson the Lord was seeking to get over. If there is such a thing
as guilt by association, then this parable becomes meaningless-
for our eternal destiny would depend upon hunting out any contamination
from our community. If we insist on having a " pure fellowship"
, aren't we being self-righteous? None of us is pure, we fail time
and again. How then can we refuse to break bread with a brother
who has broken bread with another brother whom we classify as 'impure'?
Our salvation is ultimately by pure grace alone, not separation
from false teachers. If other brethren will not separate as we think
they should, our response should not be to separate from them, if
they are validly in Christ. The prophets of the Old Testament remained
within an apostate community to plead with Israel; the faithful
of the New Testament remained within corrupt ecclesias like Corinth.
Even there, in an ecclesia riddled with immorality, false doctrine,
abuse of the breaking of bread etc., Paul makes a point of calling
them his " brethren" (far more than in any other letter).
The greatest evidence against the view that we must maintain a
totally pure fellowship is to be found in the letters to the seven
ecclesias in Rev. 2 and 3. The " few" in Sardis who had
not defiled their clothes attended an apostate ecclesia; and yet
they are not seen as " defiled" by the Lord Jesus
(Rev. 3:4). This is proof positive that there is no such thing as
guilt by association with erring members of an ecclesia. Those faithful
members were not rebuked for not disfellowshipping the others. The
Lord’s criticism of the ecclesias seems to be that they had allowed
false teaching to develop, rather than the fact they hadn’t separated
from it. Smyrna was an ecclesia which received no criticism at all
from the Lord; they weren't rebuked for not disfellowshipping the
other local ecclesias who were apostate (Rev. 2:8-11). The elders
at Sardis, an ecclesia holding many false teachers, were told to
strengthen what remained (the Greek is usually used regarding people)-
they were to strengthen the faithful minority, but nothing was said
about withdrawing from them because they fellowshipped weak brethren.
The Proverbs often taught the need to separate from and contend
with those within Israel (cp. Christadelphians as spiritual Israel)
who were astray (e.g. 14:7; 28:4). They were not to fellowship,
not walk in common, with thieves (1:11,14; 28:24 LXX koinonos).
But they were not guilty by reason of just being in the same community
as those people; they were not to walk with them, not to fellowship
them, in the sense of not behaving as they did. And there was never
the hint that the faithful were to somehow leave the community of
Israel because there were wrongdoers in it.
Practical Conclusions
If the above reasoning has been followed, we come to the following
practical conclusions:
- We should fellowship with all who have been validly baptized
into the one body of the Lord Jesus Christ and continue to hold
the Faith. We cannot insist that complete agreement on every aspect
of Christian life is essential for fellowship. Our fellowship
is on the basis of the basic doctrines comprising the true Gospel.
- We should rebuke and discipline those in our ecclesia or immediate
circle of contact who are weak in the faith.
- We cannot be responsible for the errors of distant brethren
which we hear about. We should not listen to rumours concerning
the failures of those we don't know.
- We should do all that we can to bring about unity between brethren
and not disfellowship those who themselves hold and live the One
Faith.
- Holding the above principles should not lead us to tolerate
doctrinal weaknesses on fundamental issues. If we meet a Christadelphian
we don't know, we should make sure he / she believes as we do,
and then break bread with them. To refuse fellowship to another
believer is a sin; but it is also wrong to open the table of the
Lord to anybody, regardless of their belief and behaviour.
Appendix 1: Contradictions
I have no relish in pointing out the logical contradictions in
the position of others. And yet I present the following as food
for thought to the many sincere brethren and sisters in minority
fellowships who really think that their position on fellowship is
unassailably correct.
- If a brother marries a sister in another fellowship, this isn't
treated as marriage out of the Truth. Therefore we accept those
in other fellowships as in Christ, not in the world. So, why not
fellowship them?
- A member of (e.g.) the Dawn fellowship can attend the meetings
of other fellowships, pray with them, write in their magazines,
study with them, court them- but can't break bread with them.
But this is surely using the breaking of bread as a political
weapon. Fellowship consists in many things apart from breaking
bread; thus the early believers continued in fellowship in breaking
of bread, prayers, preaching and holding on to the doctrines taught
them by the apostles (Acts 2:42 RV). The breaking of bread ought
not to be singled out in the way it is.
- It has been observed that there are serious personal failures
amongst all Christadelphians. Yet because they accept
a certain position on (e.g.) fellowship and divorce, they remain
in fellowship- whilst a member who is far more spiritual is disfellowshipped
for breaking bread with another member of the One Body, who happens
to be in a different fellowship.
- Brother Robert Roberts repeatedly went on record as accepting
that there was an exceptive clause- i.e. that divorce and remarriage
was possible where there has been adultery. If he were alive today,
many of the minority fellowships would not accept him in fellowship;
and yet they wish to give the impression that they have followed
his teachings faithfully.
- The baptisms of other fellowships are usually accepted as valid.
They are addressed as " brother" and " sister"
(except by a minority of extremists). Generally, there is no re-baptism
if someone from another fellowship wants to join one of the minority
fellowships. So if it is accepted that the baptisms are valid,
that they believe the Gospel and are true brethren in Christ,
thereby members of the one body- why not fellowship them?
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