BIBLE INSIGHT

But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. (2 Pet. 3:18)

Volume 5, Number 14, April 7, 2002

The Only Ones? (Part 1 of 4) by David McClister
Reprinted from The Palmetto Reminder http://www.palmettochurchofchrist.org/

"You people in the Church of Christ think that you are the only people who are going to heaven, and that everyone else is going to hell."

Have you ever heard anyone say such things about the Church of Christ? In short, it is a charge of intolerance, narrow- and/or closed-mindedness, and even spiritual bigotry. It is, to be sure, a very serious complaint and warrants equally serious attention and answer.

Let's begin with the simple response: it just isn't true. I personally do not know anyone in the Church of Christ who believes this (although there may be some who do - more about these folks later). That is, the only people who say such things are straw men constructed by opponents. I do know many people in the Lord's church who are very zealous for the truth, who are always ready to defend the truth against attacks, and who are brave enough to call something a false doctrine when it contradicts what they understand the Scriptures to teach. However, the same general attributes can be found among people in many other churches. Zeal for the truth and a willingness to defend it does not necessarily mean that such people think they are the only ones going to heaven. All it means is that they are concerned about being right. And I do not know anyone who would object to that.

Yet, in spite of the fact that every denominational church has people who are just as zealous about their beliefs, the charge of spiritual bigotry seems to be leveled mainly against those of us in the Church of Christ. I have come to believe that the only reason people make such a charge in the first place is that they do not understand Christianity themselves, that they have some fundamental misunderstandings about the Lord's church, and they further assume that we share in their misunderstanding. In other words, there are several flaws and false assumptions that lie behind the charge leveled against us. Let's note them one by one:

1. The charge assumes that salvation is a matter of church membership, and that we in the Lord's church think that way too.

I have learned, through experience, that when I sit down with someone to study the Bible with them, one of the most important subjects to clarify is what the Bible teaches about the church. Yet I am always somewhat reluctant to address that subject, because salvation is a matter of being in a right relationship with the Lord Jesus, not a matter of joining the right church. I just do not like to talk too much about the church in home Bible studies, because what is important is that a person learns to give his/her life to Christ first. I do not ever want people to think that they can be baptized, "join the church," and then they are saved.

However, there is a certain logic that many people possess that says that salvation is a matter of being in the right church. That is, you are saved because you belong to the right church. This idea is common enough in the denominational world, but I have even heard some of my brethren argue this way. I think that what happened is that somewhere someone tried to beat our denominational friends at their own game, as it were, using their own logic against them. Since our denominational friends were saying that the saved are in the church, some of my brethren, it seems, conceded that premise but added the idea that there is only one true (right) church. If we were to put it in the form of a syllogism, this much-heard argument would go like this:

1. The saved will go to heaven.
2. The saved are in the church.
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Conclusion: the church will go to heaven, or, in order to go to heaven one must be in the (true, or right) church.

The fact of the matter is that no one is, or will be, saved because they belong to the right church. The above line of reasoning is invalid; it comes to a conclusion that is not warranted by the premises of the argument. Specifically, this argument assumes, without warrant, that everyone in the church will go to heaven, that the church is composed entirely of saved people. But Jesus, in the parables of the dragnet and the tares (for example), says that this simply is not true (read Matt 13:24-30, 47-50). The argument properly goes:

1. The saved will go to heaven.
2. The saved are in the church.
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Conclusion: the saved ones in the church will go to heaven.

The fact is that while the saved are in the church, not everyone in the church will be saved or go to heaven. There are some of God's spiritual children who, because of their unfaithfulness to God, will not spend eternity with their heavenly Father. They are members of the Lord's body, but they will not be saved (cf. Heb 6:4-8; 2 Pet 2:20-22; 1 Tim 1:19; etc.).

The distinction I am trying to make here is more important than it might appear to be at first. This idea that "I belong to the church, and so I will be saved" has only encouraged some people to think that they have no obligations other than church membership. It only encourages people to be content with their membership and to sit back and do nothing for the Lord with their lives. The fact is that we are to be committed to Christ; we are His disciples, and we must live, speak, and act as He did (see 1 Pet 2:21ff). There is much more to being a Christian than claiming membership in the Lord's church.

So what does all this have to do with the charge that is often leveled against us? Simply this: salvation is not simply a matter of being a member of the right church. There are many, I fear, who belong to the right church but who will not be saved in the end. Why? Because our salvation is determined first by our obedience to the Lord's will. Note Acts 2:47 - ". . . And the Lord was adding to their number day by day those who were being saved." It says that they were saved first, by their obedience to the gospel (see the context, vv 37ff), and then the Lord added them to the church. That is, they were added to the church because they were saved; they were not saved because they were added to the church! Since one's salvation is not simply a matter of what church one belongs to, the idea that we think that only members of the Church of Christ will be saved is false.


Asking Too Much From Life by Jim Jonas (jjbogator@aol.com)
"I know that there is nothing better for them than to rejoice, and to do good in their lives, and also that every man should eat and drink and enjoy the good of all his labor - it is the gift of God" (Ecclesiastes 3:12-13)
In Ecclesiastes Koheleth, or the Preacher, is sharing his observations on life. He is not expressing divine insight per se; rather, he is giving his assessment from the standpoint of human experience. He says, "I set my heart to seek and search out by wisdom concerning all that is done under heaven ... I applied my heart to know wisdom and to see the business that is done on earth, even though one sees no sleep day or night" (Ecc 1:13; 8:16).
The Preacher examines various human endeavors to discover happiness: sensuality, materialism, longevity, beauty, strength, posterity, wisdom and other endowments of earthly life, which man reveres. His analysis: true fulfillment is not to be found in the human experience. "All is vanity and grasping for the wind" (cf. Ecc 1:2, 14, 17; 2:11, 17, 26; etc.).

Life is too arbitrary and unpredictable to provide genuine happiness (cf. Ecc 7:15; 8:14). Our ignorance combined with God's unfathomable providence makes us unable to effectively determine our own course (cf. Ecc 3:11; 6:12; 7:13-14; 7:23-24; 8:17). All will eventually die, our possessions will be left to others and we will be forgotten (Ecc 2:14-16; 2:20-23; 3:18-20; 9:5-6). This is not pessimism; it is simply the way things are.

It was never intended that we find our ultimate happiness upon the earth. The Preacher affirms that, for all the evil and misfortune that befalls us in this life, God has provided a sufficient supply of goodness, satisfaction and enjoyment. Thus his repeated exhortation: "Here is what I have seen: It is good and fitting for one to eat and drink, and to enjoy the good of all his labor in which he toils under the sun all the days of his life which God gives him; for it is his heritage" (Ecc 5:18; cf. 2:24-25; 3:12-13; 8:15).

Let's stop asking more out of earthly life than it can deliver. It is so constructed by God to be a place of testing, a time of growth, a span of both joy and hardship. Learn to appreciate the simple things of today and stop pretending that true happiness is just around the next bend. When considered properly, life presents reasonable happiness but whets our appetite for heaven.


FINAL THOUGHTS (Selected from The Beacon)

"Trust in yourself and you are doomed to disappointment. Trust in money and you may have it taken from you. But trust in God, and you will never be confounded in time or eternity."

"You can't do much about your ancestors, but you can influence your descendants enormously."

"The strongest evidence of love is sacrifice; the first duty of love is to listen."


MARK YOUR CALENDARS
Our weekly services are held at 1318 Griffin Road, Leesburg, Florida 34748.
Phone: (352) 365-9946 for times of services.
Web site: http://www.geocities.com/~cdillinger/cocbs/cocbshp.htm

MONTHLY BIBLE READING: Genesis 11-35; Job

QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS
BIBLE INSIGHT is published for the members of, and visitors to, the Church of Christ at Beverly Shores, Leesburg, Florida, USA.
Carey Dillinger is the editor. He can be reached at the church address or via e-mail: dillinc@yahoo.com


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