Mt. Baker Beacon Archives 2022-2023
Vol. 01, No. 07 Nov 27, 2022
Your word is a lamp to my feet Mount Volume 01, Number 07 Published by Location: Sunday: Web site:
| In this issue: Be Not Ye The Servants Of Men The Apostle Paul in I Cor. 7:23 said, "Ye are bought with a price; be not ye the servants of men." Certain kinds of liberty are desirable. We wish to be free from the oppression of tyrants and from sin. But it is also true that every man serves some master. Libertines are in the worst kind of bondage - slavery to sin (Rom. 6:16-23; John 8:34). The desire to be absolutely free, without the guidance and restraint of God, is disastrous. Man was not designed by the Creator to so live. If he attempts to do so, he becomes like a runaway car without a driver. Christ came to free us from sin (John 8:32), but when freed from sin, we immediately become His servants (Rom. 6:5-7, 15-18). A servant of righteousness is the same as a servant of Christ. Paul and Peter both described themselves as servants of Christ (Rom. 1:1; 2 Pet. 1:1). Peter said in 1 Pet. 2:15, 16, "For so is the will of God, that with well doing ye may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men: as free, and not using your liberty for a cloak of maliciousness, but as servants of God." The man who serves God must serve Him only. He dare not attempt to serve two masters; this is an impossibility (Matt. 6:24). If we are the servants of God and of Christ, we cannot at the same time be the servants of men. Paul was not speaking of physical bondage, since some Christians of that day were slaves and were instructed to obey their masters. Just how can we be brought under spiritual bondage to men? Some brethren of New Testament times were brought under bondage by Judaizing teachers (Gal. 2:4; 4:3; 4:9; 5:1). Any laws of men being taught today are parallel (Col. 2:20-23). When we let false teachers deceive us, either in morality or religion, we have become their servants. They may promise us liberty in order that they may ensnare us (2 Pet. 2:18, 19; Eph. 4:14). Sincere Christians can be "beguiled" by "subtlety" (2 Cor. 11:3; Col. 2:4-8; 2:18) Some brethren of New Testament times were brought under bondage by Judaizing teachers (Gal. 2:4; 4:3; 4:9; 5:1). Any laws of men being taught today are parallel (Col. 2:20-23). When we let false teachers deceive us, either in morality or religion, we have become their servants. They may promise us liberty in order that they may ensnare us (2 Pet. 2:18, 19; Eph. 4:14). Sincere Christians can be "beguiled" by "subtlety" (2 Cor. 11:3; Col. 2:4-8; 2:18) We can become the servants of men by giving allegiance to a religious head other than Christ. Roman Catholics with their Pope are not the only ones guilty of this. There are always some in the church who love the "preeminence" (3 Jn. 9). These may be preachers, elders, editors, or college presidents. They may not have any official position. But we must not follow any man, except as that man follows Christ (1 Cor. 11:1). Elders were never intended to be the dictators of the church or to usurp any of Christ's authority (1 Pet. 5:3). The Christian who follows an elder into apostasy cannot expect to escape responsibility. There is another way in which we may become the servants of men. That is by developing a materialistic, worldly attitude. This may be divided into two parts: (1) a desire for material goods, (2) a desire for the approval of men. We are warned against the love of money and the desire for riches (1 Tim. 6:9, 10). This can lead to a bondage not only to the money itself, but to the men who control it, and finally to the Devil, since he controls the kingdoms of this world with their riches. Those who love money will do almost anything to get it and to hang on to it. Those who control the money will then demand that we serve them instead of Christ. Many a Christian has lost his soul in this manner. Men neglect their wives, their children, and finally, the Lord by trying to advance themselves in a job that demands too much of their time and energy. This is in addition to the fact that many employers demand that the men under them break even the moral laws of God: that they lie, cheat, and even steal. Because of this danger we must learn to be content with what we have (Heb. 13:5). It is not a sin in itself for a man to desire that his family have a decent house, a nice car, etc. But this becomes sin when that man puts these goals ahead of doing right and serving God. The desire for the approval of men is equally dangerous. Rom. 12:2 tells us, "Be not conformed to this world." We will conform if we need the approval of men. We will not do and say certain things for fear of offense; we will not resist sinful customs such as drinking and immodest dress. A woman cannot always be in style and be modest, in spite of what some preachers say. Style, or fashion, is admittedly based upon the lust of the eye and the pride of life; this can even be found in the Encyclopedia Britannica (see the article under "dress"). The Christian who does not dare to be different is doomed to be a slave of men. Many have been the servants of men for years and do not even know it, being self-deceived. The less material goods we require to satisfy us, and the less we care about what others think and say about us, the freer we are from servitude to men. We must make a commitment to serve God and follow Christ, allowing no man to bind or deceive us. As Joshua said so long ago, "as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord" (Jas. 24:15). Brethren, "be not ye the servants of men." Guardian of Truth XXV: 11, p. 166 Troubled With Lying Each of us ought to be troubled with lying. We should be troubled with the fact of it (all men do not "speak truth with his neighbor" - Eph. 4:25), the danger of falling into the practice of the devil (Jn. 8:44), and the eternal consequences of lying ("Without are . . . every one that loveth and maketh a life" - Rev. 22:15). A member of the church was letting me know how little he thought of another preacher (from time to time I have wondered what he has said about me), when he said that the other preacher had admitted from the pulpit that he was "troubled with lying." It became evident that he believed that the preacher in question had fought a losing battle against the sin of lying. I had met the other preacher, but really did not know him. I certainly did not have any reason to question his veracity. A number of times since then (it was several years ago) I have thought about what my brother-preacher could have had in his mind when he purportedly said, "I am troubled with lying." The first paragraph above shows that there could be more than one area of trouble with this problem. Because of his being a gospel preacher I am assuming that he was not an out-and-out habitual liar. I know that I am also "troubled with lying," and I also know that I do not make a practice of lying. Now I do not believe that since a man preaches the gospel he is immune from the weaknesses of the flesh . . . even from the sin of lying. My wondering about my preacher-brother's meaning is triggered by either a study of God's word and/or my own thought processes. More than once or twice it has, in a difficult situation, popped into my head, "I could say . . . " (a lie), or "They would believe me if I said . . . " (a lie). Happily I can say that the lies got no farther than the thinking stage. The thinking state is sufficient to let me know that, of a truth, "I am troubled with lying," and unless I am most careful I could fall in this snare of the devil. One of the reasons my thought processes trouble me is because of the teachings of God's word: "For as he thinketh in his heart, so is he" (Prov. 23:7, KJV), and "out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh" (Matt. 12:23). I recognize, with a degree of fear and trembling, that I must "keep my heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life" (Prov. 4:23). This, a recognition of the need to control/master one's thinking, just may have been what my fellow gospel preacher had in mind when he said, "I am troubled with lying." Guardian of Truth XXXV: 23, p. 718 Created by Chuck Sibbing, last updated. 11/29/2022 The Mount Baker Beacon is a weekly publication of the Mt. Baker church of Christ, Bellingham, WA. |