LOVE-MAKING A DIFFERENCE
Br. Ted Smith
(This article contains important information for our
guidance today.)
"Keep yourselves in the love of God. .. and of some
have compassion, making a difference; and other save with fear, pulling them
out of the fire." —Jude 21-23.
With our minds all unbalanced through the fall, resulting
from original sin, —though not all fallen exactly in the same direction, —it is
not surprising that we frequently find ourselves and other brethren in Christ
in more or less confusion respecting the application of certain principles laid
down in the Word of God. For instance,
we are instructed that love is the fulfilling of the divine law; and that love
of the brethren is one of the evidences of our having passed from death unto
life; and that if we love not our brother, whom we have seen, it is a sure
evidence that we do not truly love our Heavenly Father, whom we have not
seen. (#
Ro 13:10; #
1Jo 3:14; 4:20) In their endeavor to measure up to these requirements of the
divine standard, some are in danger of erring in an opposite direction—in
danger of manifesting a brotherly love where it should be withheld, and that in
the interest of the brother. Let us
note the different kinds, or degrees of love which the Heavenly Father exercises
and manifests.
First, we have the love for the world. "God so loved the world that he gave
his only begotten Son" to die for us.
(# Joh 3:16) Second, in a much
higher and special sense, "The Father himself loveth you"—you who
have accepted Jesus Christ as your Redeemer, and who, in his name and strength
and merit have consecrated yourselves to him—you are seeking now to walk not
after the flesh but after the spirit. (# Joh 16:27) But that this special love of God can be
lost in part, or eventually wholly, is clearly set forth by the Apostle’s
statement, "Keep yourselves in the love of God". (Jude 21)
If any, after having tasted of
the good Word of God, the powers of the world to come, and being made partakers
of the holy spirit, etc., shall walk after the flesh and not after the spirit,
we may be sure that such will proportionately lose the love of God; —and, if he
persist in this course, as a result will ultimately be "none of
his." For, instead of loving such,
who through their knowledge and attainments and disobedient course, have become
wicked, the Lord declares that he is "angry with the wicked," and
that "all the wicked will he destroy."—# Ps 7:11; 145:20; # He 6:4-6; 10:26-29.
As sons of the Highest who are seeking to be like unto our
Father in heaven, and like unto the copy which he has set before us in his dear
Son, our Lord, we are to have for the world in general that broad sympathetic
pity and mercy-love which would delight in doing any and everything possible to
be done for their uplifting, in accord with the divine program, in the divine
time and order. Like our Father and our
Elder Brother, we are to love the brethren "with a pure heart, fervently
" with sincerity. This love for the
brethren is nothing like the love for the world. It is not the pity-love, nor mere generosity. It is far more; it is brotherly love. All of the children of God are brethren, as
new creatures; all these brethren have hopes, ambitions, interests and promises
linked together in the Lord Jesus and in the heavenly Kingdom in which they
hope to share. All these brethren are
joint-heirs, fellow-heirs one with the other and with the Lord. They are partners; their interests are
mutual and coordinating.
Additionally, they have a special mutual sympathy of
compassion; for while, as new creatures, they are rich in divine favor and
promises, they all have serious
weaknesses, according to the flesh—draw-backs; although the Lord is not
reckoning with them according to the flesh, but according to the spirit, the intention,
the heart desires, nevertheless, they each and all have besetments arising from
these weaknesses and imperfections of the earthly tabernacle, which cause them
to "groan," and to sympathize one with the other in their
groanings. As the Apostle says,
"We which have the first-fruits of the spirit, even we ourselves groan
within ourselves, waiting for the adoption to wit, the deliverance of our
body"—the complete Church. Thus
the sons of God have a further mutual sympathy and love and care for each
other, an interest in each other, helpfulness toward each other, which is
entirely beyond and above and outside of any feelings which could be
appreciated by the world or exercised toward it; —because the world has no such
conflict between the old nature and the new; no such covenant of sacrifice; no
such acceptance in the Beloved; no such union of heart and purpose and aim and
spirit. Oh, yes! the exhortation to
love as brethren, fervently, is one which appeals to us specially.
But now we come to another point. Our love for the brethren cannot be exactly of the same measure
and exactly of the same intensity or fervency toward all. There is something which gauges or regulates
it. What is it? It is that we love God
and the glorious principles of righteousness, which are represented in his character;
and we love our Lord Jesus from the same standpoint, as being the very
exemplifications of all that is good, noble, true, just, generous, loving; and
our love for the brethren must, of necessity, be in proportion as we find the
brethren to be copies of our Lord. We
do not mean copies in the flesh, but viewed from the Lord’s standpoint; copies
in spirit, copies in heart, copies in motive, copies in intention, copies in
loving zeal for righteousness, truth, etc.
Thus, as we grow in the love of God and in the love of Christ and in the
love of the principles which they represent, we grow also in love toward all
men and toward the brethren, but particularly toward those who are growing most
in likeness to the Lord. This is not
partiality; this is not doing to others different from what we should wish them
to do to us. This is following the Lord
Jesus’ example; for we find that amongst his apostles, even, all of whom were
chosen, there were three specially beloved; and of those three one is specially
noted as ‘that disciple whom Jesus loved." He was specially loved, because he was specially lovable; and so
with us and the brethren. We should
love them all warmly, fervently, but of necessity with varying degrees of
fervor, and the fervor should increase with each in proportion as we note his
growth in heart-likeness to our Lord.
And if this be so, what shall we say of those who, after
having come to a knowledge of the truth, and after having tasted and
appreciated its goodness, fall away into sin?—of those who cease to walk after
the spirit, and begin to walk after the flesh?
Can our love for them burn with the same fervency as before? By no means; it should not do so. As the Apostle says in our text, we should
make a difference. In doing so we are
following the example of our Heavenly Father; for we have just noted that only
by walking after the spirit can any of us keep ourselves in the love of
God. Only by following the same course,
therefore, should any be able to keep himself in the love of the brethren. Any deflection should bring corresponding
loss of brotherly love and fellowship.
This making of a difference is really essential to the
purity and progress of the Church. If
we make no difference between those brethren who walk after the spirit and
those who walk disorderly, or after the flesh, we are taking away the very
premium and blessing which the Lord intended should go to those who walk after
the spirit; and we are giving a premium, which the Lord did not intend should
be given to those who walk contrary to his Word, after the flesh. It is as much our duty to withdraw
fellowship from those who are unworthy of it as it is our duty to grant
fellowship, and that with fervency, to those whom we see to be walking in the
footsteps of Jesus. We are not to think
that it is love that is prompting us to take the wrong course of encouraging
wrong-doers, —it is not love, but ignorance; and the remedy for ignorance is to
learn of the Lord, from his Word and from his example.
The Apostle Paul calls our attention to our duty respecting
the brethren, and how we should conduct ourselves toward them under varying
circumstances, saying that faithful brethren should be esteemed very highly in
love for their work’s sake; that other brethren who are unruly should be
warned; that those who are feeble in their mental comprehension of the truth
should be strengthened; that those who are weak should be helped, supported;
and that we should exercise patience toward all.—# 1Th 5:12-14.
We are at present specially referring to the proper
attitude to be observed toward unruly brethren—they are not to be treated as
those who are esteemed very highly in love for their works; otherwise they
would be encouraged in being unruly. On
the contrary they are to be warned, cautioned, —in love, truly, and with
patience, but not with marks of the same love and esteem as though they were
walking orderly in the footsteps of Jesus and in harmony with the directions of
his word. The marks and evidences of
our love and esteem must be sincere; and must be in proportion as we see in the
brethren evidences of the right desires of heart, —to walk after the spirit of
the truth. The Apostle Paul intimates
how our disapproval ought to be shown, in cases which seem, in our judgment, to
be of sufficient importance to demand a manifestation of disapproval.
Evidently the Apostle did not mean that the brethren should
be watching each other for an occasion of fault-finding in every word and every
act; but that, on the contrary, they should be so full of love one for the
other that trivial matters would be entirely passed over, as merely of the
weakness of the flesh, and not at all of intention, of the heart The matters to
be considered worthy of manifestations of disapproval and warning are, rather,
those which are so open and manifest on the surface as to leave no room to
question the fact that they are displeasing to the Lord, and injurious in their
influence upon the brother or upon the household of faith. For instance, if the brother had been seen
under the influence of liquor; if he had been heard to utter vile or otherwise
improper language; if it were a matter of general knowledge that he was living
in sin; these would be such grounds as we believe the Apostle had in mind. But evidently the Apostle had no intention
of cultivating a spirit of fault-finding and judging one another as respects
the heart and private affairs, —use of time or money, etc. These belong to our
individual stewardship and none should endeavor to interfere with the proper
liberties of conscience and conduct which the Lord has granted to each. The Apostle is very stringent in his
condemnation of such judging of one another, which so often leads to roots of
bitterness, misunderstanding, disfellowship, etc., and which, as the old
leaven, should be purged out of our hearts and lives.—# Ro 14:10, 13.
But now, for those who "obey not our word," the
apostolic Scriptural directions in respect to their conduct, etc., is
"note that man, and have no company with him, that he may be ashamed." Nevertheless, knowing the tendency of the
fallen mind to go from one extreme to another, either of too great leniency or
of too great severity, the apostle continues, "Yet count him not an enemy,
but admonish as a brother." (# 2Th
3:13-15)
To admonish as a brother does not mean to denounce roundly and severely;
but means to admonish in a spirit of love, gentleness, meekness, patience, and
with a sincere desire to help the brother to see the fault which we are certain
exists, and which we are sure is not evil surmising on our part.
The Apostle John shows us that this matter of
distinguishing as between brethren that are to be esteemed and brethren that
are to be warned, appertains not merely to conduct but also to doctrinal
matters. Yet we may be sure that he
does not mean that we are to disfellowship a brother merely because of some
differences of view on non-essential questions. We may be sure that he does mean his words to apply strictly and
only to the fundamentals of the doctrine of Christ: for instance, faith in God; faith in Jesus as our Redeemer; faith
in the promises of the divine Word.
These will be marks of a "brother," if supported by Christian
conduct, walking after the spirit of the truth; —even though the brother might
have other views which would differ from ours in respect to certain features of
the plan of God not so clearly and specifically set forth in the
Scriptures. But for those whom we
recognize as being doctrinally astray from the foundation principles of Christ,
the Apostle intimates that very drastic measures are appropriate; —not
persecutions, nor railings; not bitter and acrimonious disputes; not hatred,
either open or secret; but a proper showing of our disfellowship with the false
doctrines held and taught by them; a proper protection, so that our influence
shall not be in any manner or degree used to uphold his denial of the
fundamentals of the Gospel. This
drastic course is outlined by the Apostle in these words: "If there come any unto you, and bring
not this doctrine (confessing Christ to have come into the world, in the flesh,
to redeem our race, etc.) receive him not into your house, neither bid him
God-speed; for he that biddeth him God-speed is partaker of his evil
deeds."—2 John 10, 11.
But, as our text intimates, we are to use discretion,
judgment, —"and of some have compassion, making a difference." Some we may recognize as being merely
entrapped of the Adversary, either in sin or in false doctrine, as the case may
be, and not willfully, intelligently, of their own volition. Toward such, still maintaining an attitude
of firmness, we are nevertheless to express freely our trust that they are only
temporarily wrong; and to seek to restore them, either doctrinally or in
respect to their perverse moral course, to the position of fellowship with the
Lord and with all the brethren who are in fellowship with him. Others we are to
"save with fear, pulling them out of the fire." We may be obliged to speak very plainly to
them; we may be obliged to tear open and expose before their eyes the sores of
their own immoral course, showing them, as the case may be, the grossness of
the sin or the grossness of the error in which they are involved; and doing so
perhaps in strong language, if we realize that nothing short of this has
availed. to arouse them from their lethargy.
In pulling them out of sin we are "pulling them out of the fire
"—out of the Second Death—as the Apostle James says, speaking of this same
class: "Let him know that he who
converteth a sinner from the error of his way, shall save a soul from
death"—a brother who is a sinner, a brother, he explains, who has
"erred from the truth."—# Jas 5:10,
20.
Finally, we remark that the dealing of the brethren with
the disorderly is not to be in the nature of a punishment; for it is not with
us to punish. "Vengeance is mine;
I will repay, saith the Lord." Our
warnings or reproofs or withdrawals of fellowship, are to be merely in the
nature of correctives, with a view, as the Apostle says, to the restoring of
such an one. "Ye that are
spiritual, restore such an one in the spirit of meekness; considering thy self,
let thou also be tempted"; —if not in the same manner, possibly in some
other manner, in which you are weaker.—# Ga
6:1 .
As to what would be a sufficiency of evidence of repentance
and reformation, each will require great wisdom and grace to determine. The heart in which brotherly love dwells
richly, the heart which loves righteousness and hates iniquity, the heart which
realizes its own imperfections, and that it is acceptable only through the
Beloved and the New Covenant (Grace Covenant)—that heart will rejoice at the
first evidences of contrition and repentance on the part of the disorderly
brother. If very full of love, his
heart may go out to him almost too quickly; he may need to restrain himself;
especially if it be a second or third offense of the kind, or the circumstances
otherwise very grievous. It will be
apparently his duty to look for works in harmony with the repentance, and to
wait to see some demonstration, in the nature of restitution for wrong done, or
such an open and radical change of conduct as will give evidence that the heart
has returned to its loyalty to God, to the truth, and to righteousness.
The erring brother, truly repentant, will not be averse to
giving such evidences, nor consider it unreasonable that his professed
reformation shall be thus attested.
Indeed, we may expect that such will feel so humbled in respect to his
attitude, and the disgrace which he may have brought upon the cause, that he
will feel disposed of himself, either to remain absent for a while from the
company of the brethren, in penitence, or, if acceptable to their company, he
will feel disposed to take a back seat—a very humble position amongst the
brethren. And if the repentant offender
had occupied the position of a leader in the company, humility on his part, no
less than discretion on the part of the brethren would seem to indicate that he
should not be restored to any official or leading position in the congregation
for a considerable time, —until ample evidence had been given of the sincerity
of his reformation.
But we close as we began, by urging that facts, evil deeds
or evil doctrines, and not evil surmisings, knowledge, and not rumors, are the
bases of Scriptural disfellowship.
Hence the necessity for the observance of the Lord a rule. (# Mt 18:15) While we are not
to close our eyes to wrong in a. brother, love will refuse to keep picking to
find fault where none is openly apparent.
And if fault is apparently discovered it is not to be "discussed
among the brethren," but as the Lord directs should be taken direct to the
offender by the discoverer and not so much as mentioned to others unless
offender refuse to hear; -refuses to correct the fault. Oh, how much trouble would be saved, how
many mistakes and heart-aches avoided if this rule were strictly followed.’
(Reprint page 3033.
Z. July 1, 1902, page 197)
ADDENDUM
Just before his death, our Pastor wrote one of the most
important articles of his whole career.
It starts on reprint page 5981 and is entitled THE HOUR OF
TEMPTATION. On reprint page 5982, under
the subheading REMEMBER DOCTRINAL TESTS ALSO we find the Pastor offering
suggestions, and he said "We have not given such strong advice
heretofore;" We do well to pay close attention to this unusual
"strong advice." There are
strong appeals today of "love of the brethren." We believe these appeals are evidences of a
lack of comprehension of what the Truth should mean to us. "Love of the
brethren" is put ahead of "love of the Truth," and this is
catastrophic in its effect upon the Christian brotherhood—we have proof of this
all around us. Our Pastor was chosen of
the Lord to give us our "meat in due season." He was highly developed in the graces of the
spirit, and had a comprehension of the Divine Plan and of the Scriptures in
general, unparalleled in the life of anyone else in our day. We believe that if we do not pay close
attention to what our Pastor taught and advised, we are showing irreverence
toward God and toward Christ. Our
Pastor’s advice is priceless and is superior to that of any other brother (or
sister) in our midst today. Here is
what our Pastor wrote and it was printed the very next month after his death:
"Let us make a discrimination between the positive
teachings of the Bible—the doctrines of Christ—and the slightly variant ways of
expressing those doctrines. We are not
to expect any two persons to use exactly the same words; but there are certain
doctrines which are fast and immovable from the viewpoint of the majority of
Bible students. Any one not in good harmony with those pretensions should not
be encouraged in the slightest degree, but, on the contrary, should be
discouraged. If he has different views,
do not persecute him—do not follow the style of the dark ages, but follow the
proper course of letting him ‘flock to himself,’ or with as many as prefer to
view matters as he views them.
(Emphasis ours.)
"We have not given such strong advice heretofore; but
we perceive that many of the dear sheep are being troubled, hindered of
development, and imposed upon. We see
that proportionately such elders and deacons are growing more bold, and hence
the need is the greater that all who do have the right spirit, and who realize
that under the Lord’s guidance in our study of the divine plan of the ages, we
have not been following ‘cunningly devised fables,’ should now take a positive
stand for the good of themselves, for the good of the leaders who manifest a
wrong spirit, and for the good of the public who are inquiring for the way of
the Lord as never before."
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There is special need today to go back to the Volumes and other
writings of our Pastor and carefully review the Scriptures and reasonings on
such subjects as the Presence of Christ, the Reign of Christ, the Binding of
Satan, the Times of Restitution, the Jubilee, the Use of the Nation of Israel
in the Millennial Age. It is high time
we should know where the truth is and not "be ever learning and never come
to a knowledge of the truth."