By
Dr. Rick Flanders,
Evangelist
“Of these things put
them in remembrance, charging them before the Lord that they strive not about
words to no profit, but to the subverting of the hearers. Study to shew thyself
approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the
word of truth. But shun profane and vain babblings: for they will increase unto
more ungodliness. And their word will eat as doth a canker: of whom is
Hymenaeus and Philetus; who concerning the truth have erred, saying that the
resurrection is past already; and overthrow the faith of some. Nevertheless the
foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that
are his. And, Let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from
iniquity. But in a great house there are not only vessels of gold and of
silver, but also of wood and of earth; and some to honour, and some to
dishonour. If a man therefore purge himself from these, he shall be a vessel
unto honour, sanctified, and meet for the master's use, and prepared unto every
good work.“ (2 Timothy 2:14-21)
In Second Timothy, chapter 2, the
young preacher is told to “purge himself from these” in order to become “a
vessel unto honour, sanctified, and meet for the master’s use” (verse 21). The
“these” from which Timothy must purge himself in order to be used of God are
false teachers, such as Hymenaeus and Philetus. Clearly the Lord calls for
preachers to separate themselves from heretics in order to have His blessing. Biblical
separation is a vital element in the mix that produces spiritual power in the
ministry of a preacher.
The Pastoral Epistles give many
important truths for preachers to know and practice. In the second chapter of
Second Timothy, several of these truths are taught through comparisons that are
made of the preacher’s work with common situations in life. The preacher is
compared with a father that passes things on to his son in verses one and two.
He is compared with a soldier in verses 3 and 4, an athlete in verse 5, a
farmer in verse 6, a workman in verse 15, a vessel in a great house in verses
20 and 21, and a servant in verses 24-26. The comparison with a vessel teaches
that, just as there are good dishes and not-so-good dishes in the kitchen of a
big house, so the House of God contains both vessels of honor and vessels of
dishonor. Some are fit for use at important occasions and some are unfit for
such use. The preacher’s hope is to be considered by God as a “vessel unto
honour,” useful for “every good work.” In order to be blessed in this way, we
are told, he must “purge himself from these.”
The presence of false teachers in
the churches is acknowledged and even emphasized in the two epistles of Paul to
Timothy. First Timothy 1 says that Timothy was left at the church of Ephesus
in order to deal with such heretical teachers. Because Timothy apparently knew
these men personally, the apostle went into detail to explain what had
apparently happened to make these once-orthodox men into heretics. First they
“swerved” away from a Biblical focus on “charity out of a pure heart, and of a
good conscience, and of faith unfeigned” (verses 3-6). Then they “turned aside
unto vain jangling, desiring to be teachers of the law; understanding neither
what they say, nor whereof they affirm” (verses 6-7). Eventually, they had
“made shipwreck” and had to be rejected (verses 18-20). Now men, as Paul well
knew, can be rescued from a shipwreck, but some of these straying prophets may have
corrupted themselves beyond rescue, “giving heed to doctrines of devils,
speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience seared with a hot iron”
(chapter 4, verses 1 and 2). Although Timothy was to have a positive ministry
among the saints at Ephesus, teaching sound doctrine in order to combat the
influence of the false prophets (see First Timothy 4:6-16), he was also to
oppose them, remembering the words of our Lord warning us against the wolves in
sheep’s clothing (Matthew 7:15-23).
The antecedent of the word
“these” in Second Timothy 2 is the teachers exposed in the previous verses, referenced
with the words “their word” in verse 17, “of whom” in the same verse, “who” in
verse 18, and named in verse 17 as Hymenaeus and Philetus. Verse 19 deals with
the question whether such apostates are saved men.
“Nevertheless the foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that are his. And, Let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity.”
Only God knows who really has
believed on Christ, and men can know of the genuineness of our faith only if we
depart from iniquity. Timothy is to purge himself of false teachers and shun
their teachings (verse 16). His failure to separate himself from these would
diminish his usefulness for God.
The Biblical doctrine of
separation, although controversial among many evangelicals today, is woven
throughout the scripture. On the first day of creation, God spoke and light
appeared, “and God saw the light, that it was good: and God divided the light
from the darkness” (Genesis 1:4). God makes a difference between what He likes
and what He does not like, and He calls for the two to be kept apart and
distinct. God made a difference between the Egyptians and His own people in
the sending of the plagues, and in Exodus 9, He even made a difference between
the Egyptians that believed His Word and those who “regarded not” the Word of
the LORD. Moses called for the people to separate themselves from Korah and
the others who rebelled. The Law demanded that distinctions be made between
what would be regarded as clean and what would be called unclean, and shunned.
The Law insisted that distinctions be made in fabrics used to make clothing and
in what kind of beast could be yoked with another. King Jehoshaphat (in Second
Chronicles 19) was rebuked for joining the apostate Ahab in battle. King
Amaziah (in Second Chronicles 25) was rebuked for wanting to hire a hundred
thousand soldiers from the apostate northern kingdom of Israel to help him
fight the Edomites. The apostle Paul wrote in Second Corinthians 6,
“Be ye not unequally
yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with
unrighteousness? and what communion hath light with darkness? and what concord
hath Christ with Belial? and what part hath he that believeth with an
infidel?...Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the
Lord, and touch not the unclean thing…” (Verses 14 through 18)
He wrote in Ephesians 5,
“Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness…” (Verse 11)
It is the teaching of the Bible
that servants of the Lord must make a difference between light and darkness,
and must purge themselves of what is evil in order to please God.
In the past hundred years,
revival-minded people have had a hard time purging themselves, and the result
of this reluctance has been the failure to see much of the power of the Holy
Spirit in our work. New Testament revival is about having the power of the
Spirit in our work and in our lives, and the great revivals of the eighteenth
and nineteenth centuries were characterized both by this power and by the bold
denunciation of sin. But the great issue of purging the churches of false
teachers confronted evangelical Christians in the first part of the twentieth
century, and challenged them in regard to whether they would pay a price to
please God. Pastors and church-members became aware of the growing influence
of liberal theology in their denominational organizations. In the Methodist,
Presbyterian, and Baptist church groups, men could be found in the employ of
the organization who denied cardinal doctrines of the Christian faith.
Liberalism at the beginning of the century was a theological viewpoint produced
by the growing retreat at the seminaries from faith in the infallibility of the
Bible, combined with the growing trend among church leaders to emphasize the
reforming of society over the saving of souls. The result of this combination
was a new definition of Christianity that relegated to unimportance the
affirmation of doctrines such as the deity and virgin birth of Christ, the
bodily resurrection of Christ, and the necessity of the new birth, while elevating
to primary importance the supposed application of the teachings of Christ to
the ills of society. Liberals did not believe that the Bible is infallible,
that Jesus is God, that Mary was a virgin when Jesus was born, that He
necessarily rose literally and physically from the dead, or that there really
is a Hell. They wanted the church to work in the world to address such things
as poverty, ignorance, disease, inequality, and war. They were perched on the
branches of every traditionally-evangelical tree, as seminary professors,
pastors of influential churches, missionaries in far-away places, and
denominational officials. But discerning Christians could see that these “liberal”
teachers were not really Christians at all. Their liberal religion was not the
historic Christian faith, and in many ways contradicted it.
The grassroots movement that
challenged the infiltration and influence of liberalism was eventually called
“fundamentalism.” At first fundamentalism amounted to sermons, writings,
conferences, and groupings in the denominations that exposed liberalism as
heresy. Then it moved forward in the form of battles to expel liberals from
their perches in the church organizations. However, by the middle 1930s, the
fundamentalists had failed to root liberalism and the liberals out of the
churches, but they would continue to meet and talk.
Any careful study of the history
of fundamentalism shows that the early fundamentalists were men and women
touched by the revivals and revival movements of the nineteenth century. The
revivalist Torrey was one of the first leaders, and the evangelist Billy Sunday
was their hero. Revivalism spawned fundamentalism in many ways, and fundamentalists
through the 1930s generally believed in revival. But then the question of
purging came to them in a different way. Since false teachers were not purged
from the churches, what shall orthodox Christians do? Some came to see that
the right and scriptural thing to do was to “come out from among them and be…separate”
(Second Corinthians 6:14-18). Gradually fundamentalists began to withdraw from
the mainline denominations and minister independently. But there was a
controversy brewing in the 1940s that led to the disaster evangelicalism has
been experiencing for over sixty years.
The revival fervor of the
fundamentalists did not die in the World War II era. It rose with new hopes
and new visions of great evangelistic triumphs. However, most of the
revival-minded failed to see the importance of purging. Many stayed tied to
church groups that acknowledged liberals (false prophets) as fellow
Christians. Many joined the “New Evangelical” movement that spurned separation
and advocated infiltration, proposing dialogue with liberals as spiritual
equals and also “ecumenical” evangelistic crusades with the heretics involved
as co-laborers. The controversy led to the split in the fundamentalist
movement in the 1950s and 1960s over ecclesiastical separation. Shall
preachers who believe the Bible purge themselves of those who deny it? Those
who would, split to the right and those who would not, split to the left. The
ones who practiced purging kept the name “fundamentalist,” and those who saw no
need to make an issue of orthodoxy took the name “evangelical.” However the sad
fact is that many of the revival-minded went left with the compromisers.
This is simply an historical
fact. Prominent men who called themselves fundamentalists in the 1930s, and
preached revival truth at fundamentalist conferences in those days, did not to
purge themselves, and fought no fight for the faith in the following decades.
They spoke and taught in favor of evangelizing the masses, of praying for
revival, and of living in the power of the Spirit, but they did not purge
themselves of the evil that had defiled the churches (note Jude 3 and 4). Was
it because they felt that taking a militant stand was somehow less that
Christ-like? Did they fear that controversy would destroy the spirit of
revival? Did they think that some of those who demanded the purging were
carnal men? Were they uncomfortable staying associated with the separated
fundamentalists for some reason? Obviously, many of them were uncomfortable
with that association, although they could accept associating with the wolves!
As a result of the split, the
character of the separatist movement changed somewhat. The influence of
fervent revival men had been diminished because many of them had defected in
the battle. Now the pessimism of what had been a small element in pre-war
fundamentalism was having more influence. The pessimists were convinced that
revival was not possible in these times. Either because apostasy in the
churches or moral decline in society prevented it, or because history had
entered a non-revival era, they taught that revival could never really happen
again. Some of them allowed for small revivals, but definitely not big ones.
The pessimists reacted strongly (and properly) against the false teachings of
the Pentecostals, but in doing so discouraged talk about the Holy Spirit and
the practice of revival prayer. Some concocted new interpretations of certain
scriptures which were just as erroneous as the false Pentecostal doctrines they
were invented to combat. So a cold wave of anti-revival pessimism arose in the
fundamentalist movement.
However, the hope of revival did
not die on the right. Certain notable evangelists kept revival theology alive
in the separatist movement. Conferences on revival and soul winning not only
exposed the error of cooperative evangelism that yoked Bible-believers with the
liberals, but also encouraged fundamentalists to carry on aggressive
evangelism, depending on God and purged of His enemies. That side of the
separatist movement saw some revival in the sixties and seventies, in answer to
prayer and connected with consecrated faith and effort. But the side that
denied revival didn’t see it, and grew colder.
The revivalism that refused to
purge itself of wolves didn’t succeed either. Although believing in revival
brings revival much more often than not believing in it does, trying to have
revival without separating from evil blunts the effect of any revival one might
see. This has been the experience of the New Evangelicalism. Honoring and
including the liberals contributed to the size and fame of evangelical efforts,
but it has also prevented the power of full-scale revival. The most famous
evangelist of our time has lamented that, although millions professed faith in
Christ through the work of his organization, no appreciable dent was put into
the moral decline of Western society over the past sixty years.
Revival comes when believers take
God’s side on every issue. This necessarily requires separation from evil.
The word “holy” is translated in the Bible from words that have the idea of
setting apart or separation, and holiness is a characteristic of real revival.
Therefore, revival efforts will fail if there is no requirement for
separation. Now God in His mercy revives His people according to their
knowledge of the truth. Some who do not understand the truth of separation
have experienced a measure of revival. A deficiency in knowledge will not
prevent revival altogether but will limit the purity and power of the revival.
But willingness to separate from evil, as far as we understand what pleases and
displeases God, is absolutely necessary to experiencing God’s reviving work.
We will be fit for the Master’s use only when we have purged ourselves of
things that He hates. One thing the God of truth does hate is falsehood, and
He calls on us to separate from those who teach it.
In the sentence that follows
Paul’s charge that Timothy purge himself from the false teachers, the apostle
calls on him also to purge himself also of unholy behavior.
“Flee also youthful lusts: but follow after righteousness, faith, charity, peace, with them that call on the Lord out of a pure heart.” (Second Timothy 2:22)
Revival calls for separation both
from unclean teachers and from unclean behavior. God is holy, and so must we
be if we are to be filled with His Spirit and used by Him. It’s as simple as
that. Efforts at evangelism that ignore or disdain separation from sin will
ultimately fail, because they will not have the blessing of God. Attempts at
reaching the world by conforming to the world never really succeed. For a
time, the use of worldly attractions to attract a crowd to church will seem to
succeed by finally and fundamentally they always fail. Methods that involve
yoking up with unbelievers in order to convert them also will ultimately fail,
because revival and separation go together.
Let us learn also that separation
without revival is a dead-end road. Joshua told the Israelites, “Sanctify
yourselves, for tomorrow the LORD will do wonders among you” (Joshua 3:5).
Their separation from what was repugnant to God was for the purpose of seeking
His favor and His miraculous acts. Again separation is connected to the power
and blessing of God. So disconnecting separation from revival can seem
pointless and certainly lead to a very dead end. Those who deny the promise of
God to revive His people poorly represent the cause of separatism. Biblical
separation is not a cold, harsh, lonely thing, but rather the door to full
fellowship and partnership with the God Who loves all the world! If we are to
reach the world with the love of God, we must do so in partnership with Him.
May we at this critical time in
the history of the world, put separation and revival back together where they
belong. May we purge ourselves of the false teachers that defile our
fellowships, organizations, and associations, in order to please the God Whose
reviving work seek. May we purge ourselves of practices, both in our personal
lives and in church work, that violate the principles set down in the Bible.
May we purge ourselves that we might be used by Him to meet the needs of our
dying world!