Apostasy in the Church: Where does it begin?
Aug 25th, 2008 by Nathan White
It should be widely agreed upon that the American church is largely in a state of apostasy. The evidence for such a statement should be obvious: false doctrine and heresies abound, blatant sins are often casually overlooked, and more people than ever profess Christ and maybe even attend church on occasion –but clearly without evidence that they have repented of their sin.
So the church, that is the outwardly professing church, is in deep trouble. But what is the reason for it? Why have so many protestant denominations ‘lost’ or have abandoned the pure gospel?
I think there are many answers to this question; one of the chief answers being of course that the scriptures are not taken as authoritative, Christ is not given His rightful title as Head of the Church, and false heresies and doctrine have leavened almost the entire lump.
But how can we break it down more precisely? Where is the source of this poisonous spring?
I stumbled upon John Owen on this subject last week, and I think his words are very wise as to this subject. In fact, it is almost as if Owen was speaking of our day. Consider his words below.
John Owen, the great Puritan theologian of the 17th century, in the book Biblical Theology, p660-661, states that the first factor in apostasy among evangelical theology (distinct from the Roman Catholic Church),
“…concerns the membership of the Church, because a true Church can, obviously, only be made up of people who are regenerate and who display reformed lives, observing the truth and living blamelessly before men.”
So here Owen points to the first facet of apostasy as being unregenerate church membership. Certainly he’s on to something here in relation to the modern church, no? Are not our cities and even our churches full of people who profess to believe in Jesus? I mean, I even heard Barack Obama profess Jesus Christ this week, in relation to Christ dying and forgiving his sins. This from a man who denies that life begins at conception! Who is it that cannot profess Christ now days, no matter what they live like?
But let Owen conclude the thought; it is worth its weight in gold:
“Many took up the title of Christian who were still profane, superstitious, carnal, proud, greedy, luxurious –indeed, they rushed into the churches in crowds.”
“…From this influx, it is not surprising that the doctrine of faith and, most especially, that of the new birth became so rapidly corrupted in the churches…until, at length, Christian church discipline was remodeled on the fashion of the pagan secular state.”
There you have it, my friends. You have a great number of people taking on the name of Christianity, as we do in our day, and these people rush into the church. Only now days, they have more reason than ever to rush into the church. Consider that a large movement within this country believes that:
- Evangelism is somehow equated with getting unbelievers in the church, something that scripture diametrically opposes.
- Thus, church programs, social functions, entertainments, and enticements are abundant in an attempt to lure in unchurched, unregenerate, indeed, profane ‘Joe’.
The end result, of course, is that the American church is filled to the brim with those who profess Christ but are yet still lost and dead in their sins. Once this has taken place, church discipline, holiness, indeed the very gospel itself, along with countless other vital doctrines are redefined and remodeled according to the prevailing few of the day –rather than according to scripture.
Finally, Owen gives us the end result of such a movement,
“And so it came about that faith was neglected, doctrine no longer studied, regeneration equated to the mechanical performance of the rite of baptism…by that time, most of the world had taken up the Christian profession so, at length, everything that had been instituted by Christ was basely transmuted into another gospel.”
Let us sum this up for this day and age:
- Church discipline is neglected, the church fills with unbelievers; or, unbelievers are enticed into the church, thus proving that church discipline was thrown out long ago,
- The true faith, pure gospel doctrine, is neglected and no longer studied are carefully considered/defended,
- Regeneration is equated with a raising of the hand, a ‘decision’, an act of the will, a sinners’ prayer, or a walk down the aisle,
- Thus, the doctrines instituted by Jesus Christ became barely visible in the very church that claims to worship and follow Him.
Conclusion:
As hard as this statement may seem, I believe that scripture and experience prove it right 100% of the time: where there is no biblical church discipline (of course, outlined in several passages, the most prominent being Mathew 18), you will not find the gospel of Jesus Christ, and you will not find a true church.
The church must be purged of its leaven, my friends, otherwise it ceases to be a church. Thus I have but one question for you: Are you in a true church?
Nathan,
I’ve been reading your site for several months. Thank you. You’re a blessing to me.
I’ve been reading John Owen’s works for about 2 years now. Where did the quotes in your post come from?
Ethan–
Thank you for the kind words. I’m simply sharing what I read from others throughout the week!
Looks like I left out the source for the Owen quote; I will have to edit and add that in. It came from Biblical Theology, P660-661. I just finished up this work; look out for a full review within the next week or so, God-willing.
–
Nathan
Nathan,
Thank you, and I look forward to your review of Biblical Theology. My wife and I have a 10 day vacation coming up, and I’m going to take two books with me: my Bible and Biblical Theology. I’m really looking forward to it.
I also appreciate that your posts are covering things like apostasy, hypocrisy, God’s view of worship, spiritual growth…all of the things we wonder about but find difficult to put in a box with easy checkmark answers and explanations. Thank you for bringing out the theology and views of the Puritans on these things. I’m continually amazed at their depth of knowledge and understanding of the things of God and His Christ and that they addressed then the same problems we face in the church today. There’s nothing new under the sun!
Anyway, keep up the good work.
-Ethan
Ethan–
Just a word of caution, my friend: Biblical Theology is NOT easy reading!
If it was up to me I wouldn’t take it on vacation, unless of course that
was the only time I could get some peace and quiet –for it requires lots of concentration. It is definitely a labor to get through.
Part of my review will be to point out that this book is for the serious
student only. Anybody else will get bored or overwhelmed and will give up early on. Not to say that you’re one way or the other, but just to warn you, that’s all. It will take some discipline to get through. I had to take a quick break about halfway through and pick up some other reading just to get refocused.
Tell you what: if you come to a point in the book where you’re tempted to
put it down, give up, or even to just finish it later in life, flip to the
last portion, the ‘book’ on Evangelical Theology, and read through that.
That’ll make it worth it, and might inspire you to go back and get through the hard stuff. The last book is the summation of his thesis, without all the digressions, and it is indeed like JI Packer said, ‘Pure Gold’.
Hope that helps! Let me know what you think of it. I’ll post a review
shortly and will also link to another review that I found helpful.
–
Nathan
Nathan,
Thank you for the word of caution. I think I’ll take you up on your advice and bring a couple of other books and place a bookmark in the ‘Evangelical Theology’ section! However, I am very serious about understanding and knowing God as He is, not as we might make Him to be, and it seems that John Owen is one who knows God intimately. I’m ready to undertake the challenge of ‘Biblical Theology’. I teach at a local Bible college, and I help shepherd a small flock as pastor, so the longer I’m a Christian, the more weighty God’s calling on me grows and the more I desire, like Paul, to present those under my teaching and preaching as complete in Christ (Colossians 1:28). And vacation is when I’ll have serveral hours each day to read, ruminate, and meditate. I only occasionally have that luxury on the weekends.
-Ethan
Yes. I haven’t always been. But the church that I now attend would fall within Owens’ anathema because it is PCA, and though they do not hold to baptismal regeneration, their practice of infant baptism is easily attached to it. Still, the doctrine is far more Gospel centered than I could get elsewhere. I would say that in some ways it fails in certain disciplines, also. For the most part it is a good one.
The question of keeping out the leaven I think is one that is unanswerable. A few reasons. First, men are sinners, regenerate or not. Second, even though we are commanded to purge out the leaven, it is impossible to get it all simply because that which is easily recognized may be cleansed but the root remains ( I am thinking mold here). Third, Jesus selected Judas, then there was the compromise of the Apostles even though they had been witness to the risen Lord, and along with that, we have the testimony of Acts and the Epistles, James’, John’s, Paul’s and Peter’s, that all warn that even in highly spiritual churches there were those who rose up from within, be they brothers or not, who themselves breed the problems.
In short there can be no resolution. However, that does not remove our responsibility to resolve. It is, as you have pointed out from Owen, the neglect of the church to disciple that exacerbates the problems that are inherent in the make up of a church filled with saints simultaneously sinners. Neglect surely cannot remediate and gangrene must be cut off or the whole will die. What a radical image Paul paints!
When looking at the Problem With The SBC , they are confronted with what other mainline denominations down through time have had to deal. Having gotten over the hurdle of inerrancy, they must now answer just how is the Bible authoritative. But the SBC has been classically baptist in the autonomy of the believer and the local church (resulting in reality an ecclesium of the majority). Both of which undermine the ability of the authority, Biblically speaking, of carrying out church discipline. It is true that it is a doctrinal matter (it always is). That is a challenge though, since the doctrinal base is up for grabs; just what are baptist distinctives?This all goes to the point that even when we have conservative churches where doctrine at one time was preeminent, that given time, they all will slip away.
So I am in a true church, but it is not fault free. And that is the point. I am not sure that the body of Christ was ever meant to be, that is, I think that this is the means by which God does discipling, in a practical exercise sorta way. As the confession says, even though we have sin remaining, and even though we are being preserved, this is not an excuse to sloth, but diligence and every church, even the purest has problems, some so much so that they hardly merit the name. The warning sounds clear: If you think you stand, take heed lest you fall.
Try this Gospel:
There is a big problem. This Gospel has for the most part stopped being preached since the 1940’s. But, it is precisely the Gospel preached in the book of Acts. You see, this pressure toward peace and not division has a compromising effect which will lead to demise, of which Owens warns. Too many are comfortable because their gospel does not make them despised by the community. Division is in reality the very tool by which Jesus is training up his children. “I have not come to bring peace, but a sword to cause division…” is remedy to sickness and apostasy. The big but is if we really institute discipline-ship many churches would no longer be megattractive.
So my question: is this the Christian Gospel, and if so, why do so many who claim the name neglect it?
“saints simultaneously sinners”
There you have the crux of the problem. If you acknowledge that all men are equally depraved sinners, where do you draw the line between what is acceptable for a church member and what is not?
None of us (and I include myself) are as good or decent as our outward appearance might allude to, and I’m not sure spiritual problems are any less a problem just because they may not manifest themselves in physical, outward actions.
How do you discipline one person for the physical act of adultery when lusting is no less a sin (at least according to Christ) and is perhaps more common?
Do you discipline only those who act on their impulses? If so, why? Why differentiate between the wicked deeds done and the wicked as one might do given the right circumstance? Shouldn’t one attempt to root out both? Of course, who would be left?
I’m just wondering how one goes about choosing who to discipline and why. What is the method/approach?
TT–
Excellent thoughts, especially the last paragraph. Our gospel certainly is *not* offensive in the good way, the biblical way. We’ve somehow gotten the idea that numbers and success are more important than truth and clarity. The root of this thinking, you know, can be explored in great depth. The church growth movement that I mentioned in my post can also be found within the same erroneous presuppositions. I won’t get into it here, but clearly Arminianism is the real enemy behind this thinking.
Regarding your comments about cleansing the church: I don’t think that Owen (or myself in the portion I wrote) meant to say that a church must be perfectly clean. Far from it, no doubt. What I tried to hit on was that a church must follow the biblical principles of church discipline, namely confronting and if necessary punishing open sin upon it breaking out within the body. For clearly, there will always be spots in our love feasts, and hypocrites who we would never know are lost. But when a professing believer sins, blatantly, there is a process, and casting him out is absolutely necessary for the unrepentant. For, of course, believers are marked by their repentance and hatred for sin, not their abstaining from it. So then, what I saying was that churches who blatantly have no concern whatsoever about who is in their midst or even who stays in their midst, will not (by definition, I believe) preach a biblical gospel, and will be (by experience) filled to the brim with unbelievers who will or will eventually control what is taught from the pulpit.
Again, excellent thoughts. Thanks for sharing.
James–
Jesus and the Apostles taught simply that when a professing believer sins, and the facts can be observed and verified (thus eliminating motives and heart sins), then we are to go to the person and confront them in love. If they repent, we are to forgive, and this of course proves they are a child of God. If after much patience and exhortation they do not repent, we are to cast them out and count them as an unbeliever.
But, read my comment above to TT. We’re not arguing that a church be pure, but simply that open sin is treated for the seriousness that it is, and the seriousness in which Jesus commanded us to treat it, and that this will keep unbelievers from ascending to authority even though they will be in our midst.
Does that help answer your question?
Thanks Nathan,
I am not very familiar with Owen. You have given me more to read of him than I ever have on my own. I guess what I was questioning is where the infection comes from, and it cannot be simply from external influences.
You are absolutely right, it is more owing to the refusal of the church maintain its charge than the conditions it finds itself in that it falls into dis-grace. In this world you will have tribulation, of that we are assured, but we have been given the means to endure.
I think it was Gordan Runyan who encourgaged his readers on his blog to not give up, because eventhough things look bad God will not abandon his Church. We can expect, though we should not presume, that he will recue his bride. RC Sproul said that he was worried if we do not return to the Reformation doctrines, because where we are headed we do not want to go. I am confident in both these men’s statements, in that even if we get to where RC is warning against, Gordan is right, God will bring revival. Still, today is the day of Salvation…
Nathan,
Y’know that email answer I just sent you? Throw that away and substitute this post here as my answer.
Note 9: Yes, I think that makes sense. I think this is a relatively simple approach when dealing with obvious problems (cheating on one’s spouse, stealing from one’s employer, abuse of one’s position, etc.).
I think the issue becomes a bit cloudy when the actions are not agreed upon as even being in error. A few years ago, a pastor was let go not for some act of misconduct but because of the manner they ran the church and their efforts in acquiring new members (among other things). Some accused the persons involved with his dismissal of pride and arrogance (something which should be repented of and for which amends should be made). The people involved insisted they were acting in the interests of the church.
In situations like this, where the truth is uncertain (even if the actions are outward and clear), I’m not sure what one is to do in terms of discipline.
So perhaps the only applicable situations are when the sins are open, obvious and incontrovertible.
“Evangelism is somehow equated with getting unbelievers in the church, something that scripture diametrically opposes.”
Just wondering about your rationale for this, where scripture opposes this.
Also NW said:
Well, to be more specific, the ideology and methodology that scripture presents is contrary to this mindset; I wouldn’t say that there is a specific command that says ‘thou shalt not evangelize by inviting to church’.
To be clear: Jesus commanded us to “GO”, as in, “go into the world and preach…”, which is definitely not the same as inviting people into our midst. The church is not a building, but a body of worshipers, of true believers. Church is chiefly to gather and worship corporately (which could be fleshed out by examining the pastoral epistles and say, 1/2 Corinthians). The main purpose of ‘church’ is not to evangelize, though that can be a side effect –for we’ll always have unbelievers in our midst. And when Jesus and the Apostles are very clear in that there is to be no open, blatant sin permitted in our midst, it should be obvious that unbelievers will not and should not feel comfortable in church.
But nobody is saying that unbelievers should never be in our midst, or that we should never invite them to church. Rather, the New Testament presents us a clear model of going out and preaching the gospel on our own, while using corporate gathering for the worship and edification of true believers.