Deconstruction, Saul, & Why God Wins

deconstructionTerms change but people do not.

Most Christians have encounter the term  “Deconstruction.” The word describes men and women who fall away from the faith once “delivered for all.” They are former church goers who openly deny salvation in Christ alone by faith alone.

Though stories of people walking away from the church are disheartening, they are not new. Since the world began spinning, men and women have boldly pledged allegiance to God while secretly caring on a war against Jesus. The apostle John reminds us,

They went out from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they would have continued with us. But they went out, that it might become plain that they all are not of us. – 1 John 2:19.  

They leave; they deconstruct because they were never truly followers of God. Their open war against God manifests what has always existed.

The question then becomes what do we do when we encounter former friends battling the God of the Bible? To answer this question, we will go back to the Old Testament.

In 1 Samuel 19:18-24, David encounters a man who had “Deconstructed” his faith. King Saul who once professed allegiance to the God of Israel, openly and repeatedly defies God. Seeking to overcome God, Saul decides to kill David because God has said David will be king. Instead of worshiping God, Saul now labors with all his might to oppose God. Fearing for his life, David runs to Samuel at Ramah. He runs to the people and to the words of God.

When we encounter those deconstructing their faith, we too should run to the people and to the prophets of God. The attacks of those who once claimed Jesus and who once sat at our feet as we taught the gospel can drive sorrow deep into our hearts. David said “Fear and trembling come upon me, and horror overwhelms me” because his “companion” his “familiar friend” now “taunts me.” When we feel such sorrow, we should run to the family of God for support. For the family of God loves us and cares for us. Most importantly, the have access to the Word of God. When are hearts are wounded and heavy, we do not need to mull about on Facebook, scan through Instagram, or attempt to lose ourselves in a tub of chocolate ice cream. Rather we should reminded ourselves of God’s promises of salvation.

What promise do we need to be reminded of? We need to be reminded that the Word of God wins. In verses 19-21, Saul’s sends messengers to kill David. All three groups get to Ramah and immediately start prophesying. Irritated by the failure of his men, Saul sets out to do the job himself. After getting directions to Samuel’s location, Saul arrives with murder on his breathe. But he never gets to David. He strips to his underwear and prophecies.

This seemingly odd story reveals a profoundly simple truth. God wins! Though modern deconstructionists pursue God with science, reason, and appeals to love, God’s Word will not be defeated. God will not be defeated of evolution, socialism or the sexual revolution. When the dust settles, God will still be on his throne. And those who believe they can fight against God will be humbled. Instead of calling God to account, God will demand that the say and confess his words.

Even the greatest politicians, scientists, and cultural icons will be humbled. Saul goes expecting a different result and gets utterly humiliated. The greatest man in Israel is exposed as nothing more than a week fool. The former friends, the professors, and the celebrities who can talk circles around us will be exposed by God. Do not embrace their arguments and their promises of power, success, and acceptance. Their titles, their awards, and their connections will not stop God. He will win; he will demand that the confess him as Lord. They will be unable to resist him. Their weakness, their frailty, their puniness will be exposed. God will win. “Every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God.”

God wins! Will you run attack him like Saul or run to him like David?

John Smyth: The Danger of Haste

JOhn-Smyth-LegacyJohn Smyth won fame from himself when he established the first English Baptist Church in 1608. Yet, few Baptists know of Smyth’s contribution to the Baptist faith because he undermined his own legacy, rapidly changing his theological convictions.

As a young man, Smyth studied a Christ College in Cambridge and was ordain by the bishop of London in 1594. Though he had been exposed to Separatists ideas in college, he remained in the Church of England, partnering with other Puritan ministers’ intent on reforming the national church.  Understandably, the Church of England took issue with Smyth’s unauthorized pleas for reform and removed him from his position as city lecturer in 1602. “Though he was loath to give offense” and did all that he could to stay in the church of England, Smyth continued to break the law. In 1606, he lost his ordination because he preached without church approval. And in 1607, he faced penalties for practicing medicine without a license. Though Smyth championed the Calvinistic doctrine of the Church of England and infant baptism, legal, clerical, and eventually financial pressures drove him to conclude that the Church of England was beyond repair and no longer a true church.

In 1607, he became one of the leaders of the covenanting Separatist’s congregation in Gainsborough in Lincolnshire. He taught that the church should be founded upon a voluntary agreement between members but allowed elders to rule the congregation and permitted infant baptism. Because of persecution, Smyth and some of his congregation fled to Holland while others headed to America on the Mayflower.

Once on new soil, Smyth moved beyond separatism because he opposed elder rule, taught that tithing was an ordinance, said only Greek and Hebrew Bibles could be read during worship, and became convinced of believer’s baptism, the sprinkling of adults post conversion. Acting on his newly acquire convictions, he dissolved his Separatist church and formed the first Baptist congregation in 1609. That year, he baptized himself and then 36 others, stating that group of two to three people ordained by the Holy Spirit could start a new church. At this time, he also changed his views about original sin and predestination, repudiating his Calvinistic convictions.

Had Smyth stopped his theological evolution in 1609, more Baptists would know of him today. But, the evolution continued.

By 1610, Smyth concluded that his Baptist church was not a true church. Smyth now believed Baptism had to be performed pastor whose baptism could be traced to the apostolic era. Convinced of succession, a doctrine he had vehemently attacked only months earlier, Smyth encouraged his church to apply for membership in the Waterland Church founded by the Mennonite movement. Smyth’s church members could no longer handle his theological about-faces and split. When Smyth died in Amsterdam in 1615, the remaining members of his church joined the Mennonite church, leaving behind a tainted legacy for the Baptist faith.

Smyth’s rash application of his theological change should serve as a warning to modern pastors. In his zeal to get the Bible right, Smyth spent much of his life getting the Bible wrong. In the span of seven years, Smyth championed Anglican, Puritan, Baptist, Separatist, and Mennonite theology. With each move, he attacked those he left behind, ungraciously viewing them to be fools or servants of the anti-Christ because they rejected Smyth’s new convictions. He said the Puritans practiced a false faith because they stayed in the church of England, a church he once fought to defend. He declared that the Separatists bore the mark of the beast because they practiced infant baptism. and succession. Later in life, he criticized Baptist for not practicing succession.

During his lifetime, he both defended and attacked congregationalism, succession, Calvinism, and infant baptism. Predictably with each change, Smyth had to disavow portions of his earlier writings. Because of his doctrinal instability and harsh tone, Smyth divided his church and struggled to maintain relationships with Thomas Helwys and other close friends. Smyth’s life revealed that zeal detached from maturity harms the witness of gospel.

Paul wrote that gospel infants, “were tossed about by the waves and carried about by every wind of doctrine.” The pastor who desires to lead his church well, and the church member who values godly leadership should learn from Smyth’s haste. They should realize that bold convictions detached from prayer, patience, and counsel lead to confusion and division. As Proverbs 19:2 warns: “Desire without knowledge is not good, and whoever makes haste with his feet misses his way.” 

To lead well, the pastor must lead calmly and patiently, wrestling with truth until he has mastered it. Impatience appeared to constantly push Smyth from theological genius to theological fool. The pastor who strikes out like Smyth and begins to blog, tweet, and lecture on topics he only just encountered will harm to his church.  Often your fluctuating convictions of today cannot help but be the embarrassments of tomorrow. The life of Smyth revealed that the prudent pastor should workout his theology in his office long before he speaks about his new convictions and calls for change. Haste leads to division and fractured legacies.

Friends, have we learned the lesson of John Smyth?

Bible Haters Are Not Ignorant

hate.jpgChristians tend to write off their spiritual opponents as uneducated Neanderthals. But not all men and women oppose the gospel because their gospel experience mimics a cave-men’s interaction with fire. The idea that morality is directly linked to knowledge originated with philosophers like Plato who advocated for better education in his various dialogues. The Scriptures paint a different picture of bad behavior. In 1 Samuel 18, Saul fears and attempts to kill David because he understands revelation. He gets the David has been appointed to succeed him by the special revelation of God and he tries to kill David.

Non-believers often hate Christians precisely because they understand the gospel. They understand that their Bible says they are sinners in desperate need of a savior. They understand that Jesus is good, loving, and all powerful. But instead of selling out and following the savior like Jonathan did, they attempt to kill and overthrow Jesus. They become Jesus’s enemy for the same reason, “Saul was David’s enemy continually (1 Sam 18:28).” The want to rule their life and will not submit to the God of the universe whom they have seen from afar. The great Welsh pastor of yesteryear, D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones said,

The Pharisees and other others hated [Jesus] because of His utter, absolute holiness and righteousness, and truth. And this is why you find gentle, lovingly, lovable people…suffering terrible and bitter persecution sometimes at the hands of ostensible Christians.

The world often hates Jesus, David and ultimately us because it understands our gospel. Jesus says in John 15:18-19, “If the world hates you, know that it has hated me before it hated you. If you were of the world, the world would love you as its own; but because you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you.”

The world despises us precisely because it knows us, our savior, and our message.  Our kids mock our faithful church attendance because they don’t think the cross really can save sinners. Our coworkers right us off as goodie-goodies who can contribute little the rugged business world because they think Jesus’s methods of peace and holiness demonstrate weakness. And, our friends deride us for not getting drunk with them because they despise Jesus’ teaching that joy comes through obedience to God. People can quote the Bible and still hate it.

Persecution is not some anomaly driven by ignorance of the divine. It is the norm for the people of God because they live in a world dominated by those who understand and hate God. The solution for persecution is not knowledge. Getting your persecutor to Sunday school will not make them believe.

Faith is the answer. Faithfully bear witness to the truth and pray for God to open the eyes of your persecutors. Faith comes through knowledge accompanied by spiritual enlightenment through the Holy Spirit. The spirit opens dark eyes through words on the printed page. When life is full of persecution do not depend on education programs, depend upon the Lord! Mimic David and faithfully love and obey others, trusting God to defend you. God saved David from Saul’s Spear and he will keep your soul from destruction. Even educated anger cannot separate you from the love of God!