“I therefore, a prisoner for the Lord, urge you to
walk in a manner worthy of the calling to which you have been called,
with all humility and gentleness, with patience,
bearing with one another in love,
eager to
maintain the unity of the Spirit
in the bond of peace.
There is one
body and one Spirit--just as you
were called to the one hope that belongs to your call” (Eph. 4:1-4) (ESV).
I
often wonder how many of our doctrines pave the long descent to hell. I do not
question the sincerity of the individuals who claim ownership of their highly
esteemed teachings; rather, I see the danger in holding so tightly to a pet-doctrine
that one loosens their grip of Christ. We, who claim to be Christians (“Christ-like”
in love, grace, and mercy), fight with each other over the doctrines we favor. We
fight in the name of Scriptures; we “debate” in the name of intelligence; we
rebuke our brothers in the name of Lord. We do all of this while the world
watches. We do these things to validate our reputation of hypocrisy and
self-righteousness. We do all of this over things that do not matter to the
Gospel.
Calvinism vs. Arminianism; Supralapsarianism
vs. Infralapsarianism vs. Sublapsarianism; gifts of the Spirit vs. no-gifts of
the Spirit; Pre-tribulation vs. Mid-tribulation vs. Post-tribulation; Preterism
vs. Futurism; … the list of our arguments is long. It is a list that provides
many opportunities for us to disagree. It justifies factions, divisions, and
dis-unity in the Church – the Body of Christ. When we should be preaching
Christ, we preach one translation of the Bible over another (Phil. 1:18).
When will we let go?! When will we
focus more on the work and person of Jesus Christ, than those things which only
lead to dis-unity?! Is not the Blood of Jesus more important than pet-doctrines
– than our desire to be right?! It seems we have as many reasons to disagree as
there are stairs to hell!
Perhaps we should be more concerned
about preaching the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. Perhaps, we should
focus on our sacred calling and share the Good News. Perhaps we should remember
that we are one Body – one Church. Perhaps we should let our preferences fall
by the wayside, instead of promoting division.
Let us remember
the Work of Jesus to open the way to Heaven. Hell shutters at the Work of our
Lord, yet rejoices at our discord. It is time for us – the Church – to walk in
a manner worthy of the calling we have received. Let us be diligent to study
for ourselves the deep things of the Word, but may we never set a stumbling
block before our brothers and sisters (Rom. 14). In the bond of Peace, let us
submit to the Holy Spirit “until we all
attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God” (Eph.
4:13).
-
Dusty