J.C. Philpot battled a
great error that was gaining ground in his day - the denial of the
eternal sonship of Jesus Christ. In his introductory remarks he answered the objections
some had made to confronting that heresy in the first place. One group thought
the battle was not necessary because they did not understand the full
significance of the error. Some were persuaded by some “Big Guns” who had
decided for themselves (and for their followers) what the Bible said and that
settled the question once for all. A third group thought it was a fight over words
and why cause a fuss over semantics and the question should never been waged in
the first place.
When confronting error
there are usually these separate battles that the truth must confront. Not only
do you fight the error but sometimes you have to deal with those who should be
on your side but for some reason or the other decided to sit this one out.
Sitting it out wouldn’t be as bad, but often they cheer for the other team which stings a little.
Philpot said
“Those who from self-interest, love of carnal ease, entanglement in error, or cowardice of spirit, wished things to remain quiet as they were, all lift their voice against the disturbers of the general peace.”
Come on, ye who troubleth Israel, if you
were quiet, none of this would have happened (1Kings 18:17). It is amazing to see that the battles will change but the tactics and the positions of the enemies of truth rarely do.
Considering one of the great fights of
our day, which I believe is on Biblical marriage, we are starting to see
these groups appear. There are groups that don’t understand what the fuss is
all about. Others who think it’s better to live and let live. There are others
that wish it was like it used to be and among conservative Christians we are
most susceptible to the last excuse. Remembering the glory days when you didn’t have
to give a definition for marriage we can say that it should not be like this because it
did not used to be like this. Both are true statements, but unfortunately,
that line of argument is a useless defense of the truth because they say "so what?" and if we shrug and saunter away mumbling to ourselves away as to avoid the controversy because we did not get to pick the fight we lose the fight anyway.
Few who live in exciting times that we like to read about would choose the exciting time for
themselves. An old proverb went something
like “blessed are the forgotten nations of history.” Why? Who wants to read a
story about a country that lived in quiet peace for centuries.
There are fights in every
generation that rise. Sometimes the fight is greater than we think that we can stomach.
Sometimes it’s a fight we would rather not have at all. All who pick up the
sword of truth wish that it needn’t be so and it grieves us that God’s Word is
not obeyed. There shouldn’t be any that relish fighting – but that should not
stop the men of God. We can look at the spiritual battles for truth about us
and wish it were not so, wish for quieter times and peaceful seasons, but that is
not for us to decide. God has placed you in this time to fight the battle that
is going on now. It’s easy to be on the right side of a fight that is already
over-the test comes when the battles just starting to get hot. Your story has been written, it is not for you
to decide what times you live in – it is for you to decide how you will live.
Once more from Brother
Philpot:
“Old Mrs. Bigotry is dead and buried; her funeral sermon has been preached to a crowded congregation; and this is the inscription put, by general consent, upon her tombstone:For modes of faith let graceless bigots fight;He can’t be wrong whose life is in the right.
But if to contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to the saints is bigotry, let us be bigots still; and if it is a bad spirit to condemn error, then let us bear the reproach rather than call evil good and good evil, put darkness for light and light for darkness, bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter.”
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