In Deuteronomy 19:14 we read, “Thou shalt not remove thy neighbor’s landmark,
which they of old time have set...” Again in Deut. 27:17 we read, “Cursed be he that
removeth his neighbour’s landmark.” We read again in Job 24:2, “Some remove the
landmarks; they violently take away flocks, and feed thereof.” Proverbs 22:28 says,
“Remove not the ancient landmark, which thy fathers have set.” Proverbs 23:10 says
again, “Remove not the old landmark; and enter not into the fields of the fatherless.”
Verse 11 continues, “For their redeemer is mighty; he shall plead their cause with
thee.”
In all these scriptures we see that the original landmarks which were set in the
time of laying out and allotting the land to the children of Israel when they received
their inheritance was very important all the way through in maintaining proper
identification of each person’s land as the inheritance passed down from one
generation to another. None were to remove the landmarks which they of old time
had set (Deut. 19:14). The ancient landmarks which had been set by their fathers
were not to be removed (Prov. 22:28). A curse was pronounced upon anyone who
tampered with any of the original landmarks (Deut. 27:17). The rightful inheritance
of each one of the children of Israel could only be identified by reference to those
ancient landmarks.
It is the same in maintaining proper land lines and boundaries now. When a
surveyor runs a land line he must locate corner stones and run the lines according
to them. I have known them to dig up a considerable area in an effort to locate a
corner stone, and if it could not be located they could not proceed with the survey
until one was established. Neither was this done by arbitrary means. The surveyor
did not just look around and decide on an arbitrary location as being the most likely
or pretty close and run from there. Rather he went to where he could clearly locate
a corner stone in each direction from the corner to be established and measured in
from those stones and established a corner that tied in with the other established
corners in the area. Sometimes they would have to go maybe as much as a mile and
perhaps in some cases even farther and measure in from each direction to locate a
given corner. But the survey could not proceed until that corner had been definitely
established to correspond with the other established corners in the area.
Also in a survey the line must be run according to where the original corner
stones are found. If there are obstacles in the way and trees and brush, etc., which
hinder him from seeing through to the other corner, he does not decide that the line
cannot be established in that place and just move it over to another place. Instead
he will carefully measure over a certain number of feet from the corner stone at each
end of the line to clear the obstacle and set up his flag at that point to shoot to and
run the line through from there, but bearing in mind all the time that the line he is
shooting is so many feet off from the actual line. This becomes a matter of official
record. When this is done and recorded legally the adjacent land owners can just
wrangle and fuss all they want to and sue each other in court over the property line,
but it will be always settled by the legal record of that surveyor who made the survey
and established those corners. Everything in a given area must correspond with
everything around it and must be tied in with the general area.
Now let us come down to apply this thought to us and to our spiritual standards,
etc. In I Cor. 10:18 we read, “Behold Israel after the flesh...” But why behold Israel
after the flesh? Because Israel after the flesh is a type of Israel after the
spirit–spiritual Israel or the Church of God in this New Testament age of time. Those
literal landmarks referred to in the above texts which were so important to the
children of Israel in their inheritance, etc., were typical of those ancient landmarks
of spiritual truths and standards which have been established by our fathers for the
church. In the 5th chapter of Hosea, God was pronouncing judgment against the
priests and princes and people of Israel for their rebellion against Him and their
idolatry, etc. and in verse 10 said, “The princes of Judah were like them that remove
the bound: therefore I will pour out my wrath upon them like water.”
From this we see that God considers a departure from established standards set
in the scriptures and established for saints to go by as removing the ancient
landmarks and His judgment is pronounced against it and His wrath poured out
upon those who do such things. In Rev. 22: 18, 19 we read, “For I testify unto every
man that heareth the words of the prophecy of this book, If any man shall add unto
these things, God shall add unto him the plagues that are written in this book: And
if any man shall take away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall
take away his part out of the book of life, and out of the holy city, and from the things
which are written in this book.” We see here that it is no light thing to tamper with
God’s Word and the standards and principles it sets forth to change them or remove
them in any way.
Now returning to the thought that in a literal land line survey all must be
definitely established to correspond with everything around it and must be tied in
with the general area, this is also true in the over-all picture of spiritual things and
in establishing true standards for the church to go by. Each individual part of that
standard must be scripturally and spiritually established and must tie in with the
general over-all standard of teaching of the church. In other words, if we see evil in
a particular thing and oppose it as being not compatible with a holy life because of
the evil influence of it, then we should oppose all things related to that in principle
and every projection of that thing in other forms whereby its evil influence could be
projected. As an illustration–if we oppose the movies in general as an element of evil
influence, and I am sure that all of us do and the saints have stood against this thing
from the time it first came in—then we should also oppose its offspring, the
television, which projects that same evil influence from the theater right into our
parlors and brings it right home to our children. As one said, “We took the night life
off the streets and brought it to our homes.”
In Isaiah 62:10-12 we read, “Go through, go through the gates; prepare ye the
way of the people, cast up, cast up the highway; gather out the stones; lift up a
standard for the people. Behold, the Lord hath proclaimed unto the end of the world,
Say ye to the daughter of Zion, Behold thy salvation cometh; behold, his reward is
with him, and his work before him. And they shall call them, The holy people, The
redeemed of the Lord: and thou shalt be called, Sought out, A city not forsaken.” In
the above verses 10 and 12 we see that the people of God have a responsibility in
lifting up a standard for the people. It did not say for them to set up a standard but
to LIFT up a standard. Verse 11 speaks of Christ who is our salvation and He is
declared to be the ensign or standard given to the people in Isaiah 11:12. Thus we
see that the standard is already given and set up for the people in Christ and His
teachings and our job is to lift up that standard in our lives and in our teachings for
the people to go by. Let us not trail that banner in the dust, nor even hold it at half
mast, but let us hold it high and clear and distinct so it can be seen and rallied to by
the people, especially the people of God.
I once heard a story of a military standard bearer who, in the time of battle when
his company was charging up a hill against a fortified enemy position, was going
ahead of his company carrying the flag. Enemy fire was very effective as the enemy
was strongly entrenched and the company was being shot up badly. The officer in
charge deemed the battle lost and that he should pull back his men, so he called to
the standard bearer, ordering him to bring back the flag. The standard bearer called
back over his shoulder as he continued to charge on into the enemy position, “I
won’t bring back the flag; you bring up your men!” According to the story, the beaten
and battered army rallied to the standard and the result was victory.
Brethren, let this be the spirit of every one of us. There is a cry from some in our
day that the standard is being held too high and we are too strict about this and that,
etc., and some are seeking for a modification of some of the old teachings which our
fathers stood by, lived and taught, and to which God attested His sanction by
miracles, signs and wonders and abundances of divine grace, producing great joy
and victorious living among His people. But when the cry goes out to bring down or
lower the standard, let the spontaneous response of every one of us be that “We
won’t do it; you bring up your lives.” And if all will bring up their lives to the
definitely established standard and principles of truth (rally to the standard), the
result will be victory.
In Numbers 2:34 we read, “And the children of Israel did according to all that the
Lord commanded Moses: so they pitched by their standards, and so they set
forward.” Ah, folks, there you have it! “They pitched by their standards and SO they
set forward.” If we want to set forward and make real solid progress in our individual
lives and in the work of God, we must pitch by the standards which God will honor
and work through. Otherwise, we are doomed to certain defeat.
In Isaiah 11:12 we read, “And he shall set up an ensign for the nations, and shall
assemble the outcasts of Israel, and gather together the dispersed of Judah from the
four corners of the earth.” Here we see that Christ was to set up an ensign for the
nations and gather the people together to it. We are to lift up His standard also to
which all who love holiness can be gathered. But take note that this standard was
one to which the people would be gathered. It was something clear and distinct that
the people could discern and gather to. We cannot expect to gather the people to
anything if we set up arbitrary standards and diverse teachings and disagree on the
standards of truth and what truth is. We must survey our entire course from the
landmarks established by our fathers and from the corner stones of truth from which
they ran their land lines and the course we take now must be just a projection of the
same lines they surveyed out for us. God has strongly attested to these principles
by mighty signs and wonders being done in the name of the Holy Child, Jesus, so
I consider these definitely established landmarks and safe lines to follow.
A perfectly straight line could be projected around the world and when it
returned to the point of beginning it would land on the exact dot where it started.
Then it could be projected around again and form only one single line with the line
on the second round falling exactly on the line which was made on the first round.
So with the lines of truth--they could be projected from the teachings of Christ and
the apostles right on down through this entire Christian era and if these lines have
been maintained straight they can be doubled back along the same lines clear to the
point of beginning and still form one single line no wider than the original line. If the
line would be any wider it would be so because of a little variation and getting just
a little off center. The second line might cover up the first line until it would still
show just one line but if the line is wider than it originally was it would be because
we had varied a little off center.
Variance is classified in Gal. 5:20 as a work of the flesh. For us to vary in any
degree from the established lines of truth laid down by Christ and the apostles and
perpetuated unto us by our fathers is to give place to the flesh. Two straight lines
running parallel can be projected around the world and still be the same exact
distance apart as at the beginning. But if there is a little variation in one of them, be
it ever so slight, by the time it is projected around the world it will be off a long, long
way. So with the lines of truth. If there is just a slight variation some way, by the time
it is projected through this age, or through a few generations even, there is no way
of calculating how far it might be off.
One has said, “Individuals are but atoms. They are born, they live, they act, they
die. But truth is an eternal principle and can never be changed.” This is very true.
Change truth to any degree at all and it becomes false. There may be different
conditions and different things to meet in our day than in the days of Christ and the
apostles or in the early days of this reformation and, no doubt, there are. But the
clear principles of eternal truth, if solidly held, will meet the problems of our day the
same as theirs.
But we cannot move established landmarks to suit our land lines. We must move
our land lines to suit the established landmarks. At this point, I think of Bro. George
Winn of Guthrie, Oklahoma, whom some of you may still remember. He said at one
time that if God would hand him the Bible and say, “Here, George, just take this book
and fix it to fit you,” he would just hand the Bible back to God and say, “God, the
book is all right just like it is. Just fix George to fit the book.” Brethren, that is the
attitude we all need and must have. Let us not be trying to change any part of God’s
Word to suit our way of life at any point, but let us earnestly be seeking God to
change our lives in any way they need changing to conform to the truths of God’s
Word.
In Zechariah 14:20 it says, “In that day shall there be upon the bells of the
horses, HOLINESS UNTO THE LORD...” This is the standard we are to lift up for the
people. This is the law of God’s house. Ezekiel 43:12 says, “This is the law of the
house: Upon the top of the mountain the whole limit thereof round about shall be
most holy. Behold, this is the law of the house.”
The first Methodist discipline had in it a paragraph which forbade the reading
of such literature or the exercise of any diversions which were not conducive to
spirituality and holiness. This may still be in the Methodist discipline. I do not know.
But we all know that this principle has long since passed out of the lives of many of
the communicants of that faith, and most faiths so far as that is concerned. The
departure from this principle was the moving of a clear definite landmark which had
formerly set certain bounds and established a certain course for the people to go by.
So long as they remained within those set bounds and followed that certain course
in their lives God’s glory was manifest among them and His power worked mightily
in their midst. But the removal of this landmark broke down the boundary and set the
people adrift and threw them into confusion as to what the standard of Christian
living was and today almost anything of the world is acceptable and very little divine
power and glory is manifest in the lives of many. But let us realize that the New
Testament can become a dead letter to many of us also if we do not watch ourselves
very closely and stay real close to its teachings in our manner of life in every phase.
The general over-all rule for Christian living and which would also be the
standard for the church to go by collectively and individually is found in 1 Cor.
10:31– “Whatsoever you do, do all to the glory of God.” This should be the corner
stone from which we would survey everything in every area of our lives. To state this
rule or principle conversely will not suffice in this case. To state it conversely would
be to state it negatively–”Will this or that dishonor God?” Let us realize we are here
for the express purpose to glorify God and we should hold this principle at all times
in its positive form just like it is stated here. “Do all to the glory of God”–and survey
everything in life from that cornerstone of truth.
Jesus Himself laid down this pattern for us to go by. In John 4:34 Jesus said,
“My meat is to do the will of him that sent me, and to finish his work.” Again in John
5:30 Jesus said, “...I seek not mine own will, but the will of the Father which sent
me.” In John 8:29 Jesus said again, “The Father hath not left me alone; for I do
always those things that please him.” Jesus did always those things which pleased
His Father. He is our example. In I John 3:22 we read, “And whatsoever we ask, we
receive of him, because we keep his commandments, and do those things that are
pleasing in his sight.”
Now let us consider that those who keep His commandments may be saved
(howbeit, some may not be saved who are quite strict about the commandments in
the main, at least) but we must seek to do those things which are the most pleasing
unto God if we would enjoy His rich blessings upon our lives. This text is put in its
positive form also– “Do the things which are pleasing in his sight.” Let us think of
it this way and not in its negative form-”Will this displease God?” We are plagued
to a great extent with negative thinking anyway. We think and talk more about the
things we do not believe in than the things we do believe in. Some have come more
to an attitude of thinking, “Is this or that sin?” than of thinking “Is this or that
glorifying to God?” But let us realize there are some things which could not actually
be located as sin which do not really please God for us in our particular case and
would not be glorifying to Him.
I esteem very highly the early pioneer ministers of this evening light reformation
and the standard of holiness they held both in life and teaching. I consider those
standards to be right because they worked and produced results and the results
they produced are the very same results the people of God yearn for and decry the
lack of in our midst today. I reverence those early brethren to the extent that it is very
grievous to me when I hear people criticizing them and challenging their teachings.
But it is common practice among those who accept and condone the innovations of
worldly things which have been coming in among us little by little over the past few
years to speak lightly of the standards taught and held by the early brethren. They
also downrate those who hold for those standards yet in our day and sometimes
such remarks as this are heard: “I do my own thinking. I do not accept a code that
has been handed down by tradition from someone way back there that I did not even
know,” etc. Sometimes those who stand for those old standards are accused of just
subscribing to some old tradition and doing things because someone else said to
do it, etc. But when we see those old standards and that old way work and produce
results and better results than the codes which people want to bring in and go by
now, that is the deciding factor in our thinking.
Of course, that attitude is not fair on the face of it for who of us do not do things
because others do them? Those who are in the “know” regarding those things tell
us that the human race produces only a very small percentage of leaders. All the
others are followers. Have any of you ever been conscious of having originated any
style or fashion which went on and later became popular and was generally adopted
by the world? If you cannot say “Yes” to this question, then are you not just
following the styles and fashions originated by others and doing those things
because the world does them? If you did not originate the styles and fashions you
are subscribing to, then certainly you are a follower and not a leader. Then why
would you think it fair to condemn and ridicule those who choose to stand by the
standards who have come down to us from our fathers?
Would any of you even imagine that if the styles were to change in the world to
long skirts that you would continue to wear the short ones you now clamor for? If
suddenly no woman of the world would ever curl her hair or wear a permanent, do
you imagine you would still think it necessary to curl yours and contend for those
things as you do now? If not, why not? Then why would you think it proper and fair
to taunt those who choose to stand by the old landmarks and not move the bounds
in such a way and think of them as you do?
You may ask, and I have been asked, if I believed the early brethren had all the
light. I would not have to believe that for my statement to be true in regard to them.
But let us realize there is a vast difference between new light as it is being advanced
today and more light on what the brethren of the early days taught and the church
subscribed to in that time. I believe without doubt that we of our day have more light
on some points of truth than they had in their day because there have been
developments in the intervening time which would throw some clearer light on some
points of truth than they could have had in their day. I can accept additions of light
on these points of truth on that basis but I cannot accept “new” light which
contradicts the basic teachings of the early brethren on any points of truth. But I
believe that the doctrines taught in the early days of this evening light reformation
contained the overall coverage of the truth as taught in the New Testament though
some of it was perhaps in a limited sense which developments have brought out
clearer than they had it.
But let me make it clear in this respect that most of the points I could call to
mind in this category would be dealing with scriptures of prophecy and having to do
with the signs of the times and the fulfillment of prophecy and not with the real
standards of holiness and Christian living. In regard to that, I believe I can say here
that I accept the standards as taught and lived by the early brethren as being right,
full and complete, and as having no need of any deductions or additions. And I feel
inclined to warn all of you at this point to be careful about accepting or being carried
away with any of the innovations of worldly things or variations in teaching and
practice which have been coming in among us the last few years and are coming in
among us now.
If I could see more real godliness and deep holiness of life and more of the
power of God accompanying these things, I could be more interested in them. But
when I fail to see this, but rather the opposite–a decline in spiritual power and deep
holiness of life and more worldly mindedness, etc., I feel that the best policy for the
church is to flee these things and follow after godliness. Let us not remove the old
landmarks nor remove the bounds which have been set for us by those who have
gone before us. Let us remember that God’s Word pronounces a curse on all who
do this.
I do not believe anyone could successfully contradict that there was more real
divine power and spiritual life and more miracle working power and healings and
genuine powerful conversions and devils cast out, etc., in those early days than
what we are able to witness and testify to in the church of our day. I know you don’t
like that. I don’t either. I would like to see it different, but to be honest I must face up
to the facts as I see them and I feel you should, too. Some of the very folks who are
taking in with these innovations of worldly things and variations from the former
teachings and practices of the earlier brethren, decry the lack of spiritual power and
miracles and healings, etc., in our day and refer back to how the early brethren did
it and ask why our brethren of today do not do it that way. It is the age-old idea of
wanting to have the cake and eat it, too, which cannot be done. Some would like to
have all that power and glory and benefits of the early church but they are not willing
to follow that standard. The two can never be harmonized so we may as well stop
trying; and if we are willing to throw the standards of the early brethren overboard,
just throw the rest overboard, also, and quit worrying about what they had that we
do not see in that same measure in the church of our day. We can never hope for the
one without the other.
We hear folks sometimes talking about God restoring to us certain things which
they are conscious to be lacking. This is the wrong approach to the problem. We
should be praying for God to restore us to the standard and place in our lives and
experiences where these things are. These things–divine glory, spiritual power and
blessings, etc., make up the faith which was once delivered to the saints. They were
delivered once, were never taken away and consequently can never be given again.
They were enjoyed by the church in the early morning time. Then when there was a
decline from those standards of the early morning church, these things were no
longer enjoyed in a general sense. Then after the long reign of the beast of Rev. 13
(Papalism) known as the “Dark Ages,” and the reign of the second beast
(Protestantism) known as the “dark and cloudy day,” when the evening light
reformation broke and the saints came out into the full light of the gospel and back
to the standards of Christ and the apostles and the early morning church, they found
these things right there where they had been left when the first apostasy came and
they enjoyed them then just as the early church did. This should be sufficient to
convince us that the standard of holiness and spiritual life are closely connected
with the manifestations of divine glory and power among us.
In the 26th chapter of Genesis, 12-25, we have a story related concerning Isaac,
the son of Abraham, which has an important connection with my thought here.
Before this time Abraham had dwelt among the Philistines in the land and had
digged wells of water there for his flocks and herds which were very great. Now
Abraham had died and the Philistines had stopped up the wells of water which he
had dug. Isaac came to dwell in that same land and he had great flocks and herds
also, and he went in and dug out those same old wells which had been dug in the
days of Abraham, his father, which had been stopped and filled with earth by the
uncircumcised Philistines. Verse 18 says, “And Isaac digged again the wells of
water, which they had digged in the days of Abraham his father; for the Philistines
had stopped them after the death of Abraham: and he called their names after the
names by which his father had called them.”
Now let us realize that the common tendency is always to slacken and let up.
This must be steadfastly resisted by all of us. The natural trend is always downward
and the drift is always away from God and right. We, as saints, must not give way to
this tendency but must pull against the tide of the world with all the strength we
have. Each generation is inclined to accept just a little lower standard than the
preceding generation held. Whatever standard we hold now, the rising generation
will hold just a little lower standard and so on and on with each succeeding
generation unless the heart is definitely wrought upon by the Spirit of God and a
deep spirituality and deep holiness of life is maintained. Those among us who are
more worldly minded and consequently less spiritual will always be ready to settle
for a lower standard of life and ready to stop the wells which have been dug by our
fathers.
But let us take note in the above scriptures that Isaac digged again in the wells
of his father and called them by the same names. Oh, how we need to dig deep in the
wells of our fathers, the early brethren–those wells of deep sincerity, deep humility,
deep devotion, deep spirituality, deep godliness, and deep holiness of life and deep
in the well of separation from the world and worldly things. Many today are not living
that consecrated, dedicated, separated life unto God which characterized the saints
of the early church and those who lived in the early days of this evening light
reformation. Too much self, too much flesh, too much worldliness–and the wells of
our fathers become clogged and we can never expect them to be a well spring of
living water springing up into everlasting life and producing in our lives the
blessings, joy, happiness, and power and grace that was and is manifested in the
lives of those who keep all these things cleaned out of their lives. In 1 John 2:15-17
we read, “Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love
the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of
the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of
the world. And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the
will of God abideth for ever.” Here we have a clearly set land mark and definitely
established corner stone from which to run all our land lines and set our bounds. Let
us call things by the same names by which our fathers called them and let us not
feel it extremism to do so. The early brethren taught strongly against the wearing of
gold and all ornamentation. Plainness and modesty in dress and behaviour and
general conduct of life characterized the lives of those early brethren and saints. The
New Testament teaches this also–1 Peter 3:3 and 1 Tim. 2:9. But I have seen entirely
too many gold watches, gold bands, and ornaments among us in recent years for my
comfort. I see today too many short sleeves, short skirts, thin and sheer apparel,
spike heels, bare limbs, etc., among us. The brethren of former years taught against
all these things and many more in principle. But there is a move on foot today to
remove the bounds and destroy the old landmarks. Let us watch and be sober, folks.
Lewis F. Powell, President of the American Bar Association, in an address to a
convention of this association in Miami, Florida on August 9, 1965 said, “An orderly
society cannot exist if every man may decide which laws he will obey.” Surely we
can readily grasp the import of this and see that in a society where every man is a
law unto himself there could be no order. But how about a church where each one
is a law unto himself and where the standard is set to accommodate the individual
consciences of the communicants? Could that be orderly any more than a society
could be orderly on that basis? No. But God is calling for order in His church. His
word says in 1 Cor. 14:40, “Let all things be done decently and in order.”
I readily recognize the importance of the individual’s conscience and contend
that he should keep his conscience clear between him and God at all cost. His
conscience may not be perfect and clear but if he is inclined to trifle with his
conscience, what chance does he have? What chance would God have to deal with
him? One must never reach such a point as that. But while recognizing the place of
the conscience in everyone’s life and relationship with God and placing proper
importance upon it and keeping it clear between the individual and God, at the same
time I contend that the individual’s conscience has nothing at all to do with what we
are to teach the church as its standard of holy living. I also recognize that God deals
with people according to the light and knowledge they have, in part. But I also
contend that the individual’s light has nothing at all to do with determining what
shall be taught to the people.
The individual’s light is respected between him and God. So is his conscience.
But neither is respected as a standard for the church to go by. If we just teach
according to the people’s light and knowledge, how would they ever gain more
light? God wants us to lift up a standard for the people according to His Word,
irrespective of the people’s light or individual consciences and let them all come to
it. But, of course, while they are getting to it, their standing with Him is rated
according to their light, knowledge, and conscience, and we should allow for that
also in extending our fellowship and confidence to them while they are coming to
it.
If God told us to lift up a standard for the people, would He not expect us to do
that? Certainly. Would He expect us to be governed in that standard by any
individual circumstance or condition? Certainly not. He would expect us to be
directed by His Word and that only in lifting up that standard. But if we were to
attempt to lift up a standard according to the individual’s consciences, we would
have many standards. But he said “a” standard.
Let us notice the different conditions of conscience spoken of in the scriptures.
Imperfect (Heb. 9:9). Purged (Heb. 9:14). Good (1 Tim. 1:5). Pure (1 Tim. 3:9). Defiled
(Titus 1:15). Weak (1 Cor. 8:7). Now let us realize that whatever state and condition
an individual’s conscience is in it will pretty well set his course for life. A corrupt
conscience would allow corrupt things in the life of the individual without
remonstrating against them, while one whose conscience was pure would require
strict purity in every phase of life and so on with all the different phases and
conditions of the conscience. An imperfect conscience will allow an imperfect life
while a perfect conscience would demand a perfect life in order to keep clear. Paul
persecuted the Church of God in a good conscience. He said in Acts 26:9 that he
verily thought within himself that he ought to do many things contrary to the name
of Jesus. We can see then that our conscience can be affected by the way we have
been conditioned. Conscience is pretty much governed and regulated by what one
believes to be right or wrong. It may be wrong, but if one believes it to be right, his
conscience will allow him to do it. On the other hand, it may be right, but if one
believes it to be wrong, his conscience would condemn him in doing it. And let us
realize that there is such a thing as a “seared” conscience (1 Tim. 4:2) and when that
happens the conscience becomes entirely insensitive to anything. This condition is
not arrived at immediately but comes gradually through one trifling with his
conscience and failing to keep it clear and tender.
I am told that there is in some heathen lands a belief that one can only appease
the wrath of his god by sacrificing his firstborn child to the crocodiles in the river.
These people take their children to the river and throw them in because their
conscience requires that of them and would smite them severely if they withheld.
But in more enlightened America our conscience would smite us to death almost if
we were to do such a thing. Thus we see that one person’s conscience would smite
him severely for doing the same thing that another person’s conscience would smite
him severely for not doing. Thus we see that conscience does not set any kind of a
general standard at all and if it did, what kind would it be?
Now let us realize that the teaching of conscience in the New Testament covers
only things which are entirely neutral in principle and involve no moral principle of
right or wrong at all. Paul brought it in under the heading of eating meat which was
sacrificed to idols and said in his discussion of it in I Cor. 8:8 that if we eat we are
no better and if we eat not we are no worse. This covers a principle that should be
applied and carried through all consideration of conscience matters. It applies only
to things of an entirely neutral nature which would neither make one better nor
worse either way. If it goes beyond this into something which involves moral
principles of right and wrong, then we are to be governed by God’s Word and not by
our conscience or what we think about it.
There has been a great cry in recent years for liberty of conscience. But let us
realize that this tendency generally runs into a liberal conscience and there is a vast
difference between a liberal conscience and liberty of conscience. God has talked
to me some in times past on the text in Gal. 5:1, “Stand fast in the liberty wherewith
Christ has made you free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage.”
People today are contending for a great many liberties which Christ did not give
them. He has never at any time liberated you and me from the obligations of His
Word and the standard it sets forth. All He has done in that respect at the best is to
just be patient and merciful and long-suffering with us and allow us time to get to the
standard and get straightened out in our conscience and light, etc. But if we would
not try to get to it but just contended for our own “think-so” in it, His patience, long-suffering and forbearance would run out on us and we would be cut off. The liberty
Christ gave us was never liberty to follow our own conscience alone as a standard
of holiness and spiritual life. Many other liberties which people contend for and do
not want to be interfered with in are liberties Christ did not make them free in, also.
God has never given to you and me free license to follow any questionable thing,
even slightly, but has instructed us to abstain from all appearance of evil (1 Thess.
5:22.) The more we do this the fuller and richer and more complete our spiritual lives
will be and the more God’s blessings will abound in our souls. Bro. Fred Pruitt and
I were together in a meeting in Minnesota some years ago and were staying in the
home of a man who was pastor of the congregation where the meeting was being
held. This man was accused to us by some of the members of his congregation that
he drank beer. Bro. Pruitt talked to him about it and he never said if he did or did not,
but his answer was that the Bible said to be temperate in all things and that would
include drinking beer the same as anything else and one could not be condemned
for drinking beer if he were temperate in it. But the liberties Christ gave never
extended to such things as this and He does not grant us license to indulge in any
evil thing even temperately.
There seems to be a great fear with some of our people today with respect to
extremism. I know there is such a thing and I fear it, too, to a certain extent. But I feel
there is not much widespread danger of it within our ranks. There is much more
danger of compromise among us at this time than of extremism and fanaticism as
I see it. Those who are a little on the liberal side anyway seem especially fearful of
fanaticism, but I certainly feel this is a trick of the devil to get their focus on this and
pull them into compromise and liberalism to avoid it. It would not be so bad if people
who feared extremism so much would fear compromise just as much and religiously
steer away from both of them. But it is not usually this way. I am fully aware that an
extreme spirit can never be satisfied. But neither can a compromise spirit; but when
given way to it will demand more and more and yet more, never being satisfied.
Let us consider Ahab, the king of Israel. He compromised the standard of God
in the first place when he went out and married Jezebel, a heathen woman, which
God had forbidden to be done in Israel. When he had done this thing, it took him out
from under the favor of God and His sheltering wing. Then he was a victim of many
things, being led captive by Satan at his will. When this woman came in, she
naturally wanted to worship her god, Baal, and requested Ahab to have an altar built
in the land to do sacrifice to Baal. He was already cut loose and drifting and under
the power of a compromise spirit, so he conceded to this, also. Next, she wanted a
temple built for Baal and he granted this request. This was a great abomination in
the sight of God. But this woman could never be satisfied, so next she demanded
that the altars of God be destroyed out of the land and Ahab was so victimized by
this spirit by then that he granted that request, also. Then she struck the final and
fatal blow to the worship of the true God and demanded that the prophets of God be
put to death and Ahab conceded to this, also.
Brethren, let us realize that when we cut loose from our moorings and start
drifting, there is no knowing where we will drift to. The only safe place for us is to
stay anchored to the old landmarks and never take the first step away from them.
We are instructed in Jer. 6:16 to “Stand in the ways, and see, and ask for the old
paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your
souls...” Here the “old paths” are called the “good way.” This is the way God views
it. This is God’s Word. Let us view it in the same way and love the old paths as we
are instructed to do here.
Now we know that no religious movement ever fell to the bottom all at once. The
greatest apostasy of them all that led to the establishment of the Roman Catholic
hierarchy came by a gradual process and was 260 years in developing, even after
it got a good start and the leaven of it was working actively but gradually for a long
time before that.
But stop at any point in that gradual decline and apostasy from the original
spirituality and glory of the early church and name any one thing that was coming
in and it by itself would appear to be of too little consequence to be worthy of much
attention, let alone create a controversy. This would be especially true in the first
stages of the decline because such things always start on very minor points. After
apostasy is farther advanced and the darkness in men’s souls increased and their
conscience becomes more seared, then they can take bigger steps at one time
without any conviction. But they have to be conditioned for those bigger things and
the devil knows he could not impose the big things at first while there is still a lot of
light in the soul and a considerable degree of spirituality and divine power and
blessings manifest in the movement. He must begin with very minor points that
appear so insignificant as to be absurd and work up to bigger things later on.
The apostasy in the Evening Light Reformation movement is no exception to this
rule but has followed the general pattern of all before it, beginning with only minor
points and working on into the bigger things later on. But perhaps the apostasy in
this movement has been the most rapid of any before it. This should cause us to
stop and take notice, because this certainly indicates a general condition existing
in the world and in the hearts of men which makes it easier for the people to accept
these things and for the devil to push them in upon the people. No reformation
before this one has ever fallen so far in such a short time. This should certainly
cause us to fear to take the first step in that direction.
But, even though the first steps were small and insignificant, those first fruits
of it are a part of it the same as the later fruits are a part of it. The little minor points
on which it started are as much an important part of it as the bigger things that came
later. Without the little things, there never could have been the bigger things. Little
drops of water make the mighty ocean. Little grains of dirt make this great earth. And
a conglomerate accumulation of little things make a great apostasy, the result of
which is a fallen movement.
I will now notice some scriptures in God’s Word directed to the ministry and I
notice them here for a definite purpose. Let me put it this way. A minister’s right to
speak is a priceless treasure. Without it he becomes useless as a minister and
overseer of the flock of God and a watchman on the wall to warn of approaching
danger. The scriptures given along this line are all aimed at protecting the minister’s
right to speak in any and all points. Note the following scriptures on this line.
“The husbandman that laboreth must be first partaker of the fruits.” 2 Tim. 2:6,
7.
“Let no man despise thy youth, but be thou an example of the believer in word,
in conversation, in charity, in spirit, in faith, in purity.” I Tim. 4:12.
“In all things showing thyself a pattern of good works; in doctrine showing
incorruptness, gravity, sincerity, sound speech that cannot be condemned; that he
that is of the contrary part may be ashamed having no evil thing to say of you.” Titus
2:7, 8.
“Neither as being lords over God’s heritage, but being ensamples to the flock.”
1 Peter 5:3.
One can see at a glance that the objective of all these scriptures and others
along this line which could be produced is to protect the minister’s right to speak
in any matter that arises. He is commanded to be an example in all things so that he
may have a right to speak in all things and to “...reprove, rebuke, and exhort” (2 Tim.
4:2), with effectiveness.
When Paul was giving instructions to the church at Thessalonica he paused to
remind them: “Ye are witnesses, and God also, how holily and justly and
unblameably we behaved ourselves among you that believe.” I Thess. 2:10. And as
a result of that he was able to record this result from his preaching to them: “When
ye received the word of God which ye heard of us, ye received it not as the word of
men, but as it is in truth, the word of God which effectually worketh also in you that
believe.” 1 Thess. 2:13. His preaching and teaching was effective and fruitful among
them because his behaviour among them gave him a right to speak in their own
eyes.
This same writer says in 2 Cor. 10:6, “And having in a readiness to revenge all
disobedience when your obedience is fulfilled.” This makes it plain that we have no
right to speak against the disobedience of another if we ourselves are disobedient
on some point and not fulfilling all righteousness ourselves.
But let us get down to the point in all of this. It is believed by many that the rift
which came about in this Evening Light Reformation movement in about 1910 to
1914 was all brought about by the necktie issue and the idea of causing a rift or split
in the movement over such a little thing as a necktie is hooted at as an extremely
ridiculous thing by many. If that were the truth of the matter and if that were the real
issue and the only issue it would be an extremely ridiculous thing. I agree with you
that it would be. But, as already observed, all spiritual declines and apostasy begins
with very small things and move on to greater things as they progress. The apostasy
of this Evening Light Reformation was no exception to this rule. But let us face it
squarely as the history of the developments confirm it to be. The innovation of the
necktie was definitely the removing of one of the landmarks of our fathers and when
one landmark is removed or destroyed it throws all related things out of proper
focus.
It is evident beyond question that the necktie has served as a mouth stopper in
the hands of Satan. He who wears a tie has no right to speak against a string of
pearls that a woman wears around her neck. Anything and everything that could be
said for or against either of these could also apply to the other in the same way.
Likewise the woman who wears the string of pearl beads around her neck would
have no right to speak about the person who wore some other kind of jewelry. And
this person who wears the jewelry of whatever kind it is would have no right to
speak about the person who wore make-up, etc. And so on and on it goes, one thing
after another, while the minister is helpless to prevent it. They have forfeited their
right to speak.
“Oh,” but you may say, “I know ministers who really preach it straight and cry
out against those kind of things.” Yes. But is there any authority back of it? Is it
effectual that they do? Do not these things continue to increase among those who
profess to be the Church of God of this day and also many other lines of worldliness
without letup? We all know this to be true and it is for no other cause than that the
ministers in this movement who cry out against these things have forfeited their
right to do so and consequently all their crying out is weak and ineffectual. The fact
that these things are cried out against by some and yet increases only adds weight
to my argument at this point.
I am sure there are some still alive today who can remember when this and other
innovations were first introduced among the saints. Many were afraid of them at that
time but were consoled by the promise of the brethren who were endorsing them
that it would just be these few minor changes to give us more influence with the
better class of people of the world so we can reach more of them and we will go no
farther. But was that the case? History up to now and the present conditions of
worldliness of every kind flooding the professed Church of God shouts in deafening
tones “NO!”
Now I would not dare to say that these brethren willfully misrepresented the
facts in the case and their honest intentions. No doubt, they spoke as they felt and
did not intend for things to happen as they did. They could not possibly have
foreseen all that has happened anyway. They certainly did not plan all of this in their
own minds and hearts. But what did happen was that when they conceded to these
things they lost control and forfeited their right to speak out against other kinds of
worldliness and the devil who promoted the whole thing just kept pushing in one
thing after another that they had not seen or thought of before. A clearly established
landmark had been removed and it threw everything related to it out of kelter and
there were no fixed lands to go by in this area. Instead of the clearly defined land line
of demarkation and total abstinence from all things of a worldly nature which had
characterized the church and the teaching up to this point, it now became a question
of what types of worldly things would be permitted. If any worldly things at all were
permitted then how would other worldly things compare with them and if one
accepted or practiced one thing of a worldly nature what right then did he have to
condemn or criticize another who practiced some other thing of a worldly nature?
And so on and on it went.
It was like the leak in the Holland dike in the story. First there was just a little
seepage of water that dampened the earth. But the water had found a way through
and soon it was a little trickle of water coming through, then a larger trickle growing
into a stream, and then, in spite of all the efforts of all the men in the area to stop it,
it broke on through the dike a mighty, gushing, uncontrollable flow of water which
flooded all the low land areas, destroying many homes and many lives and much
property. This story fairly represents what happened in this Evening Light
Reformation movement.
I read Chas. E. Brown’s book, “When The Trumpet Sounded.” At one place in it
he was discussing the time when the question of the tie was first introduced. It was
in regard to brethren being required by their employers to wear a tie as a part of their
uniform while on duty. That was granted, and Bro. Brown said, and said significantly
that, “Anyone who understands human nature would know that when such a
concession was made that henceforth there would be no standard on that point.”
That is certainly true but it is also true that when a standard on any point is
destroyed that standards on relative points are affected and they in turn affect
standards on other points related to them until it passes through the entire system
and the result is the whole standard in general is affected and eventually destroyed.
This has happened to a great extent by now in the liberal wing of the evening light
reformation movement, but I prophesy that Satan is not through with it yet. It will get
worse yet than what it is now. Let us not forget that neither an extreme nor
compromise spirit can ever be satisfied but will demand more and more and more
and yet more as it progresses.
When I was a boy I loved the game of football. I loved to play it and to watch it
being played. But I learned that the man carrying the ball was not the only important
man on the team. The blockers are very important men, too. Their job is to keep the
opposing players out until the play is successfully executed. With good, effective
blocking, the players handling the ball can successfully execute the play and make
good gains. But in many cases where blocking is ineffectual the opposing players
break through the defense line and break up the play in progress with the result that
ground is lost instead of gained.
That is something in the light that I see these first innocent-looking, ineffectual,
inconsequential, little innovations that were introduced into the Evening Light
Reformation movement. They were the mouth stoppers and their acceptance made
all protest against other things weak and ineffectual because the minister’s right to
speak had been forfeited. In other words, these things served as blockers and ran
the interference for the devil against any and all opposition while he pushed through
one thing after another and scored touchdown after touchdown against the church.
But let us not make the mistake of looking way off yonder and thinking only of
what has happened to other folks and to what extent they have gone. Let us realize
that the same thing can happen to us if we allow it and it will happen to us if we do
not keep solidly anchored to our moorings and adhere strictly to the old landmarks
and follow the land lines laid out for us in ancient times by our fathers. Let us take
a good close-up look at the things which are hammering at our own gates today and
let us realize that if these things are accepted they will constitute a removing of the
ancient land marks and an altering of the ancient land lines and the result of such
a thing could only be confusion and chaos.
Now this is the light in which we view these things and we see from the
experiences of others the extreme hazard of cutting loose from our moorings and
beginning to drift. When one does this the ocean is large and there is no imagining
where one will wind up when drifting.
I read an article in a magazine once, the title of which was, “A Fortune in a
Bottle.” It was about a fellow strolling along the ocean beach on one of our coasts
and finding a bottle containing the will of a woman in Scotland who had willed all her
fortune to the finder. She had thrown the bottle in the ocean over there in Scotland
and a lawyer investigating the case charted the course the bottle would have to
follow to reach where it was found and estimated it would take approximately twelve
years for it to make the trip. That was in keeping with the date of the will and it
furnishes a fair example of drifting. No one ever knows where a thing will go when
it is cut loose to drift. Therefore, let us not think of taking the first step toward
compromise.
I heard a minister in his message a while back say that when he and his wife
were first married he sat down with her and asked her if she ever intended to divorce
him. She was in the height of ecstasy of her new married joy, and of course the
answer was “No.” He told her that he never intended to divorce her either but
cautioned that they never take the first step in that direction. He exhorted that they
never go to sleep at night with anything existing between them that might have come
up during that day. If they kept everything cleared up as they went along and never
let a misunderstanding exist overnight their marriage would certainly never end in
the divorce court. He explained to her that it was not the big things which brought
married couples to the divorce courts, but just an accumulation of small things and
misunderstandings, etc., which summed up to a big thing. This same thing applies
to what I am dealing with here and that is just the way things develop in apostatizing
from the truth in just one little thing after another resulting in a great mountain.
I believe that was real good advice from this minister and his wife, for myself
and you and everyone else and I believe it is good advice in this case–never take the
first step toward compromise.
Now in concluding, let me earnestly exhort all brethren in Christ that we all stand
fast in one mind striving for the faith of the gospel and that we all present a solid
front against the enemy and stand solidly together to defend the church and the
succeeding generations against the innovations of worldly things which today are
hammering at our gates trying to push in upon us. Let us see to it that no bounds are
removed and no landmarks are destroyed and no corner stones of truth are moved
out of their places and let us all earnestly contend together for the faith which was
once delivered to the saints. Let us first of all contend for this faith within ourselves
that we may possess within us the fullness of this faith with all its fruits, its personal
regenerating power, its sanctifying power, its gifts of the Spirit, its unifying power
and influence, its personal relationship with God, its miracle working power and that
we may an abound in the fullness of divine love and grace in our personal lives. Let
us dig deep in the wells of our fathers and God will surely bless us to be able to
meet the problems of our day and overcome them and move on for God.
By Ostis B. Wilson
Editor’s Note: O. B. Wilson, now deceased, was associated with the Faith and Victory
group and preached this message out of a concern for them.