How
many times have new converts received sound instructions concerning the
life of a Christian, only to have the instructions nullified by the
example of older members? A brother in Canada recently told me of his
first trip south after his conversion. Struggling to overcome his
tobacco habit--because he had been taught that he ought to do so--he
watched with delight as the men of the "down south" congregation went
out between Bible study and worship to enjoy their cigarettes. "O boy!"
was his immediate reaction; "It's allowed!"
The
same thing happens in other areas of teaching. "Attend every service,"
new converts are told, and sound reasons are given to back such
instructions. But Brother Smith only attends the 11:00 o'clock service,
and he is accepted as a faithful member. "One service a week must be
sufficient," they say to themselves. "O boy! It's allowed!"
"Study
your Bible daily, and prepare beforehand for every Bible class," they
are wisely told. But they see little evidence of Bible study on the part
of others, and some of the comments in Bible classes definitely betray a
lack of preparation. "Ignorance of God's word must not be too bad," they
conclude. "O boy! It's allowed!"
"Modesty of dress is essential for Christians," they hear repeatedly.
But then they hear of mixed swimming among the members and see Sister
Jones wearing the tightest pants in town. "O boy!" they think; "It's
allowed!"
Older
Christians ought to be constantly aware that they are being watched,
watched by newer converts who are looking to them for examples. Part of
the teaching those new converts are receiving is coming from the pulpit;
the other part is coming from the lives of the other Christians around
them. What are they seeing? What are they learning? How sobering to
think that some new convert might have been discouraged and led astray
by something he saw in my life! Let each live in every aspect of his
life so as to be able to say, "Be ye followers of me, even as I also am
of Christ" (1 Cor.
11:1).
Newer
converts, though, must learn that God's word is the standard of
authority, not the conduct of other Christians. Loyalty in a kingdom is
determined by loyalty to the king rather than to the subjects of the
king. It is to Him that one pledges his allegiance when he becomes a
Christian, and he must be faithful to Him whatever others around him may
do or fail to do.
One's
"O boy! It's allowed!" then must be limited to those things which God
allows in His Word. But even then he would anticipate a certain reserve
in one's expression, for the true Christian's greatest delight is not in
some activity that just happens to be "allowed," but in serving the
Lord. "For to be carnally minded is death; but to be spiritually minded
is Life and peace"
(Romans 8:6).
Other Articles by Bill Hall
Mark These People
Three Men Rebel against Hypocrisy
What's Wrong With Today's Youth
Truth's Consequences