"Are we the
Bible believing and Bible preaching people we once were? Do we still
carry that reputation in the community? Or do we have babble in our
Bible classes and piffle and pablum from our pulpits?"
My father used
to tell about a man in the community where he once lived: He was not a
religious person, and was a member of no church in the community. He had
several daughters. When they reached the age at which they became
concerned about religion, they asked him where they should attend
church. His advice? "Go to the church of Christ, they believe and preach
the Bible. " This has been the reputation of the Lord's church
throughout the years, but one must ask, "Is this true now?" I challenge
you, dear reader, to consider the question of whether this can be said
of local church pulpits and Bible classes in our generation. I think we
need to give serious consideration to what is taking place in the Lord's
church in our time. Are we the Bible believing and Bible preaching
people we once were? Do we still carry that reputation in the community?
Do our actions merit it? Please consider what I say with a prayerful
attitude.
Babble in
Bible Classes
What is the
average criterion of a Bible class teacher in local churches? We often
put people up as teachers simply because they are members of the church
without regard to their skill and experience as teachers, their Bible
knowledge, or their faithfulness. Usually, in the lower classes, if one
is a member of the church and is older than the students, he/she is
qualified to be a Bible class teacher. In the upper classes, if a person
can stand up before the class and mechanically go through some other
person's prepared material, we consider him/her a qualified Bible class
teacher. Some such teachers wouldn't be able to detect or refute error
if it occurred in the material they teach.
A common
complaint of teachers where I have worked concerns the literature. It's
too difficult, or the lessons are too long, etc. So much of the
published literature for Bible classes is just plain babble at its
worst, and misdirected and shallow at its best. It tends to cater to and
accommodate the shallowness of Bible knowledge that exists among us.
Some of the literature is so concerned about the method of teaching that
it ignores the substance. Consequently, people complete the book with
little or no more knowledge than they had when they started it. We need
to study the Bible, not about the Bible.
Much of the
complaining about the literature comes from a desire on the part of
inept teachers for someone to "shell the corn" for them. They sort of
want the book to lie on the podium and teach itself! They want the
literature to do their work for them. Excuse me, but I have always said
that a bad teacher can't teach a good class with the best literature,
and a good teacher can teach an excellent class with the worst
literature. Beside that, God gives us teachers who can simply teach the
text of God's holy word. Why have we developed such shallowness that we
must depend upon commercial material for our Bible classes?
Writing new
Bible class literature is about like the constant escalation of what I
call "popcorn" versions of the Bible. Men keep trying to remedy the
problem without knowing what the problem is. We don't need new versions
of the Bible, but conversions. We need teachers who are willing to
conform their lives to the versions which have served us well for
hundreds of years; who so saturate themselves with Bible knowledge that
teaching it to others becomes natural and easy. Likewise, we don't need
new Bible class literature, we need literate Bible teachers. We don't
need new kinds of literature, we need a new kind of teacher. The problem
is the ineptitude of so many of our teachers, not just the inadequacy of
commercial literature. I am not anti-Bible class literature, but I am
anti much that is on the market today. From time to time someone comes
along with the idea that we need new Bible class literature and proceeds
to produce the same kind we already have.
There is more
to teaching than standing before a class and sequentially going through
a book prepared by some-one else where all one has to do is fill in the
blanks. In many such classes there is little or no discussion because of
the teacher's lack of depth in Bible knowledge, the skill to generate
discussion, or the ability to challenge the students to think. If the
blank is filled in, the student reads what he/she has written, and the
teacher says, "next question."
I am not
exaggerating when I say that the church contains many, many members who
have mechanically gone through our Bible class system from pre-school to
adult class who can't give the plan of salvation or the acts of worship
and substantiate them with Scripture. It's like our public education
system's graduating students who can't read. The dumbing down of America
by the public school system has its counter part in the church. I once
received a phone call at midnight from a sister who had been in the
church all her life; as long or longer than had I, and her request was,
"Brother Needham, l am discussing the Bible with a friend, and would you
give me some Scriptures that teach that baptism is essential?"
Obviously, she thought baptism was essential, not because she had read
it and been convinced of it on her own, but because she had heard
preachers preach it. I fear this is not unusual among us. This is like a
person who finishes high school without the ability to look up a phone
number or fill out a job application.
A preacher
friend told of how he was about to teach the Book of First Corinthians.
He gave a thorough introduction to the book. When he was ready to begin
a study of the text, one of the elders said, "Brother was First
Corinthians written before or after Pentecost?" Lord, help us! I once
commented in a Bible class that not many brethren are Bible scholars. A
brother replied, "Not many are Bible students." Is that correct?
Now, on the
positive side, and lest I seem harsh and uncharitable, let me commend
all teachers for their willingness to do their best, even though in some
cases their best falls short of adequate. The condition I am describing
is not altogether their fault. The fault lies largely with the
leadership in local churches. If I had my way about it, and I don't, no
per-son would ever be appointed to teach a Bible class who is not
regular in attendance, whose life is not exemplary, who does not dress
properly, who does not have a working knowledge of the entire Bible, and
who has not gone through a teacher training class. It is absurd to place
the responsibility of teaching a Bible class upon a person who has
absolutely no training in the skill of teaching. That's like buying your
teenager a newcar, giving him/her the keys without giving them driving
lessons. Driving is a skill to be learned, not something inborn. I use
the word "skill" intentionally, because teaching is a skill. A skill is
something one learns, not something with which he was born. To be sure
one can have inborn traits and abilities that will enhance his/her skill
as a teacher, but teaching is a skill that must be learned. This is
obvious from the fact that our public education system has a minimum
requirement of four years of college including education courses before
one can be a licensed
For over a
year now, due to health concerns, I have been forced into what might be
called "semi-retirement." This means that I have not preached every
Sunday, or had a Bible class to teach all the time. Thus, I have been in
Bible classes taught by others, and have listened to others preach more
than I have in the last 49 years. This article is based upon
observations during the last year, and upon experience over 49 years in
local work and 13 years as both an elder and local preacher.
I recently sat
in a Bible class in which Jesus' first miracle at the wedding in Cana
was the subject. Here are some of the comments and questions that
occurred in the class. Who catered the wedding feast? Since Jesus'
mother asked him to provide the wine, and told the servants to do
whatever he told them to do, perhaps she was in charge? Since she seems
to have been in charge, was the bride or groom a relative of Jesus? How
many gallons did the waterpots hold? How many persons were present at
the wedding? These and similar questions consumed the entire class and
the students went away without learning anything of the significance of
the event or lessons to be learned from it.
I also sat in
a Bible class in which Dorcas (Acts 9) was the subject. Here are the
questions and comments that consumed the class period. How old was
Dorcas when she died? What was the cause of her death? How many garments
had she made and given to the poor widows? She must have been wealthy to
have given all those garments to the poor widows. Of what fabric were
the garments made? Why was she called by two names, Tabitha and Dorcas?
Most of this is just plain babble, speculation, and shallow.
I know of a
Bible class which at "Valentine" season had valentines all over the
room. Another one taught a lesson out of published literature about
Easter and Christmas. Another class was teaching children that they
should not be ashamed to be different by suspending pictures of penguins
from the ceiling. A vacation "Bible" school class had silly looking
cartoon characters riding camels, palm trees, etc. all over the walls
from ceiling to floor, and a make-shift booth where animals were
supposedly sold for sacrifice. In all this there is more entertainment
than Bible study. It demonstrates artistic ability not teaching skill.
It may be
shocking to some but it is a fact that a good artist is not necessarily
a good Bible teacher. It is sometimes the case that in trying to use
visual aids the student's attention is drawn more to the art, the
technology, and the gimmicks used to present the lesson than to the
lesson itself. The end result is that knowledge of God's word is not
increased. A brother recently told me of a business presentation he saw.
He said the teacher had the latest technology in visual aids. He had
every-thing set up on a computer, and all he had to do to project a
chart on the screen was to push a button. He said I was so fascinated by
his slick machinery and technology that I got nothing from his
presentation. Please consider the implications of this with reference to
Bible classes.
This
shallowness in our "Bible" teaching is manifested when local churches
choose elders. An elder is supposed to be "apt to teach." The general
concept of this qualification is this: can he stand before a class and
mechanically go through material prepared by others? He may never have
taught but a class or two, and the majority of the members who select
him were never in a class he taught. He may not be able to handle
controversial questions and false concepts that rise in the class, but
if they know that he has made any kind of an effort, regardless of how
feeble, to teach a class, then he is "apt to teach." Now, does any
serious Bible student believe this to be what the Spirit had in mind in
requiring that an elder be "apt to teach"? Come now, let's be serious!
I've heard it said that someone asked brother J.D. Tant once if he
thought elders should be apt to teach, and he replied, "Where I have
preached elders are apt to do most anything." Once I was going to be
absent from my Bible class, and I asked one of the elders who attended
the class, if he would fill in for me. His reply was, "You wouldn't put
that on me, would you?"
I once asked
for a meeting with the elders to challenge some false doctrine that was
being taught by the preacher. I asked, "Do you brethren endorse this
teaching?" To which they replied, "No, but we don't know how to refute
it. We don't have a spokesman." Interesting! It has been my
understanding of the Scriptures that the elders are supposed to be their
own spokesmen. Paul said elders are to "Hold ... fast the faithful word
as he hath been taught, that he may be able by sound doctrine both to
exhort and to convince the gainsayers. For there are many unruly and
vain talkers and deceivers, specially they of the circumcision: Whose
mouths must be stopped, who subvert whole houses, teaching things which
they ought not, for filthy lucre's sake" (Tit. 1:9-11). It was
argued that elders don't have to be able to refute false doctrine, but
provide a refutation of it. Please read the above passage carefully, and
see if you think that's a proper understanding of it.
Piffle and
Pablum From Pulpits
There is a lot
of piffle and pablum pouring forth from pulpits across this land in what
we think of as conservative churches. "Sermons" consist of quotations
from Calvinistic theologians, philosophers, and pop psychologists.
Personal
motivation talks are not gospel sermons. Quotations from C. S. Lewis and
Karl Menninger are not equal to quotations from Peter, John, and Paul. I
am not saying it is always wrong to quote from men when they say
something better than we can, but when such quotations dominate our
preaching, or become the basis of our faith, something has gone wrong
with our priority list.
Many young
preachers today don't know how to refute false doctrine and have no
interest in learning how. They don't see the refutation of false
doctrine as part of the work of preaching the gospel. They shy away from
controversial subjects. I sometimes refer to it as "slap Jane
preaching." A mother took her little Johnny to school for his first day.
Knowing that he was wont to get out of hand sometimes, she said to the
teacher, "If Johnny misbehaves, slap Jane who sits next to him, and it
will scare him and settle him down." Paul said, "Have no fellowship with
the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them" (Eph.
5:11). Preachers who don't have the courage to preach the truth and
expose error by name, need to find something else to do. If they curry
the favor of men, they should not be servants of Christ (Gal. 1:10).
They ought to be politicians. They need to spend more time studying the
word of God and less time drinking at the fountainhead of
denominationalism. Many are not looking for an opportunity to serve the
Lord but a way to serve their own interests. As N.B. Hardeman used to
say, "They want to sit down in a tub of butter." Some who have never
been involved in the rough and tumble of contending with false teaching
and teachers, criticize the fight we made in the 40's, 50's, and 60's
over institutionalism and the sponsoring church concept. They criticize
the way we went about it. Good friends, it is one thing to be in the
thick of the battle and quite another to sit on the sidelines and
criticize the way the soldiers hold their weapons. Their philosophy is,
"Let error alone, let it die a natural death." How naive can we get?
Error never dies a natural death, it has to be killed with the sword of
the Spirit.
I knew a young
preacher who persuaded the church to conduct a call-in radio program. He
asked preachers in the area to be his guests. During all the time that I
listened to the program, he invited only young preachers even though
older and more experienced preachers were plentiful. One could have
listened to the program for a year and never learned what to do to be
saved or that there is a difference between the Lord's church and human
denominations. This young man and his guests conceived of themselves as
counsellors, and every question was approached from the viewpoint of pop
psychology. They quoted psychologists, C.S. Lewis, Carl Menninger, and
other popular writers, and almost never the word of God.
College
lectureships used to be staffed by the most able preachers in the
brotherhood who filled their lectures with solid Bible teaching. I can
remember hearing men like Homer Hailey, Gus Nichols, John T. Lewis,
Harry Pickup, Sr., Frank Van Dyke, and others deliver masterpieces of
solid Bible teaching. In my day brother Hailey was best known for
expository work on one of the epistles. John T. Lewis walked through the
halls of the Old Testament with a knowledge of every character as if he
were personally acquainted with each one. One came away feeling he had
walked through faith's hall of fame. He quoted long passages from the
prophets, and could recite the genealogy of Christ all the way back to
Adam without missing a link. A brother from the "conservative liberals"
recently said, "In our lectureships we have such wonderful subjects and
such poor speakers, in your's you have such poor subjects and such
wonderful speakers." I don't know if his evaluation is true, but maybe
its something to think about. I do know this, nothing, but nothing,
beats old time gospel preaching and hard-nosed Bible study. This is what
it will take to keep the church on the straight and narrow path. When we
depart from the fundamentals, we take our first step toward apostasy.
Could it be that we are more concerned with being politically correct
than with being scripturally correct?
I once heard a
gospel preacher spend several minutes apologizing before he quoted
Mark 16:16! He wanted all to know that he was not trying to hurt
anyone's feelings, he just wanted to tell the people what the Lord said.
He realized that not everybody agreed on what the passage teaches, but
he wanted them to know what it says. Brother L.L. Briggance, one of my
beloved college professors, told of a preacher who gave the invitation
in these words, "If you don't believe in some degree, and repent to some
extent, you are liable to be damned somewhat."
Let me hasten
to add that there are some notable exceptions to what I have said here
(thank the Lord!). I don't want to paint every young preacher with the
same brush. But it doesn't take a genius to realize that the conditions
I have described exist to an alarming degree. And let me as-sure you
that I am not the only person who thinks so.
Young
preachers are being paid more today than preachers ever have been paid.
Young preachers with little experience and mediocre ability are being
paid two and three times as much as the older more experienced preachers
were ever paid, and for what? A couple of canned sermons per week based
in pop psychology and Dale Carnage type personal motivation that make
people feel good, and perhaps a Bible class or two. It's nice to make
people feel good if it is because they are on good terms with the Lord,
but most often the preacher's job is to comfort the afflicted and
afflict the comfortable. In many cases these young preachers are being
paid outstanding salaries to lead the church down the prim-rose path of
compromise and eventual apostasy. For months I listened to sermons that
could have been preached in any de-nomination in town without raising an
eyebrow. These sermons would have received a warmer reception among the
sectariansthan they received from some of the brethren.
I recently sat
through a "sermon" in which the young preacher compared the local church
to a football team. He had the elders as the coaches, the preacher as
the quarter-back (he runs the game, you know!), and the members as the
players. He spent about 45 minutes on this. I learned a good bit about
football and nothing about the scriptural function of the Lord's church.
I don't
begrudge a sound, hard-working gospel preacher being paid well. It has
been my philosophy that a good gospel preacher cannot be overpaid, and a
bad one is always overpaid. I certainly am glad gospel preachers are
paid bet-ter than some of us older ones were.
The first two
years I tried to preach I did two-thirds of it for nothing! (That's
probably all it was worth!) Some churches would give me the Lord's day
contribution, three or four dollars. (The contribution always seemed to
be smaller the day I preached!) I often bought gas on credit, drove my
old car 100 miles to preach on Sunday with 50 cents in my pocket which
would buy my wife and me a hamburger on the way home.
Conclusion
God said, "My
people are destroyed for lack of knowledge" (Hos. 4:6). It seems
to happen in every generation. Some writer said, "they who refuse to
learn from history are doomed to repeat it." So true. Amos said,
"Behold, the days come, saith the Lord GOD, that I will send a famine in
the land not a famine of bread, nor a thirst for water, but of hearing
the words of the LORD" (Amos 5:11). No doubt Amos had reference
to a time when God would send no prophet to a rebellious and apostate
people, but we are dangerously close to a spiritual famine in our time.
There is a famine of hearing the word of the Lord because it is not
being preached, and because when it is preached there is an
unwillingness to hear and heed its divine message. 0, my dear brethren,
what can we expect from present trends? Will America become a "mission
field" for the religion of Christ? Will brethren from Nigeria or South
Africa have to send brethren to re-establish the Lord's church in the
United States? When the apostasy over institutionalism and the
sponsoring church started, a brother predicted that Nashville, Tennessee
would become a "mission field." (Did he ever take some "flack.") It all
but came true! Apostasy's broom swept quite cleanly in the city that had
more churches of Christ than any place on earth, and for years had been
known for its devotion to the faith of our Lord the city of the five
tabernacle meetings of the late N.B. Hardeman (known as "the prince of
preachers") in which he preached the old Jerusalem gospel to many
thousands in attendance. We can read of strong churches that existed in
the first century in places like Ephesus, Corinth, Colosse, etc. What
happened to those churches? Can one find a congregation of the Lord's
people in any of those places today? Don't say it can't happen here.
Guardian of Truth -November 16, 1995
Other Articles by James P. Needham
New Controversies Being Raised
A Change of Attitude
Indictments of the Social Gospel
Quoting Men
The Fickleness
of Men
- Caffin,
B.C. (1950), II Peter – Pulpit Commentary, H.D.M. Spence
and Joseph Exell, eds. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans).
For Past Auburn Beacons go to:
www.aubeacon.com/Bulletins.htm |
Anyone can join the mailing list for the Auburn Beacon! Send
your request to:
larryrouse@aubeacon.com |