"The
Fearful..."
(Editorial - April 2006)
But
the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers,
and whoremongrs, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall
have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone:
which is the second death (Rev. 21:8).
Linking
the “fearful” (“cowardly”
RSV) with murderers, perverts and sorcerers invites the question, “What
fears could lead to rejection at the judgment seat?” We all
have fears of varying intensity, many of which are essential to our own
survival and that of our families. Yet there are some fears which can
lead to the loss of eternal life.
A couple of these are obvious; another,
however, is not.
Fear
of failure
We can be so afraid of failing to rightly follow Christ that we never
try. We are never baptized or may never even learn the truth because we
are afraid we’ll become “responsible” and be
rejected at the judgment seat. Of course such a fear keeps us from having
any hope at all of eternal life.
Thankfully nearly everyone reading
these words has overcome this fear as we take comfort in the assurance
of our Lord: “Fear not, little flock; for it is your Father’s
good pleasure to give you the kingdom” (Luke 12:32). We strive
to live a life of obedience confident in the forgiveness God is pleased
to grant, based on His grace and our faith in the Lord Jesus.
Fear
of persecution
Another obvious fear that can cost us life is an excessive fear of persecution.
We are disciples of a Master who was reviled, rejected, and eventually
crucified by the religious and political authorities of his day. Because
we are to carry this message of truth and seek to put it into practice,
the Lord has warned us we, too, may face similar, violent, opposition.
His words are clear:
The disciple is not above his master…If
they have called the master of the house Beelzebub, how much more shall
they call them of his household. Fear them not therefore…fear not
them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul…Everyone
who confesses me before men, I will confess him before my Father in heaven.
But whoever denies me before men, I will also deny him before my Father
who is in heaven (Matt. 10:24-33).
True to these words, persecution has
dogged the community of true believers throughout the centuries. Any reading
of the Acts, epistles and Revelation makes it clear believers suffered
persecution on a regular basis. If a believer fears persecution too much,
the only way to avoid it is to renounce Christ. Of course, if we do that,
and persist in such a course, Christ will renounce us before the Father.
Persecution
today
Many of us have never faced persecution for the faith. We may have experienced
some ridicule or shunning, but nothing very serious. We may wonder if
we could handle it. Perhaps it’s reassuring when we see our brethren
in the Muslim world holding up under what few of us have had to face:
Brother is against brother, a man is against his father, daughter against
her mother, daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law, and a man’s
enemies are members of his own household. The situation has been intensified
since the “cartoon” outrage that has provided an excuse for
more persecution of Christians by Muslims.
Yet we see our brothers and sisters
in Turkey and Pakistan enduring. We see a community of Christadelphians
in southeastern Turkey growing to 60 members. We see one in Pakistan growing
beyond 1,000. We see Iranian Christadelphians spending years in exile
under continuous threat holding fast to the faith.
Perhaps we can take courage that if
they can do it, so can we!
But this much is certain: to be “fearful”
to the point of denying Christ to avoid persecution, will put us with
the murderers, liars and idolaters.
Fear
of offense
There is another kind of fear that could be spiritually fatal which is
not so obvious. It’s fear of offending our “brothers”
in the faith.
The parents of the man born blind
would not testify to the miracle of his new sight, “because
they were afraid of the Jews; for the Jews had already agreed that if
anyone confessed him to be Christ, he was to be put out of the synagogue”
(John 9:22).
Why should they care if they were
put out of the synagogue? The man who could open their son’s eyes
had God on his side. Why not side with him and forget the synagogue? Of
course, the synagogue represented the right and proper religious establishment
of the day while the Lord was still an itinerant Rabbi. Unfortunately,
if they persisted in fearing to offend the Jewish establishment, they
would never be part of eternal life.
Joseph of Arimathea was another who
was afraid of offending his “brothers.” He was a
disciple of Jesus, “but a secret one for fear of the Jews”
(John 19:38). Why should he, a wealthy and respected man, care what others
thought? But coming out publicly for Jesus would shock his establishment
friends and family, and perhaps negatively impact his status and wealth.
Hopefully, his willingness to seek the body of Jesus from the cross and
give the Lord a king’s burial represented his coming out from his
fear and was followed up by a subsequent commitment to worshipping the
risen Lord Jesus Christ. If, however, he tried to remain a secret disciple,
he would end up denying his Lord and being included in those headed for
the second death.
Then there was Peter. He had recovered
from the three-fold denial of Christ, but now he was “fearing
the party of the circumcision.” When members of this “party”
came to the ecclesia at Antioch, Peter, who used to eat with the gentiles,
“began to withdraw and hold himself aloof, fearing the party
of the circumcision.” While this may not seem a big issue to
us, Paul says that Peter “stood condemned…[committing]
this hypocrisy…[and was] not straightforward about the truth of
the gospel…” In fact, the issue at stake was whether
a man is “justified by the works of the law” or “through
faith in Jesus Christ” (Gal. 2:11-16).
How could Peter make such a serious
error? He had been given the special vision of various unclean animals
on a sheet to forever impress him that “what God has cleansed, no
longer consider unholy.” Why would he worry what the circumcision
party thought? Unless it was this: he was the apostle to the circumcised
(Gal. 2:7-8) and he did not want any obstruction to this ministry.
Whatever his thinking, it was fatally
flawed. If he had continued to give in to this “fear,”
which thankfully he did not, he would have been headed for ultimate rejection.
Our present situation
This month, some letters to the editor
appeal for courage. They challenge us to cast aside our fears of offending
our brothers and act according to the great principles of unity and devotion
to Christ. We feel the appeal should be seriously considered.
Some of us hesitate to stand up for
what we know is right because we do not want to impede our work with a
constituency of the brotherhood. This is a “fear”
akin to Peter’s.
Others of us are afraid of being opposed,
or criticized or shunned or “persecuted” for taking
a right position. This is a fear like the fear of persecution which can
cause us to deny the principles of our Lord.
This much is clear: we need to beware
lest being “fearful” we fall short of the grace of
our Lord which will rescue us from the “second death.”
Don Styles |