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May 11, 2013

Is There a Middle Ground for Heresy?

By Anthony Wade

An examination of where our teaching is through Christ's warnings to the Church at Laodicea.

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"To the angel of the church in Laodicea write: These are the words of the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the ruler of God's creation. I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either one or the other! So, because you are lukewarm--neither hot nor cold--I am about to spit you out of my mouth. You say, "I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.' But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked. I counsel you to buy from me gold refined in the fire, so you can become rich; and white clothes to wear, so you can cover your shameful nakedness; and salve to put on your eyes, so you can see. -- Revelation 3: 14-18 (NIV)

Most people are very uncomfortable with confrontation. I get it. I understand. I often hear the pleadings from Christians who want their little slice of heresy to remain intact. What's the big deal? What's the harm? I'm sure he or she helps some people! I woke up today with this question on my heart. Can we find middle ground when it comes to heretical teaching? If so, where is the middle ground? How much leaven should be acceptable to Christians? We already know that Jesus Himself taught that not everyone who says "Lord Lord" will enter the kingdom of heaven, so merely saying Christ is not enough to warrant a free pass. I think sometimes that is how pitifully low we have set the bar for acceptable Christianity. When I first started considering these things, God led me to the story of Simon the Sorcerer in the Book of Acts. Simon performed great signs and wonders for the people in Samaria. He boasted that he was someone great and people believed in him and called him the great power of God. Then Phillip came to town.

But when they believed Philip as he proclaimed the good news of the kingdom of God and the name of Jesus Christ, they were baptized, both men and women. Simon himself believed and was baptized. And he followed Philip everywhere, astonished by the great signs and miracles he saw. -- Acts 8: 12-13 (NIV)

From these verses we can safely determine that Simon appeared as saved as anyone who sits on our pews today. He believed and was baptized! He followed Phillip everywhere! Peter and John would soon come to Samaria and then we see where Simon's heart truly was.

When Simon saw that the Spirit was given at the laying on of the apostles' hands, he offered them money  and said, "Give me also this ability so that everyone on whom I lay my hands may receive the Holy Spirit." -- Acts 8: 18-19 (NIV)

Now, can we tell the motivation of Simon? Perhaps his intentions were benign. Perhaps he just wanted to see as many people baptized in the Holy Ghost as possible? I see a correlation to some common excuse making today when I hear people excuse heretical teaching and watering down the Gospel because they want to "reach as many for Christ as possible." So, did the intentions of Simon matter to the Apostles?

Peter answered: "May your money perish with you, because you thought you could buy the gift of God with money! You have no part or share in this ministry, because your heart is not right before God. Repent of this wickedness and pray to the Lord in the hope that he may forgive you for having such a thought in your heart. For I see that you are full of bitterness and captive to sin." -- Acts 8: 20-23 (NIV)

Not so much. Peter does not mince words with Simon here. The issue is not his intentions but rather that he thought he could use a carnal method to secure the power of God. How often is this still going on today? How many Simon's do we have standing behind the pulpit, trying to buy the power of God? Even worse -- how many stand behind the pulpit selling the power of God? I have heard the arguments from mega church pastors who I assume are as about as sincere as Simon was here. Compromising with the world so they can reach more people. Compromising the Gospel so they can appear relevant. Paul experienced the same thing with the Church at Corinth:

You happily put up with whatever anyone tells you, even if they preach a different Jesus than the one we preach, or a different kind of Spirit than the one you received, or a different kind of gospel than the one you believed. -- 2Corinthians 11: 4 (NLT)

A sad statement on where we are today as a church too. Happily putting up with whatever the heresy du jour is. What's the big deal? It sure seemed like a big deal to Peter and the Apostles here. They were not going to allow carnality into their ministry and neither should we. As Peter's response indicates; this is a heart issue beloved. Using carnal reasons and worldly rationales to advance the kingdom of God will not work! Sure, you might be able to build an individual church that way. People will be willing to come back if you are not preaching sin and repentance. People will be willing to come back if you cater to them and say what their itching ears want to hear. That God is only love. That God is only about blessings. That God is only grace.

For the law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. -- John 1: 17 (NIV)

The problem with grace alone heretics is that they present half the Gospel. They leave out the truth portion. They leave out the cost of sin. They leave out the devil. Paul said to the Ephesian elders that he was free of their blood because he proclaimed the whole Gospel to them. It is far too easy to cherry pick which portions of the Gospel will sell better and lead to more people returning and higher offerings. But salad bar theology leads to false conversions. People end up at the last day saying to God -- Lord Lord -- only to be turned away. There is a price to be paid for middle ground theology. The purpose driven models and seeker friendly theories develop a relationship with the church -- not Christ.

In the beginning of the Book of Revelation, we see Jesus sending letters to seven churches. The Laodicean Church often seems the most relatable to where we find ourselves today. The key verses should conclude the matter for us as to how Jesus Himself feels about trying to find middle ground with teachings that are opposed to Him. The first truth we see is that the Church at Laodicea was neither hot nor cold. This lukewarm-ness is exactly where we stand when it comes to accepting what we know we should not. I have heard very well intended Christians excuse prosperity hucksters, word faith heretics, and any other form of leaven with the most carnal of reasons. "Well, Joel Osteen helps some people." Does he? And for how many people he might help are there a hundred others going to hell who think they are saved? "Well, you can't judge his heart." You're right! I do not have to judge his heart -- just his fruit:

"Watch out for false prophets. They come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ferocious wolves. By their fruit you will recognize them. Do people pick grapes from thornbushes, or figs from thistles? Likewise, every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, and a bad tree cannot bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. Thus, by their fruit you will recognize them. -- Matthew 7: 15-20 (NIV)

The words of Jesus again warning us! Joel Osteen is already on record as saying it is not his gift to weigh people down with doctrine! He has denied Christ at least twice on national television! "Well, I know people who were able to straighten their lives out because of him." -- That is a carnal answer. "Well, you know he doesn't take a salary from his church." -- That is a carnal answer. Beloved, you must understand. I believe that Joel Osteen is sincere. I believe that he sincerely believes that he helps people and you know what? He does. He helps them carnally. He helps them try to make their best life now. But that has nothing to do with God or the kingdom. As my pastor says, you can be sincere and sincerely wrong. And just what does Jesus say he is going to do with the lukewarm? He will spew them out of His mouth! He actually says that he wishes we would pick a side! Think about that for a second. The spirit of lukewarm-ness is covering the seeker friendly church today. There is no spiritual zeal anymore. There is no real discussion of holiness and sin. There is plenty of religiosity. Plenty of lukewarm-ness. Every week we see another mega church pastor fall from grace because we do not preach brokenness anymore. We teach lukewarm-ness. When we are lukewarm about the things of God we invite the devil to have a field day with us in this world. Three pastors from Orlando alone have had to step down in the last six months because of extramarital affairs. The latest one, David Loveless, admitted to this affair lasting for several years! How can you spiritually lead people when you are so spiritually compromised? If this is the level of lukewarm-ness in the pulpit -- what do you think it is like in the pews? We are so busy looking at the sins of a world that thinks the things of God are foolishness so that we do not have to clean our own house. What is Jesus really saying here when He says to pick a side? Hot or cold? What He is really saying is He cannot stand the hypocrisy. He cannot stand the lukewarm-ness. Do not sell yourself as hot when inside you are really cold. Do not sell yourself as salt when you preserve nothing. Do not sell yourself as light when you surround yourself with the darkness of the world and excuse it away.

Continuing on in the key verses we see how we are so able to dupe ourselves. Jesus is telling us here that how we view ourselves is simply not accurate. What we say is not matching reality. We say -- "I am rich -- I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing." How terribly accurate for the religious spirit in the church today! Because we have followed carnal leadership principles and worldly theories of church growth, we now measure spiritual success with carnal metrics. Pastors are conditioned in the purpose driven model to use attendance and tithing as indicators of their success. So what we have now are carnally built mega churches that think they do not need anything. If anyone dares to criticize they simply point to their "success." Joel Osteen packs in 45,000 people per week but that doesn't mean God is sending them. Remember the warning from Jesus:

"Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it. -- Matthew 7: 13-14 (NIV)

Just because there are a lot of people embracing something does not mean it is from God. Attendance is not a fruit of the Spirit. I have heard the defense -- "so many people can't be wrong." Oh yes they can! Narrow is the road that leads to life and few find it. The true state of many of these churches is that they wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked! These are not my words! This is Jesus speaking! Yet we cannot even see it. That is the truly scary part. Because we play the part. Playing church has become so much the norm that we do not see our own nakedness. We have the best singers and musicians. We have gifted speakers and opulent temples. It is not that these things in and of themselves are bad -- it is like Simon the Sorcerer -- where is our heart? Not our mouth; our heart. I know we say all the right things. It is all about Jesus! But where is the heart? Where is the fruit? Are we cold pretending to be hot? Are we lukewarm?

If so today, the key verses conclude with Jesus telling us what we ought to do. He is counseling us to buy gold from Him, refined in the fire, so that we might become rich. Not rich in money you see -- rich in the Spirit. The question for us today is where are our churches buying their gold from? When we want to train leaders do we turn to the Bible or to the experts of this world? Do we envision church growth horizontally or vertically? The seeker friendly and purposed driven models expand the church horizontally; which is to mean more people sitting in the pews. Growth as per Jesus however is vertical; as we grow deeper in our relationship with God.

The second admonition for Jesus here is that we need to buy white clothes from Him to cover our nakedness. The second question for us today is -- where are we buying our clothes from? What is the modern church clothing itself with? When the church takes on the garment of compromise, we end up naked. When the church puts on the garment of carnality, we end up naked. The truth is that we are so busy fighting over how shiny our crown of glory is that we never consider wearing the crown of thorns. We must partake in the sufferings of Christ -- not shun them because we think it makes for poor marketing. The lukewarm church today needs some serious covering from God. We need to put on the things of Jesus -- not find ways around them!

Lastly, we need to buy salve for our eyes, so we can see again. The church has turned a blind eye for far too long. Jesus is coming back soon. There is work to be done. The harvest is ready and the very people who claim to be the laborers are laboring for the wrong kingdom far too often. Selling prosperity in this life. Selling blessings in this life. Selling the temporal over the eternal. Somewhere deep down we know it too but we do very little about it. We accept it. We continue to attend churches that refuse to turn back to the narrow path. We hold hands and sing kumbya thinking we are doing the Lord's will while people on the outside of salvation looking in upon us see the hypocrisy. They see the lukewarm-ness. Strip the personalities out of it. Strip the intentions out of it. The only thing that matters is the Gospel of Jesus Christ -- all of it. Only the Gospel has the power to save. Only the Gospel has eternal prosperity. The answer is obvious. There is no middle ground when it comes to teachings that are contrary to the Gospel. Because middle ground teaching leads to middle ground Christians. Middle ground Christians like their lukewarm-ness. But like lukewarm water we become tepid and apathetic. We become stagnant and polluted. It is time we pick a side.

Reverend Anthony Wade -- May 11, 2013  



Authors Bio:
Credentialed Minister of the Gospel for the Assemblies of God. Owner and founder of 828 ministries. Vice President for Goodwill Industries. Always remember that in all things God works for the good of those who love Him and are called according to His purpose.

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