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Christians Criticizing
Christians: Can It Be Biblical?
by Bob and Gretchen Passantino
Mike Warnke, whose lucrative career careened
through four marriages and more than one affair, says God will judge
Cornerstone magazine for printing a report disproving his ex- satanic
high priest "testimony" and exposing his moral lapses.
Healing movement televangelist Benny Hinn says God will attack CRI
president Hank Hanegraaff and his family because he criticizes Hinn
and his Faith movement colleagues. Lauren Stratford's supporters
charge Bob and Gretchen Passantino as agents of Satan because we
published evidence that Stratford's best-selling testimony of satanic
ritual abuse was false.
When it comes to Christians criticizing
Christians, the battle lines are drawn. But are the lines biblical? Is
it wrong to publicly evaluate the teachings of a Christian pastor,
expose the immorality of a Christian leader, or tell the truth about a
popular Christian media figure?
Evangelicals warn people about the false
teachings and practices of the cults, which claim compatibility with
Christianity and yet deny cardinal Christian doctrine. Our standard is
truth and our judge is Scripture. Yet when apologists turn to false
teachings within the Christian church, some evangelicals apply a
different standard. Frequently heard objections include, "Jesus
said it's wrong to judge," and, "Criticism is unloving and
divisive." Christians who voice these protests fail their own
test - they criticize and judge other Christians for criticizing and
judging other Christians. Furthermore, these critics fail to
understand that without such scrutiny, Christians are misled into
heresy and duped by those whose public ministries promote false
teachings and/or hide private immoral behavior. Careful, biblical
criticism expresses true Christian love and affords essential
safeguards to faith.
Good discernment and moral accountability should
be practiced among believers. The Old Testament establishes this
pattern. Instructions concerning false prophets in Deuteronomy 13:1-5
assume the prophet arises from the congregation of Israel. People are
admonished to banish idolatry from their families: "If your very
own brother, or your son or daughter, or the wife you love, or your
closest friend..." (v. 6). Deuteronomy 13 instructs the
Israelites how to practice good discernment within their communities:
"You must inquire, probe and investigate it thoroughly." If
the community is idolatrous, it must be dealt with publicly (v. 14).
Psalm 50:18 states that one who sees a crime and doesn't report it has
moral culpability.
The New Testament continues the theme of good
discernment within the believing community, most notably when the
Bereans test Paul's teachings (Acts 17:11) and the Thessalonians are
commanded to test all things (1 Thess. 5:21-22). Judgment is not
excluded, but unrighteous judgment is. Jesus declared: "Stop
judging by mere appearances, and make a right judgment" (John
7:24).
Jesus expelled the money changers from the
temple, denounced the Pharisees and scribes, and rebuked the teachers
of the Law. He reprimanded Peter in front of the other disciples
(Matt. 16:22-23). Paul followed Jesus' example, naming false teachers
in the church (2 Tim. 2:14-19) and openly criticizing Peter (Gal.
2:11, 14).
When immorality occurs in the church (Titus
1:15-16), the Bible says to deal with it truthfully and
constructively. The procedure for public leaders caught in false
teaching or immorality is for them to be rebuked publicly "so
that the others may take warning" (1 Tim. 5:20). A congregation
member who sins privately against another Christian is not to be
exposed publicly unless he (or she) persists in sin, in which case he
is to be rebuked before the church and we are to "treat him as
you would a pagan or tax collector" (Matt. 18:15-17). Paul
followed this procedure concerning the Christian who persisted in
sexual immorality (1 Cor. 5:3-12), and affirmed that judgment belongs
to the church.
Christian leaders are accountable to God's
people, whom the leaders serve, and should be "above
reproach," "respectable," and "able to teach"
(1 Tim. 3:2). A Christian leader who is a false teacher or immoral
should be rebuked to encourage reform (Titus 1:13), and cannot
separate his ministry from his life, expecting God to bless his
preaching while privately he sins; he is "disqualified for every
good work" (vv. 15-16).
Telling the truth about false teaching or
immorality in the church corresponds with the ethics and truth which
are to characterize the church. The church is the "salt of the
earth" and "the light of the world" (Matt. 5:13-14)
only if characterized by truthfulness (v. 11) and righteousness (v.
16). The Christian leader has an obligation to "hold firmly the
trustworthy message as it has been taught, so that he can encourage
others by sound doctrine and refute those who oppose it" (Titus
1:9). No Christian is happy when false teaching or immorality arises,
but we cannot neglect responsibility for doctrinal and moral
accountability.
Christians sometimes are uncomfortable with
criticism within the church because they assume that public criticism,
since it is painful, is also destructive. On the contrary, the
"pain" of biblically conducted confrontation produces
individual growth (1 Tim. 4:16), encourages others to Christian
maturity (1 Tim. 5:19-20), promotes church strength (Eph. 4:15), and
preserves the church's reputation in the world (1 Pet. 2:12).
This article first appeared in the Fall 1992
issue of the Christian Research Journal. Copied from: www.equip.org
CRI, P.O. Box 7000, Rancho Santa Margarita, CA
92688 Phone (949) 858-6100 and Fax (949) 858-6111
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