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An excellent and
balanced sermon on the tension between truth and unity.
Watch Out for Those
Who Lead You Away from the Truth,
November 5, 2006
By John Piper
www.desiringGod.org
"Unity without verity is no better than conspiracy."
--John Trapp
Romans 16:17-20:
I
appeal to you, brothers, to watch out for those who cause divisions and
create obstacles contrary to the doctrine that you have been taught;
avoid them. Such persons do not serve our Lord Christ, but their own
appetites, and by smooth talk and flattery they deceive the hearts of
the naive. For your obedience is known to all, so that I rejoice over
you, but I want you to be wise as to what is good and innocent as to
what is evil. The God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet.
The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you.
I recall talking to a wise leader of a large missions organization
about doctrinal faithfulness. He said something to this effect, “It’s
crucial. And so is unity. Some people emphasize one, and some the other.
Our organization is made of two kinds of people: purity boys and unity
boys.” The unity boys naturally emphasize the preciousness of personal
relationships and tend to neglect an emphasis on truth. The purity boys
naturally emphasize the preciousness of truth and tend to neglect the
nurture of personal relationships.
In fact, you could probably categorize people and churches and
denominations and institutions and movements in the evangelical church
today (or even in society in general) along these lines: There are those
who emphasize doctrinal purity, and there are those that emphasize
relational unity.
Loving People and Loving Truth
I hope you are feeling uncomfortable with that description. A good
impulse inside of you would be saying right now: “Do we have to choose?
Can’t it be both? Can’t you love truth and love people?” In fact, it
would be an even more biblical impulse if you found yourself thinking,
“I don’t even think you can love people if you don’t love truth. How can
you do what is ultimately good for people if you don’t have any strong
convictions about what is ultimately good?”
And yet there is no escaping the reality that people and churches and
denominations and schools and even whole periods in history lean one way
or the other. I think the period of history we live in is not an easy
time to be a lover of truth. The most common criticism, if you stand for
an important truth and imply by that stand that others should believe
it, is that you are arrogant, which is the opposite of being loving (1
Corinthians 13:4), and therefore you are undermining relationships.
For many thoughtful people today the only path to peaceful
relationships in a pluralistic world is the path of no truth that
deserves assent from everyone. It seems on the face of it to make sense.
If no one claims that what he believes deserves assent from anyone else,
then we can live together in peace. Right? So peaceful pluralism and
diminished truth claims go hand in hand.
But it doesn’t work like that. When there is no truth that deserves
assent from everybody, the only arbiter in our competing desires is
power. Where truth doesn’t define what’s right, might makes right. And
where might makes right, weak people pay with their lives. When the
universal claim of truth disappears, what you get is not peaceful
pluralism or loving relationships; what you get is concentration camps
and gulags.
Purity for the Sake of Unity
I want you to see from the Bible—and feel in your bones—the
importance of being a purity boy for the sake of being a unity
boy. I want you to see and feel how out of step this text is with
today’s Western culture. It pictures a way of thinking and living that
most of our fellow Americans would consider offensive, unloving,
fundamentalistic, and out of date. It’s mainly a purity text—a text
calling for vigilance in matters of truth and doctrine. But it’s not
only that. In a striking way, it is a unity text. The goal of the
vigilance for right teaching is to avoid Christ-belittling,
self-exalting dissension.
So my hope in preaching from verses 17 and 18 is that you will be
freed from any blindness or bondage to this truth-diminishing period of
time in which we live. And I pray that, because of this liberty, you
would know what it is to love your adversaries and that you would have
fresh power from the gospel to magnify Christ in showing that love.
Let’s read again Romans 16:17-18,
I
appeal to you, brothers, to watch out for those who cause divisions and
create obstacles contrary to the doctrine that you have been taught;
avoid them. For such persons do not serve our Lord Christ, but their own
appetites, and by smooth talk and flattery they deceive the hearts of
the naive.
Verse 17 gives two commands that seem contradictory, but they are
joined by a phrase that shows why they are not contradictory. And verse
18 gives two reasons why these two commands are so crucial. Let’s look
first at the commands in verse 17.
Watch Out for Those Who Cause Divisions
The first command in verse 17 is to watch out for those who cause
divisions and create obstacles or stumbling blocks. “I appeal to you,
brothers, to watch out for those who cause divisions and create
obstacles.” So it is clear from this command that Paul is concerned
about unity. He wants to promote unity. Watch out for those who
cause divisions. These are enemies of unity. Watch out for them. I
don’t want them to have that effect on you.
Avoid Them
The second command in verse 17 is to avoid these people. The last
phrase in the verse: “Avoid them.” Stay away from them. Now the
reason I said these two commands sound contradictory is that the first
one is driven by a passion for unity: Watch out for those who cause
divisions. And the second one is, in fact, a call for division. When you
spot such a division-causing person, divide from him. Avoid him.
The Dividing Line of Doctrine
What is it then between these two commands that helps us see how they
are not in fact contradictory? It’s Paul’s reference to doctrine.
Verse 17: “I appeal to you, brothers, to watch out for those who cause
divisions and create obstacles contrary to the doctrine that
you have been taught.” The issue here is not the same as in chapter 14
where Paul is dealing with different convictions about non-essential
things. There he said, in verse 5, “Each one should be fully convinced
in his own mind.” There was no talk in chapter 14 about avoiding people.
The whole point was to help the strong and the weak Christians live
together in mutual respect and understanding.
But now here in Romans 16:17, the approach is dramatically different.
Here Paul says: Avoid them. Divide from them. Why? Because they are
promoting doctrine contrary to what they had been taught. Now Paul’s
response to this could have been: Well, nobody has all the truth, and
everybody has a piece of it, and unity is more important than truth, and
so don’t divide. And we would say: That impulse would not be all bad,
would it? Unity is a good thing. Paul cares about it. His first command
is: “Watch out for those who cause divisions.”
Truth-Based Division for the Sake of Truth-Based Unity
But that is not the way he responded to this situation. Instead, for
the sake of unity—that is, truth-based unity—Paul calls for truth-based
division. Avoid them. I don’t know how Paul could make any clearer how
he relates doctrine and unity. For Paul, doctrine is the basis of unity.
Without the common doctrine they had been taught, the unity would not
have been Christian unity. So he is willing to call for truth-based
disunity (“Avoid them.” “Divide from them.”) for the sake of truth-based
unity.
In other words, when a person departs from the doctrine that the
apostles had taught, Paul sees this as a greater threat to unity than
the disunity caused by avoiding such people. If we say: How can that be?
How can dividing from a false teacher who rises up in the church promote
unity in the church? The answer is that the only unity that counts for
unity in the church is rooted in a common apostolic teaching. Isolating
false teachers—avoiding them—is Paul’s strategy for preserving unity
that is based on true teaching.
Joy in the Truth Is Dominant
Now let’s pause here before looking at the reasons for these commands
in verse 18. I want to make a clarifying comment about both of these
commands and the doctrine that connects them.
First, with regard to the command to “watch out for those who cause
divisions and create obstacles contrary to the doctrine that you have
been taught,” it is possible to go overboard on this. I hesitate even to
say it, since I don’t think this is the temptation of most churches or
most Christians today. But it is possible, and there are churches and
people that do go overboard.
What I mean is that they become so obsessed with spotting doctrinal
error that they lose their ability to rejoice in doctrinal truth.
They’re like dogs that are trained so completely to sniff out drugs at
the airport, that even when they’re off duty they greet everybody that
way. It doesn’t make for a very welcoming atmosphere.
The book of Romans does not make this mistake. Periodically Paul
warns against doctrinal or ethical error. But most of Romans is a
glorious display of the work of Christ for us and in us. So let’s ask
the Lord to help us get the balance right here. We must do this: “Watch
out for those who cause divisions and create obstacles contrary to the
doctrine that you have been taught.” But this is not the main thing we
do. Vigilance over error is necessary, but joy in the truth is dominant.
There Is a Defined Body of Doctrine
Second, with regard to the doctrine, don’t miss the obvious: There is
such a thing—a body of doctrine that someone can go against. Verse 17:
“Watch out for those who cause divisions and create obstacles
contrary to the doctrine that you have been taught.” There is a
doctrinal standard. There is something you can depart from. Paul refers
to it in several ways. In Romans 6:17, he calls it the standard of
teaching: “[You] have become obedient from the heart to the
standard of teaching to which you were committed.” In 2 Timothy
1:13-14, he calls it the pattern of sound words and the
good deposit. “Follow the pattern of the sound words that
you have heard from me, in the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus.
By the Holy Spirit who dwells within us, guard the good deposit
entrusted to you.” In Acts 20:27, he calls it the whole counsel of
God. “I did not shrink from declaring to you the whole counsel
of God.”
So there is a body or standard or pattern of sound doctrine. The
caution here, of course, is that we must not put every minor opinion
about hundreds of Bible verses in this category so that there is no room
for any disagreement at all (cf. Philippians 3:15). The pattern of sound
doctrine would be a faithful summary of biblical essentials determined
by how crucial they are in expressing and preserving the history of
redemption, the nature and condition of man, the nature and work of
Christ, the nature and word of the Holy Spirit, and the nature and work
of God the Father. One of the greatest challenges in the quest for unity
is deciding what belongs in this body of doctrine when Paul says, if
someone departs from it, avoid him. That’s part of what the elders were
working on last year in the baptism question. And which we are still
working on.
Leave Room for Enemy Love
Third, with regard to the second command at the end of verse 17 (avoid
them), we need to be sure we leave room for obedience to the
teaching in Romans 12 that says we should “Bless those who curse you”
(v. 14), and, “If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably
with all” (v. 18), and so on.
Avoiding someone does not mean: Stop caring about him, or stop
praying for him, or even stop talking to them. When Peter acted contrary
to the gospel in Galatians 2, Paul did not first avoid him. He first
confronted him with a view to winning him back. That kind of contact is
not forbidden. What Paul commands with the words avoid them, is
not no contact at all, but the kind of contact that communicates life
can go on as usual between us. It can’t. If you, as a professing
Christian, persist in departing from the doctrine the apostles taught,
we can’t simply hang out together like we used to.
False Teachers Seem Nice
That brings us finally to verse 18 and the two reasons Paul gives for
why doctrinal vigilance is so important. Verse 18: “For such persons
[that is, the persons who depart from the doctrine] do not serve our
Lord Christ, but their own appetites, and by smooth talk and flattery
they deceive the hearts of the naive.”
Let’s take the second one first. Verse 18b: “By smooth talk and
flattery they deceive the hearts of the naive.” The word for
flattery is simply blessing. And smooth talk
doesn’t necessarily mean manifestly slippery. It just means
pleasant and plausible. So the reason we must be so vigilant over
biblical doctrine is that those who depart from it take simple people
with them by pleasant, plausible speech that presents itself as a
blessing. False teachers don’t get a following by being rough and harsh.
They get a following by being nice.
Just take two examples from history: Arius (d. 336) and Socinus (d.
1604)—both of whom denied the deity of Christ. Parker Williamson
describes Arius like this:
Here
was a bright, energetic, attractive fellow, the kind of citizen whom any
Rotary Club would welcome. Singing sea chanties in dockside pubs and
teaching Bible stories to the Wednesday night faithful, this was an
immensely popular man. His story reminds us that heresy does not
bludgeon us into belief. We are seduced. (Parker T. Williamson,
Standing Firm: Reclaiming the Christian Faith in Times of Controversy
[Lenoir, North Carolina: PLC Publications, 1996], p. 31.)
And
another writer describes Socinus like this:
He
was a gentleman. His morals were above reproach and he distinguished
himself by his unfailing courtesy. Unfailing courtesy was remarkable in
an age when even the great Protestant leaders, Luther and Calvin would
use vile street language when arguing with their opponents.
This means that it will seldom be popular to resist false teachers in
the church because they are almost always perceived as bringing a
blessing and speaking with winsome words. They are gentlemen. And Paul
says the innocent are carried away. Hence he says, “Watch out for them.
And avoid them.”
False Teachers Serve Their Own Appetites
The other reason why doctrinal vigilance is so crucial, Paul says, is
(verse 18a) because “such persons [the false teachers] do not serve our
Lord Christ, but their own appetites”—literally their own belly. In
other words, the issue in false teaching is not a simple intellectual
mistake. Behind the plausible speech and the smooth gentlemanly demeanor
is idolatry, and the idol is the belly—the appetite for food or sex or
human approval. Behind serious false teaching, we almost always find not
merely intellectual mistakes, but worldly passions enslaving the mind.
Watch Out
So I close with a pointed call to vigilance: Watch out for smooth
talkers who pastor large churches, write many books, lead wide
ministries, and do not manifestly prize above their earthly good the
whole counsel of God.
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