Chapter 31
BRINGING CHRISTIANITY INTO DISREPUTE
"Let not then your good be evil spoken of" (Rom. 14:16).
It is a well-known fact that no matter how piously one may live, he will
never obtain the confidence of every one or ever reach a plane where he is
exempt from criticism. Jesus Christ, the immaculate Son of God, was the
purest and holiest being that this world ever knew and yet He was censured
and found fault with all the way from the cradle to the cross.
It is also true, in many instances, that the Christian people give their
enemies great reason to criticize and censure them. Let us briefly observe
some of the most common ways of bringing Christianity into disrepute.
We do so when we testify that the way of the Lord is a hard, up-hill way,
that the cross is so dreadfully heavy, etc. All such statements are flat
contradictions to the Word of God, for it says: "The way of transgressors [not
the child of God] is hard" (Prov. 13:15). Jesus said: "My yoke is easy, and my
burden is light" (Matt. 11:30). The Psalmist said: "Blessed is the man that
walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners,
nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful" (Psalm 1:1). Isaiah said: "And the
ransomed of the Lord shall return, and come to Zion with songs and
everlasting joy upon their heads: they shall obtain joy and gladness, and
sorrow and sighing shall flee away" (Isa. 35:10).
Another way of bringing Christianity into disrepute is for those who
profess to be Christians to let the unsaved see them looking back, brooding
over the things they left behind or everlastingly talking about the great
sacrifices they made to become a Christian. All such conduct makes a bad
impression upon the unsaved. If salvation is worth anything it is worth
everything. When we consider what we gave up from eternity's view-point it is
but worthless trash.
Still another way of bringing Christianity into disrepute is to rebuild the
things we once destroyed or to return to the things which we once renounced
and counted sinful.
It is to be borne in mind that what was once light is always light. There is
nothing that will shake the confidence of the unsaved in religion more than to
see one of its adherents return to a practice which he once preached and
testified against. Paul said: "If I build again the things which I destroyed, I
make myself a transgressor" (Gal. 2.18).
For one's conduct or conversation when at home or abroad to, in any
way, contradict the testimony which he delivers in class meeting on Sunday is
another way of disgracing religion. Our lives should be so godly and
circumspect at home during the week that our unsaved loved ones will be
compelled to believe our testimonies on Sunday. It is a bad sign for wife to
hang her head or gnaw the corner of her handkerchief when husband is giving
in his testimony. It is also equally as bad for husband and the children to begin
looking out of the corner of their eyes while wife zealously testifies of the
victories of the past week.
It also becomes quite difficult for little Johnny and Mary to not class
Mamma in with the Ananias and Sapphira family after hearing a
heart-searching sermon on lying in view of the fact that she had promised
them several punishments during the past week but had failed to fulfill her
promise. They also found it difficult to forgive her for hoodwinking them with
the old Santa Claus and Bogy-man lie which she had been telling them for
years.
It also greatly affects the cause of Christ for its adherents to engage too
frequently in soliciting finance from the unsaved. Such imprudence has caused
the man of God-the mouthpiece of the Spirit-the watchman on Zion's holy hill,
to become common in the eyes of the world and be branded scavengers and
beggars. May God hasten the day when all His children will pay their tithes
and cease to beg corn from the Philistines or go down to Egypt for help!
The habit of constantly borrowing money is not a good one to admit
into one's Christian life. We have known people who make a practice of
borrowing year in and year out, so to speak. In a certain city, where we once
served as pastor, a prominent business man, who was a stranger to us, came
to the altar one Sunday morning and prayed through and during the same
week one of these borrowing vultures, who spied him at the altar for the first
time, went to his office and asked for a loan of nearly a hundred dollars.
Adorning ourselves slovenly and untidily is also another way of bringing
Christianity into disrepute. We admit that wearing jewelry, feathers, flowers,
laces, silks, satins and other needless adornments are forbidden in the
Scriptures (1 Tim. 2:9; 1 Pet 3:3), yet this does not give us license to be
untidy. We should be patterns of neatness, cleanliness and plainness.