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Editor’s
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WHAT FOUNDATION ARE
YOU BUILDING
ON?
Recently,
I was reading a book and the following paragraph caught my attention, causing
me to reread it. “It may be that we have
been brought up in a religious atmosphere and surrounded from our very birth by
religious teaching. Being brought up in this way we heard certain things and
became familiar with these “religious truths.” Everyone round about us seemed
to believe them, and in time, we found ourselves repeating them and regarding
ourselves as true believers in them. We never thought of examining these
beliefs, still less of doubting them. We just seemed to accept everything
without thinking at all deeply about them. We assumed that everything was all
right and that we ourselves were also all right. We had not taken the trouble
really to understand and try to comprehend all these statements about religion.
We had not troubled really to take in the teaching. As I once heard a man put
it, we had taken our religion very much in the same way as we had taken our
bread and butter daily from the table. And while all was well, we had gone on
with our religion and its duties, assuming that we had the right and real
thing, and without suspecting any real lack or need. But suddenly, we were
confronted by a difficulty, a problem, and face to face with this we found
ourselves behaving and reacting almost precisely the same way as men and women
who had never laid any claim to religion whatsoever.”
Is
it possible that this could be describing some of us? Is it possible that our lives are grounded in
a religion rather than on the Word of
God? Be very sure that the two are not
the same. Religion is the belief system of interpretations and teachings that
men have put together. That is why there are so many religions in the world
today. Each religion, no doubt, has much truth in it, but it should never be
considered the main source of one’s beliefs and understanding of God’s
purposes, which can only be found in God’s Word.
The
following excerpt from a book entitled "The Unselfishness of God,"
written by Hannah Whitall Smith, appeared some time back in an issue of this
magazine but it is so profound and to the point that it bears repeating.
"I am quite sure no Israelite in the days of
Does the above have a familiar ring to it? Does it describe
almost exactly how you feel about your beliefs and those with whom you meet? I
would ask you to replace the word "Quaker" with the name by which
your fellowship is known and see if it does not apply.
What is the lesson? Simply this, that to have the attitude that you are
the "one and only" religious body with which God is dealing is to
have the attitude possessed by the Pharisees of Jesus' day. It is the spirit of pride and is arrogant
and condescending in its attitude towards others outside our "circle of
belief." It is to have the spirit of sectarianism, which the Apostle so
strongly condemned. Any group of believers who polarize around any other person
than Jesus Christ should carefully examine whom it is they are following.
Christ is not divided! This point was very strongly emphasized by the Apostle Paul
in: 1 Cor 1:10-15 - "I appeal to you, brothers, in the name
of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of
you agree with one
another so that there may be no divisions among you and
that you may be perfectly united in mind and thought. My brothers, some from Chloe's household have informed me that
there are quarrels
among you.
What I mean is this: One of you says, "I
follow Paul;" another, "I follow Apollos;" another, "I
follow Cephas;" still another, "I follow Christ." Is Christ
divided? Was Paul crucified for you? Were you baptized into the name of
Paul? I am thankful that I did not baptize
any of you except Crispus and Gaius, so no one can say that you were baptized
into my name."
It should be noted that if we are not all
following Christ and Christ alone, then we are following man. Any religious
group that bases its doctrines and beliefs on the writings of any other source
than the Scriptures themselves has fallen into neglecting the advice expressed
by the Apostle Paul above. There is but one foundation for any Christian and
that is Christ Jesus, which is the only one that will stand for eternity.
“….let the builder be
careful how he builds! The
foundation is laid already, and no
one can lay another, for it is Jesus
Christ himself!” 1 Corinthians. 3:10, 11 – Phillips translation
It is possible to be mentally in bondage
to a religious group and their beliefs and not realize it. Any group that would
frown upon or discourage expression of thought other than the "accepted"
one is sectarian in nature. “Now the Lord is the Spirit, and
where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom”
(2 Corinthians
If your standing and acceptability among
your group is dependent upon uniformity of belief in their doctrines and
teachings, then there is a binding pressure of conformity always present in
that fellowship and you have not the freedom that Christ purchased for you; the
Spirit of freedom or liberty is not present. Conformity is not the same as
unity. Unity allows freedom of disagreement without affecting your standing in
any fellowship. Conformity does not allow such freedom. On what foundation are
you standing?
E. Weeks