In his exhortation to the Ephesian elders, Paul described two types of dangers that would assail the church once he was no more. First, savage wolves would come in among them, and second, men from among them would try to draw away disciples after themselves. The latter category wouldn’t be trying to draw disciples away to themselves by preaching the gospel or speaking the truth but by speaking perverse things.
The more I read what Paul wrote to the Ephesian elders, the
more questions I have. It goes to reason that if someone saw a wolf
approaching, they would either try to chase it off with a stick or anything
handy and with a point. If they couldn’t manage to fend it off, they would at
least bar the door so the wolf couldn’t get in. That Paul knew with certainty
that savage wolves would come in among them tells me that Paul understood the
mechanisms by which the enemy infiltrates a church.
Jesus forewarned His disciples before Paul met with Him on
the road to Damascus. He elucidated the matter by warning that the wolves would
employ camouflage to worm their way into the congregation of the saints.
Matthew 7:15, “Beware of false prophets, who come to you in
sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous wolves.”
The easiest way to creep into any congregation is to declare
yourself a prophet of the Lord and say that you come with a message from the
almighty. Because the only scriptures we know by heart nowadays are the ones
about the good measure that will be pressed down, shaken together, and running
over, such individuals have an easy time gaining access to the ears and hearts
of the sheep.
Especially if the message they’re supposed to declare to the
church body has to do with their pastor and how the Lord will use him to win
the nations, or something equally boisterous, like being the first missionary
to Mars, they’ll have free reign of the pulpit for as long as they need. By the
time anyone’s the wiser, seeds have been planted, the division has been sown,
and heartache and heartbreak are soon to follow.
It’s easy to spot a wolf in sheep’s clothing because he’ll be
speaking perverse things and things demonstrably unbiblical. They may start out
mimicking a true believer, but eventually, the mask comes off, and they start
to feast. If you’re not prepared for the eventuality that a wolf may attempt to
sneak among the sheep disguised as a sheep, sharp fangs will be at your throat
before you can sound the alarm.
Because everything nowadays must be nuanced, save someone
burn their esophagus because nobody told them coffee was hot, the barometer,
plumb line, and litmus test as to whether someone is a wolf, a false prophet,
or a false teacher is the Bible. Not your opinion, not whether you like their
delivery, not whether you think they’re overdressed or underdressed, or if they
have a beard, a goatee, or that streamlined look I gravitate toward nowadays.
My grandpa was a preacher, my dad’s a preacher, and I’m a
preacher too. Each had different delivery, cadence, sermon structure, and
energy level. That never entered the equation, as it shouldn’t. Although my
dad’s soft-spoken, my grandfather was more enthusiastic, and I fall somewhere
in the middle, we all strive to be biblical.
Don’t confuse not liking someone’s delivery or the fact that
they’re a topical preacher rather than an exegetical one for them being of evil
intent. Content matters more than delivery, whether expository, textual, or
topical. Are they honoring Jesus as Lord and King? Are they preaching the
gospel? Are they rightly dividing the word?
Not everyone can be everyone else’s cup of tea. There are
preachers I can’t listen to because their tonal range irritates my ears. That
doesn’t mean they’re not biblical; I just don’t like their voice. And so,
rather than listen to their sermons, I read what they write or leave the
captions on and mute them altogether.
Some of the guys I like you may not like, and that’s fine as
well, but whomever you gravitate toward as far as your spiritual nourishment,
make sure they’re Biblical! Don’t just do it once and forget about it; sample
the food to see if it’s still nourishing. People change. I’ve seen it. It’s sad
and disappointing, but we soldier on toward the prize and the crown.
I can’t even count the number of restaurants I stopped going
to because something changed, and the food was no longer good. Whether it was
new management, a new chef, or a new supplier, the food wasn’t worth the drive,
the wait, or the money. That’s why I like gas station grilled cheese
sandwiches. They never disappoint. Even when they do, they’re only a dollar.
Some people live with the memory of how good a place was
until they go back and realize it’s not what it used to be. Very few remain
consistent through the years, and to those that do, God bless you, and may you
never compromise.
Right now, you’re thinking to yourself, is he talking about restaurants or preachers, or both? I’ll let you decide. For now, I’ve made myself hungry with all this talk about food. The question is, will I riffle through a few pages of Gurnall’s tome, or will I go get a grilled cheese?
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr
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