Social Drinking

By Donald Willis

Drunkenness is condemned in the scriptures. In listing a catalog of the works of the flesh, Paul includes “drunkenness,” and concludes, “. . . they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God” (Galatians 5:21). Thus, the case for drunkenness is forever closed. Yet, a, problem to the Twentieth Century Christian is the casual drink, the social drink. Does the Bible speak about social drinking?

The Jews were restricted from taking the strong drink (Proverbs 23:30-31), which, by the process of natural fermentation could not have been as strong as our weaker “proof liquors.”

Social Drink

Peter observes, “For the time past of our life may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles, when we walked in lasciviousness, lusts, excess of wine, revellings, banquetings, and abominable idolatries: Wherein they think it strange that ye run not with them to the same excess of riot. . .” (1 Peter 4:3-4).

Observe the contrast: excess of wine and banqueting. Excess of wine is the problem of drunkenness. The Christian has already settled this problem. I conclude that the problem of social drinking is comparable to the banqueting that Peter denotes as the walk of the Gentiles!

Definitions

Webster defines banqueting: “1. an elaborate meal; feast. 2. a formal dinner, usually with toasts and speeches. v.t. to honor with or entertain at a banquet. v.i. to eat sumptuously” (New World Dictionary, pg. 116). By this definition, a banquet could be either right or wrong, depending on the activities engaged in.

From the Greek, banqueting (potos) means “drinking, esp. a drinking party, carousal” (Arndt and Gingrich, pg. 702); “a drinking; a drinking together, drinking-bout, computation” (Bagster, pg. 325); “wine ‘feasts, drinking matches” (Adam Clarke, Vol. 6, pg. 863). The New English Bible uses the term, “tippling.”

Note the terms in addition to a drinking-bout or party: carousal, computation, tippling! Carousal means an hilarious drinking party. A compotator is one who drinks with another; fellow tippler. Tipple comes from the idea of overturning, specifically with relation to alcoholic beverages. All of the above definitions are from Webster’s New World Dictionary.

Webster’s definition number 2 of banquet (a formal dinner, usually with toasts and speeches) certainly suggests the activity that is included in the common practices of social drinking; i.e., it is a party with the serving of alcoholic beverages in which social drinking bouts (parties) are engaged.

Conclusion

“The thing forbidden by it is an assembling together for the purpose of drinking. There is nothing in this word referring to eating, or to banqueting, as the term is now commonly employed. The idea in the passage is, that it is improper for Christians to meet together for the purpose of drinking-as wine, toasts, etc. The prohibition would apply to all those assemblages where this is understood to be the main object. It would forbid, therefore, an attendance on all those celebrations in which drinking toasts is understood to be an essential part of the festivities, and all those where hilarity and joyfulness are sought to be produced by the intoxicating bowl. Such are not proper places for Christians” (Albert Barnes, James-Jude, pg. 188-189).

Jesus said the great commandment was, “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind” (Matthew 22:37). NOTE: All the heart, soul and mind! When the brain is anaesthetized with alcohol, it is impossible to love God with all the heart, soul and mind. Thus, one falls short of ability to properly show respect to God. For these reasons, the child of God should not drink the “drink of death”!

Truth Magazine, XX:11, p. 2
March 11, 1976

Humility: True Perspective

By Jeffery Kingry

“When thou art bidden of any man to a wedding, sit not down in the highest room; lest a more honorable man than thou be bidden of him; and he that bade thee and him come and say to thee, Give this man place; and thou begin with shame to take the lowest room. But when thou are bidden, go and sit in the lowest room; that when he that bade thee cometh, he may say unto thee, Friend, go up higher: Then shalt thou have worship in the presence of them that sit at meat with thee. For whosoever exalteth himself shall be abased; and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted” (Luke 14:7-11).

When I was about 15 I bought a guitar and learned a few chords. Back in the early sixties, when folk-music was “in,” I cut quite a figure among my fellow “teenieboppers.” They even voted me “most-talented” in their innocence. It went straight to my head, and I took my $15 Stella to New York in hopes of becoming a “star!” There was a try-out at the Bitter End, a coffeehouse that “discovered” Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, and Peter, Paul, & Mary. With firm confidence I strode upstairs where “other” artists were tuning, chording, and harmonizing, waiting for their chance before the spot lights. I walked around the room in wonder listening and watching. Beautiful people with beautiful voices, on finely tuned Gibsons and Martins, made beautiful music on their silver-wound guitar strings. Some could even puff on a harmonica hung before their lips by a wire contraption while singing and playing at the same time. I silently went home after enjoying the show, without having opened my $5.98 cardboard guitar case and have never regretted it. The kids back home loved my “stuff” and never knew any different.

Jesus gave us instruction on how to live, and live well, with satisfaction, happiness, and confidence. Some may think Jesus’ instructions in Luke 14 mundane and trivial. Why would the Master Teacher concern himself with the common details of our daily life? Luke 14 tells us that Jesus was interested in such things: to what homes we go, whom we have to dinner, what place in the house we take, how we act at the table (1 Cor. 10:31), what the tone of our conversation is (Matt. 12:31), what we wear (1 Pet. 3:3), whether we encourage or discourage (Matt. 10:42; 18:6).

In Luke 14 Jesus pointedly demonstrated the blessedness (happiness) of humility. The self-assertive personality is constantly ill at ease. No accomplishment of man in comparison to the whole is of much consequence. In comparison to the example of our Lord, man’s position, power, or ability becomes nothing.

True humility stems not from thinking poorly of oneself, but in having oneself in proper perspective. It is not thinking of oneself at all. A brother in Christ who held debates, wrote a great deal, and held many meetings a year was finally asked to speak on the Florida College Lectureship. After his over-long speech, several of his family and friends came to the stage to congratulate him. Amid shaking hands and smiles a young man made his way through the crowd and stretched out his hand with a small piece of paper in it. “I have been waiting for this honor for years,” he said brightly, “Can I have your autograph?” The preaching brother smilingly reached into his coat pocket for a pen as the young man walked by him to the song leader. “I have enjoyed your singing ability for years . . .” and the preacher blushed in humiliation as the two stepped away from the stage in earnest conversation. How presumptions and prideful are those who compare themselves by themselves and among others like them. When comparing our meager abilities against the real thing we come off short every time. Jesus is the author and finisher of our faith. “But be ye not called Rabbi, for one is your master, even Christ, and all ye are brethren” (Matt. 23:8).

There is no place in our Lord’s family for those who think more highly of themselves than they ought. In the politics of the world it is the vigorous, self-assertive who often pass by the humble and snatch the wilted laurel wreath of “success.” Even so, it is the godly, the becoming, the blessed thing to remain lowly minded. Leave the carnal laurels to the self-willed. A humble mind is worth striving for and possessing for its own sake. “Blessed are the poor in spirit; For theirs is the kingdom of God.”

It is a privilege to be asked to teach God’s people (Luke 4:15-20). It is presumptuous to insert oneself in a position of honor without having been asked. Preachers who ask for meetings, seek glory for their labor from men, and “seek the high places” in public have received their reward. Spiritual pride is utterly offensive to God, and draws his most serious condemnation. Everyone is pleased when the arrogant person is humiliated. But, modesty is recognized and honored by man and God. We are not much brethren, no matter how much we may think to the contrary. Lowliness of mind is a far better way of life than to possess all the honors and glory the presumptive and arrogant may commend.

Truth Magazine, XX:10, p. 13
March 4, 1976

Treasury of Merits

By Mike T. Rogacs

Being a former Catholic, from time to time I look back upon my former religion and am always amazed at the glaring inconsistencies of its doctrines as compared with Biblical doctrine. One such example is the method in which a Catholic believes his sins are to be remitted by the church and thereby by the Lord.

It is taught by the Catholic Church that sin carries with it two consequences: guilt and punishment (punishment in this life and/or in Purgatory). The guilt of the sin must be removed by confession to the priest and by Contrition; a sorrow and detest for the sin. In addition, there remains the need for “Satisfaction;” that is, a paying of the penalty for the sin or at least seeking some sort of atonement for the penalty. One can “pay the penalty” by various acts of penance assigned by the “church” (remembering that to the Catholic mind the “church” is the hierarchy of the institution, not really all the people). If this is not done before death, a man will “pay” for his sins by suffering in Purgatory. This is a realm of the dead where their sins are purged away in time and after all sins are purged, the individual will then be permitted to enter heaven; and then again only if he had been guilty of “venial sins.” “Mortal sins” are more serious sins that cannot be purged in Purgatory, and they result with the sentence of eternity in Hell.

Let us briefly pause to remind ourselves that the concept as mentioned above is quite erroneous in light of the Scriptures. A sinful individual is not required by the Bible to confess to a special official of the church called a priest. God revealed that all Christians are priests and that we are to confess our faults one to another (1 Pet. 2:5,9; Jas. 5:16). The only wages – or penalty – for sin is death, spiritual death, with the consequence being eternal damnation for any sin if a man is not moved to repentance. A man does not need to “pay” for sins in this life or after death if he has become sorrowful over those sins, repented and has asked the Father for forgiveness (Rom. 6:23; 2 Thess. 1:6-9; 2 Cor. 7:9-11). Also, concerning Purgatory, there is no scriptural basis for a “venial and mortal” distinction between sins, and there likewise exists no basis for the concept of the realm of Purgatory. As the Scriptures teach, when we sin in one point of the law we are guilty of all points of the law (Jas. 2:10). This being true, the Catholics would then have us guilty of both venial and mortal sins! How, then, could we solve the dilemma? The truth is that there is no such distinction is sins. And Purgatory? It is most likely a perversion of the Biblical teaching concerning the Realm of Hades (Lk. 16:22-28; Acts 2:27, 31; Matt. 16:18; 2 Pet. 2:9; etc.).

“The Sacrament of Penance”

But included in the Catholic concept of remission of sins is the topic of our concern in this article. It is a little understood topic by many who are outside the Catholic Church, and even by many Catholics to boot! We approach this topic by going on with our look at the concept of remission of the penalty of sin (the Sacrament of Penance) in the Catholic Church. The Catholic is taught that he can seek atonement for this penalty by seeking an “Indulgence.” The indulgence is defined by Catholics as “a remission, granted by the Church, of temporal punishment which often remains due to sin after its guilt has been forgiven.” In other words, one can avoid the punishment of sin if the church will see fit to grant him an indulgence. These grants can be total, partial, perpetual and temporal (within a certain time limit). They are granted by the church to a living individual or can also be granted to someone who is dead and in Purgatory (how one knows if a dead friend or relative is no longer in Purgatory and therefore no longer needs someone in this life to seek an indulgence is extremely hard to determine in the doctrine). The church administers these grants (indulgences) by a general edict applying certain terms which can be met by all Catholics if they so choose to meet them. Such an edict was used in persuading the Catholic citizenry of the European nations to fight in the Crusades in the Holy Land and thereby, in service to the church, gain an indulgence for sin. An indulgence can also be administered by a written decree to an individual when he has in some manner earned such favor from the church, or by word of mouth from a priest in a mass or some other occasion (an emergency, etc.). (We might recall hearing of a mass being said for some famous departed individual, i.e. John F. Kennedy.) The derisive expression “buying an indulgence” is partly justified if one realizes that certain costs of a priest’s time might need to be paid by the individual who has asked for a mass to be said. It is also obviously true that in past ages indulgences were literally bought by influential Catholics (although the church has in print referred to this practice as being an “obvious” corruption of the doctrine).

The Catholic Church cites Matt. 16:18,19 and 18:18 as their authority for “binding and loosing” in all spiritual matters, even in the realm of sin and its penalty. They believe the Pope to be the successor of Peter, possessing Peter’s power, and all priests sharing similar authority to bind and loose by being successors of the other apostles. But this doctrine of Apostolic Succession is alien to the scriptures, and this fact negates the concept that “the church” (or the hierarchy) has the authority to bind or loose anything, aside from binding or loosing any supposed penalty for sin. But believing in this apostolic succession, it was easy to develop the doctrine of indulgences during the Crusades, and seeing the possible profit involved, to continue to expand the doctrine’s scope. (In all false doctrine there appears to be suspicious motives of gain.)

It is also taught that God Himself can grant without the church’s approval any indulgence to anyone in Purgatory. It is true that God will exercise mercy in His judgments concerning the saints, but the Bible teaches, as we will note later, that this will not be in the form of an indulgence.

Now that we have an outlook on indulgences, we must ask the obvious question: where do the Catholics believe these grants for the remission of punishments come from? From God the Father? No. It is taught that they come from a place called the “Treasury of Merits” (sometimes called “Treasury of Grace”). To adequately present the composition of this “treasury” I shall give to you a quote from The Teaching of the Catholic Church, editor, Canon George D. Smith, page 977:

“The Church is not merely a number of individuals joined by belief in the same truths, by the practice of the same worship, and by submission to the same authority. It is this, indeed, but it is more. It is the Mystical Body of Christ. By his death Christ made it possible for us to gain that supernatural life of sanctifying grace whereby ‘we are made partakers of the Divine Nature.’ Those who possess this life are united with each other by their common union with Christ from whom they all received it. Thus Christ’s merits and satisfaction are shared by faithful Christians through their union with Christ in the Church . . . Thus Christ’s atonement being infinite is inexhaustible, and all the sins of the world can be expiated by it. Moreover, the saints have often made satisfaction in excess of what they require to atone for their own sins. This satisfactory value of their acts, not being used for themselves, remains in existence and can be used for others. This is that spiritual treasury often called the `Treasury of Merits,’ from which can be unceasingly drawn satisfaction for the sins of Christians.”

Let us make clear the implications of this teaching. The “Treasury of Merits” or “Grace” is the store house of all grants for the remission of sin and its punishments. It is made up of all the “excess” merits and virtues of all Catholic “saints” (the special champions of the faith), of the most revered (or is it overly revered) Virgin Mary, and of the “inexhaustible” merits of the sinless Jesus Christ. If one is in sin and is a Catholic, he can gain the forgiveness of God by seeking to apply to his credit the good life of someone else.

Surely the fallacy of the doctrine should be evident. In the above quote it was suggested that a Christian has the Divine Nature of Christ at the moment he becomes a member of the “body” of Christ. Thusly we are to be automatically found sharing the merits of Christ. One does not have to pay for his sins if he can get Jesus (or get the church to ask Him) to grant remission, even after death, of the penalty of any sin. In other words, it is supposed to be the meritorious lives of others, especially that of Christ, which pays for our sins and remits the consequences of such. The mistake of the above quote is that the church is not part of the Mystical Body of Christ in the sense of the Catholic thought. The church is not literally part of the bodily form of Christ and therefore possesses the “Divine Nature,” simply because we are part of His actual form and substance, and being part of Him in this manner we have assumed the benefits of His meritorious life. In this view, we would have the stockpile of virtues flowing through the “veins” of that “body-substance” of Christ, and we draw from the veins whatever “food” (virtues) we need to correct our inadequacies, as does each cell of a physical body. Biblically, the term “Body of Christ” refers to the body, or group, of believers which Christ claims as His own; which He purchased with His blood (Eph. 3:15; Acts 20:28). Again, it is a group, it is an ekklesia, not a literal body-substance of one called Christ. This is often the mistake of the mystical thinking Catholic Church. Another example is their doctrine that mystically the bread and wine in the Lord’s Supper changes to a literal body and blood of Jesus. This, too, is contrary to scripture as is their concept of the church’s being a “body.” This Biblical “body” which we are truly baptized into (Gal. 3:27; Eph. 1:22-23) is called “a body” to express to us that the group of Christians forming the ekklesia should function as does the human body: one head, many members, different functions (1 Cor. 12:12-18; Rom. 12:4-5). The Divine Nature mentioned is not given automatically to God’s children any more than a child’s personality is automatically given to him at birth in this life. After our spiritual birth in baptism (Rom. 6:1-6; etc.) we must put on whatever characteristics that are required of us by our spiritual parents. We do this by emulating Jesus Christ’s demonstrated virtues (2 Pet. 1:2-9; Phil. 3:13-17; 1 Cor. 11:1) just as a child emulates his father, mother, brother and sister. The virtue of Christ itself is not that which saves us. It is our birth by baptism into God’s one family group and the obedience of the rules of that family (the faith of Christ) which will also have us emulating to the best of our human ability the virtues of Christ. His sacrifice gave us the remission of our sins through the likeness of his death, burial and resurrection in baptism, and His life gave us the example of obedience of the Almighty Father, the kind of obedience necessary to please Him (1 Pet. 1:9-23).

The Catholics have forgotten long ago that the Bible only indicates that a man shall be judged according to the works he does in his body. No man shall be judged by how I have lived, good or bad; nor shall I be judged by how any “saint” or how Mary lived. I, and all mankind shall be judged according to how we were able to live according to Christ’s laws and up to His examples, from our baptism unto the day of our death (1 Pet. 1:2). No one’s virtue or merit can or shall remit or purge sin or its punishment from another person’s soul before or after death. To be sure, God has promised to use mercy in His judgments, but this mercy shall be based upon our own application of mercy in this life, and upon Christ’s knowledge of human weakness (to which He did not yield) (Jas, 2:13; Heb. 4:15-16). But to think the merits of other saints could purge our sins? Why, God tells us that the righteous will scarcely be saved by obedience (1 Pet. 4:18)!

Effects on the Church

I have been motivated to write these remarks concerning the erroneous Catholic doctrine of the “Treasury of Grace” for a reason which to many might now be obvious. There has been some of our brethren in Christ who have for reasons of their own been teaching what to my eyes is just about the same thing as a “Treasury of Merits” or “Grace”. I have not seen anyone call it a treasury, but it is quite clear that they are teaching that our salvation is based not upon our obedience of God’s law but upon the “error-free and meritorious life of Jesus Christ.” Some call this the “imputation of Christ’s righteousness” upon souls. Some call it simply Calvinism. But let us give credit to all whom it’s due: the doctrine can find roots in the Catholic Church which developed the concept in an attempt to put aside the importance of an obedient life and make salvation easier to the man who dislikes strict obedience. Though it is suggested that it would be better for all Catholics to live a “clean” life, the doctrine of the “Treasury” permits, if not encourages, a very loose-lived life. Eat, drink, and be merry. As long as the common Catholic does not incur upon himself the wrath of the hierarchy, it is good to let him think that the meritorious life of someone else will eventually get him into heaven. The Catholics on the Crusades committed a multitude of sins against humanity, but since indulgences were granted from the meritorious lives of others, the Crusaders needed not to fear Hell, while it so happened that the Church profited.

Is it not clear that any doctrine which justifies disobedience, no matter if such disobedience appears to be “white and little” or “black and big”, is of Satan, not of God (Eph. 5:6,7; 2 Thess. 1:7-9)?!

The motive of the Catholic Church to redefine sin and its forgiveness was power: a loose definition of faithfulness and obedience of God’s laws, methods, and plan of work and worship would insure obtaining a membership to that church as large as possible. This definition helped contribute to the rise and support of every unscriptural practice presented to the Catholics by each group of converts (instrumental music in worship; infant baptism by various modes; church control and involvement in social and political concerns; Christmas; Easter; etc.). In all this can be seen the evil that any practice and belief can eventually fit into a religion which teaches that a broad base of fellowship of any peoples with a “good” king of religiousity is justified by the meritorious life of Christ which will cover up the disobedience of the “good in other churches.”

That is what some of our brethren are teaching; let us have a broader base of fellowship. The meritorious life of Christ is really a “Treasury of Grace” which will purge away for free the disobedience that is done in “ignorance.”

I left the Catholic Church. Why is it that some of my brethren wish to drag us all back?!

Truth Magazine, XX:10, p. 10-12
March 4, 1976

My Material Possessions

By Bob Walton

Some of the most simple, yet most profound words ever uttered were those by Jesus in the parables. In these short, simple lessons, Jesus often taught on man’s relationship to his material possessions. Thus we wish to study three of these parables that call attention to this important matter of my relationship to my material possessions.

First of all, we are taught that “the earth is the Lord’s, and the fulness thereof” (Psa. 24:1); that “every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights . . . ” (James 1:17). Thus, we are all stewards of God; we are simply “in charge” of those things which really belong to God, but have been given to us (by His grace) to use. Of course this should always be the beginning place of our thoughts concerning our material possessions. And how good God has been to each of us! We all have so many things to enjoy; more than any nation on earth, past or present. It is because of the abundance of these material possessions that solemnity is needed in deciding how we are to use them.

Jesus, in his teachings gives four different illustrations of what we can do with our goods as stewards of God.

First of all, the Master Teacher illustrates in the story of the prodigal son the possibility of wasting our goods. The young man of whom Jesus spoke (Luke 15:11-24) “wasted his goods with riotous living” (v. 13). So it is possible to simply waste that which we have. Whether it be money or talent, so many of us use them on “the things of this life.” Oh no, we are not immoral people; we are not like the heathen who says, “Let us satisfy every desire.” We are good people, yet we use all our resources, time, and talents on “things” with no time nor resources left for the Lord. In so doing, we have our affections on “the things of this earth” (Col. 3:1-4); we waste our good on self.

A second failure as stewards can manifest itself in our hoarding our goods. “Oh no, I don’t waste my goods, they were too hard to come by,” one says. But unless we are careful, we then become as the rich farmer (Luke 12:15-21); we hoard our goods. Jesus never talked about the hypothetical nor the exceptional; he talked about the typical. And here is a very typical example of “many a man’s” relationship to his possessions. We cannot condemn the rich farmer’s honesty nor his success; we can only condemn his blindness and selfishness in relationship to his stewardship of his material possessions. He was a success in the eyes of men; he was a fool in God’s sight. He was foolish because he did not realize that “a man’s life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth” (Luke 12:15). And so it is when all that I have becomes “mine” and God is left out of my plans.

A third situation, somewhat like the one above, yet different in many respects, is the story of Jesus of the one talent man who hid his talent (Matt. 25:14-30). This man’s defense was, “I haven’t embezzled, I haven’t squandered nor wasted, I haven’t used for self; I haven’t done anything with it! His was a defensive excuse. But the import of this parable was to teach that what we have, we must use for the Lord. And the retribution for the man who hid his talent should show the futility of such action; “thou wicked and slothful servant” (Matt. 25:26) was the pronouncement of the Lord on this man. But worst of all, this unprofitable servant was cast into “outer darkness” (Matt. 25:30) for his neglect in using that which he had.

But there is still another thing (and a very, very important one) which we can do with the stewardship of our possessions; we can use them to the glory and honor of God. Such was the reckoning of the five and the two talent men (Matt. 25:14-30). “These talents were given us by our master to use; therefore we will use them” was their philosophy of life. And both men were commended for using what they had. By faithfully discharging their duty, their pronouncement was “well done, thou good and faithful servant, enter ye into the joy of thy lord” (Matt. 25:21-23).

From these brief stories told by the Master Teacher, let us first of all learn that the Lord is the giver; and He is indeed generous to every one of us today. And we need also to learn that with these manifold blessings comes opportunity and responsibility. And most of all, we need to always remember that our use, abuse, misuse, or disuse of our possessions will determine where we spend eternity.

Truth Magazine, XX:10, p. 9
March 4, 1976