Habits

By Mason Harris

Someone has said, “The chains of habit are generally too small to be felt, until they are too strong to be broken.” (Samuel Johnson) Silently and imperceptibly we are forming habits that will ultimately determine the degree of our happiness and success. These habits can easily be broken in the early stages of their growth, but once they have reached the full measure of their intensity, they assume the proportions of psychological obsessions. They completely dominate character and conduct and if they are bad habits, and are allowed to remain uncorrected, they can ruin our entire life. There are two or three observations I would like to make in regard to habits:

Number one is that we are the kind of persons we are because of habits we have formed whether good or bad. It has been said, “What you are, will determine what you do.” This is not always true. You may be much better than your worst act, and you may be much worse than your best act. But what you habitually do is you.

The second observation that I would make is this: We choose our own pattern of thought. Joshua told the Israelites, “Choose you this day whom you will serve.” Man’s birthright is his freedom of choice. And this applies to our thoughts as well as to our actions.

And the third observation is this: It is never too late to change habits; that is, as long as we are of sound mind and body. One of the greatest misconceptions of man is that be cannot change his habits. He often excuses himself by saying, “You can’t teach an old dog new tricks.” But we are not talking about dogs. We are talking about, people. And people can change. Paul said, “Be not conformed to this world, but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind” (Rom. 12:2). This says that man can change and tells us how he can change-that is, by renewing his mind. Or by changing his pattern of thought.

The great danger in habits is that, like concrete, they tend to harden and make for the habit-bound man, the man who is so completely in the grip of his habits that he will stand or fall with them. Be careful then that you form good habits.

TRUTH MAGAZINE XVII: 29, p. 2
May 24, 1973

Facts About Fornication

By David Watts

“Fornication” is a word that describes a class of sins that seem to be growing more and more common in this land. If fornication is not more prevalent today than at other times, then at least it is being committed more brazenly than in recent times. Many who are guilty of this sin speak of their actions without shame. Many who are not themselves guilty of fornication condone and excuse those who are guilty.

Definition

Some have been confused about the meaning of fornication. Authorities on the language of the N.T. define fornication as “illicit sexual intercourse in general.” This definition includes, “prostitution, unchastity … every kind of unlawful sexual intercourse.” Fornication is a broader word than adultery. It sometimes includes adultery (as in 1 Cor. 5: 1), and it is sometimes distinguished from it (as in 1 Cor. 6:9).

Since fornication includes any and all sexual cohabitation outside the bonds of lawful marriage, it includes the sin of premarital sex. By definition fornication includes the sexual intercourse involved in prostitution. In its broadest sense, fornication includes any and all adultery. And as a synonym for adultery, it includes the sin of all who are unscripturally divorced and remarried, or are married to someone who is unscripturally divorced.

God’s Law Is Unchanged

Some may consider censure of fornication as old-fashioned and irrelevant today, but actually no modern-day condition or circumstance alters, negates, or changes in any way God’s condemnation of fornication. If everybody in the world-committed fornication, it would still be iniquity. In fact, the ancient world was “filled with . . . fornication” (Rom. 1: 29), but the frequent commission of sin does not make it lawful.

Youthful passions are no excuse for fornication. The Bible says, “Flee also youthful lusts” (2 Tim. 2:22). Those who wink at sexual promiscuity in young people are winking at a sin that will damn souls, young or old, to bell! The sickness or death of one’s marriage companion does not justify or excuse fornication. Paul said, “it is better to marry than to burn” (1 Cor. 7:9), but Paul did not say, “it is better to commit fornication than to burn.” The temporary or permanent deprivation of sexual liberties of lawful marriage does not justify fornication. The laxity of a church in disciplining fornicators does not excuse the sin. The church at Corinth was remiss in their disciplinary duty, but that laxity did not justify the fornicating brother (1 Cor. 5:1f).

The reply Jesus gave the Jews who brought before Him a woman taken in the very act of adultery (John 8) does not excuse fornication. After saying, “Neither do I condemn thee,” Jesus told the guilty woman, “Go and sin no more. ” Be assured that that same woman will be condemned in the judgment if she continued to persist in sin. Likewise, the fact that no one is perfect does not excuse fornication. It is true that we all sin against God, but that fact no more excuses fornication than it excuses stealing, rape or murder! Fornication is not justified by successfully hiding the sin, or by avoiding pregnancy, or by getting married after the sin has been committed! Nothing can make fornication right.

Some Facts About Fornication

(1) It is a sin that originates in the heart. Jesus said, “For out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications … These are the things which defile a man” (Matt. 15:1.8-19). (2) It is a sin against one’s own body. The Holy Spirit said, “Flee fornication. Every sin that a man doeth is without the body; but he that committeth fornication sinneth against his own body” (1Cor. 6:18). (3) It is a sin against our Creator. Joseph in the O.T. knew this, and answered the seductress, “how then can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God?” (Gen. 39:9). (4) It is a sin that CAN be resisted and avoided. God says, “Flee fornication,” and Joseph in the O.T. shows us how to do it. God does not require more than we can do, but “this is the will of God, even your sanctification, that ye should abstain from fornication” (1 Thess. 4:3). (5) It is the only sin permitting divorce and remarriage by an innocent husband or wife. Jesus condemned all divorce and remarriage-, except it be for fornication” (Matt. 19:9). (6) It is a sin that will keep those guilty of it out of the joys of heaven. “Let marriage be had in honor among all. and let the bed be undefiled: for fornicators and adulterers God will judge” (Heb. 13:4). Fornication is a work of the flesh (Gal. 5:19-21), and those guilty of it must face the wrath of God (Eph. 5:3-6). (7) It is a sin specifically mentioned in teaching on church discipline 0 Cor. 5:9-11). The sin of fornication may have its appeal to the lust of the flesh, yet when viewed in the light of God’s word it is seen as an act of iniquity that will drag those stained by it into the depths of hell.

Conclusion

“Rahab the harlot” was justified (Jas. 2: 24). Jesus spoke of publicans and harlots going into the kingdom of God (Matt. 21:31-32). Some at Corinth had been fornicators before being washed, sanctified and justified (1 Cor. 6:9-11). Fornicators can be forgiven of this sin. But that forgiveness is not secured by merely ceasing to commit fornication, or by trying to outlive its guilt. Those out of Christ must believe and obey the Gospel in order to be forgiven of this, and every other sin. Wayward disciples must repent of their sin and pray for God’s pardon. Jesus spoke of one who was given “space to repent of her fornication” but “she repented not” (Rev. 2:22). May it not be so with any who read these lines!

TRUTH MAGAZINE XVII: 28, pp. 11-12
May 17, 1973

What Does God Want?

By Brent Lewis

This is a simple question-but there is only one way to answer it. Go to the Bible! You see, it is the Bible that tells us what God wants, for it expresses His Will. If man truly desires to know what God wants him to do, he will go to the scriptures (God’s Will). Peter says the scriptures grant us “all things that pertain unto life and godliness” (2 Pet. 1:3). Paul says the scriptures are profitable to teach us, reprove us, correct us, and instruct us in righteousness (2 Tim. 3:16), and that they will direct us completely into every good work that God intends for us to do (v. 17).

In short, what God wants is stated in His Word, His Will. But we must constantly study that will to see what God wants. Paul says, “Study to show thyself approved unto God . . .” (2 Tim. 2: 15). God’s Will is expressed in words-plain, simple, everyday, ordinary words. God conveys to us what He wants us to do by these words. The things that were in the mind of God were revealed to man by words, given to the inspired writers by the Holy Spirit Q Cor. 2:9-13).

God’s Will is understandable. Paul says, “Be ye not foolish, but understand what the will of the Lord is” (Eph. 5:17). He also speaks of the revealing of truth, “as I wrote before in few words, whereby, when ye read, ye can perceive my understanding in the mystery of Christ” (Eph. 3:3-4). Thus, Paul says we can know God’s will when we read the words that were given to us by revelation. Men today need to read the scriptures to determine what God wants! This is the only way.

Too often in the religious realm, men do things simply because they want them that way. But this will not please God. Early in the history of the Jews as God’s people, it is sadly recorded, 16 every man did that which was right in his own eyes” (Judges 17:6). The New Testament speaks of those who went about “measuring themselves by themselves, and comparing themselves with themselves,” and the scripture says they were “without understanding” (2 Cor. 10: 12). The prophet Jeremiah says, “It is not in man that walketh to direct his steps” (Jer. 10:23).

Men need to be more concerned today about the question, “What does God want?” Not, “What does my church teach?” Not, “What were my Mother and Father religiously?” Not, “What does my Pastor say?” Not, “What do I like religiously?” But, this and this alone

“What does God want?” Remember, Jesus said, “Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father who is in heaven” (Mt. 7:21). If men would concern themselves with this question alone, the problems in the religious world would melt away.

It would solve the problem of AUTHORITY Why? Because those who would ask, “What does God want?” would know that the answer is only to be found in His Will-the New Testament. God wants what He has said-no more, and no less. If we can read it, God wants it-if we cannot, He does not want it. Men would realize that we are to “learn not to go beyond the things which are written” (1 Cor. 4:6, ASV). If it is written, God wants it-what is not written, God does not want. Those who want only what God wants would fearfully recognize that “whosoever goeth onward and abideth not in the teaching of Christ, hath not God” (2 John 9). The “teaching of Christ” tells us what God wants-we may not go beyond. It would solve the problem of UNITY. God wants unity among His followers. Not some man-made, pseudo-unity, where several different denominations merge into “one,” but unity exactly as that for which Paul pled: “that ye all speak the same thing, and, that there be no divisions among you; but that ye be perfected together in the same mind and in the same judgment” (1 Cor. 1:10). All who had the desire to please God and who would read His Will, would see that Christ built only one church (Mt. 16:18); that the wisdom of God designed only one church (Eph. 3: 10-11); and that Christ purchased only one (Acts 20:28).

It would solve the problem of WORSHIP. Men would not burn candles or count beads; they would not play banjos or bongos, piccolos or pianos in “worship” to God; they would not give adoration to Mary or worship to “saints” for none of that “is written,” but rather it is beyond that which is written (1 Cor. 4:6), thus it is not what God wants. God does however; want men to worship Him (Rev. 22:9; John 4:24). The New Testament teaches that God wants men to meet on the first day of the week to partake of the Lord’s Supper and give of their means (Acts 20:7; 1 Cor. 11:23-26; 1 Cor. 16:2); that He wants men to sing (Col. 3:16; Eph. 5:19); and to pray (Acts 2:42; 1 Tim. 2:1,8). No beads, no incense, no piano-but just what is written. What is written is what God wants.

And it would solve every other religious problem; if all men wanted to do only what God wants.

We believe that there are people today who want to do what God wants-no more, and no less. You may be one of them. We believe that you should know that God’s people, the Lord’s church exists among you-a people who wish to do only what God wants. A group of people who will give a “thus saith the Lord” for every religious practice, or give it up. If we can’t read it in God’s word, we won’t do it, because, above all things, we want to do what God wants us to do! Don’t you? Come and study with us, so that together we can do God’s will.

TRUTH MAGAZINE XVII: 28, pp. 10-11
May 17, 1973

“Unity in Diversity”

By James W. Adams

(Note: I regret there has been a slight interruption in the appearance of these articles, but it could not be avoided. Meeting work has taken me away from home and library making it impossible for me to prepare the articles to run in consecutive issues. JWA)

An individual can repeat a misrepresentation, however absurd, often enough to propagandize and catechize a great many unsuspecting people. In fact, he quite often convinces himself despite what he unquestionably knows to be the facts in the case. Brother W. Carl Ketcherside has for the past fifteen years written like Jehu of Old Testament fame drove his chariot, “furiously” (2 Kings 9:20). He has written so much and so “furiously” that one researching his literary misadventures all but drowns himself in a sea of semantics. I have never read after a person who can say the same thing, so many times, in so many different ways. Our erring brother is famous for his ability to “con” his audiences and readers with “cute” clichés and inveigle them with epigrammatic errors. If rhetoric were argument and showmanship were truth, Ketcherside would be all but irresistible. Fortunately, they are not. Two of the more common Ketchersidian, rhetorical flourishes are: “Unity is not conformity” and “unity in diversity. “

Unity vs. Conformity

When our garrulous brother in pulpit and press parrots the affirmation, “Unity is not conformity,” he implies there are those who contend that unity demands absolute conformity in every view which is held respecting the faith and practice of Christians. If this is not true, his often-repeated epigram is pointless. I categorically deny that any representative preacher or writer, “heir of the Restoration Movement” or otherwise, so affirms. Why then does Ketcherside continue to prejudice the issue by constantly reiterating this cliché’? The answer is obvious. A politician uses whatever makes good propaganda, nor is he above insinuating what he dares not specifically affirm.

Ketcherside himself believes, notwithstanding his rhetoric, that there must be a relative degree of “conformity” before New Testament “unity” can obtain among professed Christians. According to him, all must subscribe to the following tenents: (1) Christ is God Lord; (2) all must be immersed in water as an act of obedience to God; (3) “partyism” must be theoretically and practically abjured; (4) none must be guilty of “moral turpitude.” Yes, strange as it may seem, Keteberside demands absolute conformity relative to the person and nature of Jesus, the action of baptism, a permissive spirit of brotherhood, which he calls “fellowship,” and circumspect morality (I suppose according to his “interpretation” of the ethics of New Testament revelation). So often are these points emphasized in the speeches and articles of Ketcherside that documentation is unnecessary.

It appears, therefore, that the whole matter resolves itself into the old and often debated question: “What are the minimal, essential elements of Christian unity and fellowship?” Ketcherside admits that almost everyone believes unity to be desirable, God to be displeased with division, absolute conformity to be neither required nor feasible, and truth to be basic while recognizing not all elements of truth on every subject to be of equal weight in the matter of unity or fellowship (“Unity in Diversity, “Mission Messenger, January 1961). The truth is that all our crusading brother has done is to come forward with his list of essentials which are subjectively, arbitrarily, and inconsistently conceived and applied. A current, cynical observation of rebellious youth is in order at this point, “So, what’s new! ” As far as I can tell, absolutely nothing except the untimely birth of another unity cult now diffused in many denominational bodies and in many divisions among those who profess to be New Testament Christians, but inevitably destined to polarize, then solidify, and finally materialize as another sect or die. Ketcherside should be an expert at this because he has been through it all before.

What About “Unity in Diversity?”

Brother Carl all but suspends his whole contention on this concept. Is it or is it not a valid one? Like the former concept involving unity and conformity, it is not new. No representative teacher known to me would think of denying that Christian unity permits some degree of diversity. To go about parroting “unity in diversity” is not to announce a panacea for the ills of division. It resolves nothing. The question is not whether this is or is not true, for it can be either true or false depending upon the degree of diversity contemplated by him who declares it. Rather, the question is: How diverse can our beliefs and practices be without disrupting fellowship and making unity impossible? Ketcherside himself agrees that professed Christians cannot hold diverse views relative to the nature and the spirit of brotherhood and Lordship of Jesus, the action of baptism, the spirit of brotherhood (anti-” partyism “), and the standard of morals. He arrives at his conclusions through ingenious and devious routes with which we shall deal later, but it will suffice for present purposes to observe that he will not allow absolute diversity either in the realm of “opinion” (his term for interpretation) or practice. So, we are back again where we began, with the old question: What are the minimal essentials, or where does diversity begin and end’?

In the January 1961 issue of Mission Messenger, Ketcherside had an article, which he called, “Unity in Diversity,” to which attention has been called previously in this article. In the article under consideration, he used what he chose to call “common examples” which he believed to be analogous to his “unity in diversity” concept in religion of ten the case in reasoning. However, as is so by analogy, his examples did not exemplify and his analogies were not analogous. In reasoning, all logicians know that analogies yield only “probable conclusions” (An Introduction to Logic, Creighton, p. 275) and that the degree of probability ranges all of the way from zero to reasonable certainty depending upon the number and validity of the points of resemblance. Ketcherside’s examples of his “unity in diversity” concept do not contain vital points of resemblance essential to establishing the fact that they are indeed analogous. His examples prove nothing, therefore, with reference to the validity of his concept.

Ketcherside’s Examples

Ketcherside employed a group of singers and a symphony orchestra to illustrate the validity of his “unity in diversity” concept in religion. He correctly noted that singers sing different parts, even sounding different notes, in unison and that instrumentalists play different instruments sounding different notes in unison, yet there is “harmony” or “unity of effect.” What he does not emphasize is the fact that all singers or players sing or play the same piece of music, which has been written and arranged by an expert in the field so as to produce the “harmony” and “unity of effect.” Had he pursued his analogy, he would have been forced to concede that New Testament revelation constitutes the perfect standard for the faith and practice of Christians and is so written and arranged by the all-wise “captain of our salvation” (Heb. 2: 10) as to produce beautiful “harmony” and transcendent “unity of effect” in ” one body” of redeemed souls of “every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation” (Rev. 5:9).

Ketcherside also fails to mention that choruses and orchestras have directors to keep all participants functioning accurately so as to maintain “harmony and unity of effect.” The different singers or players are not permitted to make up their own music as they proceed or to inject innovations of would be composers of questionable competency. To allow such would be destructive of “harmony” and make “unity of effect” impossible. The result would be chaos. One could hardly inject sections of “An Ole Dead Skunk in the Middle of the Road” into “I’ve Found a Friend, Oh such a Friend” without the loss of meaning and the destruction of harmony. By the same token, I find it impossible to perceive sweet harmony and loving unity of effect in two religious bodies teaching in unison in perfect fellowship “baptism for the remission of sins” and “salvation by faith alone without further acts of obedience to God.” Ketcherside does not.

The next example employed by Ketcherside is the “planetary system.” He blasts off into the ethereal regions with an eloquent dissertation on the galaxies and their millions of planets “majestically rotating through space.” He calls Aristotle to witness to their unity of movement though diverse in “size, shape, speed and power of attraction” in his classic phrase, “the music (symphonia) of the spheres.” He reaches a grand climax in the use of the Psalmist’s statement, “The heavens declare the glory of God,” as a premise from which to conclude “that a part of the glory of God is revealed in a demonstration of unity in diversity.”

All of this high-flown rhetoric is supposed to prove that the “unity in diversity” which Ketcherside promotes in religion is analogous to the God-ordered unity in diversity of the planetary system. Honestly, brethren, how ridiculous can a man be? The planets, each one in every solar system in the nearest to the most remote galaxy, seen or unseen by the eyes of man, catalogued or uncatalogued by the astronomer, function in strict conformity with Divine law, the law of the universe, hence their marvelous unity. They are diverse, true, but not in reference to Divine law or their amenability to it. This is the kind of unity for which Truth Magazine and her editors and contributors plead, but which Ketcherside and his colleagues and sympathizers contemptuously reject as legalism. Can this be said of Baptists, certain Holiness, members of Christian Churches, and the constituency of churches of Christ who, according to Ketcherside, are in fellowship with God, hence in fellowship with one another and constitute the “one body” of Christ? Every responsible reader should be able to see (whether Ketcherside does or not) that such a concept is absurdity gone to seed.

Next, our effervescent brother cites Paul’s use of the human body to illustrate how unity can exist with diversity (1 Cor. 12). He affects to find in this illustration support for his “unity in diversity” concept. In discussing the matter, he recognizes that Paul’s point lies in the fact that “all members have not the same function.” Function, Brother Ketcherside, function-not faith and religious practice. Paul teaches that Christians must be united in faith and practice, but that each child of God has his own peculiar function, determined by his abilities or gifts, and in implementing their collective practice based on their faith.

The same is true of the “spiritual gifts” which is Ketcherside’s next example. There were different gifts. They were distributed as the Spirit willed to different members of the body of Christ. Not all had the same gifts. However, the gifts were all directed toward the same goal and were exercised by persons worshipping in the same congregation for the edification of the body unto the belief and practice of the revealed will of the head of the body, the Lord Jesus Christ.

Will Ketcherside please advise us how (1) the doctrines of salvation by faith alone and the impossibility of apostasy, (2) the impostures connected with so-called “glossolalia and divine healing,” (3) the practice of monthly, quarterly, and yearly communion along with the use of mechanical instruments of music in Divine praise plus (4) the multitude of other divergent beliefs and practices among immersed persons who believe in the deity of Jesus can logically or scripturally be shown to be analogous to the diverse abilities or spiritual gifts to which Paul referred in his body illustration? Though lie implies such in his plea for “unity in diversity”, I cannot believe that a man of his obvious intelligence would expose himself to the idiocy of trying to prove it. Such affirmations no doubt lie at the root of Ketcherside’s proclamation that he is forever through with debating. If I had written as much foolishness as he has during the past fifteen years, I am sure I would do as he has done, solemnly disavow debating. True it is that “discretion is the better part of valor.”

Ketcberside’s final analogy had to do with the fact that the church is “the body of Christ.” In this analogy, be pulls a Joseph Fletcher on his readers. In his book, Situation Ethics, Fletcher takes borderline cases in the realm of morals where only a choice between two evils exists and makes sweeping generalizations on the basis of principles he imagines exist in them. and, “Presto!” situation ethics is proved.

Ketcberside employs cases involving differences over immaterial matters, matters of mere opinion such as “eating of meats and observing days” (Rom. 14:8), then makes sweeping generalizations regarding the toleration of aberrations in matters of faith, doctrine, worship, organization, and work. He takes principles that involve the private practice of individuals and applies them to the collective work and worship of the saints. Such misuse of Scripture is appalling in one professing to be submissive to the Lordship of Jesus Christ. With no desire to be unkind nor to judge any man’s heart, I am forced by what I read from W. Carl Ketcherside to believe that he has no more respect for the word of the Lord than he does for the comic strips in Sunday’s newspaper.

Conclusion

The most fitting way I can think of to conclude this article is to utilize a small piece of doggerel from the pen of W. Carl Ketcherside used by him to introduce an article on “The Drift of Time” and appearing in Mission Messenger, September 1955. At that time, our brother was crusading against some awful brethren whom he called “hired pastors.” He was upbraiding them because they represented a change in attitude toward the so-called “pastor system.”

As time goes on, and churches fill with pride, they sanction that which once they did deride; and bend the Scripture, which so long they taught, to uphold systems which for years they fought.

Well said, Brother Carl, you evidently had a vision pure of what you, yourself, were destined to become, so we will let Ketcherside of yesterday rebuke Ketcherside of today.

TRUTH MAGAZINE XVII: 28, pp. 7-10
May 17, 1973