Central Shelby
Church of Christ


 

 

Loving It So

False teachers are a plague in any land. The apostle Peter said that they “secretly bring in destructive heresies,” exploiting people with “deceptive words.” They “are wells without water,” promising things to people that God never promised. Peter warned that “they speak great swelling words of emptiness” (2 Peter 2:1-3, 17-18).

How troubling are false teachers? The ones Jude warned about were “serving only themselves… walking according to their own lusts; and,” he said, “they mouth great swelling words, flattering people to gain advantage” (Jude 12,16).

Both Jesus and His apostle Paul likened false teachers to wolves who come in and savage a flock of sheep. The Lord even indicated that these “wolves” would come “in sheep’s clothing” (Matthew 7:15; Acts 20:29).

False teachers are more than a problem. They are a destructive force in the lives of many a soul. For this reason the prophet Isaiah said that “the prophet who teaches lies, he is the tail.” Such a person is the lowest of the low in any society (Isaiah 9:15).

Yet as distressing as the existence of such teachers is, sadder still is the fact that there are those who are willing to listen to and follow their teaching. The prophet Jeremiah spoke to this when he described the religious conditions of his day: “An astonishing and horrible thing has been committed in the land: The prophets prophesy falsely, and the priests rule by their own power; and my people love to have it so” (Jeremiah 5:30,31).

My people love to have it so.”

Have we ever considered that if a people wouldn’t ‘love to have it so,’ false teachers wouldn’t persist? It’s all about a principle that we’ve termed ‘the law of supply and demand.’ If a people demand the truth, they won’t be satisfied with teachers who feed them a diet of falsehood. Evangelists, pastors, and teachers who speak the truth uncompromisingly will be sought and supported by such a group while false teachers won’t find a home. But if a people demand to hear only what they want to hear (whether it‘s the truth or not), false prophets lurk around every corner, ready to give them what they crave. As Paul said, “the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine, but according to their own desires, because they have itching ears, they will heap up for themselves teachers; and they will turn their ears away from the truth, and be turned aside to fables” (2 Timothy 2:2-4).

Do we need to be wary of false teachers? Yes. The Lord said “beware of” them, and Paul said to “watch” for them. But what we need to keep an eye on as much (if not more) are any perverse attitudes that might be welling up within our own hearts that would put our own fleshly desires above the truth. Let us not forget that the “coming of the lawless one” works his influence among those who do "not receive the love of the truth” (2 Thessalonians 2:11).

We would do well to ask ourselves questions such as, “Do I like a particular sermon because it is the truth, or because it resonates with my way of thinking?” -- “Do I despise a certain religious article because it is false or harmful in nature, or because it states some soul-searching truths I don’t want to consider?” To put it candidly, of what type of teaching and preaching would it be said of us, “My people love to have it so”?

False teachers are dangerous, but they can’t have their way with us unless we want it that way. We ourselves are responsible for the teaching we hear, listen to, tolerate, love, and obey. (Read Matthew 15:14.)


--Mike Noble


 

 

 

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October 28, 2009

Central Shelby Church of Christ
1118 Burks Branch Road
P.O. Box 445
Shelbyville, Kentucky  40066
Phone:  (502) 647-9179