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Home/Churches and Ministries/How Not to Be a Heretic

How Not to Be a Heretic

Of course, no one ever plans to become a heretic, but it still happens.

Written by Le Ann Trees | Monday, October 10, 2016

Second, know what your church believes. If you haven’t done so already, become informed regarding your church’s positions on key biblical teachings. Most churches have a statement of faith. Are you familiar with what your church’s statement declares?  Who taught the person who is teaching you? How do his or her positions differ from those of other ministers/Bible teachers? On certain topics, multiple views cannot logically all be correct. Ask your pastor why he holds certain doctrinal positions. Most pastors would be all too happy to discuss biblical topics with their congregants.

 

Many people attend churches with dynamic ministers who deliver inspiring sermons. While these messages are uplifting, they don’t always convey the truths of Christianity. Every Christian needs accurate answers to the most important questions of life:

  • What will happen to me when I die?
  • Is this awful trial happening to me because I didn’t love God enough, pray enough, or trust Jesus enough?
  • What if my child isn’t walking with the Lord?
  • What difference does being a Christian make in my life now, as well as for eternity?
  • Can I lose my salvation?
  • What is God’s purpose in creating the world?
  • What is God’s purpose in creating me?

Christians also need to be able to distinguish between different doctrinal views on a certain subject in order to assess the correctness of the teaching they receive. For instance,

  • Does God do all the work in salvation, or is it a cooperative act between God and humans?
  • Did God elect some people to salvation, or did he only foreknow who would choose him?
  • Is our right standing (justification) before God based upon a transformation within us or a declaration of something done outside of us?

On what basis will believers determine their views on salvation, election, and justification from the alternatives listed above? Proper guidelines for interpreting Scripture restrain us from trying to make God’s Word say what we think it should say, and instead, keep us on course in determining the correct meaning of any given biblical text.

Good doctrine is not the only thing people need. They need to be the givers and recipients of Christianity applied in everyday life through thoughtful and loving deeds. I was personally the recipient of this kind of love from Christians—and non-Christians—after my son died ten years ago. Yet, what I needed most of all in those dark days was truth about God, and to know what that truth meant for my family. It was sound doctrine that ultimately gave me the courage to keep going—to know that my circumstances did not have the final say and that God is faithful, no matter what I may encounter in this world.

We don’t need to start from scratch when interpreting the Bible. The church has well defined, well defended, and well established doctrine that has been established over the many centuries since Christ’s resurrection and ascension. We need to know and understand these truths and avoid at all costs becoming opponents of God’s church—heretics who hold strange teachings disconnected from Scripture. Of course, no one ever plans to become a heretic, but it still happens. Here are three things that can help keep you on God’s Scripture-obeying path.

First, history can help us discern truth from error. Studying the history of Christianity and the major theological disputes over the centuries gives us a good grasp of when and where doctrinal differences developed and the resulting legacies that exist to this day.

[Editor’s note: This article is incomplete. The link (URL) to the original article is unavailable and has been removed.]

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