Paul’s answer is very instructive for us. He explained that the call to be separate does not mean that they were to have no contact with sinners in the world. They were not called to leave the world the way the monks tried to leave the world. Separation is not achieved by avoidance of sinners in the world. The believer is called to separate by way of fellowship. There is a participation in Christ’s body that is unique only to believers. Paul was calling the church to think differently about the world than they did with regard to Christ’s church.
I am ready to flee California. This used to be the greatest state in the union, but things have changed. California was just rated last for quality of life. The freeways are overcrowded, people are overtaxed, and the cost of living is at an all-time high. I want to move to Idaho, buy a farm, and live on acres away from people and problems.
I am using hyperbole to make a point. The attitude I described is how many Christians think with regard to the world. All I would have to do is substitute “world” for “California,” and the application would be the same. Christians today are greatly discouraged by what they are seeing in the world. It is becoming very difficult to be a Christian and live together in this world with unbelievers. Christians are thinking a lot about separation, and a farm to get away from it all doesn’t seem like a bad idea.
There are certainly legitimate reasons for making a move to another place. The problem is that many Christians justify a move because they want to escape the problems they are experiencing in the world. After all, didn’t the Lord call believers to be separate from the world (2 Cor. 6:14–18)? What does this mean? Are we called to withdraw from the world and have no contact with non-Christians?
Few Christians would think this call means we are to live a monastic life, but getting away from the world and its problems can be its own brand of monasticism. The irony is, that kind of separation can be a very worldly pursuit. It assumes that one can achieve in this life the glories of what is promised only in the new heavens and earth. And such a separation in this way sends a poor message to the world—that we don’t care about them and only want to get away. What becomes of the Great Commission with this kind of separation? This is why we need a healthy consideration of what it means to be separate from the world.
COME OUT AND BE SEPARATE
Christians have always struggled with how to understand the call to be a separate people in the world. There have always been those who either, using Richard Niebuhr’s classic categories, pit Christ against culture or assimilate Christ into culture. We can fall back into the world just as easily as we can desire to separate out of the world. So, to what kind of separation is God calling the Christian in this world?
A brief reflection of Paul’s instruction to the Corinthian Christians provides us with the answer. They were allowing worldliness to go unchecked in the church. Some of the symptoms included sinful divisions, worldly ministry methods, pagan practices in worship, abuse of spiritual gifts, sexual immorality, and toleration of false doctrine.
Paul’s goal in addressing these problems was to call the church to proper separation from the world as God’s people. In 1 Corinthians 5:1, Paul addresses a report that gross sexual immorality was being tolerated in the church. Because the church refused to address the issue by exercising church discipline, they were compromising their status as God’s holy community.
In calling the church to be separate, Paul made a surprising connection to the Old Testament: “Cleanse out the old leaven that you may be a new lump, as you really are unleavened. For Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed” (1 Cor. 5:7). Paul grounded his call to separateness in the story of Israel’s deliverance from Egypt. The Passover, together with the Feast of Unleavened Bread, celebrated Israel’s deliverance from death and their separation from the land of Egypt. Anything brought back among them from their former way of life was a threat to their separate status as God’s people. The church, like Israel, was called to “go out from their midst, and be separate from them” (2 Cor. 6:17). They were to come out of Egypt and never to let Egypt come back into them.
Paul recognized that the church in Corinth was confused over the issue of separation. They appear to have taken his call to be separate as unreasonable. Their questions probably went as follows: “What are we supposed to do, create our own little sectarian group with our own morals?” And what about our differences with other Christians? Many Christians today share this confusion.
Paul’s answer is very instructive for us. He explained that the call to be separate does not mean that they were to have no contact with sinners in the world. They were not called to leave the world the way the monks tried to leave the world. Separation is not achieved by avoidance of sinners in the world. The believer is called to separate by way of fellowship. There is a participation in Christ’s body that is unique only to believers. Paul was calling the church to think differently about the world than they did with regard to Christ’s church.
The world will always be what it is. It operates on its own system of values, attractions, and wisdom that often stand in opposition to the righteousness of God. By becoming Christians, we have left their fellowship and been joined to another. Our former love for the world has been replaced by love for Christ, but none of these truths entails a withdrawal from or refusal to mix in among the people of the world. This is why Paul explained to the Corinthians that because we live in the world there is no possible way to avoid mixing with unbelievers in daily life. Christians have an earthly citizenship, too, so long as they remain on this earth.
Christians are separate from the world, however, insofar as we refuse to join that way of life that stands in opposition to our heavenly citizenship. We are called to separate from the world by refusing to have fellowship with those who practice a way of life from which we have been delivered. We are separate in our heavenly status as Christ’s body and in the way that we behave before the world.
This is where the Corinthians had failed. They allowed into their fellowship someone who claimed to be a believer and yet lived in sexual immorality. The church’s refusal to separate from their former way of life had the consequence of joining together the church and the world. This is why Paul called them to separate from “anyone named a brother” (1 Cor. 5:11) who lives in a manner inconsistent with their new identity as the redeemed people of God. The Lord calls us to separate from those who claim to be believers and yet live in a way that contradicts the Christian faith and life through the practice of sin without repentance. We separate by breaking fellowship with them. The intimacy, care, and participation that exists among believers is not shared with those who refuse to repent and believe the gospel.
The Corinthian church was to accomplish this separation through church discipline. By casting the man back into the world, they were preserving their separate status as Christ’s people. Would they still cross paths with this man? Certainly. But now they no longer had Christian fellowship with him, and their willingness to maintain the purity of Christ’s church as believers in the world is what biblical separation is all about.
HOW THEN SHALL WE SEPARATE?
With these principles set before us, there are a few ways forward that Christians should consider when it comes to the issue of biblical separation.
First, the church today needs to repent of not taking seriously the call to be separate. In Christianity and Liberalism, J. Gresham Machen lamented that the church has been unfaithful to Christ by letting into her membership scores of unbelievers, many of whom are then appointed to teaching positions in the church. Machen wrote:
The greatest menace to the Christian Church today comes not from the enemies outside, but from the enemies within; it comes from the presence within the Church of a type of faith and practice that is anti-Christian to the core. . . . A separation between two parties in the Church is the crying need of the hour.
A separation, as described by Paul to the Corinthians, is the crying need of the hour for us, too. Because the call to be separate has not been taken seriously in the church, the church today has lost its identity in the world. The church ought to look very different from the world in belief and practice. Many churches could begin to solve this problem by casting out the “Achans” from their midst (see Josh. 7).
Second, Christians need to set the right priorities in their pursuit of separation. Often Christians are separating from each other and the world on all the wrong issues. Christians need to unite in what is most important and avoid being obnoxious in our convictions as we allow for differences, without separation, on those matters of liberty of conscience. The great need of the hour is convicted Christians who are willing to stand together for the truth of the gospel, who are committed to being shaped by the Word of God, and who are able to distinguish those issues that have lasting significance in their stand for the truth.
Finally, Christians need to consider their witness to the world. In His High Priestly Prayer, Jesus specifically prayed to His Father that believers would not be taken out of the world (John 17:15). The Lord left us in the world to be His witnesses. Unbelievers need the gospel, and that is why we are here. Does the world perceive this about us? Do they see that we care enough to help them know the blessedness that we have in Christ? We carry the answer in the message of the cross, but if the sense unbelievers get from us is that we are running away from them, why would we think they will turn to Jesus and desire to enter our fellowship? In our proper separation, we go to them with the gospel and remember that our witness is the reason the Lord is preserving us in the world.
One day I might leave California, but it might not be everything I bargained for. So I think, for now, I will try to practice being separate right where I am. Wherever Christians are truly separate as the body of Christ, in that very place a little piece of heaven can be enjoyed on earth, and that right now is exactly what every place needs.
Rev. Christopher Gordon is preaching pastor at Escondido United Reformed Church in Escondido, Calif., and featured teacher of the program Abounding Grace Radio. This article is used with permission.
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