Thursday, April 21, 2016

Seven Truths About False Teachers

Seven Truths About False Teachers

1. False teachers are common.

When and where there are teachers of truth, there will necessarily be teachers of error.

The first and most fundamental thing I learned about false teachers is that we ought to expect them and be on the lookout for them. They are common in every era of church history.

This should not surprise us since the Bible warns that we are on war footing in this world, and that Satan is on full-out offensive against God and his people. And sure enough, history shows that whenever the gospel advances, error follows in its wake.

When and where there are teachers of truth, there will necessarily be teachers of error. Perhaps the most surprising thing about false teachers is that we continue to be surprised by them.

2. False teachers are deceptive.

False teachers are deceptive. They do not announce themselves as false teachers but proclaim themselves angels of light, people who have access to wisdom others have missed or misplaced.

Instead, they begin within the bounds of orthodoxy and announce themselves only slowly and through their subtly-twisted doctrine. They turn away from orthodoxy one step at a time rather than all at once.

3. False teachers are dangerous.

False teachers are dangerous, and part of what makes them so dangerous is that they will affirm so much that is good and true.

They will not deny all of the doctrines upon which the Christian faith stands or falls but only select parts of it. They draw in the unsuspecting with all they affirm and only later destroy them with all they deny.

There is an important lesson: We only know a person when we understand both what he affirms and what he denies.

4. False teachers are divisive.

False teachers cause division within the church and often cause division even among true Christians.
Because false teachers tend to remain within the church, and because they claim to be honoring the Bible, they confuse true believers and drive wedges between them.

Amazingly, it is often those who stand fast against falsehood who get labeled as divisive. The church often trusts a smiling false teacher ahead of a frowning defender of truth.

5. False teachers give people what they want.

As Paul wrote his final letter to Timothy, he warned that the time was coming when people would not endure sound teaching (and hence, sound teachers), but instead they would have itching ears and demand teachers who would satisfy this itch—who promote self-indulgence over dying to self and living to Christ.

False teachers do this very thing. Their concern is not for what people truly need but for what people want.

The concern of the Christian is the exact opposite—the gospel does not address what we want but what we need!

6. False teachers are not innocent.

False teachers know they are false teachers.

This may not be true all the time, and perhaps some false teachers deceive themselves before they deceive others. But I believe most know who and what they are; in fact, I believe most know and delight in who and what they are.

They are not naive people who have taken a wrong turn in their theology, but evil people who are out to destroy others. Their attack on truth is far more brazen than we may like to think.

7. False teachers cannot tolerate the Gospel.

False teachers simply cannot tolerate the gospel.

At some level and in some way, they will always add to or subtract from the pure and sweet gospel of salvation by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone.

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