7. Dealing With Error Whilst Preaching Truth
7-1 The Word Will Not Return Void
As Israel moaned and groaned their way through the wilderness, so the
condemned generation in which we live are likewise full of a negative
spirit. Many of the movies and songs which fill the subconscious thinking
of many men and women are likewise negative in their essence. For those
who work long hours doing repetitive work (and that in principle includes
almost everyone, wherever they live), a complaining, grumbling spirit
can easily develop. Everything becomes a burden, a load we must bear because
we have no choice. Familiarity with family members can slip into a lack
of respect, those we should love become simply another of life’s irritations,
grudgingly tolerated because there is no way out of the family structure
we are in. And in the repetition of the activities of ecclesial and spiritual
life, a like chafing at the bit can so easily develop. Especially is there
the tendency to look at one’s fellow man in a critical way. We can look
at the unbelievers around us and consider them so far gone that we don’t
even try to preach to them: ‘Well, he’s a Muslim…she’s so caught up with
her new baby…he’s so rich’. And we can look at our brethren in a similar
way, noticing their faults, irked and irritated by their ways (this is
especially true when we are meeting with the same two or three believers,
as many readers are).
Yet there is a hopefulness in the Father and Son which must rub off on
us; a spirit of grace, a grace and love that thinks no evil and delights
in what is positive. The grace of the Father, and the life of grace lived
and shown through His Son, is so essentially outgoing, so unregarding
of human response, piling “grace upon grace” (Jn. 1:16 Gk.), that
if we sense it, we will show it too. The Father is ever seeking for some
positive response, and is highly sensitive to it. He told Moses: “If they
will not believe…neither hearken to the voice of the first sign, that
they will believe the voice of the latter sign [but] if they will not
believe also these two signs…” (Ex. 4:8). The God who knows the end from
the beginning gives the impression that He is sure they will believe-
even though they didn’t. He is so seeking for faith in His creatures (cp.
“surely they will reverence my son”, Mt. 21:37, and Ex. 19:21 cp. 20:18).
In this, Isaiah says, He shows His matchless grace: “For he said, Surely
they are my people, children that will not lie: so [therefore]
he was their Saviour…but they rebelled, and vexed his holy [gracious]
spirit” (Is. 63:8,10). Our tendency is to notice the negative in others,
and let it outweigh the positive. God works quite the other way. He hopes
for positive response, and even speaks as if He will get it when He knows
He won’t. Consider how Job shook his fist at God through many of his speeches-
so much so that Elihu, on God’s behalf, had to rebuke him at the end.
Finally, Yahweh asks Job to “declare thou unto me” (Job 40:7; 42:4): to
make a declaration. And Job does, in a matchless humility: “…therefore
have I uttered that I understood not…I abhor myself, and repent in dust
and ashes”. And Yahweh immediately comments to the unrepentant friends:
“Ye have not spoken of [‘unto’] me the thing that is right [Heb. ‘prepared’],
as my servant Job hath” (42:7). Evidently Job hadn’t spoken “right” earlier;
but it’s as if God seizes upon this one recognition of failure and is
so pleased with it. He was looking for repentance in Job, and triumphantly
seizes upon it once it is stuttered out by him. And so with our preaching
of the Gospel and in our seeking to win back brethren who go astray [and
I do hope we all make some personal effort to do this…]: seek
for response. As the disciples came upon the Lord talking to the woman
by the well, it looked as if He were seeking something (Jn. 4:27).
But they didn’t ask what- for it was obvious. His body language reflected
how He was seeking her salvation. He seeks the lost until He
finds them, even now (Mt. 18:12; Lk. 15:8); as He looked up into the branches
of the sycamore tree seeking Zacchaeus, He was epitomising how He came
(and comes) to seek and save all the lost (Lk. 19:5,10). Our
preaching to others isn’t a cold-hearted witness, or a theological debate;
it is a seeking of glory to the Father; we exhort one another,
considering how we may provoke to love (Heb. 10:24). But let
me ask: do you consider how you might encourage your brethren,
or those in the world around you; what words to say, what to do or not
to do…?
The Word Will Not Return
We must believe, really and truly, that the word will not return void,
but it will accomplish what it is intended to achieve. We are not scattering
seed with the vague hope that something might sprout up; we are planting,
fully expecting to see a harvest. “The word of God grew and multiplied”
(Acts 12:24) surely means that the number of converts to the word multiplied-
for the same word is repeatedly used in this sense (Acts 6:1,7; 5:14;
9:31; 19:20). Thus “the word of God” is put by metonymy for ‘the response
to the word of God’, as if the word will inevitably bring forth response.
The RV translates the parable of the sower as if the seed sown is the
convert: “he that was sown…” (Mt. 13:19 RV). And later on in Mt. 13:38
we are told so again: “the good seed are the children of the Kingdom”.
Yet the seed was a symbol of the word of God. The parallel between the
seed and the convert is such as to suggest that the word of God will produce
converts in some sense; it will not return void (Is. 55:11). The apparent
dearth of response to some preaching therefore poses a challenging
question. Are we preaching the word of God alone, or our own ideas? Does
God withhold blessing for some reason unknown to us? Is this parable only
part of a wider picture, in which somehow the word does return
void due to man’s rejection? Thus the word of God was ‘made void’ by the
Pharisees (Mk. 7:13 RV- a conscious allusion to Is. 55:11?)…. This is
perhaps one of the most defiantly unanswerable questions in our experience.
As an aside, one possible explanation is that “the word” which is sent
forth and prospers, achieving all God’s intention, is in fact Messiah.
The same word is used about the ‘prospering’ of the Servant in His work:
Is. 48:15; 53:10 cp. Ps. 45:4. Another is to accept the LXX reading of
this passage: “…until whatsoever I have willed shall have been accomplished”.
Here at least is the implication that something happens and is
achieved when we preach God’s word. The same idiom occurs in Ez. 9:11
AVmg., where we read that “the man clothed with linen”- representing Ezekiel
or his representative Angel- “returned the word, saying, I have done as
thou hast commanded me”. The word ‘returned’ in the sense that someone,
somewhere, was obedient to it even if others weren’t.
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