Spiritual Warfare: Beware of Deviant Teachings
S. M.
Toward the end of the first
century, the truth of Jesus Christ was severely distorted, and the confusions
resulted in the spiritual world not only undermined the faith of "those
who are called, beloved in God the Father and kept for Jesus" (Jude 1),
but were about to shake the church foundation.
The Lord's faithful apostle Jude was thus anxious to rectify the deviant
tendency by warning his contemporaries.
Among the many
confusions, the arising of the false prophets and false teachers was the
most serious one (Jude 4; 11 Pet 2: 1; I Jn 4:
1). As a matter of fact, while the
Gospel of the kingdom must be proclaimed to the end of the earth, Jesus
predicted that heresies would come to confound his followers (Mt 24:4-5,
11). Jude reminds the believers to
contend more resolvedly "for the faith which was once for all delivered to
the saints" (Jude 3). According to
Jude, the false teachers are:
Robbers or thieves: They are
"secretly brought in" (Gal 2:4), and do not enter by the door (Jn 10:1). What is
the door? It is the Lord Jesus (Jn 10:9, 14:6; 1 Cor 11:1; 2 Pet
2:21) and the Bible (2 Tim 3:15-16; 1 Cor 4:6; Is 8:
20; Rev 22:18-19).
The ungodly: The false teachers'
words and deeds are opposed to God. They
acknowledge God, but their hearts are far from God (Mt 15:8-9). They are corrupt and do abominable deeds (Ps
14:1).
The immoral: They take the grace
of God as the opportunity to indulge in lusts and lower nature of the flesh
(Eph 2:3, 4:19; 11 Tim 3:5). Their
immorality brings harm to the name of the Lord and the church.
Those who deny the Lord: They deny
the great power of the Lord's redemption.
They use their learning, philosophy, or human tradition to corrupt men's
faith (Col
2:8-9; 1 Tim 6:20-21, 1:3-4; 2 Tim 4:3).
The sanctity and power of the true message is different from
"deceitful spirits and doctrines of demons" (I Tim 4:1).
Moreover, Jude uses some striking
similes to describe the hypocritical and vicious false teachers:
Reefs which cause shipwreck: They
sit in love feasts and fellowship, but they wreck the faith of the innocent and
the unwatchful.
Waterless clouds: To the
disappointment of many, some clouds gather but fail to rain. False teachers have a name of ministry but
lack in power. Rain symbolizes the Holy
Spirit. Any minister without the Holy
Spirit can never bring the people to spiritual life and power. As a result, those who follow the false
teachings will be tossed around and swayed by every wind of doctrine (Eph
4:14).
Fruitless trees: Devoid of the
Holy Spirit, no preacher or teacher can offer the fruits of the Spirit of God,
nor can he benefit the spiritual needs of the hearers. False teachers are not different from a leafy
but fruitless tree. They are "twice
dead, uprooted," for they first died in transgression and sin and now they
are dead in apostasy (Eph 2:1). These
are spiritual deaths, once in this life and once in the future, because their
flesh died in sin and their soul will suffer the second death in hell (Rev 21:8).
Wild Waves: Waves are a common
sight, but wild stormy waves alert the voyagers. In church, the false teachers are like the
hurricanes that often cause the "roar and foam" (Ps 46:23), A true
believer should never be intimidated by the wicked false teacher. They are not reborn from the Holy Spirit, and
so in them there is no fruit of gentleness and peace. Their remarks are like the foam and filthy
tossed upon the seashore. Isaiah gives
quite an exact description: "The wicked are like the tossing sea. It cannot rest, and its waters toss up mire
and dirt (Is 57:20). A true believer
should shun themselves from these people.
Wandering Stars: Wandering stars
are meteors, consumed in the outer atmosphere.
The false teachers are the dregs of the heavens, and, as such, they
vanish into the darkness. The debris of
the meteor can sometimes cause injury or damage on the earth. The destiny of the false teachers and the
apostate will be similar to the vanishing stars , for
"the nether gloom of darkness has been reserved forever " (Jude 13).
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