A Word about Controversy


By Robert Haldane

 
 

Many religious persons have a dread of controversy and wish truth to be stated without reference to those who hold the opposite errors. Controversy and bad spirit are in their estimation synonymous terms and strenuously to oppose what is wrong is considered as contrary to Christian meekness. Those who hold this opinion seem to overlook what every page of the New Testament lays before us. In all the history of our Lord Jesus Christ we never find Him out of controversy. From the moment he entered on the discharge of his office in the synagogue of Nazareth until he expired on the cross, it was an uninterrupted scene of controversy. Nor did he with all the heavenly meekness which in him shone so brightly treat error and truth without a reference to those who hold them or study to avoid giving its proper appellation to those corruptions in doctrine or practice that endangered the interests of immortal souls. His censures were not confined to doctrines but included the abetters of false principles themselves.


And as to the apostles, their epistles are generally controversial. Most of them were directly written for the express purpose of vindicating truth and opposing error and the authors of heresies do not escape with an abstract condemnation of their false doctrine. Paul again and again most indignantly denounces the conduct of opposers of the gospel and by name points out those against whom he cautions his brethren. When Hymenaeus and Alexander erred concerning the faith, and when he delivered them unto Satan that they might learn not to blaspheme he did not compliment them as amiable and learned persons. Even the apostle who treats most of love and possessed so much of that spirit which was eminently manifest in the divine Master does not avoid controversy nor in controversy does he study to avoid severity of censure on the opposers of the truth.


In the examples of opposing error left on record for our imitation we perceive nothing of that frigid spirit of indifference which smiles on the corruptors of the word of God and shuns to call heresy by its proper name. With what holy indignation do the apostles denounce the subtle machinations of the enemies of the gospel and in vain shall we look among those faithful servants of the Lord for anything to justify that trembling reserve which fears to say decidedly that truth is truth or that error is error. In what style indeed should perversions of the truth of God be censured ought they to be treated more as mere matters of opinion on which we may innocently and safely differ? or ought they to be met in a tone of solemn strong and decided disapprobation? Paul warned Christians against men who arose from among themselves, ‘speaking perverse things to draw away disciples after them’ and instead of complimenting false teachers in his day denouncing an angel from heaven on the supposition of his preaching another gospel and if an apostle was withstood to the face when he was to be blamed are the writings of those who subvert the gospel to be passed without rebuke.


While a spirit of lukewarmness and indifference to truth is advancing under the mask of charity and liberality there is a loud call on all Christians to stand fast in one spirit with one mind striving together for the true faith of the gospel to present a firm and united phalanx of opposition to error under every name from whatever quarter it may approach and not to stumble in their ways from the ancient baths to walk in paths in a way not cast up to make their land desolate Jeremiah 18 15. Thus, saith the Lord “stand ye in the ways and see and ask for the old paths where is the good way and walk therein and ye shall find rest for your souls.” Should believers become unfaithful to their trust and be seduced to abandon their protest against false doctrines they may gain the approbation of the world but what will this avail them compared with the favour of God but if with prayer to God in the use of the appointed means they contend earnestly for the truth then they may expect the fulfilment of that blessed promise when the enemy shall come in like a flood the spirit of the Lord shall lift up a standard against him.


(Reproduced from the Link).