When Tolerance Is Sin
by William MacDonald
Tolerance
can be a virtue, but it can also betray an inexcusable weakness of
character. We admire the person who tolerates differences where no great
issue is at stake. He allows for a variety of preferences, methods, and
unimportant viewpoints. He would rather be killed for a sheep than for a
lamb.
But there is another form of tolerance that is despicable. That is the
willingness to remain silent when God's name is blasphemed or Christ is
dishonored. It is the treachery of silence when truth is on the
scaffold. It is the unwillingness to speak out against evil. Tolerance
that condones deceit and unrighteousness is sin.
Those who think that Jesus was always tolerant should read Matthew 23, a
denunciation of hypocrisy. This passage proves forever that our Lord
was capable of scathing indignation at the pretense of religious
leaders. Or they should read Revelation 2:20, where he condemned the
Church in Thyatira for tolerating a woman teacher named Jezebel.
Paul, too, was intolerant of evil. He even mentioned names, something
that is considered unacceptable in evangelical circles today. He
delivered Hymenaeus and Alexander to Satan, that they might learn not to
blaspheme (1 Timothy 1:20). He didn't hesitate to single out Hymenaeus
and Philetus as false teachers (2 Timothy 2:17). And he denounced
Alexander the coppersmith by name for his evil behavior (2 Timothy
4:14).
John also had the courage to name Diotrephes as one who loved to have
the pre-eminence (3 John 9). It seems that the church today has lost its
capacity for godly intolerance. As Robert G Lee said, "We live in a
world of invertebrate theology, jellyfish mortality, seesaw religion,
India rubber convictions, somersault philosophy that tells us what we
already know in words which we do not understand."
The writings of William Barclay are another case in point. Barclay
denies the deity of Christ, the inspiration of the Scriptures, the
miracles of Jesus and his substitutionary atonement. He believes in the
eventual salvation of all mankind. Yet his books are sold in the
majority of Christian bookstores. He is widely quoted by prominent
evangelical leaders. And multitudes of Christians study his books on the
specious excuse that 'they contain such valuable background
information'. The fact that he is a heretic, a blasphemer and a deceiver
is not important. Neither, apparently, is the honor of our Lord Jesus
Christ.
A missionary to India was right on target when he wrote, "Toleration has
become so tolerant, that evil is included in that tolerance. We are in
danger of becoming 'moral cows' in our plump comfortableness."
It is an ungodly tolerance that has allowed so many pulpits in America
to be filled with "false apostles and deceitful workers, transforming
themselves into apostle's of Christ."
Detecting a resemblance to conditions in Elijah's day, J. Sidlow Baxter
writes, 'Such are the people who today, with sickly kindness, will
tolerate teachers of errors in our pulpits because they are such
smooth-mannered and amiable gentlemen. They would rather allow error to
be preached and souls to be deceived than hurt the preacher's feelings.
Let Baal be worshiped rather than drought come! Let the cancer kill its
victim rather than the cruel surgeon use the knife! ...The best thing
that could happen to some so-called Christian ministers of today is that
they should be denounced in God's name by their hearers.'
It is a sinful tolerance...
[1] that refuses to castigate a false church system that leads millions to eternal destruction with its perverted gospel.
[2] That honors its head as a great evangelist at the same time that he is condemning evangelicals as wolves.
[3] That labels God's prophets as divisive when they denounce its idolatry, its immorality and its other heresies.
[4] That sends converts back into its deadening clutches.
...What has happened to the church of the martyrs?
We have an enormous craving for popularity. This is the stuff of which
false prophets are made. We have a desire to avoid unpleasantness at all
cost. A desire like this keeps us from confronting, from intervening
when we should.
We have a distaste for being different. We find it easier to move along
with the crowd, to drift with the tide. It is all too easy to remain
silent when we are in an adverse theological climate. We are 'slaves who
dare not to be right with two or three.'
We have lost the capacity for being angry. We are not easily enough
disturbed. We are in the sorry state of having no capacity for
indignation. We are experts at putting off decisiveness simply because
we don't want to act.
Sometimes we are too blinded by friendship to stand against wrong. When a
Christian spoke out against E J Carnell's book, The Case For Orthodoxy, because it argued against the inspiration of the Scriptures, a friend
of the author said 'Well you do not know him personally as I do. He is a
gracious gentleman, a godly man.'
Jay Adams was right when he said 'In some circles, the fear of
controversy is so great that preachers and congregations following after
them will settle for peace at any cost - even the cost of the truth -
God's truth. The idea is that peace is all- important. Peace is a
biblical ideal ... but so is purity. The peace of the church may never
be bought at the price of the purity of the church. The price is too
dear.'
Ecumenism and catholicity are two great buzzwords today. Let's all get
together. Don't do or say anything to rock the boat. Doctrine divides,
they say. What we need is unity.
What we really need is to contend earnestly for the faith in a day when
it is being attacked, diluted and denied. We will be tolerant in matters
of indifference but intolerant of departure from the truth of God. With
Luther, 'Here we stand. We can do no other.'
J. C. Ryle also wrote:
Controversy in religion is a hateful thing. It is hard enough to fight
the devil, the world and the flesh without private differences in our
own camp - but there is one thing which is even worse than controversy
and that is false doctrine being tolerated, allowed and permitted
without protest or molestation ...
Three things there are which men ought never to trifle with:
A little poison
A little false doctrine
A little sin.