
Introduction
Punishment In Old Testament
Punishment In New Testament
Rules Governing Church Discipline
Considerations Necessary in Implementing Church Discipline
How Soon Should Church Discipline Be Implemented?
The Fruits of True Repentance
Cutting-Off
Our Duty
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HOW SOON SHOULD CHURCH DISCIPLINE BE IMPLEMENTED?
A. ON PERSONAL TRESPASS. (MATTHEW 18:15-18)
“But Christ has given special light as to how to deal with
those who are erring, and with those who are unconverted in the
church. There is to be no spasmodic, zealous, hasty action taken
by church members in cutting off those they may think defective
in character… The Lord forbids us to proceed in any violent
way against those whom we think erring, and we are not to deal
out excommunications and denunciations to those who are faulty.”
TM 46-47.
B. ON PUBLIC SIN AND WHEN THE PROSPERITY OF THE CHURCH
IS THREATENED. ( 2T 14-16)
“There were some in sacred office who pleaded for their
heathen wives, declaring that they could not bring themselves
to separate from them. But no distinction was made; no respect
was shown for rank or position. Whoever among the priests or rulers
refused to sever his connection with idolaters was immediately
separated from the service of the Lord. A grandson of the high
priest, having married a daughter of the notorious Sanballat,
was not only removed from office, but promptly banished from Israel.
"Remember them, O my God," Nehemiah prayed, "because
they have defiled the priesthood, and the covenant of the priesthood,
and of the Levites."
“How much anguish of soul this needed severity cost the
faithful worker for God the judgment alone will reveal. There
was a constant struggle with opposing elements, and only by fasting,
humiliation, and prayer was advancement made. Many who had married
idolaters chose to go with them into exile, and these, with those
who had been expelled from the congregation, joined the Samaritans.”
PK 673-674.
“Though God had granted the prayer of Moses in sparing Israel
from destruction, their apostasy was to be signally punished.
The lawlessness and insubordination into which Aaron had permitted
them to fall, if not speedily crushed, would run riot in wickedness,
and would involve the nation in irretrievable ruin. By terrible
severity the evil must be put away… So with the apostasy
at Sinai. Unless punishment had been speedily visited upon transgression,
the same results would again have been seen. The earth would have
become as corrupt as in the days of Noah. Had these transgressors
been spared, evils would have followed, greater than resulted
from sparing the life of Cain. It was the mercy of God that thousands
should suffer, to prevent the necessity of visiting judgments
upon millions. In order to save the many, He must punish the few.
Furthermore, as the people had cast off their allegiance to God,
they had forfeited the divine protection, and, deprived of their
defense, the whole nation was exposed to the power of their enemies.
Had not the evil been promptly put away, they would soon have
fallen a prey to their numerous and powerful foes. It was necessary
for the good of Israel, and also as a lesson to all succeeding
generations, that crime should be promptly punished. And it was
no less a mercy to the sinners themselves that they should be
cut short in their evil course. Had their life been spared, the
same spirit that led them to rebel against God would have been
manifested in hatred and strife among themselves, and they would
eventually have destroyed one another. It was in love to the world,
in love to Israel, and even to the transgressors, that crime was
punished with swift and terrible severity.” PP 324-326.
“But God hates hypocrisy and falsehood. Ananias and Sapphira
practiced fraud in their dealing with God; they lied to the Holy
Spirit, and their sin was visited with swift and terrible judgment…
Infinite Wisdom saw that this signal manifestation of the wrath
of God was necessary to guard the young church from becoming demoralized.
Their numbers were rapidly increasing. The church would have been
endangered if, in the rapid increase of converts, men and women
had been added who, while professing to serve God, were worshiping
mammon. This judgment testified that men cannot deceive God, that
He detects the hidden sin of the heart, and that He will not be
mocked. It was designed as a warning to the church, to lead them
to avoid pretense and hypocrisy, and to beware of robbing God.
“Not to the early church only, but to all future generations,
this example of God's hatred of covetousness, fraud, and hypocrisy,
was given as a danger-signal… In the” case of Ananias
and Sapphira, the sin of fraud against God was speedily punished.
The same sin was often repeated in the after history of the church
and is committed by many in our time. But though it may not be
attended by the visible manifestation of God's displeasure, it
is no less heinous in His sight now than in the apostles' time.”
AA 72-76.
“To establish his guilt beyond all question, leaving no
ground for the charge that he had been unjustly condemned, Joshua
solemnly adjured Achan to acknowledge the truth. The wretched
man made full confession of his crime: "Indeed I have sinned
against the Lord God of Israel. . . . When I saw among the spoils
a goodly Babylonish garment, and two hundred shekels of silver,
and a wedge of gold of fifty shekel's weight, then I coveted them,
and took them; and, behold, they are hid in the earth in the midst
of my tent." Messengers were immediately dispatched to the
tent, where they removed the earth at the place specified, and
"behold, it was hid in his tent, and the silver under it.
And they took them out of the midst of the tent, and brought them
unto Joshua, . . . and laid them out before the Lord."
“Sentence was pronounced and immediately executed.”
PP 495.
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