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- STE:The price of unity by Vernon C. Lyons
-
- Twentieth century theologians have streamlined Christianity by
- reducing all the virtues to one--unity. In our generation the most
- respectable "ism" is ecumenism. Few people discern that there is a
- false unity as well as a true unity and that each is purchased at a
- staggering price.
-
- False church unity, which is the most popular kind is purchased with
- freedom as the price. Gospel liberty is obliterated and liberty of
- conscience becomes impractical, if not impossible. The communion of
- saints is forfeited for a communion of committees. The minority speaks
- for the mass and the conscience of the individual Christian is
- by-passed for the consensus of a committee.
-
- This kind of church unity is also attained at the price of truth.
- Those who major on mergers tend to believe very little and after
- merging believe still less. They are more noted for their compromises
- than their convictions. Their spiritual discernment having been dulled,
- they move in a doctrinal dusk that calls non-churches churches and
- regards unbelievers as believers. In the mania to merge, fixed truths
- become forgotten tenets.
-
- True church unity is also costly! It is to be obtained not by
- compromise, but by conflict. The faith must not be diluted, but
- defended (Jude 3). It may cost a man his unscriptural creed and his
- man-made catechism. This kind of unity flows from a humility which is
- willing to reject human tradition and subject itself to divine truth,
- as stated in God's Holy Word. This unity is described by the words,
- "One Lord, one faith, one baptism" (Eph. 4:5). The beginning of this
- unity is one Lord. The basis of this unity is one faith. The badge of
- this unity is one baptism.
-
- This true unity will cost you your prejudice, your pride, and
- perhaps even your popularity.
-