Are we Asleep?
This article was published in the
Presbyterian Standard, Issue No. 8, October-December 1997.
T
HAT great Reformer who restored to the church's public life the
doctrines of grace, John Calvin, fought the good fight of faith on many
fronts. Error in the church is a hydra-like monster, and when one head
is lopped off through faithful contending another three quickly appear
in its place, leering at the godly and enticing the unwary. Error dons
many clever disguises, such as zeal for God and love for men's souls,
and its flaming energies seem to be without limit, being fuelled and
fanned by the prince of hell himself.
Unconscious
A controversy which involved Calvin in some debate was with certain
sectarians who taught the doctrine of "soul-sleep." This was (and is)
the idea that souls departing this world enter into an unconscious
slumber, awaiting the wakening call of the resurrection day. Therefore
during this intermediate state both the righteous and the wicked share
the same portion. This doctrine is held today by the Seventh Day
Adventists among others.
We may with Calvin
refute this concept from Scripture, pointing perhaps to our Lord's
account of the rich man and Lazarus (Luke 16:19-31) — often
called a parable but apparently referring to real individuals —
where at death one soul was comforted and the other tormented. We would
prefer, in all seriousness, to locate this condition of ignorance and
inactivity in the present world, where the sinful masses seem quite
oblivious to solemn gospel warnings and repeated entreaties, sleeping
the sleep of death!
Zion
This slumber is only to be expected, given the whole race's
participation in Adam's first sin and in the awful promise spoken by
his Maker, "in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die."
(Gen. 2:17). That day saw the spiritual death of all mankind, the
separation of the soul from God, the fount of life and companion in
communion. We are bold, however, to suggest that there is also a kind
of "soul-sleep" in the church today — including the evangelical
and Reformed church.
The Lord in His
Word calls upon His people to stir themselves! "Awake, awake...arise"
(Judg. 5:12); "it is high time to awake out of sleep" (Rom. 13:11).
This makes plain to us that even converted souls, made alive unto God,
may at times fall into lethargy and be in danger of letting their
defences drop and shirking the conflict to which they are called. Do
not forget, in God's sight sloth is certainly sin (Prov. 6:6-12; Heb.
6:12)!
The times may have
changed but human nature decidedly has not. What else explains the
things we see all around us? We would expect to see God's saints
stirred to righteous indignation at national sin, to militancy in the
light of church apostacy, to fervent prayer in time of spiritual
declension, but instead we see slumber! A dreamy attitude has descended
upon the church: the Faith is still held in theory but no longer worked
out in practice.
Peace
A truly peaceable spirit is an asset to every Christian, but not one
that is silent in the face of sin. That sort of peace is an enemy of
righteousness, acting like a drug to quieten the conscience. What
changes, even in confessional churches, believers have seen (and
tolerated) in recent generations! It is one thing to open the door of a
place of worship and say to sinners of the world, "Welcome!" but quite
another for the church to grant the spirit of the world an entrance
into her very heart, to occupy the throne which Christ has set for
Himself. Gimmicks and follies have crept into the church's life
nonetheless: so many now are the instances of what can only be called
"evangelical silliness" in worship, evangelism and congregational life,
that the believer confronted by such a swelling tide of unbiblical
nonsense is sorely tempted to shrug his shoulders and to opt for the
quiet life of compromise.
Rebuke
Ministers deceive themselves if they think they are being faithful to
Christ by believing and preaching a generally orthodox gospel —
and leaving it at that. The devil is perfectly content with such an
attitude — after all, the congregation and the denomination may
be slipping into hell the meanwhile: but once begin to think, to act in
accordance with the principles of Truth, and Satan and his servants
will soon take note. What a rebuke the Lord had to give Israel's
shepherds: "His watchmen are blind: they are all ignorant, they are all
dumb dogs, they cannot bark; sleeping, lying down, loving to slumber."
(Isa. 56:10).
The Nation
Because of her unique religious history, the United Kingdom and
especially Scotland has been of peculiar importance in the development
of Christ's kingdom on earth during these last days. There can be
little doubt that viewed as a nation today we are asleep. Would a
Protestant people in time past have allowed themselves to be sucked
irresistibly into the vortex of a papist Europe without pausing to ask,
What are the religious consequences, what liberties may be lost? The
voices, even christian ones, that soothe us by saying there is no
danger merely illustrate their wilful ignorance of history and how
stupefying and subtle this condition is.
The nation is fast
losing what little collective spiritual conscience it possesses: the
permissive age which tentatively gave its approval to a limited range
of moral evils has now given way to what we might call the submissive
age, in which we witness a wholesale surrender to every form of
depravity. Unnatural lusts are celebrated, abortion mills ply their
grisly trade, the twin gods "leisure" and "pleasure" are worshipped
with abandon — and there is hardly a whimper of evangelical
protest, simply an attitude of indifference and resignation.
Ourselves?
We dare not distance ourselves from criticism, with that self-satisfied
spirit which says, "I...have need of nothing" (Rev. 3:17): the church's
risen Head says to such tepid disciples, "Where is your zeal? Repent of
your self-righteousness!" Too often we display the form of religion but
our fervency has evaporated: the smug majority is always against
"fanaticism" — even Christ, the model of sanity and reason,
suffered the taunts of His kith and kin — "He is beside
himself"....."a Samaritan"....."mad" (Mark 3:21; John 8:48; 10:20). We
need not then be disturbed or ashamed when the same are cast in our
faces: if we have a good conscience then they are badges of honour,
even tokens of our union with Christ. "It is enough for the disciple
that he be as his master, and the servant as his lord." (Matt. 10:25).
In past days there were those who rejoiced to unfurl His banner to the
full — and bear the consequences; they found that Christ was
outside the compromised camp, not within. Oh to have this sacrificial
spirit again!
God Awaking
Awakened souls, convinced of the horror of sin and its effects, know
what to do in a day of blasphemy; they call upon God to wake Himself:
"Awake, why sleepest thou, O Lord? arise, cast us not off for ever."
(Psa. 44:23). They do not excuse themselves from action because it is a
day of small things. In the mystery of His providence however, God may
have to be entreated many times before He will answer, as though He
must be goaded into action: like a stallion, finally provoked into a
powerful sweep of its tail by the nagging attentions of a swarm of
flies; or a slumbering parent, only roused by the concerted appeals of
a family of needy children.
Sin in this life
makes us sleepy, careless and prayerless. It is only in heaven with
Christ that the believer"s desires and attainments, his will and his
deed, shall be perfectly at one. We shall surely be satisfied, when we
awake there. |