"Do you promise to tell the
truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?" Every witness
swears to do exactly this in court. It's obvious why we are sworn to tell
the truth: lying eliminates any possibility of justice. But a partial
truth is also as false as an outright lie. "Did you see the bank
employee place $5000 in her briefcase?" "Yes, I saw her do
it." The statement is true, but it's only a partial truth -- for the
witness also knew that the bank employee had been instructed to place the
$5000 in her briefcase in order to transport it to another branch. Any
truth that is less than the whole truth has the force of a lie. In the
same way when the whole truth is spoken but more than the truth is added
to it, then even the whole truth has the force of a lie. "The truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth" means that there is no
attempt to mislead, no attempt to falsify; there is neither anything said
nor anything not said that will deceive anyone in any way. In other words,
the witness is totally transparent.
When the apostle Paul was about to leave the congregation
in Ephesus, where he had ministered for three years, and move on to Rome,
he reminded the Christians in Ephesus, "I did not shrink from
declaring to you the whole counsel of God."(Acts 20:27) He meant,
"I have spoken the truth of God's good news; I have spoken the whole
truth, and only the truth; I am as transparent to the gospel as I can
be." What is "the whole counsel of God?" What aspects
comprise the whole gospel? If we look at chapter 20 of Luke's Acts
of the Apostles we shall discover what Paul had in mind, what inflamed
his heart.
I: --
He tells the church elders in Ephesus that he
testified "of repentance to God and of faith in our Lord Jesus
Christ."(20:21) This is bedrock. This is the foundation. This is
where Christian existence begins. Repentance to God means that the God we
cannot escape in any case we shall now no longer flee. Repentance to God
means that the God we have always ignored we are now going to honour and
love and obey.
We must understand that repentance to God and faith in our
Lord Jesus Christ are not two different matters. Jesus Christ is
the presence and power of God in our midst. To repent (return to
God) and to entrust ourselves to Jesus Christ; these are one and the same.
The result of this is that under God we move from being a
creature of God to a child of God. Everyone is a creature of God (as are
the animals, for that matter); children of God are those who have welcomed
Jesus Christ, their elder brother, and in his company have been quickened
by the invisible work of the Spirit.
Needless to say in discussing spiritual matters we can
bring forward all kinds of illustrations from the realms of botany and
zoology and psychology and history. Eventually, however, the illustrations
are seen to be just that: illustrations, but never exact parallels. They
can't be parallels just because botany and zoology, psychology and history
all pertain to what is natural; they all pertain to what occurs as a
development within nature. To move from a creature of God to a child of
God, however; from someone whom God loves to someone who loves God, from
assuming God to be maker to intimate acquaintance with God as father; all
of this arises from the infiltration of God's Spirit. And for the work of
God's Spirit there may be many illustrations from nature but there are no
parallels from nature, just because the work of God's Spirit isn't a
natural occurrence.
It was years before I understood the importance of
horse-breeding. In fact I didn't appreciate the importance of
horse-breeding until a friend, a physician who is a lung-specialist with a
professional interest in pulmonary function, told me that by dint of the
hardest athletic training the most any person can improve her lung
capacity is 3%. Should I train as a rower or a long-distance runner? The
hardest training will enable my lungs to perform only 3% better. In other
words, before the athlete is trained the athlete has to have the proper
genes. The athlete has to be born with an athletic potential that is
trainable.
At this point I understood why "horsey" people
are so fussy about the pedigree of a horse. There's no point in training
any horse at all for the Kentucky Derby. The only horse worth training is
the horse that has already been bred. To be sure, Jesus trained disciples.
But before he schooled them and subjected them to daily rigour; before he
did any of this he called them, and they responded in repentance and
faith. Therein, precisely there, they were conceived and
quickened and birthed as his men and women whom he would subsequently
school and train and use.
We have to begin at the beginning. "Repentance to God
and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ" is this beginning. It is the
foundation of "the whole counsel of God."
II: --
Another aspect of the "whole counsel"
Paul speaks of when he declares, "I did not shrink from declaring to
you anything that was profitable."(20:20) The apostle had commended
to anyone at any time anything that he deemed to be edifying, helpful,
useful; anything that was instructive, enlightening, fruitful, beneficial.
He did so because in the absence of what edifies there will invariably
effervesce what coarsens; in the absence of ceaseless reiteration of what
builds up or enriches there will inevitably appear what destroys or
degrades. We never have to go out of our way to find any of this. All we
need do is underemphasize, under-attend to all that is
"profitable", and instantly all that is demeaning and degrading
and distressing will surge over us.
There is much evidence that our society has little
appreciation of what is profitable, little appreciation of what ensues if
we don't know or don't care or don't hold up what is profitable. Several
years ago a Canadian Prime Minister wished to explain to Canadians why his
government had removed several expressions of sexual conduct from the
criminal code. Assuming that what he put forward all Canadians of normal
intelligence would see to be the soul of common sense he said, "The
state has no business in the bedrooms of the nation." Many people
remarked to me how sound the prime minister's remark was. But I thought
differently. To be sure, I think I know why he said what he said and whom
he wished (rightly) to protect. At the same time, I didn't regard his
statement as self-evidently wise. What happens in Canadian bedrooms isn't
the concern of legislators? What if what happens in the bedroom is cruel?
What if it is exploitative? What if it is degrading? What if it is
perverse? "Perverse!" a woman in the congregation exploded at
me, "'perverse' is an old-fashioned term that has no relevance today.
The sexual revolution means that no sexual conduct should be labelled
perverse." Whereupon I told her that according to what she had just
said, paedophilia should be celebrated as sexual liberation. She was
appalled, and told me that paedophilia was perverse in that it
entailed the sexual exploitation of a child. Whereupon I asked her if it
had to be a child who was exploited before we could use the term
"perverse." (In other words, is it acceptable to exploit an
adult?) By now she was angry at me in that I had got her to admit that
there is such a thing as perversion. When she fell silent I decided to ask
her a question: "Do you think that all social sanctions should be
withdrawn with respect to bestiality? Should bestiality be looked upon as
one more sexual expression, as acceptable as any other?" Silence. My
point is this: what virtually all Canadians regarded as self-evidently
wise (the Prime Minister's statement) I regarded as asinine.
It is plain that there is no agreement as to what is
perverse and what is normal, what is acceptable and what is reprehensible.
The apostle told the congregation in Ephesus that he had always declared
what he deemed to be profitable, and had declared it just because he knew
that congregations need to hear what is profitable. Then what is
profitable? Let's be sure we know. Let's be sure we think more critically
than those Canadians who didn't assess the Prime Minister's remark. Let's
be sure we know where we can learn what is profitable. Paul says he didn't
shrink from declaring to the Christians in Ephesus anything that
was profitable.
III: --
Next the little man from Tarsus informs us of
another aspect of the whole counsel of God. In Acts 20:2 we are told that
as he travelled through Macedonia he "gave them [i.e., the Christians
whom he met] much encouragement." We need to be encouraged; all of us
need to be encouraged; all of us need to be encouraged all the time. Why
do we need to be encouraged? Because we are either discouraged or
uncouraged.
Now here we have to take a little detour in English
grammar. The English prefix "dis" means that something that was
once the case is no longer the case. A dismasted sailboat is a boat that
had a mast once but has a mast no longer. (The mast was broken off in a
storm.) The English prefix "un", on the other hand, means that
something has never been the case: undeveloped camera film is film that
has never been developed.
The point is obvious. We need to be encouraged both when
we are uncouraged and when we are discouraged. Sometimes we
find ourselves in new situations where fear freezes us; we are
face-to-face with danger or threat or simply the unknown concerning
something that we are looking at for the first time; at this point we are
uncouraged and need to be heartened. At other times we find ourselves in
situations that aren't new; we've been in them before -- and just because
we've been there before, we are discouraged and need to be heartened. I am
convinced that while we certainly do find ourselves uncouraged in life as
we face something new, we find ourselves discouraged far more often. Most
of life isn't new; most of life is old; in fact, most of life is
"same old." That's just the problem. We are discouraged far more
often than we are uncouraged. Most often it's the same old thing: same old
letdown, same old betrayal, same old disappointment, same old frustration,
same old sacrifice thrown back in our face, same old experience of giving,
giving, giving while the "leeches" around us are satisfied with
taking, taking, taking. We are discouraged in the face of the "same,
old"; we are uncouraged in the face of the "different,
new." Since life is far more same than different, far more old than
new, we are chiefly discouraged.
Then how are we to be encouraged? How will the whole
counsel of God encourage us? We need to keep in our hearts the truth that
we are not the only players on the stage of life; we are not the only
actors in the drama. As was the case with the three young men in
Nebuchadnezzar's fiery furnace, we are not alone. There is another one
present whose presence counts for more than anyone else's; this one's
presence is determinative. Because of this extraordinary player, the drama
can never finally be tragic; the drama can never finally be pointless; it
can never finally be inconclusive.
At the same time, when I need to be encouraged I find I am
sent or given whatever I need to demonstrate once more the secret
effectiveness of the extraordinary player in the drama. For instance, not
so long ago I received a letter from a woman who had been a psychiatric
patient in Mississauga Hospital years ago. She was writing me to encourage
me, she said, inasmuch as I had encouraged her most tellingly when she was
struggling for life in every sense of the word. Needless to say I did for
her neither more nor less than I should expect any clergyman to do for
her. No matter: her letter told me that at one point I had stood between
her and an unravelling so pronounced as to be unimaginable.
In the providence of God, what is sent you or given you or
shown you that profoundly encourages you, and encourages you particularly
with respect to the truth and triumph of the kingdom?
(ii)
There is another means by which we are
encouraged, whether we need encouraging because we are uncouraged or
discouraged: we are encouraged by something as simple as our bodily
proximity to each other. I never weary of those two verses from the two
shortest books in the New Testament, John's second epistle and his third.
In one verse of each letter John says that he wants to see his
fellow-believers face-to-face, so that their joy (his and theirs) may be
complete. (2 J.12, 3 J.13) Surely to find our joy complete in each other's
bodily presence is to find ourselves encouraged. Joy throbs only where
discouragement is dispelled.
When I return home from a holiday, especially the sort of
holiday that entails a protracted absence, the first thing I have to do is
look up my friends; I have to go and see them. What do my friends and I
talk about when we are beholding each other face-to-face? We talk about
what we could just as easily talk about over the telephone. Then why get
together? Because meeting bodily does for us both, does for our
friendship, what no telephone conversation will ever do. The profoundest
human meeting is always a bodily meeting.
If all of this is true with respect to natural
friendships, how much more telling it is if we are going to encourage each
others in matters of the Spirit.
IV: --
The whole counsel of God includes something
more; it includes admonition, warning, even heartache. Paul says to the
elders in Ephesus, "For three years I did not cease night or day to
admonish every one with tears."(20:31) At the same time that Paul was
encouraging every one in Ephesus he was also admonishing every one. Why?
What was occurring within the congregation that found Paul admonishing
every one with tears night and day? To answer our question we must look at
two other N.T. documents that speak of the congregation in Ephesus.
In his letter to the Corinthian Christians Paul writes,
"I fought with beasts at Ephesus."(1 Cor. 15:32) He doesn't mean
that he fought literally with wild beasts as a gladiator in an arena. Paul
was a Roman citizen, and no Roman citizen could be forced into
gladiatorial combat. "I fought with beasts at Ephesus" means
"I had to contend with influential people in the congregation who
were bent on distorting the gospel and dismembering the people." In
any congregation there can always appear those who knowingly or
unknowingly deny the gospel, denature the gospel, and damage the
congregation. These people may wreak their havoc through ignorance,
through stupidity, through folly, through malice; but whatever their
motive and however they behave, they are distressing and dangerous; they
have to be resisted. Paul contended with them when he lived for three
years with the Christians in Ephesus. He admonished others to resist these
gospel-deniers as well.
But why does he say that he admonished night and day with
tears? To answer this question we must turn to the book of Revelation.
There we are told that the congregation in Ephesus was noted for its
energy and its orthodoxy: energetically it had fended off any and all
false teaching. Good. The gospel-deniers hadn't been allowed to reach
first base. Good. And yet the congregation in Ephesus was known for one
thing more, says the book of Revelation (2:4): it had lost its first love.
What was its first love? What did it mean to lose it?
There are two aspects of losing one's first love. (i) The
congregation in Ephesus was so very determined to fend off false teaching
(as it should) that it became hard and harsh itself; it became more
concerned with doctrinal precision than with whole-soulled,
self-forgetful, other-embracing love. In its zeal for doctrinal purity it
settled for spiritual sterility; it allowed love to evaporate. (ii)
The second aspect of losing one's first love is simply a matter of having
one's love for one's spouse weaken and weaken until it dies out. According
to the prophet Jeremiah (2:2) God says to Israel, "I remember; I
remember...your love as a bride, how you followed me in the
wilderness." Israel's love for God was once new and fresh and vibrant
and resolute; Israel's love for God was once so ardent that Israel would
follow God anywhere, even amidst wilderness hardships. And then the ardour
and ecstasy of her love declined, and declined still more, until finally
Israel lost her love for God. The book of Revelation says that this had
happened with the congregation in Ephesus. Its love for its Lord had grown
cold; its love for people had grown cold as, under pressure from the
gospel-deniers, it became more concerned with doctrinal precision than
with self-denying compassion.
Concerning this matter the message to any congregation is
so obvious that I shall not say another word about it.
V: --
Lastly, at the end of his address to the
congregation in Ephesus Paul says, "I coveted no one's silver or gold
or apparel. You yourselves know that these hands ministered to my
necessities, and to those who were with me."(20:33-34) Paul is
reminding his hearers that all the time he was with them in Ephesus he
didn't sponge off them; he wasn't a freeloader; he didn't try to enrich
himself by means of the gospel; he wasn't a financial schemer; in fact he
had no hidden agenda at all. Moreover, in envying nobody's silver or gold
or clothing he didn't poison the congregation with that envy which always
poisons congregational life. In short, he neither enriched himself nor
poisoned others.
Paul is now speaking not of the content of the whole
counsel of God but rather of the manner in which the whole counsel is
delivered. At the end of the day the content of our witness and the style
of our witness must be found to enhance each other. They will be
found enhancing each other as long as in our encouraging, in our
admonishing, in our exhorting to repentance and faith, in our speaking the
profitable word; as long as in all that we do we continue to cherish,
glory in, and find ourselves ravished by our first love.
Victor Shepherd April 2002