Tim Conway warns that arrogance disguised as false humility causes churches to tolerate sin instead of exercising loving discipline for the purity and health of the body of Christ. This sermon emphasizes the importance of church discipline and purity, highlighting the need for humility, obedience to God's Word, and the responsibility to judge and correct one another in love within the church community. It addresses reasons why churches may struggle with implementing discipline, such as personal sin, false humility, fear of consequences, and a lack of understanding of the biblical mandate to judge righteously. The speaker urges believers to run the race of faith together, supporting and correcting one another for the sake of the church's purity and individual spiritual growth.
Full Transcript
It's pride to tell God, well, we're just too loving and merciful to do what you've told us to do in your word. And remember, brethren, what is even the case when you put somebody out of the church? Is it not love that does that? It's love for the church and love for the church's purity, and it's love for the individual. Has the church you are a part of ever disciplined someone? Are there professing believers in the church who are living in ongoing sin and it is not addressed? Why is this? Why are churches not practicing church discipline and excommunicating someone? This excerpt is from The Difficult Path to Church Purity, preached in 2017.
And I want you to notice something else here. Notice verse 2, And you are arrogant, brethren, notice verse 6, your boasting is not good. And notice those two words, arrogance and boasting.
Because I want you to remember what sort of arrogance and boasting this is. This isn't just somebody after the service goes out here in the parking lot and they're able to throw a football further than somebody else and they boast about it. This arrogance and this boasting is the kind of arrogance and the kind of boasting that will not discipline somebody out of a church when they need to be disciplined out of a church.
And we need to catch hold of these two statements. Paul is responding to an attitude that was held to by the Corinthian church that was behind why they had not already put this man out. Now think about this.
What are the reasons? Think with me. What are the reasons that churches don't practice this? I mean in the churches around us. Or even in individuals in our own church who get angry when sin or false doctrine is dealt with.
Let's think about why. Well, sometimes it's because the angry person is guilty of the very same things. Do you know? Let me just tell you this.
The individual that we put out of the church on Wednesday. One of the reasons he flip-flopped in where he was is because he told James and myself that after confessing these sins that he's been involved with, he actually spoke to some in the church who sought to put him at ease by telling him, I do the same thing. And I'm a Christian.
And he was actually influenced by that. I told him, you don't want to measure yourself by other people. That is really dangerous.
You know what? Sometimes people don't want to do it because they're guilty of the same things. Sometimes putting somebody out of the church condemns somebody else still sitting in the church. Because their life is a testimony of the same.
Sometimes it's because people carry around the attitude of, well, who am I to judge? You know, judge not lest ye be judged. That permeates the world's thinking and it comes into the church. Well, who am I to judge? Who am I to cast the first stone? I mean, I've got sin.
My life isn't perfect. So who am I to do this? But you just need to recognize, Paul is calling imperfect people to carry this out. And you know the Corinthians at this point are imperfect.
And yet he's calling very imperfect people to carry forth with this action. Sometimes it's because people feel that this is cruel. Sometimes it's because people just despise authority.
Some people just hate the thought that the church actually has the authority to say that if you're going to live that way, you cannot fellowship with us. Some people just don't like that. Sometimes it's because, and I feel the weight of this, sometimes the reason we don't like to exercise this is because we love that person and we want them involved in our lives and we have a friendship with them and it's going to be broken by this action.
Sometimes it's family members. I understand that. But that is a reason for us to not carry through with this.
Some have a false humility. It's the same false humility that is behind not disciplining your children. It's the same false humility behind being averse to capital punishment.
It's basically that false humility that runs around never wanting people to suffer consequences for their sin. And I call it false humility because it's not humility that tolerates sin in the church. Paul says it's arrogance that is tolerant.
Do you all see that? In verse 2, notice what Paul says. Ought you not rather to mourn? Can I tell you something, brethren? It's brokenhearted humility that puts people out of the church. I don't doubt that there are some leaders in some churches that are just blatantly heavy-handed and when somebody opposes them, like diatrophies, they use texts like this for their own agenda.
I don't doubt that. But brethren, sometimes the way people react... Well, I know. I know you don't know how the leaders of churches that practice church discipline wrestle and struggle and pray and weep.
True humility doesn't say, well, God, let me tell You how we're going to deal with sin in the church. That's not true humility, folks. And that's what a lot of churches do.
True humility listens to God, listens to His Son, listens to His Apostles, and surrenders. It's pride to tell God, well, we're just too loving and merciful to do what You've told us to do in Your Word. And if you think, well, who are we to judge? Well, you need to read v. 12.
Is it not those inside the church whom you are to judge? Put away this idea that we have no right to judge one another. We are commanded to judge one another. Not unrighteously, but with righteous judgment.
We are to evaluate one another's lives. Brethren, do you not recognize we are running in a race together? John talked about running this race in the first hour. We run this race, but not as islands unto ourselves.
We run this race with a group of people. And it's love that as I'm running the race, my eyes are not just on that finish line selfishly concerned about only me making it. Paul could look at the churches and say on that day, you are going to be my crown.
Brethren, when we get there, and we helped one another, and when we were discouraged, and when we were bored down with weights, and we bore one another's burdens, and when we began to go cold, and we stirred up one another the love and good works, and when we were feeling like we didn't want to go to that prayer meeting and all of us lifted up our voices together in song that night, and it filled one another with the praise of God and with power of the Spirit to go out and face this world again. Brethren, we are in this together. We are running a race together.
That's why God put His people in churches. He didn't say go as far away from each other as possible, but rather come together. And we have a responsibility to judge one another and judge the condition of one another.
And to look around and to look at the state of one another. And to encourage one another and rebuke one another and deal with one another when our brothers sin against us or we see sin in their life. And remember, brethren, what is even the case when you put somebody out of the church? Is it not love that does that? It's love for the church and love for the church's purity.
And it's love for the individual. Because some way or another, there is a way that even Satan can save some of our fallen brothers. And that's what the text teaches.
You're not being loving when you resist bad doctrine, people who promote it. Brethren, I'm talking in the church, on the Internet, or wherever. And for you to associate with it, it's to be blind.
Because you know what? I believe that we have young people that tolerate association with bad stuff on the Internet. And you think yourself impervious to it, but you're not impervious. You're no more impervious than the race of mankind was to one woman's sin or to the angels were over one devil's sin.
It permeates. And a little leaven leavens the whole lump. And you can sit there on the Internet and think, oh, well, I'm impervious to this.
I'm wise enough to avoid this. Have you never read the pastoral epistles? Avoid these foolish controversies. Avoid them.
Why? Because they tend to bad things. They tend to slander and evil suspicions and divisions and dissension. That's what they aim to, brethren.
And you young people, you know what? There's a place to cut off that hand and gouge out that eye. Don't go on Facebook and look at that stuff. Brethren, I'm talking about that which is poison.
There's lots of good stuff out there. And there's good stuff among us. But brethren, we are running a race.
And the thing is, when you get on the Internet and you engage in controversy that only leads to negative things, you know what you do? You infect the whole. Because a little corruption allowed in the church begins to permeate and it spreads. That's the reality that we find.
And it's arrogance that allows this. It's arrogance that is tolerant. We are a people called to judge.
Sermon Outline
I. The Problem of Arrogance and Boasting
Arrogance prevents church discipline
Boasting about tolerance is harmful
Corinthian church's failure as an example
II. Reasons Churches Avoid Discipline
Guilt of others in the same sin
Fear of judging others
Love and friendship hinder action
False humility that tolerates sin
III. True Humility and Love in Discipline
Discipline is an act of love for purity
Imperfect people are called to judge righteously
Church discipline protects the community
IV. The Danger of Tolerating Sin and False Doctrine
Sin and false teaching spread like leaven
Avoiding foolish controversies
The responsibility to judge and protect the church
Key Quotes
“It's pride to tell God, well, we're just too loving and merciful to do what You've told us to do in Your Word.” — Tim Conway
“True humility listens to God, listens to His Son, listens to His Apostles, and surrenders.” — Tim Conway
“It's love for the church and love for the church's purity, and it's love for the individual.” — Tim Conway
Application Points
Evaluate your own heart to avoid arrogance disguised as false humility when confronting sin.
Support and participate in loving church discipline as an act of care for the community.
Avoid engaging in divisive controversies that harm the unity and purity of the church.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is church discipline necessary?
Church discipline is necessary to maintain the purity of the church and to lovingly restore those caught in sin.
Is judging others always wrong?
No, Christians are commanded to judge righteously within the church to help one another grow and maintain holiness.
What is false humility in the context of church discipline?
False humility is the attitude that tolerates sin to avoid confrontation or suffering, which is actually pride in disguise.
How does arrogance affect the church's response to sin?
Arrogance leads to tolerance of sin and prevents the church from exercising necessary discipline, harming the entire body.
How should Christians handle false doctrine and controversy?
Christians should avoid foolish controversies that cause division and instead focus on guarding the church's purity.
Arrogance in Disguise
Tim Conway
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