Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Fundamentalist and Evangelical are not a Four-Letter Words

B.B. Warfield- Fundamentalist

On a fairly regular basis, I will encounter people who think of themselves as particularly enlightened, and, over the course of a theological disagreement, they will announce that I am a 'Fundamentalist.' This claim, I suppose, is intended to make me recoil in fear at my own opinion and cause others to view me as some sort of unclean leper that should be cast out of civilized society. What is sad, is that so many of my theologically conservative counterparts tend to react to these sorts of accusations by immediately dropping whatever subject is at hand and defending themselves against this apparently outrageous charge.

For my own part, I simply reply "I am not a Fundamentalist, I am an Evangelical, though, frankly, our nation could use a few more Christian Fundamentalists." I then return to the conversation at hand. 


What is a Fundamentalist?

Historically speaking, the term 'Fundamentalist' first became prominent in America in association with a brilliant series of essays called 'The Fundamentals: A Testimony to the Truth". These articles, headlined by the likes of Warfield, pictured above, and other leading conservative theologians were published from 1910-1915 and sought to combat the errors of higher criticism and modernism. The heart of the movement was the inerrancy of the Scriptures, and they also strongly argued for penal substitutionary atonement, the literal virgin birth and resurrection of Jesus,  and also taking the miracles of Christ and the global flood/creation accounts literally. 

All of these things I happily stand for, and on most counts, conservative theologians today generally do as well (issues in Genesis and nature of atonement being the only real areas of dispute). In this sense the 'F-word' (which is how so many modern scholars treat it) is not the millstone it is made out to be. It is simply the affirmation that the Bible means what it says and is right about it. Fundamentalism was an ecumenical movement that highlighted the strength and agreement of God-fearing people against the rise of a liberal and shameful perversion of God's truth. 

Why am I not a Fundamentalist?

If I celebrate their doctrine so enthusiastically, then why, exactly, do I not take up the mantle of Fundamentalism and own it proudly? The answer lies in the work of one of the most under-appreciated theological minds in the 20th century, Carl F.H. Henry. I have referenced him before in this blog, but, I must repeat that if you have not read Henry, place him as the next author on your reading list. His work is fantastic. 

Carl F.H. Henry- Evangelical

In 1947, Henry published his book The Uneasy Conscience of Modern Fundamentalism in which he challenged conservative Christianity to not simply hold strong doctrine but to live it. Borrowing the term 'Evangelical' from concept in the great Awakenings, Henry sought a revivalist's spirit with a Puritan's mind. The goal was to 100% retain the sound theology of Fundamentalism while also emphasizing the command from Christ to spread the Gospel. 

Henry continued this challenge throughout his life, publishing many other works, including Evangelical Responsibility in Contemporary Theology (1957) and Christian Countermoves in a Decadent Culture  (1986). 

Cultural redefinitions

In addition to the stigma surrounding the term 'Fundamentalism', many conservatives have begun to argue for the abandonment of the term 'Evangelical' as well, since it has been hijacked by liberal, mainline Protestants of various denominations. I think there should be an awareness of the cultural expectation that surrounds these terms, but I also think it is a terrible shame to simply let them be ravaged by those who spit in the face of God. 

Neither label is essential, obviously, because in any instance the substance of a thing is far more meaningful than what you call it. (Insert worn out Shakespeare quote, here.) However, we owe so much to men like Warfield and Henry that I think it is unfortunate that a new generation of budding conservative theologians may associate their terms and concepts with something as nefarious as liberalism (in the case of Evangelicalism) or radical extremism (in the case of Fundamentalism). These movements, and the goal they aimed for, are a very important part of our religious heritage as theologically conservative Christians in America. So, even if you do not use these terms, yourself, understand their history and be willing to inform others of that history when the opportunity presents itself. 

Friday, October 9, 2015

A misconception about Arminianism




I promised this post a while ago, and I am going to deliver it, even though what I have to say here will probably upset many of my Calvinist friends.

Is Arminianism heresy?

Nope. A lot of my Reformed friends like to refer to the Canons of Dort as proof that Arminianism has indeed been declared heresy. But, let's take a step back for a moment and realize exactly what the Canons of Dort were, they were a regional council within a specific church under a specific confession. This was not the sort of great, ecumenical council of the church that saw Arianism or Marcionism thrown aside, this was a regional group making a decision for those under their confession. (And, incidentally enough, it caused a split amongst Dutch Monergists as well, with Lutherans breaking away from the Reformed). 

For a modern comparison, the canons of Dort were similar to a modern denominational position paper. Occasionally, denominations will take the time to clarify their position on certain topics that become controversial either in their churches or in their nation/society. This may deal with abortion, women in ministry, homosexuality, or, I have even seen some try to nail down a confessional position on the exact nature of Divine Impassibility or the Regulative Principle of Worship. 

These types of papers declare where that group stands on that issue, and they serve as a notice to any that would consider joining or associating with them as to what is expected. This does not represent the same sort of ecumenical recognition of orthodoxy that one sees even in such documents as the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy or the Danvers Statement. Because Dort falls into this lesser category, it is a mistake to try to declare Arminianism heresy on the basis of that document. 

Arminians do believe in Total Depravity

When I use the term 'Arminians', here, what I am referring to is the group specifically dealt with in the Canons of Dort. These were followers of Jacob Arminius who sought to defend his theological system, which was rooted in the Reformed Belgic Confession. Dort was actually written as a response to the Articles of Remonstrance. Article 3 of clearly says that man has no free will in and of himself, and that he needs the grace of God to have the ability to turn to God.

In this respect, Arminians are consistent with Augustine and reject Pelagianism.

Arminius himself sums it up nicely:


But in his lapsed and sinful state, man is not capable, of any by himself, either to think, to will, or to do that which is really good, but it is necessary for him to be regenerated and renewed in his intellect, affections or will, and in all his powers, by God in Christ through the Holy Spirit, that he may be qualified rightly to understand, esteem, consider, will, and perform whatever is truly good. When he is made a partaker of this regeneration or renovation, I consider that, since he is delivered from sin, he is capable of thinking, willing, and doing that which is good, but yet not without the continued aids of Divine Grace.(Works of Arminius, Vol 1 ccel.org)

Arminians do believe in Election

Now, please do not mistake me, the Arminian view of election is different than the Calvinist one, and I do believe that it is quite mistaken. But, it would also be a terrible misrepresentation of Arminianism to suggest they do not have a doctrine of election. 

As Arminius defined it:

Predestination therefore, as it regards the thing itself, is the Decree of the good pleasure of God in Christ, by which He resolved within Himself from all eternity, to justify, adopt, and endow with everlasting life, to the praise of His own glorious grace, believers on whom He had decreed to bestow faith.(Ibid, above)
The difference between the Arminian view of election and the Calvinist view is metaphysical, it addresses the difference in how they view God's decree. In Arminianism, God decrees his grace on mankind, allowing them to have freedom, before he decrees who will be saved. In Calvinism, to decree those who will be saved is to decree who will receive his grace. The result is two different notions of freedom, and two different doctrines of election.

Arminius responds to caricatures of his position:



ARTICLE 27 (7.)
'Faith is not the pure gift of God, but depends partly on the grace of God, and partly on the powers of Free Will; that, if a man will, he may believe or not believe.'
I never said this, I never thought of saying it, and, relying on God’s grace, I never will enunciate my sentiments on matters of this description in a manner thus desperate and confused. I simply affirm, that this enunciation is false, “faith is not the pure gift of God;” that this is likewise false, if taken according to the rigor of the words, “faith depends partly on the grace of God, and partly on the powers of free will” and that this is also false when thus enunciated, “If a man will, he can believe or not believe.” If they suppose, that I hold some opinions from which these assertions may by good consequence be deduced, why do they not quote my words? It is aspecies of injustice to attach to any person those consequences, which one may frame out of his words as if they were his sentiments. But the injustice is still more flagrant, if these conclusions cannot by good consequence be deduced from what he has said. Let my brethren, therefore, make the experiment, whether they can deduce such consectaries as these, from the things which I teach; but let the experiment be made in my company, and not by themselves in their own circle. For that sport will be vain, equally void of profit or of victory; as boys sometimes feel, when they play alone with dice for what already belongs to them.
For the proper explanation of this matter, a discussion on the concurrence and agreement of Divine grace and of free will, or of the human will, would be required; but because this would be a labor much too prolix, I shall not now make the attempt. To explain the matter I will employ a simile, which yet, I confess, is very dissimilar; but its dissimilitude is greatly in favor of my sentiments. A rich man bestows, on a poor and famishing beggar, alms by which he may be able to maintain himself and his family. Does it cease to be a pure gift, because the beggar extends his hand to receive it? Can it be said with propriety, that “the alms depended partly on the liberality of the Donor, and partly on the liberty of the Receiver,” though the latter would not have possessed the alms unless he had received it by stretching out his hand? Can it be correctly said, because the beggar is always prepared to receive, that “he can have the alms, or not have it, just as he pleases?” If these assertions cannot be truly made about a beggar who receives alms, how much less can they be made about the gift of faith, for the receiving of which far more acts of Divine grace are required! This is the question which it will be requisite to discuss, “what acts of Divine grace are required to produce faith in man?” If I omit any act which is necessary, or which concurs, [in the production of faith,] let it be demonstrated from the Scriptures, and I will add it to the rest.
It is not our wish to do the least injury to Divine grace, by taking from it any thing that belongs to it. But let my brethren take care, that they themselves neither inflict an injury on Divine justice, by attributing that to it which it refuses; nor on Divine grace, by transforming it into something else, which cannot be called GRACE. That I may in one word intimate what they must prove, such a transformation they effect when they represent “the sufficient and efficacious grace, which is necessary to salvation, to be irresistible,” or as acting with such potency that it cannot be resisted by any free creature (Works of James Arminius Vol. 1, Wesleyan Heritage Collection, pp. 314, 315).

Now for the part that will REALLY make Calvinists mad

The most common complaint against Arminianism by Calvinists is that God is not sovereign in that model in the way that the Bible describes him to be sovereign. I completely agree with that. But, to say that God is not sovereign in any way in the Arminian system is simply incorrect. 

In fact, (and I can already feel the Calvinist fireballs flying my direction) God has more freedom in certain forms of Arminianism than he does in some forms of Calvinism. (Including the one that I hold.)

Before you stone me, let me explain. In his brilliant work Freedom of the Will, Jonathan Edwards argues that Arminianism must be false because Libertarian Free Will is an incoherent concept. This means that no person has libertarian free will, and that includes God. For Edwards, God's will is more free than ours because the nature that dictates his will is uncaused and wholly good, whereas ours is contingent and evil. Ours interferes with our rational decisions, his does not.

The consequence of Edwards' position (which has been the position of the majority of Reformed thinkers) is that while God is free to create any world he wishes, the only world he would wish to create is the one he created. I.e, his nature, reason, will, etc. when combined to make a decision would only choose to create this world that we live in. 

In many forms of Arminianism, God is free to choose as he wills from a wide selection of possible worlds, and his choice between them is solely his good pleasure. Edwards, and I alongside him, would argue that this makes God's choice of how to create arbitrary and irrational, and that God does not make arbitrary and irrational decisions. However, in the sense of how many options he has God is 'more free' in the Arminian concept than he is in the Calvinist one.

So, we as Calvinists rate sovereignty based on control, and thus we see God as most sovereign in our model, but Arminianism seems to rate sovereignty based on freedom, and in that respect it can be argued that God is most sovereign under their notion. 

Conclusion

Anyone who has read my blog in the past knows that I think Arminianism is incorrect, and they should know that I think it has negative consequences (for a great summary on that, I suggest this article: http://www.desiringgod.org/interviews/do-arminians-preach-a-sufficient-gospel). But, Arminians are not heretics, and many of them are in fact our brothers in Christ. As Spurgeon once said:
You know, brethren, that there is no soul living who holds more firmly to the doctrines of grace than I do, and if any man asks me whether I am ashamed to be called a Calvinist, I answer, I wish to be called nothing but a Christian; but if you ask me, do I hold the doctrinal views which were held by John Calvin, I reply, I do in the main hold them, and rejoice to avow it. But, my dear friends, far be it from me even to imagine that Zion contains none within her walls but Calvinistic Christians, or that there are none saved who do not hold our views.(The Man with the Measuring Line)
So, go out, be gracious, try to show our brothers in Christ the truths of God's Word, but do so as one brother to the next, and not as if they are a pagan savage in need of evangelism.

Monday, September 21, 2015

The difference between Calvinism and Arminianism.




I owe a post on misconceptions about Arminianism. This is not, actually, that post. However, for the time being, it should serve a similar purpose:

A Brief Summary on the difference between Calvinism and Arminianism


What do we mean by each?


By Calvinism, we mean the soteriology as explicitly laid out by the Canons of Dort in 1619. These canons laid out soteriology in a series of five points, and the concept of five point Calvinism is fairly common and alive and well, today.

            What is not as widely known, however, is that the famous five points of Calvinism were actually written in response to five points put out by Arminianism, known as the Articles of Remonstrance in 1610. The Remonstrant/Dortian conflict was over the interpretation of the Belgic Confession from 1566, which was the standard for the Dutch Reformed church. (Dutch Reformed churches now hold what are called the ‘Three Forms of Unity, which accept the Canons of Dort as well as the Heidelberg Catechism 1563, in addition to the Belgic.)

Interestingly enough, both Calvin (1564) and Arminius (1610) were dead by the time Dort and Remonstrance were penned.

In brief, here is how Dort and Remonstrance compare:

Both held that man is totally incapable of choosing salvation without the grace of God in their lives. (Essentially, this is known as ‘total depravity’.) For the Calvinist, this grace is always a sufficient condition for man to accept God and be saved. For the Arminian, this grace is merely enough to make the free will of the individual alive, and then the individual must choose to accept Christ.

            Both held that God elected people to salvation. For the Calvinist, this election is made without any merits of the individual being considered, it is completely unconditional. In Arminianism, God elects people based on his ability to foreknow who would accept salvation of their own free will. The subject of how free will is defined is disputed between these two groups, and we will cover that later.

            The two sides are divided on the nature of the atonement. The Calvinist believes that the atonement of Christ is only intended for those who God elected. Thus, the atonement is effective for everyone for whom it was attended. The Arminian asserts that the atonement is intended for all men, and it’s effectiveness is contingent on man choosing to accept the work as such in his life.
                        -There’s a bit more to the atonement than this, however. The Calvinist believes that the atonement was a ‘penal substitutionary’ atonement. This means that when Christ died on the cross, he was literally accepting the full penalty of all the sin he intended to die for once and for all. Obviously, if this is the case, then we understand why the atonement is limited, because if Christ intended to die for all, then all would be saved, and universalism would be true. In the words of Puritan John Owen:

“The Father imposed His wrath due unto, and the Son underwent punishment for, either:  All the sins of all men all the sins of some men, or some of the sins of all men. In which case it may be said:
 That if the last be true, all men have some sins to answer for, and so, none are saved.
That if the second be true, then Christ, in their stead suffered for all the sins of all the elect in the whole world, and this is the truth.
But if the first be the case, why are not all men free from the punishment due unto their sins?
You answer, "Because of unbelief."

I ask, Is this unbelief a sin, or is it not? If it be, then Christ suffered the punishment due unto it, or He did not. If He did, why must that hinder them more than their other sins for which He died? If He did not, He did not die for all their sins!"

-The vast majority of Arminians accept Owen’s dilemma as being valid. Therefore they have responded by saying that the atonement was not a penal substitutionary one. Instead, they present other theories, the most common of which is the ‘ransom theory’, which says that when Christ died he paid the cost of all sin in the divine economy of justice. This, obviously, leaves room for all men to have a part in the atonement while maintaining that they are responsible for accepting that payment for their debt, in the same sense that a hostage may become convinced of the dogma of his captors, and choose to remain with them, a sinner may be convinced of the dogma of his sin, and choose to remain in it.

On the last point of Dort and Remonstrance we see an instance of saying the same thing in different ways. Both the Arminian and the Calvinist taught that only those who persevere in the faith until the end would be saved. However, the Calvinist teaches that since his faith is decreed before the foundation of the world, and God is the active agent all the way through, then God ensures that the Christian perseveres in the faith and the elect never fall away. The Arminian, by contrast, teaches that man, of his own free will, can choose to reject the faith even after he has entered into it. So, in Arminianism, it is possible to be saved at one point in life and not saved later on.
-Many Baptists who agree with the other features of Arminianism have rejected it on this last point. They believe that since God knows who will be saved from the start, then a person’s salvation is just as set in stone as it is in Calvinism, and they agree with the Calvinists on the point of how perseverance works.


FREE WILL


As we noted, Calvinists and Arminians define free will differently. However, it is very important to note that both sides do believe that man has free will in such a way that he is morally responsible for his sin. For the Arminian, for the will to be ‘free’ it is essential that the ability to do otherwise lies with the agent in relation to his decision. So, as we see in salvation, God looks into the future and sees what an agent will do of his own free will, and then, consents to let that will be the case and decrees that the world will be that way.
Calvinists, on the other hand, believe that the will is free so long as man does what he wants to do. So, if my choice aligns with my strongest desires, my choice is free. Now, one may say that I do not want to get out of bed and go to work in the morning, so how is it a free choice that I do so? The answer is that while I may not want to get out of bed, I do want to keep my job and pay my bills and take care of my family. The desire to do those things outweighs my desire to not get out of bed, so I get out of bed, and accomplish what I most want to do. As it relates to salvation, without the grace of God I do not want to come to God, and so I freely choose not to… I am morally responsible for my evil choice to not follow God because I did what I wanted to do.


Other options


Now, there are nuanced versions of these two views, including some folks that would be considered ‘four point Calvinists’ who explain the nature of the atonement in a way that tries to split the difference between Calvinism and Arminianism (see Bruce Ware’s God’s Greater Glory for a great example. On the Arminian side, there are differences on how exactly God’s foreknowledge and his decree work together, and we usually distinguish at the very least between ‘Classical Arminians’ who hold to Simple Foreknowledge and ‘Molinists’ who adhere to something called Middle Knowledge. (Ware, mentioned above, uses Middle Knowledge as well, but he uses it to come to Calvinistic conclusions about free will and grace.) There are also extremists on both sides, from warped versions of Calvinism that deny that man has any free will, (we call them fatalists) to warped versions of Arminianism that insist that God does not know the future (we call them Open Theists.) Lutherans hold a slightly different view than both camps, though in fairness they probably have a bit more in common with Calvinism. Roman Catholics have a bit more in common with Arminians, overall, on this issue.


For a good introduction to the classic Calvinist view, I suggest: Chosen by God by RCSproul

For a good introduction to a more traditional Arminian view, I suggest: Elect in the Son: A study in Divine Election by Robert Shank

Conclusion

In brief, there’s your difference between the different views. As you might have noticed, I very strongly support the classic Calvinist notion of election.  However, what gets missed way too often in this debate is how close, theologically, the original Calvinists and Arminians actually were, and even today, Southern Baptists hold to both views. (The ‘Baptist Faith and Message’ was adapted from the Calvinistic ‘New Hampshire Confession’, and the very first Southern Baptist Confession, the ‘Abstract of Principles’ was Calvinistic as well, but, in an unfortunate turn in history, racism was the primary unifier that brought together the Southern Baptist Convention just before the Civil War, and by the time they finally wrote a statement of faith in 1925 they wrote it so that it would be neutral on the question of Calvinism.) What I get sick of is Arminians treating Calvinists as though their view makes God evil, or Calvinists treating Arminians as though their view makes God not sovereign. I’m very adamantly convinced of Calvinism, but there’s gotta be enough perspective there to realize that what we are arguing about is the metaphysics of God’s decree and man’s freedom, and the hairs getting split there are very fine, indeed. 

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

A misconception about Calvinism

Calvinism as Controversy:

I am a Southern Baptist. Few topics are more controversial in Southern Baptist circles than the topic of Calvinism. This phenomenon has always been interesting, to me, since Calvinism's chief historic rival, Arminianism, is technically against the standards of the Southern Baptist Confession. (By Arminianism, here, I mean Arminianism proper, such as it is laid out in the Five Articles of Remonstrace and the writings of Jacob Arminius, himself. (By the way, many more Calvinists should read Arminius. All in all, he was an excellent scholar.) These writings contrast the Baptist Faith and Message, which clearly teaches that no one can lose his salvation. Classic Arminianism teaches that a person can in fact lose their salvation, so, what we see in Southern Baptist circles is not really Arminianism, but a sort of synergistic evolution of historic Baptist life. The Baptist Faith and Message was based on the Calvinistic New Hampshire Confession, a personal favorite of this author, and it kept the Calvinistic teaching of 'Perseverance of the Saints'. I have always found synergism and this teaching to be an odd pairing, but such is life as a Southern Baptist, you really do see all kinds.

So, I guess the best way to sum up the point of this post is this: I am not trying to convince you to be Calvinist, I am simply trying to persuade you that Calvinists are not all the horrible ghouls we often get made out to be. 

Free Will and the Author of Sin

Calvinists have often been accused of believing that man does not have free will in the decisions that he makes. However, this is contrary to historical Reformed teaching. Consider the following from the Calvinistic Second London Baptist Confession of Faith: (emphasis added)

CHAPTER 3; OF GOD’S DECREE

Paragraph 1. God hath decreed in himself, from all eternity, by the most wise and holy counsel of His own will, freely and unchangeably, all things, whatsoever comes to pass;1 yet so as thereby is God neither the author of sin nor hath fellowship with any therein;2 nor is violence offered to the will of the creature, nor yet is the liberty or contingency of second causes taken away, but rather established;3 in which appears His wisdom in disposing all things, and power and faithfulness in accomplishing His decree.4
 This confession is in perfect agreement with the teachings of other Calvinistic confessions, like the Westminster Confession of Faith as well as the teachings of John Calvin, himself, who said:



Whence, then comes this wickedness to man, that he should fall away from his God? Lest we should think it comes from creation, God had put His stamp of approval on what had come forth from himself. By his own evil intention, then, man corrupted the pure nature he had received from the Lord; and by his fall drew all his posterity with him into destruction. Institutes of the Christian Religion, 3:23:8
What often gets missed, when Calvinists are accused of believing that man has no free will, is that there is significant debate to be had as to how free will is defined. When a synergist says that man has free will, he means something different from what a Calvinist means when he says that man has free will.

Calvinists believe that man has what is called 'Compatibilistic Freedom' and what that means is that we believe that man's freedom is completely compatible with God's decree of all things that would ever happen. God is in complete control, yet we still act freely. How, you may ask? Well, in compatibilistic freedom, man is free so long as he can do what he most desires. Let me give an example. Say that I have to be at work at six o'clock in the morning for a twelve hour shift. If I get up and go to work, I did so as a free act. But, you may argue, of course you did not want to get up that early! And, who wants to work a twelve hour shift? Surely, this disproves the Calvinist notion of what freedom is...

But, on the contrary, I did do what I wanted most. Let me explain: when my alarm clock goes off so that I can get up and go to work, a significant part of me certainly does not want to get out of bed. However, greater than my desire to continue sleeping is my desire to continue to pay the bills and put food on the table and gas in my car. So, because my greater desire in that instance means I go to work, I get up and I go to work. My going to work is now, as Calvinism defines it, a free act.

 The same would of course go for acts of mine that are sinful. In the moment that I make that decision, my desire to disobey God is greater than my desire to honor God with my life, and I fall into sin. However, none of this contradicts God's overall plan and decree for the universe. As Joseph told his brothers:



Genesis 50:20 "As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good, to bring it about that many people should be kept alive, as they are today."

Joseph's brothers were responsible for sin and God was responsible for the good that came out of the situation, anyway. 

That leads to the other half of this misconception. Because people believe that Calvinists teach that man has no free will, they are led to believe that Calvinists believe that God is the author of sin. Take a moment, if you will, and scroll back up to where we quoted the London Baptist Confession. Notice, it explicitly says that God is not the author of sin. If a person tells you that God is the author of sin, he is not a Calvinist, he is a fatalist, and his view is just as heretical as are the extremes of synergism: Open Theism and Pelagianism. Calvinists are wrong if they try to put all synergists in those two categories (a blog post for another time, consider it forthcoming) and synergists are wrong if they group Calvinists in with those who think our Holy and Righteous God is the author of sin. 

Some helpful links


RC Sproul on God's sovereignty and human freedom (video)

Jonathan Edwards on the nature of man's freedom

Excerpt from John Frame's Doctrine of God about whether God is the author of sin

Conclusion

All I ask from my synergistic brothers and sisters in Christ is that if you are going to disagree with us, please do two rather simple things. First, I ask that you represent our views fairly, as they have been explained, above. (And I promise that in the next few days I will produce an explanation of certain points of synergism that demand the same from our Calvinist brothers and sisters) and second, let us live and work to fulfill the Gospel together. Do not vilify the Calvinists around you or try to have them thrown out of your churches, embrace them with unity as we work to serve the same Lord and spread the same Gospel. God bless.