Mark #7 - Biblical Understanding of Church Discipline, Part 1

Published: Oct. 27, 2010, 6:30 p.m.

b'There is a great need for churches to realize the value of corrective church discipline for the health and vitality of the church. Churches must realize that corrective church discipline on earth is important because it is a small act of judgment that dimly points to God\'s final judgment in heaven. However, that relatively small act is performed with the hope that the sinning church member will come to repentance before God\'s final judgment ever arrives. This decline of church discipline is perhaps the most visible sign of the failure of the contemporary church, which is no longer concerned with purity of confession or lifestyle, but sees itself almost entirely as a voluntary association of autonomous members with minimal moral accountability to God or each other. Without a recovery of biblical church discipline, the church will continue its downward slide.\\n\\nThis is not the way it is supposed to be. The people of God are depicted throughout the Bible as people of purity. As the chosen people of a holy God, the people of Israel carried God\'s own name and reflected his holiness in their life, worship, and beliefs. Israel was instructed in how to live a life that set them apart from their pagan neighbors. In the New Testament, the church of God is likewise described as the people of God who are visible to the world by the purity of their life and integrity of their testimony. \\n\\nIndividuals and churches usually commit one of two errors when contemplating church discipline. First, they might think, "This is a private matter. We have no business interfering here. After all, we are all sinners. Who are we to judge?" With this thinking, there is no corrective discipline at all and some might get uncomfortable with the "meddling" in biblically-based discipline. Second, some go to the opposite extreme and rush into judgment with the gleeful purpose of censoring and molding others to look just like themselves. In their harshness, they forget that the purpose behind all church discipline is to be redemptive and instead settle for "enforced conformity that never penetrates the heart." However, the process of implementing discipline in a church that currently does not practice discipline will be a slow, nerve-wracking, and mettle-testing process. It is wrongheaded to think that people will understand and accept church discipline because it is in the Bible. People will resist corrective discipline. People will resent the church "prying" into their personal lives. People will choose family allegiances and personal friendships over clear Biblical standards. We must never assume that people and other churches will understand or support the process or results. Yet do it we must because the Bible demands it and the church needs it.'