It would have surprised everyone to find that the actor and comedian W.
C. Fields was interested in religion! When a surprised friend caught him
reading the Bible, he said, "Well, I am looking for loopholes--and
there do not seem to be any."
A few mission leaders today are
searching the Scriptures for loopholes as they deal with the
vexing problems Christian workers, especially tentmakers, face in
spiritually hostile countries. I have before me a mission training paper
with the title, "When is it acceptable to lie?" And an article from a
missions publication on the same subject. Both are from respected groups
that do fine ministry.
No Christian leader defends gratuitous,
blatant lies. But when is it permissible, in a hostile country, to tell
a half-truth or withhold information to give a less than truthful
impression?"
I hasten to say here that this is a
paper still in progress. This is not an easy subject to deal with. Your
feed-back is welcomed.
If you seek a job in a Muslim country,
how much must you reveal about yourself on a job application or in a job
interview? What do you tell border guards and customs officers? How do
you answer the nosy questions of Muslim or Hindu or Buddhist neighbors
and colleagues at work? Is it acceptable to use a minimal job mainly as
a front or a cover for regular missionary work? Is it permissible to
hide behind a phantom business? Dare you evangelize if the government
forbids it? What about exchanging money on the black market? Smuggling
Bibles? Holding two passports? Paying bribes?
What if your telling the truth could
get a co-worker or a local convert into trouble? What if your telling
the truth could get you arrested or imprisoned? Or kicked out of the
country on 24 hour notice--with your family and possessions? What if
your truthfulness could also get your employer in trouble?
Is lying always wrong, or is it
excusable when it is for the gospel? Does the end ever justify the
means?
The mission papers I have before
me list Bible passages that seem to justify lies in severe
situations. Since I already had this paper in progress before I found
these papers, I have incorporated all their arguments into it. I have
also examined all the suggested passages, and added others that were
surprisingly omitted.
What is my conclusion? I find no
loopholes. Not one. Let us not open this Pandora’s box! We may
never be able to close it again.
But the difference of opinion in
mission circles is not among people with greater and lesser commitment
to the Lord, but among leaders all of whom love the Lord and care about
truth. It is said that we must be understanding of Christians and
mission groups who can live with more ambiguity on this question than
most other Christians.
So the arguments on both sides must be
considered. If we conclude that lying is never permissible, how do we
deal with the ethical dilemmas tentmakers often face?
I will consider the subject in
seven sections:
1) The loophole proof texts and Bible case histories that have
been suggested in the training papers.
2) More passages on lying and truth.
3) Passages on governmental authority.
4) Underlying problems in the 1990s that exacerbate the
temptation to lie.
5) Scripture versus experience.
6) Critical situations tentmakers face and a few suggestions
for dealing with them.
7) What bearing has "situation ethics"?
1. Proof texts used as loop-holes for untruthfulness
The following passages were listed
on the mission papers to support selective lying, half-truths and
evasive silence. Prooftexting is always dangerous because a verse
seems to say one thing in isolation but something quite different in
context. We must see how these proof texts hold up under scrutiny.
We must ask about each passage: 1) What does it actually say? 2)
What did it mean to the writer and the earliest readers? 3) How
does it apply to us today?
Prov. 2:11-13.
Prov. 2:11-13. "Discretion will watch over
you; understanding will guard you; delivering you from the way of evil,
from men of perverted speech. . ." True. But the mission papers suggest
that discreet means secretive and less than totally
truthful. But the word usually means cautious. Prov. 2:1ff. shows a
father counseling his son. The discretion is not to protect himself in
persecution, but to guard him from the bad influence of wicked men and
loose women! (vv.12-19). It is to protect from sin, not give
license for it.
Prov. 11:13
says, "He who belittles his neighbor lacks sense,
but a man of understanding remains silent." The mission papers
use this to show there are occasions when silence is accepttable. But
v.12 shows the context is about tale-bearing! We have here no
justification for evasion of truth, but a command not to gossip.
Prov. 12:23.
Prov. 12:23. "A prudent man conceals his
knowledge, but fools proclaim their folly." The point is to conceal
folly, not truth, as confirmed by the previous verse, which is
omitted from the mission papers: "Lying lips are an abomination to
the Lord, but those who act faithfully are his delight." This
passage is an admonition to braggarts.
Prov. 15:28.
Prov. 15:28. "The mind of the righteous
ponders how to answer, but the mouth of the wicked pours out evil
things." The context clarifies the situation: You are about to lose your
temper, to shout, maybe to harm someone. But as a righteous person, you
show restraint. You think how best to deal with the problem. It suggests
you ask the Lord how to respond, because the next verse says God hears
the prayers of the righteous. It is good advice for tentmakers,
but not permission to lie.
Prov. 13:3.
"He who guards his mouth preserves his
life; he who opens wide his lips comes to ruin." This could be
true of a tentmaker. But here a father counsels his son not to offend or
insult people or make enemies by careless speech. Don’t pick a fight. It
is no loophole for lying. The mission papers oddly omit verse 5, which
says, "A righteous man hates falsehood"!
Prov. 25:2.
"It is the glory of God to conceal
things, but the glory of kings is to search things out." What is
the implication--that God withholds truth so we may also? Rather, the
verse says God’s knowledge is too vast and high for human beings. But
King Solomon loved researching God’s physical world and human
nature. God says: "As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my
ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts higher than your thoughts."
(Isa.55: 8,9) He says to Job, "Where were you when I created
everything?" Paul asks, "Who knows the mind of the Lord so as to
instruct him?" (1 Cor.2:16) "O the depth of the riches and wisdom
and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments and how
inscrutable are his ways! For who has known the mind of the Lord or who
has been his counselor?" (Rom. 11:33, 34) How can Prov. 25:2 justify
people’s half-truths?
Ecclesiastes 3:7b.
Ecclesiastes 3:7b. "For everything there
is a season and a time for every matter under heaven. . ." Then it lists
human activities--to eat and not eat, to sleep and to waken, even a time
to sow and a time to reap! A time to gather stones and a time to throw
them. In the middle of the list it says, "A time to keep silence
and a time to speak. . ." When is silence golden? While someone else
speaks, while others study or sleep--or mourn. If speaking up could hurt
someone. If a matter is not our business. The passage justifies times of
silence, but does not suggest evasive silence. We are never obligated to
say everything we think. The question is whether we intend to deceive
and if our interrogator would think so.
Exodus 1:15-21.
It is said that the Hebrew midwives lied
to Pharaoh when he ordered them to kill the male babies. Did they? The
text says they "feared God"--that is, they trusted him. They told
Pharaoh the Hebrew women delivered their babies before they could be
summoned. Was that a lie? The midwives may have dragged their feet. But
the Hebrew women were strong, used to slave labor. They would not call
the midwives, knowing about Pharaoh’s edict. Surely other mothers helped
with the deliveries, and God helped the women to give birth safely. No
deceit is implied.
Exodus 3:18, 8:25-29.
Exodus 3:18, 8:25-29. It is said that
Moses lied to Pharaoh. Did he? It is said he asked to take the people on
a retreat when he had no intention of returning. Is that true? The
Hebrews had been slaves in Egypt for four centuries! They lived in a
rural ghetto because the Egyptians considered them ceremonially unclean.
Now they had multiplied so much that they constituted a threat to Egypt.
Yet they were needed because Egypt was heavily dependent on their slave
labor. But life for the Hebrews had become intolerable. So Moses hoped
to lead them to freedom. But when he asked for permission for a
religious retreat, that is all that he intended. The people needed to
renew their covenant with God by animal sacrifices, which they had not
offered for 400 years! Most of the Hebrews were idolaters! Sacrifices
would be offensive to the Egyptians, so Moses asked to go three days
journey away.
Moses and Aaron also needed to unite
the people behind their leadership. But Moses intended for them all to
return. How do we know? Because the sacrificial animals they would take
to the retreat were not nearly enough to sustain all the Hebrews on
their long journey to Canaan. God had said they would take all their
cattle and belongings with them on departure, plus gifts from
neighbors. Such a massive operation could never be carried out in
stealth. They could not emigrate without Pharaoh’s permission.
Moses knew Pharaoh would never grant so
many people such a long vacation from work, nor trust them to travel so
far. But the king’s refusals gave him an excuse to escalate his request.
Now he asks to emigrate en mass, to secede from Egypt! Why would Pharaoh
refuse? If he lost his slave labor force, the Egyptian economy would be
destroyed! (It was!) During each plague Pharaoh gives permission for
their departure, and when the plague ends, he retracts it. Until the
angel of death takes all the oldest male children, including the heir to
the throne! Moses defies Pharaoh, but does not lie.
It is said the Hebrews lied when they
borrowed things from their neighbors and then absconded with the
loot! But only the old KJV says borrowed--a poor translation.
God told the poor Hebrews to ask the wealthy Egyptians for things.
The Egyptians knew it was well-earned back pay. Besides, they now had a
healthy respect for the Hebrew God and wanted his people gone! They gave
willingly.
It is God who parts the Red Sea to
let his people cross and allows the waters to drown the Egyptians.
Joshua 2:1-14.
Joshua 2:1-14. It is claimed that Rahab
lied about the Hebrew spies. Did she? Yes, several times. This is the
most often cited loophole passage to justify lying. She lodged the
Hebrew spies in her house which was part of the wide Jericho city wall.
Its location was convenient, and it probably would not arouse suspicion
for two men to enter the house of a prostitute. But someone reported the
Hebrew spies so the king sent officers to arrest them. By now, everyone
knew what the Hebrews had done to Egypt! And how God had provided for
them in the desert and protected them from all enemies.
Rahab hid the men on the rooftop under
bundles of flax. She lied and sent the officers out into the night on a
wild goose chase. The heavy city gate closed for the night, so she used
a rope to let the Hebrew spies out through a window, telling them to
travel by night and hide by day.
Rahab spared the spies because she had
come to believe in the Hebrew God who had parted the Red Sea and
protected the Israelites in the wilderness. He must be the true God! Her
reward? A promise that when the invading Hebrews came, they would see
the red cord in Rahab’s window and rescue her and her family.
It is said this passage provides a
loophole for lying, if the lie is intended for God’s cause. Besides,
Rahab is commended three times in the N.T.! But Heb. 11:31 commends her
faith, not her lies. And James 2:25 says she proved her
faith by risking her life. But nowhere is she commended for lying! In
any case, it is preposterous to think God would ever intend for
Christians in the A.D.1990s to derive their ethics from a Canaanite
prostitute in the 1300s B.C.! And on the occasion of her conversion! Her
inclusion in the genealogy of Jesus suggests she changed her conduct.
1 Samuel 16:1-5.
1 Samuel 16:1-5. It is claimed that Samuel
lied about his visit to Bethlehem. Did he? He said he was going to
Bethlehem to sacrifice. He went to Bethlehem and sacrificed. He also
sprang a surprise on everyone by anointing David king! He acted
secret-ly, but not deceitfully. God ordered it because King Saul had
crossed the line and was now rejected. Samuel was high priest and
prophet of God, ful-filling his God-ordained role in his own land. He
had more than one reason for the trip. This suggests we need not always
reveal every reason for an action.
2 Kings 6:15-20.
It is claimed that Elisha lied to the
Syrian army. Did he? The king of Assyria sent his army to arrest
the prophet because his prophetic insight enabled the King of Israel to
attack them. Elisha woke up to see his city of Dothan surrounded by
Syrian armies with all their horses and chariots! His servant is
petrified. But Elisha says, "Fear not, for those who are
with us are more than those who are with them!" (v.16) He asks God to
open the servant’s eyes. Then he too sees this hilltop city with an
inner circle of horses and chariots of fire around the two of
them! An angel army! Between them and the Syrians! Then at Elisha’s
request, God strikes the Syrians blind. Then Elisha volunteers to lead
them to the man they seek, who is, of course, Elisha himself, their
guide!
Elisha does exactly as he promised,
after turning himself into a moving target! He leads them to the most
dangerous possible place--inside Samaria, the walled capital of Israel,
straight to the King, their mortal enemy! Imagine the horror of the
trapped Syrians when God restores their sight! And the king of Israel
immediately orders their death! There is no escape. But Elisha says to
the king "Stop! Do not kill them--feed them! I have brought them
for dinner!" After the royal banquet Elisha sends the well-fed armies
safely to their home! His kindness has defused the Syrian animosity.
There is enormous humor here--and a lesson about winning enemies through
kindness. But surely there is here no justification to lie.
Luke 16:1-9.
Jesus commends the lying steward. This
business administrator of a wealthy estate has been caught embezzling
the householder’s goods. He knows he will be dismissed and no one else
will hire him. His options are heavy manual labor or begging, neither
one tolerable. He revises his bookkeeping, quickly reducing all the
accounts receivable. This second swindle ingratiates him with all the
debtors and obligates them to take him in!
Jesus commends this administrator for
his prudence in preparing for his future, but not for his lying
or cheat-in! The mission papers oddly do not include the next verse,
which dispels all doubt about that. Jesus says, "He who is dishonest
even in very little will be dishonest also in much." To God, big
lies and little ones look the same.
John 2:24, 25.
It is claimed that Jesus was sometimes
less than forth-right. It was Passover early in his ministry. "Many
believed when they saw the signs he did; but Jesus did not trust himself
to them. . . for he himself knew what was in man." He did not always
know what everyone was thinking, because in the incarnation he laid
aside his divine prerogatives and limited himself to our human
capabilities. But he had unusual prophetic power and insight, especially
because he was without sin. In the context John gives several examples
of Jesus reading people’s thoughts. 1) Nathaniel in John 1, Nicodemus in
John 3, the Samaritan woman in John 4 and the paralytic in John 5.
Several other passages show that Jesus was not carried away by the
praise of fickle crowds. Their motivation was wrong and they could turn
on him.
So tentmakers should not be gullible.
The passage justifies selective trust. Converts from Islam often
do not trust each other, and with reason, since 8 out of 10 go back to
Islam sooner or later! But we must not be so suspicious that our lack of
trust damages genuine converts, driving them back to Islam.
This passage suggests caution and
wisdom, but no hint of dishonesty. It can be right to escape
persecution, as Jesus made strategic withdrawals from regions where
people had heard and where religious leaders had turned against him. God
probably allows some tentmakers to lose their employment because they
have too high a profile. So he sends them to a new location and brings
in a fresh witness. It is some of the best, most faithful witnesses that
are likely to be expelled, so expulsion must not be equated with
failure.
Matthew 7:8.
Jesus said: "Do not give dogs what is holy
or cast your pearls before swine, lest they trample them underfoot and
turn to attack you." It is suggested Jesus here allows lying to enemies.
But the passage relates rather to Jesus’ preaching and teaching, and
is highly significant for tentmakers in hostile situations. Jesus
did fishing evangelism, saying things in public that would fish
out the seekers from the indifferent or hostile crowds, but
reserving his deeper teaching for those who were hungry to know. The
parables had hidden meanings. They allowed insincere listeners to leave
with the same prejudices with which they came. But they were also
teasers to get people to ask the important questions. Jesus gave the
precious truths only to those who stayed to ask. This passage may apply
to street meetings, Christian radio and TV, but does not suggest lying
for our protection. It models the ideal evangelistic approach for
tentmakers. (See GO’s Workplace Evangelism: Fishing out Seekers.)
Mt.27:11-14, Mk. 15:1ff, Luke 2:1-15,
John 18:19-40, 19:1-16.
Mt.27:11-14, Mk. 15:1ff, Luke 2:1-15, John 18:19-40, 19:1-16. It is
suggested that Jesus was less than forthright at his trials. All gospel
accounts are condensed narratives, with each writer recording
facts truth-fully, but emphasizing what impressed him. So we must
consider all of the accounts to get all the details, and yet allow each
writer only those inclusions and omissions that reflect his own
recollections and his own purpose in writing.
In all four accounts Jesus answers
Pilate’s questions, showing respect for this Roman authority--and even
spiritual concern. The Jews (who refused to enter the Praetorium,
fearing ceremonial contamination during this Passover week) wanted
Pilate to condemn Jesus without evidence. Their real charge against him
was blasphemy, but Rome did not care about religion, so the Jews brought
a trumped up charge of treason--of political subversion! Jesus did not
refer to himself as "the Messiah, the king of the Jews," since these
titles were politically loaded. (He preferred the less political "Son of
man.") Pilate knew all about messianic prophecies and had arrested a few
false messiahs, political liberators who led armed insurrections
against Rome. The Jews claimed Jesus was "perverting the nation,
forbidding the people to give tribute to Caesar, claiming to be Messiah,
a king."
The triumphal entry could have given
credence to that charge, except that Jesus rode on a donkey, not a
horse. He came in peace, and Jewish leaders would have recognized his
deliberate fulfillment of the prophecy in Zech. 9:9,10. Jesus repeatedly
disassociated himself from Zealots and all political groups. But this
accusation from the Jewish politico-religious establishment was
exceedingly dangerous. When Pilate asks if he is the Messiah (the
Christ), the king of the Jews, Jesus answer sounds evasive, but
is not. He cannot say an unqualified "yes" because the Jews’ term is
intended to mean a political revolutionary, and Jesus was not that. Yet
he was the true Messiah, come to set up a spiritual kingdom. He just
tells the truth. The old KJV translates: "Thou sayest so." RSV: "You
have said so." NEB: "The words are yours."
Jesus says Yes--but that he would not
use Pilate’s politically loaded terms. He says, "My kingdom is not of
this world. If it were, my servants would fight so I would not be
delivered to the Jews. My kingship is not of this world." (Jn.18: 36)
Jesus is not saying that in other circumstances he might engage in
bloody combat. (Although he would not.) He is asking, "If I were the
poli-tical messiah they accuse me to be, would I not have soldiers
around me, and weapons? Do you see any? Do I look or act like a
revolutionary?" So Pilate publicly declares Jesus innocent and offers to
free him at Passover, but the priests demand Barrabas, the very kind
of rebel false messiah they accuse Jesus of being! It was easy to
use blackmail to coerce Pilate to crucify Jesus. Procurators were not in
the military hierarchy, but were Caesar’s own personal appointees--often
from his own household. A treason charge would reach him swiftly. So
Pilate gives in.
Jesus also said to Pilate (Jn.18:37):
"For this I was born, and for this I came into the world, to bear
witness to the truth. Everyone who is of the truth
hears my voice." Pilate shuts Jesus up with a rhetorical question to
which he wants no answer: "What is truth?"
It is preposterous to suggest that
Jesus evaded truth in order to save his life, and therefore we may do
so, too!
But Jesus responds differently before
the Jewish religious leaders. He answers them not a word. They are
insincere. They know their real charge is blasphemy and that treason is
a false accusation. He has already been pronounced innocent by Pilate
and Herod. Months earlier the Jewish leaders had admitted Jesus’
supernatural power, but attributed it to the devil. Jesus asked why
Satan would hurt his own cause by expelling his own servant demons? How
could anyone expel them without first binding Satan? No one had ever
done that except Jesus!
There is no suggestion that Jesus told
half-truths or withheld information to protect himself. His silence
before the Jews is not to avoid self-incrimination but to shame them for
their hypocrisy.
Conclusion:
Conclusion: One mission training paper
asks, "Based on these passages, do you believe we are obligated
to tell the truth to everyone?" The implied answer is "No." But my
answer is: Yes, absolutely! We are never obligated to say
everything we think. Often we should not volunteer information that is
not requested. But we should live in such a way that we have nothing to
hide.
Not a single one of these proposed
loophole passages provides a loophole! They reveal abysmally poor
Bible study skills! More surprising--Why were so many adjacent verses
against lying omitted? Is it honest to select only passages that seem
to support one’s thesis and to ignore all that oppose it?
2. More on lying and truth
None of the following passages were
included in the training papers, though they bear directly on the
subject.
Genesis 12-22. Abraham and Sarah.
Abraham, a self-employed
tentmaker, moved his cattle business to a wicked, dangerous foreign
country in order to represent God there. They finally found the right
location in that land. But whenever Abraham built an altar he was
staking a claim for God. All the tests that he and Sarah faced revolved
around three questions: 1) Could God protect them? 2)
Could God provide for their large entourage? 3)
Could God fulfill his promises? That is, his salvation
promises--his plan to form a people for himself. Time and again they
resorted to lies, because they failed to trust God. Twice they
jeopardized God’s promise and the whole plan of salvation! Abraham
allows Sarah to be taken captive. It seems neither he nor Sarah knew
that she also was necessary for the fulfilment of the promises. Abraham
could, and did, take a concubine and two other wives. But the promise
was to Sarah, and God comes to her rescue. What effort it took for God
to turn this couple into a man and a woman of faith! Meanwhile, they
damaged their testimony and jeopardized the very people they were
supposed to bless.
Genesis 27-37. Isaac and Rebecca, Esau
and Jacob. Then Isaac, who knew
his parents’ failures, had to learn the same lessons the same hard way.
Peace-loving Isaac also failed in his roles as husband and father. He
played favorites with his children. Isaac’s unconcern, complacency and
self-indulgence almost forced Rebecca to take things into her own hands.
It is easy to understand why she and Jacob colluded in the deceit of
Isaac and Esau, but they paid dearly for it. The mother and the young
son never saw each other again. The boy Jacob had learned lying well.
His whole life was characterized by deceiving and being deceived. The
lying resulted from a failure to trust and obey God. Can the children of
tentmakers understand the fine line some of their parents draw between
truth and falsehood?
Joshua 7.
After 40 years of wander-in, the Hebrews
crossed the Jordan, and attacked Jericho, a large, wealthy, walled city.
The whole land was filled with fear of the Hebrew God. The next target,
Ai, would be easy, so Joshua sends fewer men. But they flee! It was a
shameful retreat that damaged God’s reputation. Even little Ai could
rout the Hebrew armies! But God tells Joshua he has allowed the defeat
because there is sin in the camp. Achan has taken the forbidden
booty--a luxurious garment, 200 shekels of silver and a 50 shekel bar of
gold, and buried them under his tent. Nor does he confess. He waits all
day silently as Joshua calls one tribe at a time, and each family in
order, to find the culprit. Not until Achan is apprehended does he admit
his guilt. The penalty was death for the whole family, who were involved
in his coverup. They were stoned. They had caused Israel’s defeat, the
death of many men and had hurt God’s reputation in the region. God would
not bless any of the Hebrews until the dishonesty was dealt with.
Daniel.
Daniel. When Daniel, probably only 15, was
taken hostage to Babylon, he saw the hand of God in this circum-stance.
He was so far from home he could have indulged in the sinful pleasures
of Babylon and his family would not have known the difference. But he
resolved in his heart never to do anything to compromise the
reputation of his God and he led his friends in the same resolve. In Ch.
3 the friends of Daniel stand before the great new golden statue.
Nebuchadnezzar orders all his satraps (governors) to show their loyalty
to him by worshiping his statue. The three Hebrew young men could have
faked compliance and avoided the furnace. But they would have denied
God. He wanted them in the furnace so he could show himself strong on
their behalf--for their sakes, and for the eventual salvation of
Nebuchadnezzar and many others.
When the Medo-Persians conquered
Babylon, they quickly learned that Daniel was honest in his words and
his deeds even in the face of death--a superb example of a tentmaker
with personal integrity. His jealous enemies could find no fault in
him except for his faith. He always prayed by his open window, facing
Jerusalem. (If he had looked up the Babylonians and Persians would think
he had adopted their moon worship.) Now when the Persian king demands
exclusive worship of himself for a month, Daniel had an easy escape. He
needed only to step back a few feet from the window. He could still
pray. Would it not have been wise to take this evasive action instead of
risking the lion’s den? Why does Daniel insist on praying at his window?
Does he need to provoke opposition? Yes. If they could not see Daniel at
the window, everyone would think he was complying with the
idolatrous order. His testimony would be ruined and God’s glory
compromised. God could have saved Daniel from the lion’s den, but he
wanted him in it! Why? Because it let him demonstrate his power and his
love for him, so the king, the accusers and all the people would know
about it!
We should be discreet, in the sense
that we should not flaunt our faith in people’s faces. But we do not
have the option of evasive speech or action if it means denying the
Lord. How can God reveal his power and glory to the unreached peoples if
we constantly short-circuit what he is doing?
Acts 5. Ananias and Sapphira.
Acts 5. Ananias and Sapphira. Many of
the earliest believers were selling their possessions and bringing the
proceeds to help care for the many who had been expelled from their
homes by their families or had lost their jobs. Although the giving was
voluntary, this couple pretended to give all they had, which was not
true. One could argue that what they did was not harmful to anyone. But
what did the Holy Spirit think? It cost them their lives. Truth
matters.
Luke 9-12. Jesus says the disciples in
persecution are not to worry about food and clothing. He says in all
four Gospels that they would suffer for their faith.
Luke 9-12. Jesus says the disciples in
persecution are not to worry about food and clothing. He says in all
four Gospels that they would suffer for their faith. In Lk. 9:23 he says
they should take up their cross daily. Jesus had not yet been crucified,
so he does not mean this command in any spiritualized sense. He means
that his followers must begin every day knowing that it might end with
crucifixion. He says he came not to bring peace but a sword and that
families would be divided between members who believed and those who
persecuted them. He tells them not to fear the ones who can kill the
body, but rather, fear him who can destroy the soul. Jesus was concerned
about the spiritual damage we might incur during persecution. The Father
sees even a sparrow fall and a hair of our heads drop. Nothing can hurt
us without his permission. He tells his disciples they will be arrested,
and not to worry about what to say when they are brought before kings
and magistrates. The Holy Spirit will tell them what to say. He is the
Spirit of truth and would not coach them to tell lies! We only feel the
need to lie when we are trusting in ourselves instead of in God.
Peter lied at Jesus’ trial.
Peter lied at Jesus’ trial. All four
Gospels record this incident, the kind of situation a tentmaker might
find himself in. He watches the trial of Jesus from outside--probably in
a patio, and is terrified for Jesus and for himself. When the servants
charge that they saw him with Jesus, he denies it three times--he does
not even know this Man! The cock crows as Jesus said it would, and Peter
weeps bitterly. Surely, we cannot see in Peter any excuse for lying. He
learned. See his 1 Peter letter for how to live in an atmosphere of
persecution and how to face accusations and imprisonments. Their
behavior was to be above reproach. No lies or deceit, no matter what the
cost.
Psalm 51:6.
Psalm 51:6. "Thou desirest truth in the inward parts. Therefore teach me
wisdom in my secret heart." Yes.
Psalm 66:18.
If we cherish iniquity in our hearts God will not
hear our prayers.
Prov. 6:16-19.
Prov. 6:16-19. Seven things the Lord
hates--abominations to him. Haughty eyes, a lying tongue, hands
that shed blood, a heart that devises wicked plans, feet that run to do
evil, a false witness that breathes out lies, and a man who sows
discord among brothers. Lying is mentioned twice!
Prov. 8:7-9.
Prov. 8:7-9. Wisdom is personified,
another name for the preincarnate Jesus. "For my mouth will utter truth;
wickedness is an abomination to my lips. All the words of my
mouth are righteous; there is no thing twisted or crooked in them."
Prov. 12:17-22.
Prov. 12:17-22. "He who speaks the truth
gives honest evidence, but a false witness utters deceit."
Prov. 14:5, 25.
Prov. 14:5, 25. "A faithful witness does
not lie, but a false one breathes out lies." "A truthful witness saves
lives, but one who utters lies is a betrayer."
John 8:44ff.
Jesus says to the Jewish leaders, "You are of your father, the devil,
and your will is to do your father’s desire. He was a murderer from the
beginning and has nothing to do with truth, because there is no truth in
him. When he lies, he speaks according to his own nature for he is a
liar and the father of lies. But because I tell you the truth you do not
believe me. Which of you convicts me of sin? If I tell you the truth,
why do you not believe me? Because you are not of God." How can we
justify lies?
Ephesians 4:25.
Ephesians 4:25. This verse must be taken
with vv. 20 to 24. Paul comments on the sinfulness of the pagan
non-believers. Then he says, "You did not so learn Christ! Assuming you
have heard of him and were taught in him, as the truth is in
Jesus." Then he tells them to put off the old nature, like dirty
clothes, and "Put on the new nature in the likeness of God in true
righteousness and holiness." V. 25--"Therefore, putting away
falsehood, let everyone speak the truth with his
neighbor, for we are members of one another." He says, no stealing, no
evil talk, no grieving the Holy Spirit. "Be imitators of God." (5:1)
Colossians 3:8-10
lists sins that characterized these people
before their conversion, and says, "But now put them all away: anger,
wrath, malice, slander and foul talk from your mouth." "Do not lie to
one another, seeing that you have put off the old nature with its
practices and have put on the new nature which is being renewed in
knowledge after the image of its Creator."
Titus 1:2.
Titus 1:2. Paul refers to "the God who never lies" and says "be
imitators of him."
1 John 2:21, 22.
1 John 2:21, 22. "You know the truth,
and know that no lie is of the truth. Who is a liar but he who
denies that Jesus is the Christ? This is the antichrist."
Proverbs 19:9.
Proverbs 19:9. "A false witness will not
go unpunished and he who utters lies will perish."
Rev. 21:27.
Jesus says about the crystal city, God’s
glorious redeemed people, "But nothing unclean shall enter it, nor any
one who practices abomination or falsehood, but only those who
are written in the Lamb’s book of life."
Rev. 22:15.
"But outside (of the crystal city) are the
dogs and sorcerers and fornicators and murderers and idolaters and
every one who loves and practices falsehood."
Ephesians 6:10-18.
Truth is a major part of our spiritual armor and
our only weapon! "Put on the whole armor of God, that you may be
able to stand against the wiles of the devil. (Not to be overcome by
him.) For we are not contending against flesh and blood, but against the
principalities, against the powers, against the world ruler of this
present darkness, against the spiritual hosts of wickedness in the
heavenly places. Therefore take the whole armor of God, that you may be
able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand.
Stand therefore having your loins girt with truth and having
put on the breastplate of righteousness, and having shod your
feet with the equipment of the gospel of peace; above all taking the
shield of faith, with which you can quench all the flaming darts of the
evil one. And take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit,
which is the word of God. Pray at all times. . ."
We hear a good bit today about power
encounter in missions. Rick Love, the U.S. director for Frontiers, who
knows the value of power encounter from his tentmaking experience in
Indonesia, rightly says in an EMQ article, that we have an even greater
need today for truth encounter and moral encounter! To
speak out the truth and to live out its implications--even when it is
costly to do so!
In this cosmic struggle for control
of the world we cannot afford to have any chinks in our armor. Even when
we can get away with a lie, we are defeated because the devil
knows we did it. It gives him a foothold in us. All he has to do to turn
us into inveterate liars is to keep us in tight situations! We play
right into his hands! Would he risk getting us arrested if he knew our
truthfulness might convert an authority?
James 1.
James 1. Sin never stays small. It always
grows until it is beyond our control. Almost every lie demands others
until we are caught in a web we could not have imagined. There is also
the influence upon our children--are they able to understand the
subtleties in speech which we justify? Even more important, what do we
teach our new converts? Will they lie to avoid persecution? Will they
justify lies in other situations?
Paul’s letters and the Acts show us how
much he suffered, but there is not the slightest hint of lying. Why
doesn’t he tell converts that a little lie in a crunch won’t hurt?
Instead, he says much about truth and he demonstrates it, as he models
Christian living for his converts, in an idolatrous, immoral, corrupt
marketplace.
3. Government authorities
It is understandable why tentmakers
should fear encounters with government authorities. It was a problem
also for New Testament believers, so the Bible gives us counsel.
Acts 4:18-20 and Acts 5:27-29.
Acts 4:18-20 and Acts 5:27-29. The
whole story must be taken, not just a verse or two. Peter and John are
arrested for preaching and once for healing a well-known crippled man at
the temple gate. They are jailed, but when they are to be brought out
for trial the following morning, they have escaped and are finally found
on the temple steps, boldly preaching! They say, "Whether it is right in
the sight of God to listen to you rather than to God, you must judge;
for we cannot but speak of what we have seen and heard." In Ch.5, "We
must obey God rather than men." And they preach a sermon to the Jewish
Council! (The Council was more like the governing board of a
non-evangelical denomination than a government, so what they did might
not be appropriate in another country.)
They did not break Roman laws, but
they did disobey their religious authorities. It could be argued that
the Jewish leaders had just lost all true authority by crucifying Jesus.
(The Herods were Idumeans--half Arabs from Edom, who ingratiated
themselves with Rome. The high priestly family bought their
positions.) Jesus told the scribes (lawyer-theologians) that they had
failed to use the keys of the kingdom to enter the kingdom of God, and
had kept others from entering, too. (Lk.11:52) So the keys were now to
be given to those who were more worthy--Peter and the other apostles!
(Mt. 16, 18) One could argue that these religious rulers were not
legitimate. But Paul later apologizes for talking back to a high priest.
But the synagogue rulers persecuted Paul, and Jesus himself in
Revelation called the Jewish gatherings "the synagogues of Satan."
Romans 13:1-7.
Paul said every person is to be subject to
government, because it is an institution ordained by God, because he
wants peace and order in society. (No one regime is necessarily
approved. But regardless of the regime, it is to be obeyed just because
it is the government of the moment.) Christians were to observe good
conduct because governments are not a terror to good conduct, but to
evil doers. They were to obey rulers for two main reasons: For the sake
of conscience and to avoid God’s displeasure. They were to pay taxes and
revenues, respect and honor! If rulers or others
persecuted them, they were to bless them! (12:13). The Christians’ goal
must be to win the authorities to the Lord. Their good behavior and
their Christ-like attitudes would cause the rulers to ask questions,
enabling the Christians to answer them! (Recall Paul before Felix,
Festus, Agrippa and Bernice.)
Almost all of 1 Peter tells Christians
to obey governmental authorities and how to live and witness under
severe persecution. In 1 Pet. 3:14-16 he tells them not to fear, but to
maintain good conduct, to keep focused on Jesus Christ living within
them and to be ready to answer the questions that this would elicit!
What would seekers ask about? The Christians’ hope! They
would marvel how the Christians could have peace and joy in the midst of
economic discrimination and physical persecution.
It is easy to think Paul and Peter
might make an exception in the case of today’s Saudi Arabia or Iran--the
two worst persecutors. But the government of which these two apostles
speak was Nero’s Rome in the sixties! In the end, both apostles were put
to death by Nero.
That is, he thought he had killed them,
but they were still alive! Only Jesus holds the keys of life and death.
The worst that Satan can do only gets the Christian promoted to God’s
up-stairs department! It can only happen when God permits it for his own
reasons.
John gives the same counsel. The
persecution was even worse in the 90s under Domitian. Nero’s persecution
was mainly in Rome. But under Domitian, emperor worship became
obligatory and it was empire wide.
Revelation.
Revelation. The whole book deals with this
subject! It was during the terrible Domitian persecution that the seven
churches of Asia (with their many congregations) felt the temptation to
compromise their faith. They suffered not only physical persecution, but
also economic discrimination. The Nicolaitans (who could tolerate
considerable ethical ambiguity!) told fellow Christians to be faithful
to God in their hearts, but to pretend worship to Caesar. They could
avoid suffering.
Jesus condemned this thoroughly in the
book of Revelation. He taught through the visions in Revelation that the
gospel would be taken throughout the world. In Ch.6 we see the
post-resurrection Jesus, crowned and seated on a white horse, riding out
into the world to conquer! (He is the same Messiah figure of Psa. 45:
2-7, Hab. 3:8,9, etc.) In Ch. 19 we see him again accompanied by many
riders, all of them in white and riding on white horses. They are
identified as those who followed him and were faithful to him--those who
took the gospel to the whole world. But Ch. 6 shows that always the red
horse of physical persecution would follow close behind. (This rider
carried, not a sword for war, but a meat cleaver, used for animal
sacrifices. The sixth seal shows the martyred Christians as such animal
sacrifices, with their blood under the altar.) The black horse would
follow. He represented, not famine, as often thought, because there was
plenty of oil and wine. He stands for property loss and economic
discrimination. We are told later that the Christians could neither buy
nor sell without the mark of the beast. Then the pale horse would
follow--death due to war, epidemics, famine and wild animals (a menace
in those days). The pale horse went after believers and non-believers
alike. God could have spared the Christians, but it would have been
cheap insurance that would have attracted everyone in the empire--for
the wrong reasons. The believers’ faith had to be tested to see whether
it could endure. In the suffering, believers gave their most powerful
testimony and their most convincing demonstration of the wonderful help
of their strong Lord.
God gives the human and non-human
forces great freedom to do evil and to persecute believers. Why? He
could have protected the believers. But if the evil in people’s hearts
was not allowed to express itself, how could God condemn them? He would
seem like an unjust judge. He has to let them do their worst. Until they
destroy all life on this planet (Rev. 16) and then destroy all the
culture they have built during millennia of civilization (Rev. 17,18).
God seems to say to wicked people, "If you will not repent, do your
worst. You are playing right into my hand. You are bringing down eternal
damnation on yourselves."
At the same time, the believers need
testing for their purification. Or their neighbors could charge, as
Satan did, that God was unjust to save such imperfect people, who just
trusted him for what they could get out of him. (The health and wealth
gospel!) But their faithfulness unto death justified God in saving them.
But the worst that Satan can ever do to
believers is to get them transferred to God’s upstairs department! They
keep right on living! Some may not lose consciousness here before they
are already aware of their new environment. Revelation pictures them
singing, worshiping and praying. Who can say how important their
contribution is in this cosmic struggle for control of God’s
world. God uses the Christians’ suffering to purify them, to win
seekers, to damn the unrepentant, and to accomplish his goals for human
history.
There is already more persecution of
Christians in our day than in any previous period of history. If we
believe we will soon have the world evangelized then we should be
preparing our-selves and Christians in every land for more severe
persecution, as the world become more polarized. Jesus said Christians
would always be in the minority (Mt. 13).
We must also remember that today, when
we missionaries and tentmakers go to live and work in other countries,
we go as guests. This adds to our responsibility to obey their laws.
Jesus said we are to give to Caesar what is his and to God what is his.
That means that if Caesar interferes with what is God’s, that we may
disobey--but we must then be willing to take the consequences. If
authorities forbid us to meet for worship, we must meet anyway, but in
small house fellowships. If they forbid evangelism, we must nevertheless
share the good news. But we must not flaunt our Christian activity as a
challenge to government, but witness quietly, and in a context of
otherwise irreproachable behavior.
Nowhere do the gospels suggest
confrontational evangelism. In persecution you focus on personal
integrity, quality work, caring relationships, tactful verbal witness
appropriately inserted into non-religious conversation, and readiness to
answer questions. You fish out the seekers from among the
indifferent or hostile people around them and tell them the good news
where it will not arouse antagonism. (Col. 4:5,6)
It is the way that Jesus evangelized in
a milieu almost identical to a Muslim country today. The Jews and
Muslims act from a fanatical monotheism that rejects the Trinity.
The more positive our individual and
collective contribution to a country the more tolerant they are of our
religious activity. A number of mission hospitals and schools in Muslim
countries that were started under European colonialism, have been
allowed to continue. An American Christian has been permitted to do
church planting in a fanatically Jewish part of Israel--because he has
established three firms that provide jobs for Israelis and bring hard
currency into the country-- $6 million a year.
The persecution of godless governments
give us no excuse for lying. It is precisely in this kind of situation
that we are admonished to speak the truth! Anything less is insulting to
our all-powerful God! He said we can never be brought before authorities
without his permission. When it happens we know God is zeroing in on
those authorities. We have one responsibility--to tell them what the
Holy Spirit is telling us to say! The Spirit of Truth will not tell us
to lie!
4. Underlying problems
Several underlying factors in the
1990's tentmaking syndrome contribute to the problems in tentmaking
today and make evasion of truth seem necessary.
1) Unclear tentmaker model
Mission leaders have reluctantly taken
the word "tentmaking" from the apostle Paul, because 80% of world
population is now off limits to regular missionaries unless they can go
in with jobs and work permits. Oddly, that is the only interest most
seem to have in Paul’s approach to ministry. But Paul gives us is a
remarkable, total strategy for church planting in hostile
regions. It is an extremely effective strategy in which tentmaking plays
a dominant role. His plan requires few foreign missionaries and
virtually no foreign funds!
But most Christian expatriates are
not tentmakers! They had little or no ministry at home, and so they have
no cross-cultural ministry in their new host country. A genuine
tentmaker, who fully supports himself, has a full-time spiritual
ministry because he integrates work and witness. Paul gives detailed
instructions for how to regard the job, and what kind of evangelism to
do in the workplace. It is quite different from what most contemporary
Christians are doing. Paul was a fully trained, fully qualified
missionary who could have served as clergy. But he deliberately chose to
serve as a lay person, an artisan, a worker-evangelist. We must heed his
example and his instructions.
True tentmakers must be who they
say they are. No pretense. Much of what is called tentmaking today has
little resemblance to what Paul did. When Christians raise full donor
sup-port and then get minimal jobs abroad as a cover or a front for
regular missionary work, they are already in an uncomfortable situation.
It creates a clandestine mentality which leads them to do and say things
that make them suspect. Non-believers ask embarrassing questions, not
about God, but about the puzzling inconsistencies they see. The
Christians run out of ways to evade the questions and lose track of what
they have said on prior occasions, so that their half-true answers
become increasingly puzzling. In no time at all the Christians have lost
credibility--exactly that quality which Paul’s tent-making gained for
him. He genuinely earned his living. He did not pretend to do so while
receiving fat paychecks from Antioch. (See GO Papers: Why Did Paul
Make Tents? A Biblical Basis for Tentmaking.)
If we put full self-support at one end
and full donor support at the other, all combinations in between are
legitimate, as long as they are completely honest before everyone
concerned. But here is the hitch. It is these hybrid options which bring
constant temptations to untruthfulness, because they tend to be not
fully honest.
2) Unclear evangelism concept
It constantly amazes me that in our
truly evangelical circles, even in mission circles, there is no strong
agreement that all Christians must witness. Ralph Winter estimates that
even in the mission community about 90% rarely evangelize; they
are engaged in other kinds of ministry. Because most Christians do not
know how to evangelize, some mission leaders describe two kinds of
tentmakers--those who focus on lifestyle on the job and those who take
minimum jobs and focus on evangelism and church planting. For shame!
Anyone who cannot explain who Jesus
is and help a seeker to receive him, is no tentmaker at all! That person
is just a Christian expatriate--a typical church member who had little
or no ministry at home, and therefore has little or no ministry abroad.
Matt. 10:32, 33.
Matt. 10:32, 33. Jesus says that he will
acknowledge before his Father in heaven only those who acknowledge him
in public--especially in an atmosphere of persecution. The others he
will not acknowledge. When should we witness? Whenever the opportunity
arises. Especially when people ask.
I am even more amazed at the crudeness
of much Christian evangelism. It is extremely important in implementing
Paul’s worker-evangelist approach to also follow his instructions for
how to evangelize, as described above. He reduced evangelism in hostile
societies to godly living and thirst-producing verbal witness. Instead
of evangelizing indiscriminately, they were to fish out the seekers. The
Christians were to put out bait and wait for seekers to ask questions
about God, and then be ready to answer them. You will rarely get into
trouble when you answer the questions of a genuine seeker. You are not
imposing the gospel, but allowing the seekers to pace the conversations
and even to show by their questions which answers they need! It is a
very liberating approach to evangelism which makes it a joyful activity.
Few Christians feel comfortable invading the privacy of indifferent or
hostile individuals. Paul and Peter both taught their converts to
fish, not hunt. (Col. 4:4,5, 1 Pet. 3:14-17).
Hunting more often puts one into a
position where lying may seem necessary. Fishing is more appropriate for
hostile environments. (See GO’s paper on Workplace and Campus
Evangelism: Fishing out Seekers--30 pages.)
3) Unbiblical view of work
Why does Paul say so much about
work in his brief letters? He had to instill a biblical work ethic in
his converts or his whole strategy would have failed. For Paul, the job
was no necessary evil that took time away from evangelism. He integrated
work and witness. He did not relegate ministry to free time. A true
tentmaker is a full-time minister of God even with a full-time job! The
job is the God-given context in which most of the evangelism takes
place. It is where the gospel must be lived out as well as spoken, to
elicit the crucial questions. Essential parts of lifestyle are personal
integrity (no lies!), caring relationships, and quality work.
Mission leaders create tensions for tentmakers by reminding them often
not to put so much effort into their jobs "because that is not what they
are here for!"
Yet Paul says that Christians must
serve their masters with the same efficiency and wholeheartedness as if
the employer were Jesus Christ! (Eph. 6:5-10, Col. 3:22-24) This
part of tentmaking dare not be ignored! Since 70 to 90 percent of the
laborers were slaves, the boss was usually a slave-master! He was
usually a wealthy householder--and a key person to be won to the Lord.
Imagine the impact on him when one or more of his employees was
transformed by Jesus Christ and approached his work and relationships
with a whole new attitude! Paul told the Christian slaves there was to
be no more pilfering, no more drunkenness, insubmission, disobedience,
unfaithfulness, laziness, gossip, quarreling, rudeness, envy, etc. They
were to be chaste, and a model of good deeds and sound speech. They were
to serve the employer as though he were Jesus Christ himself! Eph.
6:3-5, Col. 3:23-25, Titus 2:9, 10. Paul taught them to turn even
unpleasant labor into ministry and worship!
Many converted householders be-came
leaders of new house churches. They were the natural, most logical
leaders, once they grew spiritually. Their villas became the meeting
places of new Christian fellowships.
Today, it is a way to win a very
influential person, like the boss, his nuclear family, his extended
family, his employees and their families! In most cultures today, women
and children have little freedom to follow the Lord, unless the husband
and father can be won first. The best place to reach the head of a
family is in the workplace.
There is much else in the Bible
about God’s view of work and the fulfilment of our cultural mandate. It
is still binding on Christians and is most effective when integrated
with our missionary mandate.
Most mission leaders and many
tentmakers have little appreciation for the workplace and
worker-evangelism because they have never held a significant secular
job, or if they did, they had no ministry in that context. Secular work
experience and witness on the job ought to be part of the formal
training of every pastor and missionary! Paul made it a requirement for
all his church leaders. (Acts 20:33-35, I Tim.3:4.) Without workplace
experience how could they perform their main task--to mobilize the
laity? Not to get everyone onto some church committee, but to equip
every member to witness effectively in the neighborhood and the
workplace (Eph. 4:10).
In the many articles I have collected
on tentmaking over 20 years, almost all assume that a tentmaker’s
ministry has to be done in his very limited free time! This wrong
concept distorts what tentmaking is, but it is what clergy in the church
at large have been teaching church members for many decades.
4) Unwillingness to suffer
All careers have some vocational
hazards. Tentmaking adds another one--the possibility of persecution.
Jesus made willingness to suffer a
condition of discipleship. In Luke 9 he turned away volunteers
who came on the wrong premises. In Luke 14:25-35 he gave three
conditions: They had to love Jesus more than their loved ones, more than
their own physical safety and more than their possessions.
Dr. Josip Tson of Romania, who suffered
much during the Communist regime, says it was those Christians who had
already lost everything that were the most effective witnesses, be-cause
they had little more to lose. One wonders if God will have to send
Chinese and Eastern European Christians to evangelize the Muslim world,
because most Westerners are unwilling for any suffering at all, and do
not provide appropriate models for converts. And we ship persecuted
converts off to America for safety, when God may have a quite different
plan for them.
As to truth, we have to use common
sense. No human being is under obligation to tell everything about
himself to everyone he meets, and indeed, this would be impossible. We
are to be open and transparent. We should answer questions briefly, but
honestly. Answer what you think they are asking. If someone asks, "Why
are you living in Turkey?" you might say, " My work is here," "I like
Turkey and the Turkish people," and maybe, "I want my children to gain
experience in a foreign culture." Say these things if they are true.
There is nothing wrong with having secondary motivations, as long as our
primary motivation is right. But if they ask, "Are you a missionary?"
Then a tentmaker can say, honestly, "No, I am a chemistry teacher, but I
am a Christian and my relationship with Jesus Christ is so wonderful
that I wish everyone could experience it."
You never hide the fact that you
are a Christian. When the question is asked, that is your clue
that God wants you to answer it. An evangelistic conversation is to
occur. Do fishing evangelism--by giving a brief answer and
leaving the listener free. When they ask another question, you proceed
with a few more thoughts. As soon as possible, get them into a
one-on-one Bible study. This gives you freedom to take more initiative.
Bona fide tentmakers, who are fully
self-supporting and have a substantial secular job, and good
qualifications, usually have little difficulty. They have freedom to
speak, because they are who they say they are. There is no
pretense. The temptations to dishonesty arise more often when the
Christian is in a "hybrid" situation, pretending to earn their living
but actually living on donor support, trying to do regular missionary
work instead of the tentmaker’s unique ministry.
5. Bible versus experience
There is a basic problem with this
loophole approach to the question of truthfulness in tentmaking.
1) It was bothersome to me to
search the Scripture for justification to do what I otherwise consider
wrong. In writing this paper, I have
wanted to be fair, and to find texts for truth evasion in tight
situations. I experienced tight situations myself during my 21 years
abroad--in my tentmaking and in my work in restricted countries. But I
have not been able to turn up loopholes in Scripture.
2) It is wrong seek out verses that
might excuse lying, while ignoring the passages that rule it out,
2) It is wrong seek out verses that
might excuse lying, while ignoring the passages that rule it out,
especially when these are adjacent to the chosen texts. This
selective use of the Scriptures in the training papers suggests a
disregard for truth.
3) It is wrong to select
narratives of Old Testament characters to justify questionable actions.
If we are right in emulating their
dishonesty, why not also their adultery and murder? We can rejoice in
the degree of holiness many attained with no written Scriptures and
without the Holy Spirit in them in a post-Pentecost sense. God judges
people within their particular milieu. He holds us to much higher
standards. N.T. ethical teaching and examples, and its evaluation of
O.T. saints is a more certain guide for conduct.
4) It is wrong to ignore narratives of
people trusting God and resisting the temptation to lie,
4) It is wrong to ignore narratives of
people trusting God and resisting the temptation to lie, even when this
proved costly. Unfortunately, in almost every country the church
has taken root only after a period of blood bath. We must provide models
of faithfulness.
5) It is extremely bad Bible
study to use proof texts, with no regard for their contexts!
Even isolated sayings from the Proverbs have a
context. You approach Proverbs topically. Put together all the verses on
a single subject, in a logical order, and treat it as a chapter.
God does not contradict himself in Scripture. As we have seen, not one
of the suggested loophole verses gave us any leeway for evasion of
truth. (That any Christian leader could misuse Scripture in this way
makes one wonder about the rest of that person’s ministry.)
6) It is always wrong to begin with
experience and then seek biblical justification. We must begin with the
Scriptures and bring experience in line with it.
6) It is always wrong to begin with
experience and then seek biblical justification. We must begin with the
Scriptures and bring experience in line with it. We rightly criticize
cults for beginning with experience--it is how cults arise. We must
begin with the clear teaching of Scripture, and then correct our conduct
according to its light.
6. Times of ethical temptation
The temptation to be less than truthful
comes to all tentmakers at certain crucial points. Here are a few of
them.
1) Filling out application forms for a
secular job. 1) Filling out
application forms for a secular job. You must be honest in every point.
If you make up the usual chronological resume, you must account
for where you were working or studying each year. A way to avoid this is
to make up functional resumes, where you describe only the
studies and work experience relevant to the job you want. But almost
certainly the employer will then ask for fuller information, maybe even
a transcript of grades, etc.
To avoid all mention of religious
interests at first and then have it appear strongly in subsequent forms,
smells of deception. It is better to be honest and then pray that God
will overrule and get you the right job. If the employer is an American,
he may even be pleased that you are someone with high standards, who
will not drink, etc. If he asks whether you will evangelize, assure him
that you will be sensitive to the people and their culture, but that you
will want to share your faith with people who ask. Unfortunately, a few
unwise Christians have made some employers wary.
If the employer is Muslim, Hindu, etc.,
he may not be surprised even that you did seminary studies, since
non-Christians often consider all Westerners Christians. If such an
employer turns you down because of your faith, accept that as God’s
will.
2) Applying for a work permit or visa
papers. 2) Applying for a work
permit or visa papers. The same reasons apply as in the job application.
Most often the employer gets your work visa for you. But if you must do
it yourself, answer only what is asked, but do so honestly.
Many of us have seen God work on
our behalf in these situations. Recently, a couple applied for a
residence visa for a Muslim country, knowing that the data they had to
present would ordinarily bring immediate rejection. The person who
attended them was so alarmed he called the head officer. Instead of
rejection, this man quickly approved them, impressed with their honesty.
Much depends upon the particular individual who must pass on your case.
He may not agree with his country’s strict policies, or he may have had
a good experience with U.S. citizens, or then, with Christians.
3) When neighbors or colleagues at
work ask personal questions. They always do. In most cultures this
is quite acceptable. On your first meeting they may already ask where
you work, what you do, how much you earn, how much rent you pay, how
much you paid for your car, etc. Why did you come to this country? Do
you like it better than America? (They also ask single people why they
are not married, and childless couples why they do not have children,
and if they have one why they do not have two!) Everything is fair game.
We should live in such a way that
we have nothing to hide. We can be transparent. We can answer questions,
because that is right before God and part of our cultural adjustment.
If we start out with little lies and evasions we will certainly be
caught in inconsistencies and our reputation for truth will crash, along
with our credibility as representatives of Jesus Christ.
4) Entering a country.
4) Entering a country. A few countries do
not allow people to cross a border directly into a hostile neighbor
country. So a few Christians carry two passports. This was illegal and
probably still is.
5) Taking in Christian literature.
It can be risky to take many Christian
books into some restricted countries. But tentmakers need these books
for themselves and their ministry and to share with other expats. You
need to select carefully and take a reasonable amount--even though there
is some risk. (Most tentmakers in sensitive countries get paid annual
vacations in the U.S., and other trips out to nearby countries, and can
replenish their supply. Christians also exchange books with each other.)
Many international flights arrive
during the night when customs guards may do less thorough searches. Some
do not read English. Others do not agree with their country’s strict
policies and will be lenient, especially, if the foreigners are friendly
and polite. He may expect a tip, but you need to distinguish between a
tip for services and a bribe, which is illegal in many countries.
You can always say that you need the
books for your personal religious practice. Children’s books are easier
to justify, and can be useful for evangelism of English learners. Avoid
books with the words evangelism or missions on the cover.
Avoid multiple copies of one title, that might appear to be for resale.
It is ideal to take Arab New Testaments or individual gospels into
Muslim countries, but this involves more risk. You might take a couple
of bilingual testaments--English and Arabic--as language learning aids.
If the religious books are mixed with secular ones, and children’s
books, they will attract less attention.
Bringing in Christian books is not
breaking any law, but you want to avoid flaunting them before the
guards.
5) Smuggling Bibles and Christian books
into a country. Every
government has a right to control what comes in and out of its borders.
It could be drugs! It was counterproductive when Christians used to
smuggle materials, and even people, into Communist countries in
false-bottom cars, etc. Some of my Christian friends behind the Iron
Curtain felt it greatly added to the government’s persecution of them.
During that same period, our IVCF-IFES tentmakers were regularly
taking in a whole van full of Bibles and books, openly, with no trouble.
Border guards sometimes took sample copies. (They may have been
spiritually hungry!)
7. Situation ethics
We must guard against the ethical
relativity that became so dominant a few years ago. Proponents say we
must often choose between two sinful alternatives, in which case, we
should opt for the more ethical of the two.
I am not sure that God ever allows
Christians to be put into this situation, because Scripture says that in
every test and temptation God always gives a way out. 1 Cor. 10:11-13)
The Holy Spirit always shows us what to do.
A common example was the WWII refugees
fleeing the Nazis at night. If the baby cried, the whole group might be
found and put to death. So would it be justifiable to kill the baby? But
usually there are less drastic options. Could the baby be sedated? Could
just one person walk with the baby, apart from the group, reducing the
danger for the rest?
What should we think about people like
Corrie Ten Boom and her family, who hid Jewish people to protect them
from certain death in Nazi concentration camps? We must admire their
enormous compassion and courage, in what proved to be a very costly
service, since all of these Christians except Corrie died in
concentration camps. Corrie felt justified in lying to save their Jewish
refugees, and she is responsible only to the Lord for what she believed
was right. Her sister Betsy felt she must always tell the truth and
trust. Once when they were ready to sit down for a meal, there was a
knock at the door. The Jews quickly hid under the table. When the
Gestapo asked where they had hidden the Jews, Betsy answered truthfully,
"Here, under the table." The officers thought she was being sarcastic,
and stomped out. If they had lifted the floor-length tablecloth, they
would have discovered the Jews huddled together.
A Russian Christian gives helpful
advice. If officers ask if you have anyone hidden inside, say neither
yes or no, but, "Why don’t you see for yourself?" Also, it may be right
to withhold information, not as deceit, but as deliberate disobedience,
and take the consequences.
Conclusion:
It is a mistake to wait until a crisis
occurs to decide what we would do. We should anticipate some crises and
think what would be the biblical way to respond.
Fascism uses the same tactics as
Communism--and I experienced some of both in my brief work in Poland and
seven years in Franco’s Spain. All the university student meetings in my
apartment in Barcelona were illegal. You could not have more than 15
people in your home at any time without police permission. It would have
been denied to us because evangelicals could only meet in buildings
registered for that purpose, and all student meetings were prohibited.
Evangelicals had been free to study in the universities only since 1965.
Even then a couple of them were kicked out of their universities and the
nuns forbade the student nurses to live in the dorms or to eat in the
dining rooms.
We decided that if the police came to
our meetings in my apartment, we would answer questions honestly, but
not volunteer unrequested information. They came several times. Once we
moved our meetings to another location for several weeks. But on a
couple of occasions we convinced the police that our Bible studies were
politically harmless. They told us not to meet again, knowing we would
meet. My Catholic landlord and landlady, who lived in the same building,
could have caused us harm, but they had already found Jesus Christ in
our conversations together.
Eventually, we applied for legal
status, not expecting to get it because there was no law to cover our
case, but to show the authorities we had no reason and no desire to be
clandestine. Then persecution intensified and Christians were denied
permission to publish several books. But the individual who had to pass
on our case was more broad-minded, and we became the first evangelical
non-church organization to become legalized in Spain!
When we resort to lies, our main
problem is insufficient trust in our sovereign God. We must obey
governments in our host country, but not in the question of evangelism.
We must not flaunt our faith, but evangelize quietly. We should not take
foolish risks, but also not be so timid and cautious that we fail to
witness when we should. We must be sensitive to people and to the Holy
Spirit. We should always speak when someone asks us about our faith.
We must believe that no one can touch
us without God’s permission. If God allows our arrest, it is because he
intends something big, and we should not thwart that by dishonesty. A
number of missionaries who have been taken hostage have been put to
death, but others have won their captors to the Lord!
The very first Christians suffered
terrible persecution at the hands of Saul of Tarsus. He entered house
after house, dragging out men and women, and interrogating them about
Jesus. What did they say? One probably said, "Once I was blind, but now
I can see!" They all told what they heard Jesus say and what they saw
him do and what they experienced at his hands. Saul became the most
evangelized man in history! He heard more testimonies than we have in
all four gospels! If the Christians had tried to evade the truth, "the
chief persecutor of the church" might never have become "our beloved
brother Paul." Let us not short-circuit what God is trying to do,
regardless of the cost to us. Let us honor God and speak the truth and
trust in his love and his power.
–Ruth E. Siemens
Copyright 1997, Ruth E. Siemens
|