Thursday, 15 September 2011

The Characteristics of False Religion


This is not a comfortable issue for many church people because much of what they do falls into this category.  Dr D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones analyses this aberration with his usual astuteness and precision.
The first characteristic, he says, of false religion, is its hypocrisy.  It majors on saying one thing, and doing something quite different.  But this is not always the case with hypocrisy.  Like the Jews in Stephen’s day in the first century, and the Sanhedrin in particular, they were involved in a cynical game of pretence – they, outwardly, claimed to do their religion for God, but in fact were doing it for themselves.  This is true of all false religion.  It supposes to be worshipping and serving God, but is rather an exercise in self-worship and self-aggrandizement.  There are honest and consistent enough to actually do what they say they are doing – good works, church attendance, supporting charitable causes, being a good neighbour, as well as having all the right language for the right occasion.  But because this is all supposed to be directed to the living and true God, it turns into indisputable hypocrisy.  

The second feature of false religion is that it is very keen on what we must call institutionalism.  What is meant here is the actual worship of the church, just as the Jews worshipped the Temple.  Hypocrites put the worship of the church up against the Christian faith.  The church is their idol (which is always a mark of false religion), idol worship; they would do anything for the church; nothing would be too much trouble for the church.  But would they do anything for Christ?  That’s a different question, for to do anything for Christ would make you a bit too extreme in religion.  And what if the church departs from Christ?  What do you do then?  Who do you follow?  The hypocrite will always opt to follow the church, and walk away from Christ and His Gospel.   Like the Second Law of Thermodynamics, which teaches that, left to itself, mater tends to deteriorate and decompose, etc; so likewise the church, when left to itself after having been given up by God,  always tends to institutionalise, and therefore become utterly ineffective, because maintaining the institution takes precedence over everything else.  What is central to every form of false religion is the building.  This becomes the number one interest – a nice building, nice decor, soft comfortable seats, and the right temperature.  But the building soon takes the place of Christ and the preaching of the Gospel.  Everything is controlled by the building.  But, as Rev. Dick Lucas so famously remarked, “the building is only for sheltering us from the rain” 

The third characteristic of false religion is the emphasis on tradition - the tradition of men.  How easily we become unthinking copy-cats of what went before, good or bad. To follow good tradition, that is, Gospel tradition, is good and acceptable and mandatory for the Christian Church; but to follow the traditions of men, of the church in the past, of past or present church leaders, is the height of folly.  Today, the trend is to follow the practice of the modern-day gurus who are experts in worship.  Churches, their ministers and elders, ape the world with the best imitation they can muster.  The worship in many evangelical churches today is nothing but sheer unadulterated worldliness dressed up to look like contemporary worship, when it is nothing of the kind.  As Paul tells us in Rom.1, we, like him, must be “separated unto the Gospel of God,” unto Christ, and away from the world in all its forms and expressions.

The last mark of false religion is self-righteousness.  Hypocrites, like the Pharisees of old, “trusted in themselves that they were righteous” (Lk.18:9).  There is this pride in what they have achieved or accomplished, and in what they are and where they belong. There is pride in their particular tradition, glad that they belong to a church where every preacher is a good one, where there is no theological pluralism within its bounds, where every elder is a devoted servant of Christ (or the church!), and where every member is a true Christian.  Self-righteousness – repugnant, insulting, nauseating.  But, as Jesus taught his disciples, “Unless your righteousness exceeds that of the Scribes and the Pharisees, you will, by no means, enter the Kingdom of heaven” (Mt.6).   He also said that “That which is highly esteemed among men is an abomination in the sight of God.” 

So false religion is essentially hypocritical, and hypocritical religion is essentially false.  So beware!

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