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Our
Lord's prayer for "oneness" of believers (Jn. 17:20-f)
emphasizes the desirability of unity, and its effect ("that
the world may believe that thou didst send me"). This unity
is defined as based upon and growing out of a "oneness"
with God; the result of teaching that had been accepted and
followed. "And I made known unto them thy name, and will make
it known; that the love wherewith thou lovest me may be in them,
and I in them."
Men
have long recognized the need for unity, but they have not always
accepted Christ's concept — of its essence, nor of the way to
attain it. Catholicism, viewing the body of "believers"
as a body politic, has used organizational bonds to hold its many
parts together. Protestant denominationalism, particularly in its
beginning, formulated "Creeds" or lists of "I
Believes" as bonds of fellowship. The "Party
Spirit" flourished, and peer pressures or unwritten laws from
"our" church have been used to hold various sectarians
together. And in more recent times, social needs have supplanted
spiritual matters. By ignoring God's word, and stressing
"unity in diversity," others have accepted
"union" in place of unity. The cults are often bound by
loyalty to a human founder rather than to Christ.
Our
diverse society, with its emphasis on individuality, may despair
of being "joined together in the same mind and judgment"
(1 Cor. 1:10), for in one sense, this is impossible. We judge
subjectively, out of our knowledge, experience and background; and
none of us are exactly alike. But all saints can and should
"have a mind" to serve Jesus
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Christ, and their judgments and opinions
should spring from and be governed by that single goal.
1
Pet. 3:8 tells us to be of one mind, then describes that
"mind." It is sympathetic, brother loving,
compassionate, humble, etc. Paul wrote to the Philippians:
"Have this mind in you, which was also in Christ Jesus"
— who humbled himself, became a 'servant' for our sake, and was
obedient even unto death. It was on this basis that he urged them
to unity, saying, "Being of one accord, of one mind; doing
nothing through faction or through vain-glory, but in lowliness of
mind each counting other better than himself; not looking each of
you to his own things, but each of you also to the things of
others" (2: 2-8). The welding together of differing
individuals, through their common desire to think like, obey like,
be like their Lord, is that which commands the attention of the
world and causes them to believe.
When
brethren differ in their understanding of the will of God, the
fact that they differ is not destructive of unity as much as the
selfish "mind" which may exist. If both desire truth,
and recognize the same standard of truth, they can study together
— drawing closer to one another as they draw closer to Christ.
One need not condone or participate in error during this process.
But when we seek to force "unity" by organization,
Creed, Party lines, or carnal pressures, we may expect only more
of the same. Nothing, but nothing, but nothing will glue brethren
together like the genuine love of God.
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