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Do We Need Permission?

Do We Need Permission?

 

     For several years while in Virginia, I enjoyed going out with a couple of dear Christian brothers to hunt for Civil War relics.  Of course, hunting on federal property was a serious crime and was unthinkable. However, so many of the personal properties owned by residents in the Richmond area were treasure troves of those artifacts. Their woods and fields held bullets, shells, buckles, buttons, and the like. Dave Young, Jr., always followed the same procedure before our hunts. He would go see the homeowners where we wanted to hunt, people he had known, built friendships and done business with for years. If we got their permission-sometimes the thoughtless or unethical practices of other hunters made them inclined to refuse us-then we would go on their property and hunt for relics. It was their land and their right to permit or deny. If we had ever chosen to hunt one of those places without permission and got caught, it would have been a silly argument to say, "They did not tell us we couldn't hunt here."

     This example is crude and imperfect, but I think it illustrates a principle most can understand. It is not natural to construe someone's silence as permission. Yet, when it comes to matters of faith and practice in religion, we attempt that very approach.

     When it comes to how we live and serve in this life, we have to have God's approval for whatever we do (Col. 3:17). When He tells us what His will is on any matter, our response to that should be thoughtful, careful, and submissive.  To be otherwise would be thoughtless, careless, and rebellious-with God's stated desires.  To think that God would give us physical life, generous physical blessings, incredible spiritual blessings, spiritual life, and powerful promises on a continuous basis and we could ever be callous or cavalier about what He wants reveals an unfathomable audacity. Frank Chesser once depicted such an attitude this way, saying, "It has no respect for either the sound or the silence of God's voice. It only does what the Bible says in a given area because it happens to agree with the Bible on that point. At the first sign of conflict, it will have its own way ever time" (The Spirit of Liberalism 18).

     Church music in worship often gets isolated from the larger principle.  How we worship God in song, whether with or without mechanical instruments, is just one specific of a much broader principle. God has told us what He wants for church music (Eph. 5:19; Col. 3:16). Whatever we do must meet His expressed will.  Projecting songs, using songbooks or shape notes, having a song leader, or singing in parts or four-part harmony still falls within the category of His command that we sing. But this same principle covers everything we do in worship as well as the specific commands He has for us regarding our work as a church, our response to His grace in order to have His salvation, and the like. 

     Our culture teaches us to ask, "Why can't I?" It encourages us to say, "You didn't say I couldn't." But, "the whole world lies in the power of the evil one" (1 John 5:19). The humble spirit of a grateful, grace-receiving child of God, when viewing the will of God, should always be, "Do I have permission for that?"  Such is neither cowering fear or abject slavery.  It is adoration and reverence for a Lord who gave everything that we "may know Him and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to His death" (Phil. 3:10).

                                                                                --Neal Pollard