sola scriptura wrote:
So, can I say he is teaching a lie? I think he's ignoring the truth, which all of us do from time to time, unfortunately. If a pastor actually acknowledges the truth and still teaches the opposite, I would say that is definitely a lie.
Some of the discussion in this thread about Pastors who are afraid to teach the truth about marriage kind-of reminds me of the fable about The Emperor's New Clothes. Everyone pretended that His Highness was not strutting around naked, because (proverbially speaking) no one wanted to rock the boat.
Matthew 8:23-26 NKJV Now when He got into a boat, His disciples followed Him. (24) And suddenly a great tempest arose on the sea, so that the boat was covered with the waves. But He was asleep. (25) Then His disciples came to Him and awoke Him, saying, "Lord, save us! We are perishing!" (26) But He said to them, "Why are you fearful, O you of little faith?" Then He arose and rebuked the winds and the sea, and there was a great calm.
The reason some of us have paid a high price for "coming out of the plyg closet" is because of people who do not want to rock the boat in spite of knowing truth. If more Pastors and other leaders were willing to risk rocking the boat, then pretty soon, we all would find that the boat simply can not be rocked beyond what God is able to handle. Maybe we need to wake Him up to calm the storm!
If God really placed a Pastor in the position he holds, then God is able to keep him there if
everything he teaches is Biblical Truth. I have little or no respect for a supposed man of God who refuses to teach something that he acknowledges to be Biblical Truth because of his fear of losing position, especially when the eternal destiny of so many orphans depends on the adults in their lives hearing, believing, and acting on that Truth. ("Why are you fearful, O you of little faith?")
What's the difference between ignoring truth and telling a lie? Very little, in this case. In fact, most Pastors who acknowledge truth about plural marriage will still teach monogamy-only when they get behind their pulpit. That makes them false teachers and liars, regardless of any other truth they might teach. Yes, I know that those are strong words, but they are backed up by my own actions. I had the integrity to be honest about my beliefs, and it cost me everything I had in the denomination I was once part of, including ministerial credentials and church membership. I'm glad that God will balance the books someday.