The DeGRAFF FREE
State Route 235/
Phone: (937) 585-4463
James R. Roby, Pastor
Standards
by
Ronald E Williams
In most spheres of life, we welcome standards. They provide safety, uniform
levels of acceptable performance and guidelines for behavior. Take, for
example, the manufacturer who is interested in selling a product on a long-term
basis. Such must maintain rigid quality controls to secure and keep long term
satisfaction with his product. Should he let down his standards in production
or in handling consumer concerns, it would mean ultimate loss of business and
profitability or, to put it another way, the success or failure of his venture.
The "World" Uses Standards
Though many consumer products are shoddily made and with a philosophy of
"planned obsolescence," they do not survive in a market place of fair
competition. Purchasers with discernment look for quality, value and service
and thus impose certain "standards" on that which is acceptable to
the market at large. Manufacturers who ignore these consumer-mandated
"standards" do so at their own peril and will not survive.
In the medical community, professional health providers must meet exacting
standards of education, peer review, on-the-job performance and liscensure. Though these various standards do not guarantee
quality health care, the public and our governmental agencies use them to weed
out quacks, imcompetents and charlatans. Who would
desire to have brain or heart surgery performed on them by a health care
provider who never mastered or understood anatomy, or came to the procedure
with no prior skills or experience?
Picture the sports enthusiast watching professional baseball, basketball,
football, hockey, etc. when suddenly all rules (standards) were eliminated. He
would be amazed at the poor batter who insisted on six strikes instead of
three, the football team that played with twenty players instead of eleven, or
the basketball player who used a stepladder to facilitate his "slam
dunks"! Standards provide the parameters necessary for uniformity, fair
competition and predictability. Without the "rules of
the game" anarchy would reign, and no game would be like another.
The World's Standards Change
Culturally or socially mandated standards, however useful and necessary for
various spheres of life, are fickle and transient. Whereas
our God is holy and immutable (changeless), the standards of men seemingly
change with the winds.
Clothing styles acceptable to society are in a constant state of flux. The
punk rocker of this generation would laugh hysterically at the attire of the
"flapper" of the roaring twenties. The "evangelical"
believer of today may look on the dress of the pre-World War II believers with
a condescending amusement, and conclude they were unnecessarily austere.
Various forms of social behavior also seem to undergo changes in standards,
or acceptable norms. Strictly observed "courtship" of the past which
was guided by parental rules and guidelines seems "old-fashioned" to
today's youth who often choose serial dating, unfettered petting, and brazen
fornication. Physicians and nurses who would have been arrested and
incarcerated forty years ago for the same procedure, are now enriching
themselves through socially acceptable abortion of preborn
children. Divorce, which was unheard of among believers 50 years ago, or at
least was discussed in hushed tones, is now becoming prevalent in our circles.
A believer of Fanny Crosby's day would be horrified to hear the average
Christian teenager's tape and CD collection of today. The sensual performers,
driving beat and worldly music styles would have been rejected by those
God-fearing folk of yesteryear, but such musical tastes are common and
acceptable to contemporary professors. What the average American believer now
watches on his TV set during the course of an average week would have been
grounds for church discipline several generations ago.
Whereas society at large can be expected to follow the dictates of the flesh
and a depraved human nature, believers must march to the beat of a different
drum. Our contemporary culture looks with a patronizing disdain on our Godly
American forebears, considering themselves enlightened and freed from the
shackles of Biblical standards. It reminds one of Paul's conclusion:
"... but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was
darkened. Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools" (Romans
1:21b-22).
Christians Standards Should Never Change
What is the lesson in all of this? Man left to himself will "do that
which is right in his own eyes" (Judges 21:25). His "standards"
will be flexible and of a temporary nature. They will change with the whims and
ways of each generation and, over a period of time, will even be contradictory
of preceding cultures!
Christian friend, the question is not how you and your manner of life are
acceptable to your mutable generation, but to your immutable God! We can find
small comfort in the fact that we "fit-in" with the mainstream
of professing Christendom: "Woe unto you, when all men shall speak well of
you!" (Luke 6:26).
Standards of dress, behavior, etc., will always be followed. The question is, whose standards do you observe? Because our inborn,
fleshly temptation is to follow the standards of the world around us, God wants
us repeatedly to resist these inclinations: "Thou shalt not follow a
multitude to do evil..." (Exodus 23:2); "for thou art an holy people
unto the Lord thy God, and the Lord hath chosen thee to be a peculiar people
unto himself, above all the nations that are upon the earth." (Deuteronomy
14:2)
Godly Standards Set Christians Apart
Standards observed for their own sake become legalistic and Pharisaical.
However, Godly standards of dress, behavior, music, church order, separation,
etc., observed to please the Lord, and, formulated on the basis of scriptural
principle, effectively set us apart as a peculiar people that live lives
considered inscrutible by our peers.
Do not pride yourself, my friend, on your liberality or your
broad-mindedness. We must concern ourselves with obtaining God's approval, and
not that of society, on our standards. Godless
Those who fear God and eschew evil will seem eccentric to their contemporaries.
Their standards of life, because they conflict in so many ways with their
world, make them objects of curiosity, defamation and misunderstanding. They
become a spectacle (1 Corinthians 4:9) to a laughing society.
We would all do well to take personal inventory on our manner of life. We
all live by standards of some kind, formulated after some criteria discerned or
not. Personal holiness, denial of the flesh, scriptural principle,
separation from sin and the world, and pleasing God have got to be our
motivations for establishing standards of life. If they are not, you will look
like, think like and act like the God-rejecting world whose standards you have
unwittingly followed.