Ethics and Organized Religion
May 9, 2008
By George P. Wood
I once had a friend who was very interested in spirituality
but not in organized religion. His wife attended church, but he didn’t. Instead,
he would invite me over to his house from time to time, cook a wonderful
dinner, then pepper me with questions for the rest of the evening. I did my
best to answer them before he brought out dessert.
There are probably many people like my friend. They like
Jesus, but not the church. They are interested in what He says about ethics and
whatnot, but they are uninterested in what the church does on any given Sunday.
Interestingly, they have the Bible on their side, at least
to a certain extent. Consider what we read in Proverbs 21:3 (NIV):
“To do what is right and just is more acceptable to the Lord
than sacrifice.”
Indeed, unless you do what is right and just, God does not
accept your sacrifice.
“The Lord detests the sacrifice of the wicked, but the
prayer of the upright pleases him” (15:8).
“The sacrifice of the wicked is detestable — how much
more so when brought with evil intent!” (21:27).
How you behave also affects whether your prayers are
answered.
“The Lord is far from the wicked but he hears the prayer of
the righteous” (15:29).
“If anyone turns a deaf ear to the law, even his prayers are
detestable” (28:9).
In each of these five verses, ethics is more important than
religious practices. If your heart is right, and if you speak and act in an
ethical manner, then your religious practices are pleasing to God. If not, then
the opposite is true.
But at the end of the day, I don’t think the Bible is
forcing us to choose between ethics and organized religion. If God were so
antipathetic to organized religion, why did He reveal so many laws regarding
animal sacrifice, tithes, priests and prayers? The point of these verses is not
that we get to make the choice between ethics and organized religion, only that
the former is more important than the latter.
Or rather, perhaps what we should say is that the organized
religion is supposed to be a means to ethical living. Why did God give us the
Law? To show us how He wants us to live. Why did He give us priests and
sacrifices in the Old Testament and Jesus Christ in the New Testament? To show
us that if we don’t live the way He wants us to, the sin must be punished, but
that forgiveness is also offered to the repentant. Why do we attend worship
services on a regular basis and support the local church? Because the natural
tendency of humanity is to forget God, His Law, and the gospel unless we are
constantly reminded of their reality. That’s what church — organized
religion at its most obvious — is all about.
So, don’t forget to go to church this weekend!
— George P. Wood is senior pastor of Living Faith
Center (AG) in Santa Barbara, Calif., and author of The Daily Word online
devotionals.