Secondary Separation: Should Christian Brethren Ever Separate?

The concept and practice of so-called “secondary separation” is a divisive issue within fundamentalism. It is appropriate now, more than ever, to examine the matter in light of Scripture. What follows is an all-too brief survey of several respected fundamentalist leaders of the past 50 years on this very matter. Their views are briefly presented and analyzed, and some conclusions will be drawn at the end. Hopefully, this modest study will edify the body and exhort fundamentalists to be captive to the Scriptures, wherever they may lead.

At the outset, a brief definition of fellowship must be offered so we’re all on the same page going forward. Loosely, “fellowship” is defined as a union for spiritual purposes. More precisely, a partnering of individuals, churches, organizations or any other group for the purpose of promoting Biblical truth, based on a common spiritual foundation. Therefore, when we discuss a separation among brethren, we are really pondering the question, “With whom or what can I legitimately enter into a spiritual partnership with?” (Oats).

What in the world is “secondary separation?”

Ernest Pickering

A secondary separatist would be one who will not cooperate with (1) apostates; or (2) evangelical believers who aid and abet the apostates by their continued organizational or cooperative alignment with them; or, as employed by some (3) fundamentalists who fellowship with those in the previous category. (217)

Rolland McCune:

“Secondary separation” is the refusal to cooperate with erring and disobedient Christians who do not adhere to primary separation and other vital doctrines. (146)

Douglas McLachlan:

Familial separation is the unfortunate necessity of functional severance from members of the family who are true Christians, when doctrinal or ethical compromise creeps into their lives or ministries. (132)

John R. Rice:

Do you see that since this secondary separation is an artificial, man-made doctrine, in every case it must depend on one’s personal, variable judgment? How much better to follow the simple rules in the Bible. Since there is no clear-cut Bible teaching on the question, secondary separation is a manufactured doctrine that leads to great confusion. And, sad to say, it also leads to passing judgment on Christian brethren, judging people’s motives, and this leads to division and strife among people who really are serving the same Saviour, who believe the same Bible, who preach the same Gospel, and both seek to win souls. That is unfortunate and, I think, unscriptural. (228)

In light of the above, my own working definition of so-called “secondary separation” is this:

A secondary separatist is a Christian who will not cooperate with:

  1. apostates
  2. true Christians who aid and abet the apostates by their continued organizational or cooperative alignment with them
  3. true Christians, when a Scripturally defensible claim of doctrinal or ethical compromise creeps into their lives or ministries

This is a concise definition, and one all fundamentalists would do well to adopt. Many would disagree, and I believe they are wrong. John R. Rice, as we will see, draws his circle of fellowship around the fundamentals of the faith and allows very wide latitude within this boundary. His views may surprise many, especially fundamentalists of the Sword of the Lord vintage.

John R. Rice

Rice was strongly against secondary separation. His primary focus was revivals and soul-winning, and his theology on separation reflects this. For Rice, the threshold of orthodoxy was the fundamentals of the faith—period. Rice would accept any Christian so long as he espoused (1) faith and salvation in Christ, (2) the Bible, (3) the virgin birth, (4) blood atonement, (5) the deity and (6) bodily resurrection of Christ (182, 224). I have chosen to spend a great deal of time on Rice because I believe he speaks for a great many frustrated fundamentalists on this matter.

The important thing is, is a man for Christ and the Bible? If he is, and he makes no divisive issues and strife, then fellowship with him. So the Scripture teaches. That means I can fellowship with some who fellowship with some they ought not to fellowship with. (182)

[W]e have an obligation to have brotherly love and kindness and charity toward those who are weak in the faith, but just so they are “in the faith. (224)

Rice would likely separate from fundamentalists who were in favor of secondary separation, citing Rom 14:1 as support.

Listen, you are not to run with anybody if it means quarreling and strife and division and hair pulling and hell raising. Say to that one, “God bless you, but go your way, and I will go mine.” If there is going to be strife and no real unity and no real heartfelt joy and results for God, then sometimes we cannot cooperate with Christians who make strife over minor issues. They are weak in the faith and they make an insistent division over it. (184)

Rice decried what he saw as undue obsession with division at the expense of evangelism. Fighting modernism was not Rice’s main priority—evangelism was.

The tendency to go to extremes appears in the matter of defending the faith and standing up for Christ and the Bible. Those of us who would defend the faith and expose false prophets are constantly urged to attack good Christians, to spend our time and energy in fighting good Christians who may not agree with us on some matters or may be wrong on lesser matters but are born-again, Bible-believing, soul-winning Christians. We have followed a simple course down through the years. We are against infidels and false teachers. We are for good Christians. (196)

Rice’s most passionate plea was for Christians to have perspective. The great division, he warned, is between those who are saved and those who are lost. “Let us face it honestly: Are we going to fight for God’s people and against Satan’s people? That is what we ought to be” (197).

Rice’s critique of secondary separation

Rice’s guiding verses on this matter were Ps 119:63 and Rom 14:1 (221). He outright denied that Scripture teaches separation from brethren. “No, there is nothing in the Bible like that” (224). He saw separation as an “all or nothing” proposition. He did not allow for the different “levels” of separation that Ernest Pickering wrote about, which we will examine in the next article. He defined the doctrine as follows:

But what is called ‘secondary separation’ means not only must the Christian be separated from liberals, modernists, unbelievers, but he is to separate from anybody who does not separate enough from unbelievers. (218)

Rice charged that Christians are commanded to fellowship and love other Christians (Jn 13:34-35), and this very love, not division, should guide Christians in this matter. Fractious, subjective battles among real Christians divide the body and hinder the cause of Christ.

But still the weight of the Scripture here is tremendous. We should love other Christians as Christ loved us. Our love for others ought to be such an obvious fact that people will know Christians are different. So only a very serious matter ought ever hinder the fellowship of good Christians who love each other. (222)

Most fundamentalists who uphold separation from brethren point to 2 Thessalonians 3:6-15 as support. Their arguments will be presented shortly, but I ask Christians to examine the passage for themselves and reach their own conclusions. Rice expressly denied that 2 Thess 3:6-15 teaches secondary separation, labeling this “a clearly biased interpretation” (226). He maintained it merely taught that the disorder in question was eating without working (224-225).

Going back to his call for unity for the sake of evangelism, Rice protested that secondary separation resulted in arbitrary decisions. “Where can one draw the line? Unless he takes the plain Bible position of separation from the unsaved and the restrained fellowship with Christians who live in gross sin, one will make subjective decisions according to his own preference” (226-228). Fred Moritz dismisses such objections as a “smokescreen,” and calls for biblical discernment on the matter (84).

Finally, Rice appealed to examples of other Godly fundamentalists to bolster his case, men who did participate in inter-denominational fellowship for the sake of the Gospel, including Moody, Billy Sunday, R.A. Torrey, Bob Jones, Sr., H.A. Ironside, W.B. Riley, Bob Schuler and J. Frank Norris (228-234).

Rice’s work on separation was published in the midst of his very public falling out with Bob Jones, Jr. Any honest Christian will admit that views change with perspective, as hard-won knowledge, wisdom and experience are brought to bear upon tough issues. Perhaps Rice would have taken a harder line on separation earlier in his ministry. Regardless, a position must be evaluated in light of Scripture, not by the character of the man promoting it.

Rice’s plea for unity is appealing, but incorrect. He errs by failing to acknowledge different levels of fellowship and ignores Scriptures which clearly teach separation from brethren. In this respect, Rice epitomized a particular fundamentalist mindset which is antithetical to militant separatism. George Marsden remarked,

Antedating fundamentalist anti-modernism was the evangelical revivalist tradition out of which fundamentalism had grown. The overriding preoccupation of this tradition was the saving of souls. Any responsible means to promote this end was approved. (67)

Rice’s was a “big tent” fundamentalism, and given the nature of his revivalist ministry, perhaps it is understandable Rice was so inclusive about doctrine. He was still mistaken. I will survey several fundamentalist leaders who believe Rice was mistaken in the next article.

Works Cited

Marsden, George M. Understanding Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1991. Print.

McCune, Rolland. Promise Unfulfilled: The Failed Strategy of Modern Evangelicalism. Greenville: Ambassador International, 2004. Print.

McLachlan, Douglas. Reclaiming Authentic Fundamentalism. Independence: AACS, 1993. Print.

Moritz, Fred. Be Ye Holy: The Call to Christian Separation. Greenville: BJU, 1994. Print.

Oats, Larry. American Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism. Watertown: Maranatha Baptist Seminary, 2012. Unpublished class notes.

Pickering, Ernest. Biblical Separation: The Struggle for a Pure Church. Schaumberg: Regular Baptist Press, 1979. Print.

Rice, John R. Come Out or Stay In? Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 1974. Print.

Discussion

Tyler, it makes a very big difference on how you treat that disciplined person. Jesus says to treat him as a pagan and tax collector.

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Greg Long, Ed.D. (SBTS)

Pastor of Adult Ministries
Grace Church, Des Moines, IA

Adjunct Instructor
School of Divinity
Liberty University

Jay,

Yes, there is a good bit of variance. A rather literal rendering of the Greek would reading something like this: “Now we command you, brothers, in the name of the/our [textual variant here] Lord Jesus Christ, to withdraw from (avoid, keep away from) every brother who is living ataktos and not according to the tradition which they/you received [another variant] from us.”

A key point of contention is the word ataktos, which used to be consistently translated something like “in a disorderly manner” (so, e.g., KJV). Papyri discoveries around the turn of the twentieth century provided some examples of the word in the context of idleness, which caused some scholars to assume that was a specialized meaning of the word, and so the nuance of “idleness” found its way into translations beginning around 1908. The scholarly consensus has shifted decisively since then back to the originally understood (and more general) idea of “disorderliness” but for some reason that consensus is not reflected in (at least most) modern translations of Scripture. Gordon Fee, for example, confesses in his recent Thessalonians commentary that he is unable to grasp why translations continue to use words related to idleness, in that such translations do “not in fact have a lexical leg to stand on,” being supported in this regard by “a total lack of evidence” (First and Second Thessalonians, 209).

So, this shift in the understanding of a key term in the passage accounts for some of the variance you see in the translations.

Chuck,

Welcome to SI! Hey - fantastic work on secondary separation, 2 Thes 3, et al. I’m sorry our paths haven’t crossed. I don’t know how I didn’t know you in connection to Central. God bless as you plow forward in life and ministry.

Straight Ahead!

jt

Dr. Joel Tetreau serves as Senior Pastor, Southeast Valley Bible Church (sevbc.org); Regional Coordinator for IBL West (iblministry.com), Board Member & friend for several different ministries;

2 Thessalonians 3:6-15 is found in the second section where Paul addresses the problem of willful unemployment with certain members of the congregation. Paul begins by laying down the principle that the congregation is to withdraw from any member who continues to live in conflict with apostolic instruction (3:6). Following this, Paul supports and applies the principle to the specific problem within the Thessalonian church. Certain members were refusing to work and were relying on the financial support of others in the congregation. Addressing the problem directly, Paul uses his own example of industry (3:7–9) and his previous instruction while with them (3:10–11) as authoritative guidelines to be followed. Next, Paul commands the disobedient to find gainful employment so that they can provide for their own needs (3:12). He then exhorts the congregation not to grow weary of supporting those who are truly in need (3:13). Paul concludes with a final exhortation, restating the principle from 3:6 that the congregation is to follow in disciplining the disobedient. The members are to mark those who continue to disobey Paul‘s directives, both his directives in the letter as a whole and in this section specifically, and not to associate with them (3:14). Paul ends with a caution that, in complying with this directive, the congregation is not to treat the disobedient as an enemy, but as a brother (3:15). Paul clearly views the disobedient in this passage as a fellow believer. He uses the term brother to describe the disobedient in 3:6. The expression is commonly used in similar contexts as a metaphor of one who is a member of God‘s spiritual family, hence a believer. He also places the disobedient in 3:11 among the members of the Thessalonian congregation and, thus, as one who has made a profession of faith. And, he concludes the section in 3:15 by cautioning the congregation that they are to treat the disobedient member as a brother and not as an enemy when disciplining him.


The evidence for the disobedient being treated as an unbeliever in the present passage, however, is not as clear cut as Matthew 18 and 1 Corinthians 5. Although the willfully unemployed were persisting in disobedience, the sin itself does not seem to be of the same stripe as the sin in 1 Corinthians 5. Disobedience is still disobedience, but willful unemployment and freeloading do not seem to measure up to the level of transgression that gross sexual immorality does. The two sins do not seem to be on the same scale. Some, sensing the tension and seeing the two passages as addressing those who were to be treated as unbelievers, attempt to heighten the sin in view by associating it with the sin Paul harshly condemns in 1 Timothy 5:8. There, Paul declares that those in the church who fail to care for the needy among their own family are, in effect, denying the faith. He adds that such failure to care for one‘s own family makes the guilty worse than an unbeliever. Thus, by linking willful unemployment with failure to care for one‘s family, this approach heightens the sin in 2 Thessalonians 3 and argues for treating the disobedient as an unbeliever, rather than a true brother. The problem with heightening the sin in 1 Thessalonians 3 in this way is that such heightening must be read into the text. The text says nothing about the willfully unemployed not taking care of the members of their own families. Paul does describe other sins the willfully unemployed are involved with in 3:11 (leading an undisciplined life, doing no work, acting like busybodies), but failure to care for family is not mentioned among these. Since such failure involves a heinous sin, it is strange that Paul does not mention this, were the disobedient in 1 Thessalonians 3 guilty of this sin as well. Furthermore, Paul says nothing in 1 Timothy 5:8 about those who fail to care for their families as shirking their responsibility because they are willfully unemployed. In fact, the context points in the opposite direction. Those who fail to care for family are condemned precisely because it is assumed they had the means to do so. Theirs is not a lack of means, as though unemployed, but the failure to use the means they have to care for their own. In short, the two passages offer no common denominators that suggest the sin in the one is related to the sin in the other. Returning to the question, then, what is the spiritual status of the disobedient in this passage? Is the church to view the disobedient as a believer or as an unbeliever? The evidence thus far points in the direction that the church is to view the disobedient as a fellow believer. The fact that Paul specifically directs the church to treat him as a brother supports that conclusion.

The question that needs to be answered from this passage is whether the discipline Paul calls for is excommunication or something short of that. If it be excommunication, that argues for treating the disobedient as an unbeliever. As in Matthew 18 and 1 Corinthians 5, he may be called a brother, but if the church is being directed to remove him from membership, it would be because his actions are viewed as those of an unbeliever and not those of a true believer. The chief argument in support excommunication is that Paul gives the church the same directive for disciplining the disobedient in 3:14 as he does the disobedient in 1 Corinthians 5:11. After directing the readers in 3:14 to publicly identify the disobedient, Paul then commands, ―do not associate with him, so that he will be put to shame.‖ The expression ―do not associate with‖ is identical to the command Paul gives to the Corinthian believers in 5:11. As noted above, the evidence from 1 Corinthians 5 is that the discipline there involves excommunication. Since the expression ―not to associate with‖ in 1 Corinthians 5:11 is used in a passage calling for excommunication, the expression itself must have a meaning consistent with that context. The Corinthian believers are not to associate with the incestuous man by removing him from membership and limiting their contacts to efforts to bring him to repentance. That being true, the identical expression in 3:14 can have the same force.

In a similar way, Paul is calling on the Thessalonians not to associate with the disobedient by removing him from membership and limiting their contacts to efforts to bring him to repentance. These similarities notwithstanding, there are difficulties with this reading of the text. The general consensus is that Matthew 18 and 1 Corinthians 5 call for the excommunication of the disobedient. Therefore, whatever is said of the disobedient in Matthew 18 can also be said of the disobedient in 1 Corinthians 5 and vice versa. In both passages, the unrepentant are to be viewed as unbelievers and removed from membership. And, in both passages, the discipline of the unrepentant is understood as the final step in church discipline. The overriding problem in placing 2 Thessalonians 3 in the same category is the command, “treat him as a brother” which Paul‘s gives to the congregation in 3:15. In Matthew 18:17, the Lord directed his disciples to regard the unrepentant as a Gentile and tax collector. To regard the unrepentant as a Gentile meant that he was to be viewed as an unbeliever and, specifically, he was to be viewed as an unbeliever at the point of excommunication. In other words, the Lord‘s directive represents the final step in church discipline, and it is at this last step that the unrepentant is to be viewed as an unbeliever. The tension comes in that Paul specifically cautions the Thessalonians in 3:15 that they are to treat the disobedient as a brother. Again, as discussed earlier, to treat the disobedient as a brother meant that they were to view him as a believer, as a brother in Christ. The problem in equating the discipline in Matthew 18 (and, thus, in 1 Corinthians 5) with the discipline in 2 Thessalonians 3 is that the respective designations of the disobedient are not synonymous. The semantic domains of Gentile and brother simply do not overlap. In fact, in these contexts, the two expressions are antithetical.

So, what is the nature and purpose of the discipline in 2 Thessalonians 3? When taken together, the evidence argues for taking the discipline in this context as pointing to a level of separation short of excommunication. In effect, the disobedient is given notice that his conduct is inviolation of apostolic standards and told he must repent. To drive home the seriousness of the breach caused by sin, the members are to withdraw normal fellowship, to include withholding of the Lord‘s Supper. And, they are to give notice that, if he does not repent and find gainful employment within a reasonable time as determined by the church, he will be viewed as an unbeliever and, thus, excommunicated from membership.

With the disobedient in 1 Corinthians 5, that point comes when the incestuous man fails to repent after the first confrontation. With the disobedient in 1 Thessalonians 3, that point comes if the willfully unemployed fails to find work in the time determined by the church. The information from the key texts can now be applied to the questions raised at the outset about the subjects and nature of church discipline in order to arrive at a biblical paradigm. The initial question concerned the spiritual status of the disobedient. When exercising church discipline, is the church to view the disobedient as a believer or as an unbeliever? Two of the key texts, Matthew 18 and 1 Corinthians 5, identify the disobedient as an unbeliever. This is directly stated in Matthew 18 when the Lord says that the church is to view the disobedient as a Gentile, a metaphor for an unbeliever. It is clearly implied in 1 Corinthians 5 where Paul directs the church to place the disobedient outside the membership of the congregation, that is, to treat him as an outsider or unbeliever. The third key text, however, identifies the disobedient as a believer. In calling for the church to exercise church discipline, Paul warns the congregation in 2 Thessalonians 3 not to treat the disobedient as an enemy, but to admonish him as a brother, that is, as a brother in Christ, as a fellow believer. This means that, when the circumstances call for the church to discipline its members, it is to discipline both those who are viewed as unbelievers as well as those who are viewed as believers. Thus, fellow believers can be and must be the objects of church discipline, when the circumstances warrant.

The second question raised concerned the nature of church discipline. Must church discipline involve excommunication or does the New Testament allow for a level that stops short of that? Again, two of the key texts call for excommunication. This is clearly implied in Matthew 18 when the Lord says that the disobedient is to be viewed as a Gentile and tax collector. As discussed above, the combination describes metaphorically those regarded as unbelievers to be placed outside of the membership of the church. In the 1 Corinthians 5 passage, Paul specifically commands the Corinthian congregation to remove the disobedient member from among them, that is, to excommunicate him. In contrast, the third key text calls for discipline that falls short of excommunication. The disobedient in 2 Thessalonians 3 is viewed specifically as a brother or fellow believer, to be disciplined within the church, not as an unbeliever, to be removed from the church. Paul says the readers are to withdraw from him and not to associate with him. In short, the members are to withhold normal fellowship from him in an effort to bring him to repentance. But this level of separation does not entail excommunication in that the disobedient is still considered a brother in Christ. Thus, depending on how the church views the disobedient, church discipline can involve excommunication, but it can also involve a level of separation short of excommunication.

Pastor Mike Harding

[Chuck Bumgardner]

A key point of contention is the word ataktos, which used to be consistently translated something like “in a disorderly manner” (so, e.g., KJV). Papyri discoveries around the turn of the twentieth century provided some examples of the word in the context of idleness, which caused some scholars to assume that was a specialized meaning of the word, and so the nuance of “idleness” found its way into translations beginning around 1908. The scholarly consensus has shifted decisively since then back to the originally understood (and more general) idea of “disorderliness” but for some reason that consensus is not reflected in (at least most) modern translations of Scripture. Gordon Fee, for example, confesses in his recent Thessalonians commentary that he is unable to grasp why translations continue to use words related to idleness, in that such translations do “not in fact have a lexical leg to stand on,” being supported in this regard by “a total lack of evidence” (First and Second Thessalonians, 209).

So, this shift in the understanding of a key term in the passage accounts for some of the variance you see in the translations.

Fee’s commentary is priceless on that passage :).

I always thought that the ‘idleness’ translation was a little odd for the passage, but hadn’t thought hard about it until this morning. I was going to look it up in BDAG when I got home, but now it seems like you’ve spared me the trouble!

I’ve heard an argument that ‘walketh disorderly’ (ASV, KJV, Darby, etc) was actually more closely aligned with what Paul was referring to - something about an allusion to the church as an army, but don’t remember now for sure. I can’t say that I care a lot for the ESV translation (the ESV’s my Bible translation of choice), but I’m not overly impressed with HCSB rendition either.

In any case, thanks for sharing. Appreciate it.

"Our task today is to tell people — who no longer know what sin is...no longer see themselves as sinners, and no longer have room for these categories — that Christ died for sins of which they do not think they’re guilty." - David Wells

The footnote in the 1599 Geneva Bible works for me.

“Fourthly, he saith, that idle and lazy persons ought not to be relieved of the Church, nay, that they are not to be suffered.”

It fits the context of the passage.

"Some things are of that nature as to make one's fancy chuckle, while his heart doth ache." John Bunyan

A few comments:

1. We all appear to agree that the passage has application beyond idleness and laziness. Therefore, we would disagree with Rice’s contentions in this article.

2. We all agree church discipline is a serious matter. It is supposed to be disgraceful and shameful, meant to bring the sinning brother to repentance.

3. My basic issue, as yet unanswered, is that Chuck’s position is a distinction without a practical difference. I say he still is a brother, just under church discipline and excluded from corporate fellowship. Chuck says he is not a brother, in that he must be functionally treated as an unbeliever. Sure, I understand. What is the practical difference, in real life, between Chuck’s position and mine?

4. All of this makes it very clear that separation from brethren is not something to be taken lightly, which I am very glad we agree on.

Very interesting discussion!

Tyler is a pastor in Olympia, WA and works in State government.

Hello, Mike,

Thanks for the thorough explanation of what I have found to be the most typical way of approaching 2 Thess 3:6-15. You have set forth that position very clearly. I’d like to interact with that position a bit, if I may, as I view the passage somewhat differently, and it is so often used as a key passage in the realm of ecclesiastical separation.

Unless I’m missing something, I agree with your entire first paragraph as you’ve written it (though not with all of the implications you are drawing from it), with one slight exception which I’m not dogmatic about (I believe 3:13 is an injunction not to be weary in doing what is right in terms of moving forward with disciplining the disorderly, not in terms of benevolence). I believe you are reading the Thessalonian situation correctly, and I believe that all through the process of discipline, the offender is to be treated as a believer/brother (Matt 18:15; 2 Thess 3:15).

We start to differ in our reading when we consider the gravity of the sin being addressed. I do not deny that the sin discussed in 1 Cor 5 may be considered more “heinous” than the sin in 2 Thess 3. This brings up a question which is both theological and practical: For what sins ought a professing believer be disciplined from the church? I contend that any teaching or practice inconsistent with the gospel of Christ and its attendant teachings (which is another way of saying “the tradition you received from us,” 2 Thess 3:6) is grounds for discipline. Notice the lack of specificity in Matt 18:15. In Paul’s letters, he is not afraid to name specific sins for which discipline is necessary. In 1 Cor 5:9, it is porneia​, but notice how Paul builds from this core in 5:9, through 5:10 and 5:11, to a culminating list in 6:9-10 (each list contains all the sins in previous lists, i.e., 5:10 contains 5:9, 5:11 contains 5:10, 6:9-10 contains 5:10). Presumably, everything in 6:9-10 would be grounds for church discipline, then, including being covetous, or a reviler — hardly the sort of things we’d consider “heinous.”

How about the question of how serious the sin of 2 Thess 3 is? We don’t need to reach into 1 Tim 5 in order to establish this.

First, consider the seriousness of Paul’s tone. He is not mincing words as he opens this section with “Now we command you, brothers, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.” The verb of command and the appeal to divine authority show that he means business here.

Second, consider how Paul characterizes the infraction. It is contrary to the apostolic tradition (3:6), which is a serious matter. As you note, it seems they were taking advantage of the patronage of others in the church (reflected, I’d say, in the language of 3:8, 12) when they should have been working for their own living; this might arguably be categorized with the “greedy” of 1 Cor. 6:10 (pleonekths is “one who desires to have more than is due,” BDAG 824). In addition, they were being “meddlers” (“busybodies”) (3:11), which sounds fairly innocuous, but was very often condemned in strong terms in the standard moral instruction of the day (on this, see Jeannine K. Brown, “Just a Busybody? A Look at the Greco-Roman Topos of Meddling for Defining allotriepiskopos in 1 Peter 4:15,” JBL 125:3 (2006)).

Third, consider that they had been called out regarding this problem before in 1 Thessalonians 4:9-12. The problem had not been handled, and Paul is addressing it more strongly in 2 Thessalonians.

Fourth, and perhaps most significantly, consider the language Paul uses to indicate how the Thessalonians should respond to the disorderly should they not cease their disorderly living. As you note, the expression “do not associate” in 3:14 is precisely the same as the action commanded toward the sexually immoral man in 1 Corinthians 5:9, 11, and those are the only times that expression is used in the NT. The burden of proof would seem to lie on one who wishes to make the disassociation something different in 2 Thess 3 than it very clearly is in 1 Cor 5.

(An expanded defense of this point may be found at http://cbumgardner.files.wordpress.com/2007/06/the-seriousness-of-the-o…)

And that brings us to the “brother” terminology in 2 Thess 3:15. For this phrase—“admonish him as a brother”—is the single, key point of the passage that leads people to the typical interpretation. As you noted, it provides a tension with what seems to be a fairly straightforward church discipline passage. You call it “the overriding problem,” and indeed it is. If 3:15 were not in the passage, I suspect that it would be straightforwardly understood as a typical church discipline scenario, no questions asked.

But the typical interpretation has its problems as well. You have already noted the challenge in reconciling the parallel usage of “do not associate” in 1 Cor 5 and 2 Thess 3. As well, are we really to think that Paul means for the Thessalonians to put the offenders under some sort of disciplinary probation, some sort of partial ostracization, a secondary level of church membership? Does Scripture know anything of this sort of treatment outside of this passage, if indeed this passage teaches it? As well, what if this “discipline that falls short of excommunication,” this “withholding of normal fellowship from him in an effort to bring him to repentance” does not succeed? Is the offender to be kept in limbo indefinitely?

So, “as a brother” (3:15) provides the crux of the challenge. I suggest a way forward that differs from the typical interpretation. It is not an entirely novel reading of the passage, although it is a minority view.

Typically, Paul is seen as providing a progression of actions in 3:14-15: (1) take public note of the disorderly; (2) disassociate from the disorderly; (3) admonish the disorderly as a brother. On this reading, the disorderly is admonished “as a brother” after he is “withdrawn from.” However, it seems to cut the Gordian knot, and comport better with the grammar of the passage not to understand 3:14-15 as a sequential progression of actions. Instead it is better to read Paul thus: (1) take public note of the disorderly so that (sunanamignumi as purpose infinitive) the congregation may disassociate from him, and (coordinate kai) (2) in relation to “taking note” of the disorderly, do not treat him as an enemy, but admonish him as a brother.

In this understanding, the “taking note” is equivalent to “telling it to the church” in Matt 18, the third “stage” of the Matthew 18 procedure. Even in this final, public stage of church discipline, the last chance for repentance before expulsion, the church is yet to avoid anger toward the offender, still considering them brothers, holding out hope that they may yet repent and remain in the fellowship of the church. If the offender remains obstinate, the church must respond with expulsion, after which time the offender is no longer to be considered a “brother.”

This understanding coheres with the larger situation of the Thessalonian offenders. Note that they are spoken to (among the larger congregation) in 1 Thess 4:10-12 with language similar to that in 2 Thess 3, and in 1 Thess 5:14, the congregation is to “warn the disorderly” (in the NT, the ataktos word group is only used in 1 Thess 5:14, 2 Thess 3:6-7, 11, indicating the connection among the passages). So the offense is not new to 2 Thessalonians. Paul had given them the “no work, no food” principle when he was with them cf. 2 Thess 3:10), he had written to the congregation to warn those not following this principle (1 Thess 5:14), he was admonishing them in the present letter (2 Thess 3:12), and the congregation was to follow through with a final, formal action (“taking note,” 2 Thess 3:14) if they continued to prove unrepentant.

It appears the congregation needed a strong nudge to follow through with the discipline that was incumbent upon them (hence the strong language of command in 2 Thess 3:6); they were not to grow weary in doing what was right (2 Thess 3:13). But at the same time, they were not to let the pendulum swing too far the other way; they were still to admonish the offenders as brothers.

John Gill, for one, subscribed to this understanding: ““But admonish or reprove him as a brother; as one that has been called a brother, and a member of the church…who indeed is to be reckoned as a brother whilst the censure is passing, and the sentence of excommunication is executing on him; for till it is finished he stands in such a relation.” (An Exposition of the New Testament [1746–48; London: William Hill Collingridge, 1853; reprint, Atlanta: Turner Lassetter, n.d.] , p. 586, emphasis added.) This conclusion, or a similar one, is also embraced by Rigeaux, Les épîtres aux Thessaloniciens, 715–16; and John Brug, “Exegetical Brief: 2 Thessalonians 3:6, 14, 15 – Admonish Him as a Brother,” Wisconsin Lutheran Quarterly 96 (1999): 208-217.

This explanation coheres (at least broadly) with Matt 18, explains the “brother” language of 3:15 while maintaining the expulsion of the offender, and comports with Paul’s practice of church discipline elsewhere. It also has implications for how the passage is applied to ecclesiastical separation.

[TylerR]

I agree that this is a church discipline situation.

I say they are still brothers. You say they are brothers too, but are to be treated as functional unbelievers. We both agree church discipline does not make a Christian not a brother in reality.

What is the practical difference between our positions? Are we splitting theological hairs here, or is there a real difference? Think we’re on the same page.

Tyler,

Actually, I do not say they are brothers. They may be, or they may not be. Given their expulsion from the church (as I understand this passage), the burden of proof would seem to be on the offenders to show that they actually are “brothers” by means of genuinely repenting from their disorderly behavior.

The significance of this entire discussion (which gestures toward the difference between our positions) is that fundamentalists have very typically taken this passage to be an example (if not the example) of “separating” from someone in a church discipline situation while still acknowledging that they are a brother in Christ.

For example, Mark Minnick, in a sermon on separation (“Scriptural Separation: II Thessalonians 3:6, 14-15,” Mt. Calvary Baptist Church, 23 October 2005) says that apart from 2 Thessalonians 3, we might very well conclude on the basis of other church discipline passages (e.g., Matt 18; 1 Cor 5) that those who persist in disobedience in either doctrine or deportment cannot truly partake in salvation in Christ. But because he understands ‘brother’ in 2 Thess 3:15 to indicate the state of the offender after the final stage of discipline, he concludes, “There actually is a category of people who are true believers but they are not obeying,” and applies this category to evangelicals who do not fully obey NT instruction regarding ecclesiastical separation.

Similarly, Joe Stowell: “Let me say this. Most of the people, if not all of them in the New-Evangelical camp, are born-again people. They are our brothers and sisters in Christ. But we believe they are walking disorderly and contrary to the teachings of the Bible in these matters [ecumenical evangelism, etc.]. The Bible says to ‘withdraw yourselves from every brother that walketh disorderly’ (2 Thess. 3:6). So, we do not cooperate with them.” (“Where We Stand Today,” The Gospel Witness (23 January 1975), 13).

Let me put it this way. Fundamentalists were faced with a situation where they (rightly) wanted scriptural warrant for separating from those whose associations were themselves suspect — or, we could say, separating from those who weren’t sufficiently separated themselves. Many believed they found such warrant in 2 Thess 3:6-15 because Paul tells the Thessalonians in 3:6 to withdraw from the disorderly, and then in 3:14 tells the Thessalonians that if anyone didn’t obey Paul’s “word by this epistle” (3:14), they were to note him and have no association with him. But Paul goes on to say “Yet count him not as an enemy, but admonish him as a brother” (3:15). You can see how that language would naturally seem to fit into the scenario in view: new evangelicals were not “withdrawing from the disorderly,” which command was at least part of Paul’s “word by this epistle.” So in a typical fundamentalist reading of 2 Thess 3:6-15, this meant that faithful believers should “note that person and have no association with him” while simultaneously considering him to be a brother in Christ. This reading thus allowed a species of separation which allowed for disassociation without considering the offender an unbeliever.

I do not say that such separation is incorrect; I merely question whether that sort of ecclesiastical separation can be directly inferred from 2 Thess 3:6-15. That is, my reading of 2 Thess 3:6-15 does not conclude with a “separated-from” offender who is still considered a brother, but that is where the sort of ecclesiastical separation under discussion ends up. And that seems to address something of how our positions differ.

Mike, I owe you an apology. I posted my response to you without checking your initial post thoroughly, in order to get my response up before I went to do something I had scheduled with my kids. I re-read your material this morning and realized that I am “talking past you” at at least a couple of points because I didn’t remember everything you said when I read through your material the first time. You are engaging in a very close (i.e., not superficial) reading of the text, and you are asking the right questions about how 2 Thess 3 harmonizes with 1 Cor 5 and Matt 18. You have provided one of the best and most thorough explanations of the passage from the traditional standpoint that I have seen to date. I very much respect you and your work, and I want to be sure to take it seriously. Please forgive me for my undue haste. Let me try to make amends with a couple of points here, and then I have a question of clarification for you.

First, I raised an objection that in your interpretation of 2 Thess 3, the offender would essentially be relegated to sort of a second-tier status in the church. I asked, “Is the offender to be kept in limbo indefinitely?” and spoke of “a secondary level of church membership.” But that is not what you are saying. You indicated that “In effect, the disobedient is given notice that his conduct is in violation of apostolic standards and told he must repent. To drive home the seriousness of the breach caused by sin, the members are to withdraw normal fellowship, to include withholding of the Lord‘s Supper. And, they are to give notice that, if he does not repent and find gainful employment within a reasonable time as determined by the church, he will be viewed as an unbeliever and, thus, excommunicated from membership.” So you are not proposing an indefinite probation, as I suggested. I missed that due to my haste.

All the same, given the history of this problem in Thessalonica and previous instruction by Paul in person and via letter, in addition to the “do not associate” language that is parallel to 1 Cor 5, I still see my reading as a better fit than the traditional interpretation. And I should say that you take a good step beyond where most people leave the traditional interpretation, at least so far as I have researched. Most (as I recall) do leave the offender in limbo, barred from the Table or the like, with no further comment.

Second, I downplayed your acknowledgment of the seriousness of the offense. You do note “the seriousness of the breach caused by sin” and do see this sin as ending in excommunication if the offenders continue in it. You note that it is in violation of apostolic standards (the “tradition” of 3:6). I was focusing not on your fifth paragraph, but on your second paragraph where you argue that the sin of 2 Thess 3 is not of the same stripe as that of 1 Cor 5.

Our point of disagreement, then, is not whether the sin of 2 Thess 3 should end in expulsion if not repented of (we both agree to that). Instead, our point of disagreement is how 2 Thess 3:6-15 fits into the disciplinary process.

And in that vein (“where in the disciplinary process”), I wonder if you could help me by clarifying a point you are making. I have understood church discipline to involve the entire process from start to finish, from the initial confrontation through the typical steps of Matt 18, ending in formal expulsion. (The hope is for restoration, and perhaps that might be included under the broad rubric of “church discipline” as well, should it happen.) In your material above, you ask whether church discipline must involve excommunication, or whether the NT allows for a level that stops short of that. Your conclusion, after referencing Matt 18, 1 Cor 5, and 2 Thess 3, is that “depending on how the church views the disobedient, church discipline can involve excommunication, but it can also involve a level of separation short of excommunication.”

But in your treatment of 2 Thess 3, you indicate that the church is “to give notice that, if he [the disorderly man] does not repent and find gainful employment within a reasonable time as determined by the church, he will be viewed as an unbeliever and, thus, excommunicated from membership.” So, in the end, this church discipline does not really “involve a level of separation short of excommunication,” since that excommunication is precisely where it will end up if the offender remains unrepentant.

Am I misunderstanding you? On the one hand, it seems as you see 2 Thess 3 as “stopping sort” of excommunication, but on the other hand you do see it ending in excommunication.

And one further point. If you do see 2 Thess 3 as eventually resulting in excommunication, how does that principle carry over to ecclesiastical separation for you?

Thanks,

Chuck

I’d like to make a brief hermeneutical point regarding our use of church discipline passages in the present discussion. I’ve been focusing on the exegetical details of particular passages, 2 Thess 3 in particular, but these are questions apart from how these passages are to be brought to bear on the question of ecclesiastical separation.

In 2005, Phillip Brown presented a paper at a Bible Faculty Leadership Summit and in it noted, “It seems to me that we have applied [2 Thess 3:6-15] to the entire gamut of ecclesiastical relationships (e.g., believer-to-believer, believer-to-congregation, parachurch-to-parachurch, church-to-parachurch, etc.) without carefully arguing the hermeneutical grounds that justify such a broad application.” I believe he is correct. (You can read the entire paper here: http://www.apbrown2.net/web/CategoriesOfTruth_DBTS.pdf)

I believe that church discipline passages — passages that teach us about how to handle separation from a professing believer in the context of the church — do have much to teach us about separating from professing believers in other contexts. But we must respect the fact that “other contexts” are indeed in view as we seek to apply those passages to ecclesiastical separation.

This point — the need for hermeneutical sensitivity — is perhaps unnecessary to make in our present discussion, but many of us have no doubt seen a church discipline passage directly applied to non-church-discipline situations without taking account of the differences between what the passage is specifically addressing and the situation to which we seek to apply it. It might be instructive to chase Phillip Brown’s statement in one of the posts on this series on secondary separation.

CB

You are the pastor of Faith Baptist Church in Anywhere, USA. A person comes to your morning service and professes to be a Christian. After talking with him you come to understand that he is. He provides a baptismal certificate from another like faith church as well. After a year, the brother, who has since joined your fellowship and has been faithful, starts asking about whether women can teach in church. It turns out that his sister, who is Charismatic, regularly teaches in the main service at her church. After you show him the Bible’s instruction, he seems unconvinced. Over the course of weeks he needles this issue in Sunday School. You once again readdress this with him in private, which he rejects. He continues to grow more belligerent on the issue, becoming more contentious and causing problems in the church. You gather the deacons and such, as your constitution states, and address the man again. Anyway (to save time typing), after following the proper church discipline, which he rejects because he thinks the Bible teaches woman can teach, you withdraw his active membership for not agreeing with your church’s statement of faith and ask him to not return until such a time as he can abide by the statement of faith. You did this because he had become contentious on the issue and was causing problems pushing his beliefs despite agreeing to abide by your fellowships statement of faith.

Now, that is close to what 2 Thes 3 is addressing since the man is stirring up problem in the church with his own beliefs. Is this man no longer a Christian? Or, is he a brother that you are separating from due to his contentious and unrepentant nature, and his misunderstanding of doctrine?

Mark,

You asked, “Is this man no longer a Christian?” Not to nitpick, but to clarify, do you mean, “Is this man to no longer be considered a Christian?” If he was a Christian before expulsion, he is still a Christian afterward, and if he was not a Christian before expulsion, he remains unconverted afterward as well. As I understand it, church discipline deals more strictly in the realm of the credibility of the profession, although that certainly has implications for the reality of the matter.

CB

Chuck,

Thank you for your excellent work on 2 Thess 3. I have appreciated very much what you have written. The present passage introduces a possible probationary period for the subject depending upon the nature of the infraction. However, as you have observed, where there is prolonged continuance to violate clear apostolic instruction, eventually excommunication appears to be involved in 2 Thess 3.

Labeling someone as a disobedient brother is a serious matter, whether or not we can reasonably determine the salvific status of the subject. It should not be done lightly. In many cases, I think we are dealing with disagreeing brethren or brethren who have accepted some level of theological/ministerial error. Thus, Bauder’s paradigm of levels of cooperation come in to play.

Pastor Mike Harding