Eat the Meat, Spit out the Bones
Eat the Meat, Spit out the Bones has always been a statement that bothers me. It is thrown out to say we should not worry about some false teaching mixed in with the bible, but just be mature enough to “Eat the Meat, Spit out the Bones”. I have a friend who asks, would you eat a bowl of ice cream if you knew there was a little dung mixed in, even if you knew you wouldn’t taste it? Of course not, and false teaching is like dung. Below is an article that I tend to agree with:
EAT THE MEAT, SPIT OUT THE BONES
There are a lot of clever-sounding sayings that make the rounds among Christians, and one of these is “eat the meat, and spit out the bones.” Many have written to exhort me to do this, and they mean that I shouldn’t worry so much about exposing error. They wonder why I can’t just “eat the meat, and spit out the bones.”
There is a bit of truth to this saying, in that God’s people are always to exercise biblical discernment when hearing sermons or reading Christian books. We are to “prove all things; hold fast that which is good” (1 Thessalonians 5:21).
But the Bible also twice warns that “a little leaven leaventh the whole lump” (1 Cor. 5:7; Gal. 5:9) and exhorts us to mark and avoid those who teach doctrine contrary to that which we have learned in Scripture (Rom. 16:17). There is great danger in eating the wrong spiritual meat!
What if the meat is rotten or poisoned or hasn’t been cooked or properly stored? The U.S. government regulates how restaurants must cook meat, because undercooked meat is dangerous. When I worked in a restaurant in my youth, I was taught to handle the meat very carefully and to store it properly, because it spoils easily. If you eat meat that is spoiled or poisoned or undercooked, even if you spit out the bones, you will be in trouble. The writings of men like Brian McLaren and Richard Foster and Chuck Colson and Rick Warren contain plenty of rotten meat. Those who advise God’s people to “eat the meat, and spit out the bones,” must explain to us how they know that this “meat” is safe.
Also, what if the bones have splinters or what if you get a bone stuck in your throat? When I was growing up in Florida, I went fishing often with my dad and granddad, and they were careful about which fish they kept and which they threw away, because some had too many bones to eat safely. And Mom was very careful to keep an eye on us when we were eating fish because of the ever-present danger of getting a bone stuck in our throats. This happened from time to time anyway, and it was a very unpleasant thing and, in fact, can be fatal. Likewise, very few Christians are able to wade through sermons or books by compromising preachers on their own and expertly spit out all of the “bones” of error.
And what if you don’t know the difference between meat and bones? A toddler doesn’t know the difference, and if it tries to eat meat and spit out bones, it will quickly be in trouble. Likewise, the average Christian today is far too biblically ignorant and carnal to distinguish properly between truth and cleverly presented error.
My friends, beware of clever sayings that aren’t supported by Scripture.
We live in a shallow, apostate, carnal age, and it behooves us to study the Bible diligently and to think biblically!!!!
Written by David Cloud
|Hat Tip: sermonindex.net|
Tags: false teacher, Prosperity Gospel, The City Church, Word of Faith
September 9th, 2008 at 3:51 pm
This is a very timely post. Thank you! This is something I’ve been confronted with recently — particularly the idea of giving someone The Message or The Shack (both of which contain false teaching) because they are new Christians or because they supposedly aren’t smart enough to read and understand scripture. First, if they’re new Christians, they should not be given something with false teaching in it, or they’re not going to be able to discern the error; and, second, if anyone thinks they’re smart enough to understand scripture, they’re wrong! Since only the Spirit of God understands his thoughts, it is only by the Spirit of God that we understand anything in the bible anyway (1 Corinthians 2:11). Therefore, anyone who is a new Christian or a mature Christian will only understand as the Spirit of God gives understanding of the things of God. Having said that, we still have to use our mind to reason and think about the things we are reading in the Bible, so we can’t pretend that we learn the things of God by osmosis or anything…
September 10th, 2008 at 9:40 am
Hey Matt!
I agree with you about the Shack and The Message. If there is anything false in them, why do we need to read them? Isn’t scripture enough for us?
I believe the scriptures are enough for us…anything else has the potential to leaven what God gave us and we should constantly be on guard.
We are admonished by scripture to look back to what has been taught (scripture), but so many books today look to bring a “fresh” look, or something new in Christianity.
September 12th, 2008 at 1:28 pm
[...] the wake of my post called “Eat the Meat, Spit out the Bones” Pastor Wendell Smith came out with a blog post called “Scandal and Restoration” [...]
September 19th, 2008 at 11:00 am
Craig,
I hear that same bromide. Eat the chicken and spit out the bones. The Bible has another food analogy that seems to contradict that. Paul said that a little leaven leavens the whole lump.
Why do we allow such drivel as this in the assembly?
I taught at a school where that bromide was used a lot. Today, they are using a text book in pastoral ministries that advocates homosexual marriage.
Guess they swallowed a bone, huh?
Phil Perkins.