Originally posted by Paul33:
C4K,
Thanks for keeping the thread on track.
John,
One does not eclesiastically separate from a book?
Who are you kidding? In the ifb churches one most certainly separates from a book - the NIV, the NASB (in some), etc.
We also separate from song books, cds, dvds, etc that are produced by authors/artists that are off limits.
I see I have to duck in again and explain some things. In particular, the concept of ecclesiastical separation is not being understood on this thread.
1. "Ecclesiastical" means pertaining to the church. Ecclesiastical separation is when my church does not cooperate with another church or parachurch organization or evangelistic effort. When I buy or use a KJV it does not contribute any money to the C. of E., does not foster cooperation between my church and an Episcopalian one, does not bring C. of E. influence into my church, does not acknowledge C. of E. doctrine. Using the KJV or not using it has nothing to do with ecclesiastical separation.
2. If one must define not using a translation, book, CD or whatever as separation, it is classified as personal separation, not ecclesiastical separation. Personal separation involves the individual being separated unto God from worldly practices. Personally, though, I don't feel it fits here either. I consider the matter of which Bible version a church uses to be a doctrinal matter, not a matter of personal separation.
3. As a pastor, I can enforce ecclesiastical separation through my leadership. My church will never cooperate with a liberal "United Church of Japan" church in an evangelistic meeting while I am pastor. However, personal separation is much harder to enforce. The pastor who tries to do so must often become a dictator, and that is unscriptural. I freely admit that some (that's some, not most, not half, just some) IFB pastors rule their churches as a dictator and enforce obedience with a big stick on matters of personal separation. I do not, and there are only a couple of my supporting pastors I suspect of doing so.
4. If you want to consider ecclesiastical separation in relation to Bible translations, the area in which this occurs is when a church will not associate with another church on the basis of which Bible translation a church uses.
God bless.