Home Pastors Articles for Pastors Does Your Church Punish or Discipline?

Does Your Church Punish or Discipline?

I am frequently asked about my thoughts on church discipline.

I’ve learned that most of the time, when someone asks, they have a personal agenda they are attempting to address far more than they have a concern for Biblical accuracy.

They may know someone who committed a specific sin they feel warrants discipline. Sometimes, they were injured by someone and want to make sure the person is properly disciplined.

They may even want to be a part of the “prayer” process…and they want details…so they can pray (and gossip) appropriately.

Don’t Miss

If it sounds like I have an angst against church discipline…maybe I do. It’s not that I’m against it. I do believe there is a place for church discipline. How can I not? The Bible addresses it.

It’s just that most of the time when I’ve seen it spoken of, it seems more like retribution than something Biblical. I’m against that! I think punishment was nailed to a cross.

  • Should we being doing more church discipline? Yes
  • Should we do it better? Yes

My bigger question would be as to the purpose of church discipline.

I’m a simple-minded guy though. I’m not deep. I need thoughts I can wrap my mind around. So I’m not attempting to give a scholarly reply to the subject, but simply add some of my thoughts. For some of them, I give a general reference, and for others, it’s simply a thought, though each of them is based on my interpretation of Scripture as a whole and my view of God and His plan for mankind.

I have often thought in terms of my role as an earthly father attempting to parent my children when I think of how God must think in terms of parenting me. Obviously, He’s the perfect parent, but even Jesus alluded to the role of an earthly father in relation to our Heavenly Father. (Luke 11:9-12)

Here are 7 simple thoughts on Church Discipline:

Grace is primary in healthy discipline, not secondary.

Throughout Scripture, God approached people with grace and unconditional love. Discipline should never be done in anger, but always in a redemptive way. (Romans 5:20)

The best discipline you will never know about.

(Read Matthew 18) If discipline is handled correctly, the person is approached by someone, usually someone close to them, they repent, and you move forward. In most cases, no one else needs to know at this point.