[soundofgrace] RE: [soundofgrace] A Tribute to My Brother

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From: "Daryl Coleman" <daryl@...>
Date: Tue, 15 Jun 2004 23:19:29 -0500
John, your comments about some of the areas of disagreement with your
brother made me think of my own relationship with my own older brother,
a pastor up in Nebraska.  He is a disciple of Zane Hodges, and holds
that theological viewpoint very close to heart.  I have serious
disagreement with him over this, and at times we have a very difficult
time even speaking about the subject.  He is from time to time trying to
get me to read books by R.T. Kendall and Joseph Dillow (also Zane Hodges
disciples), and I am always trying to get him to read Spurgeon and other
sovereign grace materials.  Still, I respect his love for Jesus and the
fact that he does have a shepherd's heart for the little flock he
pastors in Nebraska.  I still hold out hope that I will one day help him
"see the light" in this matter, and I suppose he has the same opinion of
me.  This issue has not diminished our love for each other, though.

Soli Deo Gloria

_/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/
Daryl Coleman
Garland, Texas
Homepage: http://www.dkco.com/
"I am not strong enough to fall away while 
God is resolved to hold me"  - Unknown
_/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/ _/

-----Original Message-----
From: John Reisinger [mailto:jreisinger@...] 
Sent: Sunday, June 13, 2004 7:18 PM
To: soundofgrace@...
Subject: [soundofgrace] A Tribute to My Brother

A tribute to my brother Ernie

By John G. Reisinger

 

            Yesterday I attended my older brother's funeral. This is the
second of my two brothers that have gone home to be with the Lord. At
the time of refreshments following the funeral there was an opportunity
for personal testimonies and nearly everyone who spoke had come to faith
in Christ through my brother Ernie's witness. On my drive back to New
York I kept remembering things about both of my brothers. In some ways
they were very much a like and in other ways radically different. At my
brother Donald's funeral over half of the people spoke to me and said,
"Your brother Donald was the first person who ever told me the Gospel."
An elderly Amish man said, "I knew a lot about Moses and works but not
much about Jesus and grace until I met your brother." God used my
brother Donald's funeral to bring Ernie's son Donald to a clear
understanding of God's sovereign grace. 

            In some ways, my two brothers were two of the greatest
Christians I have ever known. Ernest was by far the most famous. I used
to say, "My only claim to fame is that I am Ernie Reisinger's brother"
since I was constantly introduced that way at conferences." Under God, I
owe my soul to Ernie's witness to me. I also owe him for many other
things over many years. As I said, he was in some ways one the greatest
Christian I have ever known. Let me share some things that I think made
him the great Christian that he was. I would remind any who feel it is
wrong to pay open tribute to a believer's faithfulness that Scripture
says, "Honor to whom honor is due." It also gives us many examples of
God Himself testifying to the faithfulness of some of His saints.
Hebrews chapter eleven is only one example.

            First of all, Ernie was never bitten with the love of money.
He viewed his business as a ministry unto God and seriously treated it
as such. The business could have made ten times more money than it did
and he would not have been one penny richer. It was God's business and
God's money. He paid himself a salary and put everything else into a
Gospel foundation to help further the cause of Christ. He did not live
in expensive homes or drive "rich men's cars." He enjoyed the good
things of life but never allowed anything to possess him or his
affection except the Savior. "Love neither the world nor the things of
the world" was not a struggle with Ernie since his heart and life were
occupied with something, or Someone, far better. 

            Secondly, Ernie never did anything in a half hearted way or
with a lukewarm attitude. Some may feel he did not always act as wisely
as he could have but no one can ever question his zeal or his motive. He
could have well answered any critics by saying, "I like the way I do it
better than the way you don't do it." Let me give a few instances of
what I mean.

            Not long after Ernie went into the construction business, he
went to listen to John Rice preach. He arranged to have the Sword of the
Lord, a paper John Rice edited, send for three months to every home with
a Carlisle mailing address. During that three month period there were
Sword of the Lord's wrapped around telephone poles, laying in the gutter
and doorways, sticking out of garbage cans, etc. I do not know if anyone
got converted through that effort but I do know that one whole
generation of people living in Carlisle, PA will never say, "No one ever
loved me enough to put the Gospel in front of me." The whole town of
Carlisle will be "without excuse" because of Ernie's effort. 

            Several years later Ernie went to hear Donald Barnhouse and
was greatly impressed. He arranged to have every professional person,
doctors, lawyers, dentists, teachers, college professors, etc. living in
Carlisle to receive a subscription to Eternity, the magazine edited by
Dr. Barnhouse. Again, I have no knowledge of the results of that effort
but I do know that one generation of all the professional people in
Carlisle had the Gospel set before them through the efforts one building
contractor.

            There is one instance where a nasty situation was created
quite intentionally. Shortly after I went to Bible school I stopped to
see Ernie and he gave a "great book" by a man named Andy Telford. It was
on the subject of predestination as it relates to personal salvation. I
had just recently come to understand the doctrine of sovereign grace in
election. I opened the book and the author gave his understanding of
predestination on page one. He said, "The doctrine of predestination
means that believers are 'predestined' to get safely to heaven. It has
nothing to with getting saved. It means "pre" and 'destination.' The
train company predestines or guarantees that a certain train will take
you to Chicago. If you will use your free will and get on the train, the
train company guarantees that, because of "pre" - "destination" you will
arrive safely in Chicago." I am sure it was not even close to the wisest
way to say it, but I blurted out, "The man does not know what he is
talking about." A very nasty discussion followed. What I did not know at
the time was that Ernie had gone to hear Mr. Telford and true to form,
he had bought 500 copies of his book. All of you who know Ernie will
know that he changed his mind about predestination.

            Thirdly, Ernie knew how to see the big picture and always
keep it in view. He had that rare ability to be a 100% idealist and 100%
realist at he same time. It was this gift that enabled him to accomplish
many things that the pure idealist would never touch with a ten foot
pole and the 100% realist would say it was neither practical nor
possible. Ernie was chided for going into the Southern Baptist. He was
called a compromiser because he bent over backwards to take people where
they were and slowly teach them "a better way." Few, if any, Reformed
Baptists could have started or developed the Founders Ministries in the
Southern Baptist. I personally think the Founders was one of Ernie's
greatest accomplishments even though that ministry, along with Ernie's
disagreement with the view of Eldership practiced by men like Al Martin,
created one of the splits within Reformed Baptists that exists to this
day. I should add that I personally feel the split was more than
justified.

            During the last fifty years Ernie and I differed on more
than one subject. It would be dishonest with history and a dishonor to
both my brother and myself to gloss over the obvious. On nearly all of
our differences over the years we ultimately reached agreement, the one
exception being the morality of the Sabbath commandment and Law and
Grace in general. Of all our theological differences over the years,
this is the only one that he refused to discuss with me even though he
wrote quite extensively on the subject. He sincerely believed and stated
, "There is nothing to discuss, the creeds have said it all." I would
feel that Ernie did not really understand what I believed. I was often
asked, "How do you feel about your brother Ernie's strong disagreement
with you over law and grace?" I would reply, "If I believed what Ernie
thinks I believe, I would be more upset than he is. Given what he thinks
I believe, he would be a hypocrite if he were not upset. He is more than
justified in opposing me as long as thinks as he does about my
convictions." It would be both unfair and untrue for anyone to say,
"Ernie worshipped the creeds." He did not. He was committed to the
theology of the Westminster Confession of Faith only because he
sincerely believed it was the true expression of what Scripture taught.
This is why I could honestly respect his convictions and sincerely
respect and love him as a Godly Christian. I can understand exactly why
at one point he could most conscientiously regard me as being on the
border line of heresy. I think in later life he modified that to mean I
was "grievously wrong." However, his attitude was based 100% on what he
believed the Scriptures taught and what he understood me to be teaching.

            Ernie's body will lie silently in the grave until the
resurrection but we will still hear him speak. Though he is dead his
voice will be heard for a long time. We will see his foot prints in a
lot of places and in a lot lives for many years to come. Ernie's death
coincided with Ronald Reagan's death. As I listened to the many changes
that had taken place in the world of politics because of Reagan's vision
and influence, I thought of Ernie. I heard Reagan list a few of the
things that he and his philosophy had changed and then he said, "Not
bad, not bad at all." I thought of a ninth grade drop out well on the
way to being an alcoholic being rescued by sovereign grace and then
having the unbelievable effect on so many lives and the well being of
the Church of God at large and I thought, "Not bad! Not bad at all!" 

            Before he was converted Ernie had never read a single book.
He did not even read the funny papers. His conversion filled him with a
thirst for knowledge and truth that made him wiser than his peers.
Despite his lack of education his greatest influence was with
professional people. Again we can rightly say, "Not bad, not bad at
all." God took a nobody and really made him a somebody. He took a
drunken carpenter and made him a Prince in the House of Israel. He will
be both remembered and missed.

 

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