February 15 – Division
Matthew 10:34f – "Do
not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not
come to bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to turn a man
against his father, a daughter against her mother, a daughter-in-law
against her mother-in-law; a man's enemies will be the members of his
own household."
In my local hometown newspaper, there is one whole page reserved for church service
advertisements, business advertisements for those who support such
activity (at least in name), and for a short devotional (such as this
one), written by a member of the local clergy association. A
non-clergy member is not allowed to offer any advice in said column.
(After all, it is a free column in the newspaper, and there must be
some regulations as to who can spout free spiritual advice.) In one
February 2019 issue, the writer speaks about the need for brotherly
love in our politically polarized country, and for the same globally.
He is correct; there is much need for love in action in the United
States these days, especially when one understands and practices the
action of love as described in 1 Corinthians 13.
However, there was one
statement in the column that was vague, but unitarian in nature:
"Divisive politics, fractured religion, the Cowboys versus the
Redskins...we focus too much on what makes us different, instead of
what brings us together, namely the call to love one another."
I can't tell from this statement if the writer is addressing this to
Christians only, or to us and the world at large. If he is writing
to Christians only, then his sentence makes perfect sense,
admonishing us to show love in action. Jesus did say that the world
would know that we are his followers by our love for our fellow
followers (John 13:35).
The problem comes into
the picture if the writer is address his statement to U.S. residents
in general. Not everyone is a Christ-follower in this country; as a
matter of fact, the majority are not. Therefore, it is not expected
that sinners act like saints, to love someone in general, much less
someone with whom they disagree or dislike. What brings us together
as a nation of believers and non-believers is the U.S. Constitution,
namely the Bill of Rights put forth in the first ten amendments.
That coming together is sometimes only an agreement to have the right
to disagree with each other. When the Spirit of God brings
repentance and forgiveness to the new believer, he starts to work in
the Christian to change his actions, in keeping with the repentance
that originally changed his mind and opened his blinded eyes to his
true spiritual condition and standing in God's eyes. As the cultural
morality continues to decline in this nation, our disagreement as
believers with the same will continue to grow as well, causing an
even greater divide among our fellow countrymen. Therefore, in the
midst of a moral dilemma, there will be strife and arguments, as
Jesus stated in the leading scripture to this devotional.
The questions, then, are
thus: Will we believers speak the truth in boldness, but with
gentleness and kindness, not in a mean-spirited way? Can we show
respect for a person to have the right to speak his opinion, without
needing to respect the opinion. Several times in the New Testament,
we are commanded to "hate what is evil, and to cling to what is
good" (Romans 12:9; 1 Thess. 5:21, 22). When Jesus caustically
confronted the Pharisees for their self-righteous hypocrisy (Matthew
23:1-39), was he not speaking the truth in love? He had to point out
the evil that they were promulgating. Did he hate them for their
sinfulness? Or did he hate the sin living inside a creature that God
loved?
The balance for
Christians is a tough one – loving the sinner, but hating the sin.
May God teach us how to love sinful people, while still standing for
the truth that can rescue them.
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