Stimulating debate wasn't Christ's priority when He walked this sad earth. He came to prove His love through sacrifice - did He not? He came loving and helping, not debating and skillfully turning phrases. What do you think?
"Are you talkin' to me?!!" (Robert DeNiro,
Taxi Driver)
What
I think is that you can expect a barrage of "proof" texts that show Jesus
did engage in debate, name-calling, shaming others, outrage and violence. It's happened here before. Nonetheless, I appreciate the purpose of your post and agree that the courage of a few will inspire others to speak up and speak out.
Many of us have spent years under the tyranny of men (and a few of us have been those men) who decided what they wanted to say,
then went to the Scriptures for authoritative "backup." They (we) preached a false gospel of "this-is-how-it's-gonna-be-or-else." It is, as Jem points out, the natural way presiding over the spiritual:
The natural comes first and then the spiritual, eh?
It seems that those of us with strongly assertive, aggressive, and/or competetive
natures want to continue as we have always done, using Scripture as an excuse to do so.
So do those who are
naturally inclined to be meek, submissive, sensitive, etc. seize upon the gentler side of Bible accounts to justify the tendencies we have always had.
Neither is correct. In Christ we are given a
new "nature," that of the Man from heaven. The passing away of the old, and the becoming of the new
can be as excruciating (and
seem as strange and undesireable) as the pangs of natural childbirth and natural growing pains. It does not have to be so, but more often than not it is the rule. We have spent a lifetime learning to behave
naturally, i.e. to control and utilize our earthly natures; dare we expect to not have to
learn spiritual concepts, attitudes and behavior?
Even when we have learned to pray to God in and about every situation of life, we discover that our prayers are largely "me"-centered. If they are not directly about self, they reflect the desires of the self.
When Jesus taught those who asked Him the manner in which to pray (Matt.6:9-13), there was nothing at all of self in His words. The primary intent of His (our) prayer was/is to glorify, honor and please God. The requests He taught should be made are all to be stated in the plural:
"Give us... forgive us... lead us... deliver us..."in light of which Peter reminds us to resist the devil,
"knowing that the same afflictions are accomplished in your brethren that are in the world." (1Pet.5:9) Peter goes on to say (v.10),
"But the God of all grace, who has called us unto His eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after you have suffered a while, make you perfect, establish, strengthen, settle you." And Paul addresses that concept by saying,
"For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us." (Rom.8:18).
It doesn't come easily (because it doesn't come
naturally), but we must learn to put God before self because that is the order of things: God, who always was, created us,
and redeemed us for His own pleasure-- His is the priority and the preeminence. And we must learn that even God's gracious redemption of us is not just about
me, the individual, but about
us, His Body and the Bride He is perfecting for His Son. We must learn to view our brethren not according to their natural features, but as God sees them: beloved, precious in His sight, and we must learn to lay down our lives for them.
What I have said is not what I have learned, but what I am learning. This board has been and is an excellent classroom for such...
All emphases within Scripture quotations are my own.
Such words as "reckon", "self", "nature", etc. may strike a sour note to some. Please consider that these are legitimate English translations of valid Scriptural expressions. It is
their extreme misapplication, the
false teachings about them that have made them seem distasteful to us. Let us pray for each other, for the cleansing of our minds and memories, and that we may be taught by the Holy Spirit to rightly divide the Word of Truth.
Because of His grace,
al
P.S. to just me: All of us, from every background and at every stage of growth, will have to learn to love (accept, tolerate, etc.) each other. We're going to be living together for a very long time!