Hi All!
I have been urged via e-mail to explain my previous post on this thread more fully. I sent an explanation to the challenger of my post via e-mail.
Please, all should feel free to publicaly respond to errors/ bad thinking/ etc., that I may post. Though I'm a "Global Moderator
" the idea is that we have a forum here to discuss things, not a place for me to pontificate unchallenged. I will try not to take comments personally and will attempt a civil response.
The issue addressed was anger from offended exassemblites on the BB and my tolerance of same. The concern was that I was contra scripture and supporting sin in the lives of those seeking recovery. I was told to suggest love and forgiveness from the abused toward those who seem to defend some aspect of Assembly teaching/practice. Jesus taught, "to love our enemies" and as such we are to even love those who hate us, etc. and not wait for honest repentance to forgive.
In the same Mt. 5 passage we find other verses that exhort us to "be perfect that we might become the sons of God". If we take this verse and interpret it privately from the context of scripture we might conclude that performance of sinless perfection is the path to salvation.
We must ask what the context of the "love our enemies" verse is and what was Jesus intention in the message of the Sermon on the Mount. I believe the Sermon had the same purpose as the law of Moses, and that was to reveal our own sinfulness and need for salvation apart from law.
How about the Epistles and their exhorations to love and forgiveness and the need to eschew bitterness? It is sometimes hard to apply principles without an example to show us what these things look like in real life. Jesus and Paul provide us with an understanding of what they meant re. love and forgiveness in the context of abusers and false teachers.
Jesus did not feel that loving one's enemies meant not excoriating the Pharisees. Love is rooted in justice, and the two can not be separated. For ultimately the truth can not only set the abused free, but the abuser as well. Love is not pacifism and egalitarism, but active and morally discerning in nature. Without the ability to judge moral differences and evaluate what is more sinful and what is less sinful in daily life we make a mockery of justice and as such are not loving in our approach to life. (I understand re. salvation all sin is equally condemning, but I'm talking relationships here, not salvation)
One key to understanding the Bible is to have a common sense approach to it's application. When Jesus teaches it's better to cut off body parts, then miss the Kingdom, we must ask if Jesus really meant for us to cut off our hands. When Paul spoke the truth in Galatains in his correction of Peter was he hypocritical, for being so angry, or was he passionate in his love of the truth? Common sense tells us here that Christ's love in Paul was not a "spiritualized" kind of ignoring of the situation, but active specific correction.
Okay, but there are those who "hate" GG and Company and why encourage such bad motives? I do not wish to encourage hatred of these pathetic souls, but my attempt to further silence these lambs is not helpful either. I have found that anger is a phase and if individuals are allowed to vent they soon get over their anger. I don't have chapter and vs. for the above, and would relegate my views to the area of observation of human behavior.
The understanding of forgiveness and abuse can be seen in the following example. You look out the window and see a man attacking a child. You rush out and defend the child and then, after subduing the attacker, you demand the child shake hands and forgive the attacker. Good practical application to loving our enemies, or stupid? The application of discernment in the above situation demands that the attacker be brought to justice first. Certainly it is not the time to enjoin the abused with lessons of forgiveness! Nor would I correct the victim about controlling their anger against the would-be rapist.
Is anger sin? Sometimes. Is wallowing in bitterness good for one's soul? of course not, but how to get out of it? We must first be clear that passion re. truth and justice are not bitterness. But, sometimes the reaction to the abused seeking a honest repentance from the abuser can be the defensive responses from those who don't want to deal with their abusive character.
I understand posters' who make a partial defense of Assembly teaching and practices are not "abusers" like GG, but neither were the "bewitched and foolish" Galatains false teachers. These Galatians were just recipients of the dangerous teaching and in danger from same. So are posters who have not clearly seen the errors in their previous instruction and practices.
Assembly abusive teaching and practices are the priority of the moment (as in the example of the attacker above) and defense of the abused. Without moral clarity and establishment of what is most important in the Assembly situation we run the risk of making the abused the focus of correction (shaking hands with the attacker) instead of the attacker confessing and repenting of his crime.
God Bless, Mark