Another little devition I gave recently for our Lord's Supper service...
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I was scanning through my Bible app, looking at the
section that shows me a snapshot view of all of the verses I have highlighted
in the past.
I run across some that always give me grief as I read
them and realize how far off the mark I tend to fall. So I figured I would
share some of the grief this morning.
Do nothing from rivalry or conceit, but in humility count others more
significant than yourselves. Let each of you look not only to his own
interests, but also to the interests of others. (Phil 2:3-4)
This verse always comes to mind when I view the way
Christians deal with each other online. Pretty much every professing Christian
fails in this type of area when they deal with other Christians online.
They treat each other horribly – there is no humility –
there is no looking to the interests of others – it is all about making the
other person look stupid. It is about being right, not kind of humble.
Christians are told we should be loving and seeking to
outdo others when it comes to showing them honor, as Paul mentions in Romans.
Love one another with brotherly affection. Outdo one another in showing
honor. (Rom. 10:12)
This one really gets me. It is just so easy to go into
defense and self-interest mode in life. Everyone is more concerned with
outdoing others in their supposed knowledge. If Christians would only seek to
outdo one another in love and honor, what a difference it would make in the
church as a whole.
And the last one I will mention is one that is most often
on my mind.
Brothers, if anyone is caught in any transgression, you who are
spiritual should restore him in a spirit of gentleness. Keep watch on yourself,
lest you too be tempted. Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of
Christ. For if anyone thinks he is something, when he is nothing, he deceives
himself. But let each one test his own work, and then his reason to boast will
be in himself alone and not in his neighbor. (Gal 6:1-4)
For most people, the idea of dealing with other
Christians when we see them in some transgression does not mean to restore
them, but rather to expose and ridicule them. Sadly so many take pleasure in
pointing out the wrong of others, rather than gently seeking to restore them. And
rarely is their humility or concern about one’s own actions.
A fourth century church commentary on this verse stated
it nicely, saying:
It is true, and no one is
unaware of it, that if we consider honestly our acts and thoughts we find
ourselves superior to no one and cannot easily pass judgment on another. For
the person who is puffed up as if he were something special is misled, since he
does not know that humility becomes a means of growth.
For he does not have before
his eyes the words and deeds of the Savior, who, though he be Lord of all,
humbled himself so as to give us a pattern that we might follow should we wish
to grow.
If we were to exult
ourselves, we would stumble as a result of the ignorance of a heart elated by
the hope of presuming to be more worthy of praise.
It becomes a daily practice to fight back what we want to
do, and how we want to react, when it comes to defending our position over that
of the other, obviously ignorant people out there. But it is a good practice to
do, seeking to fight back our inclination to fight for our rights and our
views.
We would do much better to instead seek to approach
others with gentleness and compassion, knowing that what we should count them
and their interests and more significant than ours, seeking to outdo them in
showing honor, and understanding that what may be their transgression today
could indeed be ours tomorrow.
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