
|
Our
Two Faces
(Editorial - May 2004)
Having
washed the apostles’ feet, their Lord and Master resumed his
seat and began to instruct them:
A
new commandment I give unto you, that ye love one another; as I have loved
you, that ye also love one another. By this shall all men know that
ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to another (John 13:34-35).
Since
there was longstanding instruction to “love thy neighbor as thyself”
(Lev. 19:18), we might wonder what was new about the Lord’s command.
While we might wonder what was so new, the disciples would not.
Their
companion was the Son of God, the King of Israel, far superior to them
in every way, yet he had deliberately treated them as if they were superior
to him. And more than that, he had then commanded them to act in
a similar manner to each other. They would immediately feel chagrined,
as they had just been debating who among them should be the greatest,
and they would recognize that never before had there been a command
to deliberately treat each other with this kind of loving humility (for
further comments see the first of Bro. Barling’s new series beginning
in this issue).
Christian
love
While Christ’s specific
action at the last supper was a very dramatic example of his attitude,
there was nothing new about it. Throughout his ministry children,
sinners, weak and hurting people had been attracted to him. His
was not the face of arrogant royalty but a face that spoke of gentle concern
and empathetic response. His appeal had consistently been: “Come
unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest…for
I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls”
(Matt. 11:28-29 NIV). And they did come, being attracted by his
lowliness of manner and gentleness of expression. They saw his face
and felt comforted by it.
The
personally probing point is that the Lord’s face should be seen on all
his followers; in fact, he commands it to be so.
More
probing still is the elaboration of Christian love given by the apostle
Paul:
Love
is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it
is not proud. It is not rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not
easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight
in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always
trusts, always hopes, always perseveres (I Cor. 13:4-6 NIV).
The
kind, patient face of a Christian is what Debroah Kaufman saw when she
was suddenly taken ill (“The Unchosen Minority” in this issue).
The engaging, helpful, joyful face of Christian love is what visitors
saw when they attended the campaigns in Guadalajara and St. Lucia (see
the CBMA section). Christadelphians who travel frequently see the
face of Christ’s love in warm hospitality when they are entertained by
brothers and sisters who did not previously even know them.
An
anomaly
Yet there is another face one sees on believers
that is not attractive or appealing.
-
Coming away from a
particularly intense meeting, an observer commented, “The only
time Christ was around that table was in the opening and closing prayers.”
Those around the table were all committed followers of Christ, but
the faces were hostile, aggressive, threatening, anxious.
-
In a different part
of the world, a complaint was heard from a participant in a meeting
with Christadelphians -- he did not feel like he was dealing with
those who were possessed by the attitude of Christ. The faces
he confronted showed no gentle empathy, but stubborn resistance and
condescending control. Everyone there claimed to be a devoted
disciple of the Lord, but many of the faces did not look like the
face of Christ. They were not Christ-like, but “Christ-less”
was his comment.
-
In a recent periodical,
an article appeared urging believers to shun other believers if they
disagreed on significant points of Bible teaching. The article
envisaged those involved would be in the same congregation so that
visitors would have the remarkable experience of being warmly welcomed
by two brothers who would refuse to talk with each other. The
visitor would see the face of Christ turned to him but immediately
changed into the angry face of disdain when the brother looked at
his fellow believer.
-
And we were approached
by some who considered leaving the truth because the faces of those
whom they held as Christ-like elders had turned on them with harsh
rejection and intolerance. Without knowing what they had done
to incur anger, they later discovered they had, in innocence, strayed
from traditional procedures.
A
common element
In each one of the above incidents, disciples
were confronted with perceived error and handled it badly. Yet in
each situation a New Testament verse could be referenced to justify what
turned into unChristlike behavior:
-
An elder had sinned and was to be
rebuked before all (I Tim. 5:20).
-
We
must earnestly contend for the faith we have received (Jude 3).
-
Whoever
does not abide in the doctrine of Christ must not be welcomed into
the house (II John 9-10).
-
Let
all things be done decently and in order (I Cor. 14:40).
Christ
handled similar situations
Somehow the Lord whom we follow did not
lose his humility and grace even when confronted with error and bad behavior.
Nicodemus was a great religious leader in Israel and heard the rebuke:
“‘You are Israel’s teacher’ said Jesus, ‘and do you not understand
these things?’” (John 3:10). Yet the gracious manner of the
Master was such that Nicodemus was drawn to the Lord, defended him at
trial and lovingly laid him to a short rest. The disciples were
sharply rebuked, “Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith” (Matt.
8:26) but the Lord’s loving countenance was such they were not turned
away by the criticism.
In the midst of a challenging
confrontation when Pharisees, Herodians, scribes and Sadducees were all
trying to catch Jesus at his words, one of them spoke wisely. The
Lord was not so overwrought with defending the faith that he missed it:
“Thou art not far from the kingdom of God,” he encouraged (Mark
12:32-34). And when he saw an ecclesia that had squelched all error,
he saw something else as well. They had lost the face of loving
enthusiasm and he warned them to get the love back or they were headed
for spiritual disaster (Rev. 2:1-6).
What’s
our problem?
Upon examining one self, many a believer is frustrated with his own
inconsistency. Sometimes he has the face of Christ beaming with
loving kindness and gentle humility. Other times he realizes his
face is set in unapproachable hostility, contemptuous pride or disdainful
rejection.
The problem is we keep
on letting the flesh get the best of us.
The loving humility commanded
by Christ is not natural, far from it. What is natural to us is
“…hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage, selfish ambition, dissensions,
factions and envy…” (Gal. 5:20-21 NIV). The disciple, of course,
realizes this but it doesn’t change the fundamental impulses of our nature;
and when these impulses can seize upon scripture to seemingly justify
discord and arrogance, we have a deadly combination.
The solution is honest
self-examination every time we meet around the table of the Lord.
That is not as easy to do as it is to say. It is very easy to seize
on II John 10 and expand it to every doctrinal disagreement. It
is easy to use the need for right teaching to justify condescending intransigence.
It is easy to forget that we are warned, “If I have the gift of prophecy
and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge…but have not love, I am
nothing” (I Cor. 13:2).
The face of Christ is
not easy to consistently reflect. To have a measure of success,
we need to relentlessly examine ourselves and persistently pray the Lord
will help us to reflect the glory of his face and not the ugly face of
the flesh.
Don Styles
|