CARIBBEAN
EXHORTATION
An Appeal on the Basis of Love
(Reflection - July/August 2005)
No
one with a spiritual mind can read Paul’s letter
to Philemon and fail to understand the passion and concern of the apostle
for all the brothers and sisters whom he had begotten in the Gospel.
His love for those, as he expressed it, who owed him their “very
selves,” that is, their hope of eternity, radiates from every
verse of this letter. And that concerned love clearly extended not just
to those who were his own converts, like Onesimus and Philemon, but
to other fellow workers like Apphia, and “dear friends”
whose names are known to us only from this and similar epistles.
Verses 4 to 7 portray ecclesial life in Colossae, exemplified by life
in Philemon’s household. It involves faith, love for all the saints,
prayer, full understanding, great joy, encouragement, and best of all
“refreshing the hearts of the saints.”
Question: Is this a picture of OUR ecclesia? Is
it a picture of OUR household?
Verses 8 to 11 present a wonderful spiritual lesson. Apostles had real
authority – from Christ himself (John 20:21-22). Paul tells Philemon:
“I could be bold and order you to do what you ought to do.”
But he did nothing of the sort. “I appeal to you on the basis
of love,” he wrote. What a difference! That’s the beseeching
spirit. In our brotherhood today we have many brothers claiming authority
and demanding compliance.
Question: Why not
try instead appealing on the basis of love? I promise you that it will
work wonders.
In verse 14 the apostle tells Philemon that he wants his consent before
he, Paul, does anything that affects their mutual relationship and the
affairs of the Colossian ecclesia.
Question: Does our ecclesia, our organization,
our home, operate on the basis of mutual consent? The reason to do so,
Paul insists, is that “any favour you do will be spontaneous and
not forced.” In my experience, that’s the very best of reasons.
Verses 12 to 16 describe two miracles. Onesimus, once an “unprofitable”
runaway slave, is miraculously transformed by the love of Christ into
“a man and a brother,” even more, “a
dear brother.” The second miracle is the miracle of sacrifice.
Onesimus had become a companion and a comfort to Paul, and he was helping
him while he was “in chains for the Gospel.” Paul
made a big sacrifice so that Onesimus could show a full measure of repentance
and Christian love to his former master whom he seems to have defrauded.
Furthermore, and amazingly, Paul did not make Onesimus pay back what
he owed. In what must have been a tremendous act of sacrificial love,
Paul offered to pay back everything his newly reborn brother owed to
Philemon.
Questions: Do we honour the lowliest of our brothers
and sisters and treat them with dignity? Do we sacrifice willingly as
Paul did for the “least” of Christ’s brothers? Do
we have faith in a new convert as Paul had in Onesimus?
Verses 11, 12 and 16 pose a very serious question to each one of us,
and especially to our missionaries. When Onesimus arrived in Rome he
was a disreputable, untrustworthy good for nothing with a low background.
Questions: How do WE treat someone with a criminal
record like his? Do we decide he or she just isn’t suitable to
become a Christadelphian? Do we plead the need for separation from wickedness
and just shun them? Do we refuse baptism because, after all, they may
backslide? Onesimus’ conversion, like yours and mine, was one
great miracle. If he reaches the coming Kingdom, well, as with you and
I, that will sure be another.
Wills Samuels, Portmore, Jamaica |