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Recently we were
listening to a radio broadcast of a championship game and
the fans were booing one of the stars so loudly that the commentator
began to discuss the habits of fans in booing athletes. One
remark he made has stuck with us. He said, ”Only saints want
justice, the rest of us want mercy.” The avid sports fan demands
justice and perfection in others. When their star fails to
perform as they think he ought they give him the famous ”Bronx
cheer.” Certainly a dedicated athlete trying his best does
not welcome this kind of treatment, but that’s the kind he
gets from his public just the same. The booing fan couldn’t
do nearly as well himself, yet he feels justified in giving
the poor struggling player a piece of his mind for failing
to come through in the clutch.
No wonder David
declared, ”Let me fall now into the hand of the LORD; for
very great are his mercies; but let me not fall into the hand
of man.” Solomon said that ”the tender mercies of the wicked
are cruel.”
It certainly is
true that we are going to need all the mercy we can get. Why
then does man demand justice for others when he is in such
need of mercy himself? It’s the old story of the mote and
the beam. It’s so easy to overlook the big plank in our eye
while finding fault with the tiny speck in our brother’s eye.
Human nature has always been this way.
It is interesting
to note that Jesus who did no sin was far more merciful and
forgiving to the woman ”taken in adultery, in the very act”
than were her accusers who had been guilty of sin. In fact,
some believe that the Greek text indicates that Jesus said,
”He that is without this sin among you, let him first cast
a stone at her.” Although her accusers were also sinners and
in need of mercy themselves, yet they demanded their form
of justice for her. This type of thinking is still prevalent.
We find the most vocal sometimes to be the one whose own private
lite would indicate that they should be the most forgiving
of others. This is true in the ecclesia as well as in the
sports world. Why do we frail human beings make such a big
thing of another’s short comings when we have so much to be
forgiven ourselves?
Jesus makes it
very plain when he says that God is kind unto the unthankful
and to the evil. We sometimes have the twisted idea that we
are doing God a service when we are NOT kind to the unthankful
and the evil. Somehow we are holding up the banner of God’s
truth by persecuting the evil. Certainly we are not to join
them in their evil, but Jesus couldn’t have made it more clear
that we, while not partaking of their evil, should be kind
to them. ”Be ye therefore merciful, as your Father also is
merciful,” says Jesus.
Christ taught us
that we are going to receive mercy in direct proportion to
the mercy we have shown. This thought should loom very large
in our minds the next time we are tempted to point an accusing
finger at another. This does not mean we condone wrong doing
or wrong doctrine. Certainly Jesus did neither, but he was
merciful to the sinner for, he reminded the self righteous
Pharisees that ”they that are whole need not a physician.”
Unfortunately Phariseeism is not dead and we must combat it
as zealously as we combat wrong doctrine and living. Jesus
did. No one denied the woman was wrong. Jesus simply was willing
to forgive while other sinners demanded justice. Almost all
problems we face in the brotherhood and with our dealings
with one another could be eliminated if we just show as much
mercy as we know we will need to be accepted by Jesus. At
the judgment seat it will only be those who completely forgave
others who will be recipients of Christ’s forgiveness. ”Only
saints want justice, the rest of us want mercy.” Let us be
kind unto the unthankful and to the evil because God is. ”Be
ye therefore merciful, as your Father also is merciful.”
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