It is a new week and we will proceed in our
journey through Galatians. We are gradually drawing to the end of the epistle
and we will now be dealing with some more practical implications of God’s grace
in our lives.
This week we are at Galatians 6:
“Brethren, if someone is caught in a sin, you who are
spiritual should restore him gently...” Galatians 6:1 New International Version
Permit me to chip in a thought before we
consider this verse in particular. A number of Paul’s epistles follow the same
pattern. The initial paragraphs set out to establish some wonderful realities
while the latter parts of the epistles then draw on those realities to address
the practicalities of appropriate Christian conduct in those assemblies.
Faith
before conduct. Belief before practice. The state of mind before the manner of
life. This is the sequence that Scriptures teach as the pattern to follow in
addressing issues. Is there any issue about a particular believer’s conduct?
The proper way to address it is to start from looking at what the person
believes. Are you concerned about any issue in your own practice of life? Then
you need to consider very closely what you really believe about the issue. My
slogan for this is “sort the mind, sort the man”.
Back to our verse for the week, Apostle Paul
continues describing the sort of attributes that should characterize people who
have experienced the grace of God. At this point he is advocating for gentle
and humble restoration of an erring brother or sister.
There was a time in the past when I
thought the only thing that matters is simply the attempt at restoration no
matter how it is done. There is no doubt that what the erring brother or sister
needs is the restoration but the Holy Spirit admonishes us to do this in an
attitude of humility.
I remember vividly specific episodes
in which I tried to correct fellow believers without this humble, gentle
attitude. The outcome was never what I intended. The other party only perceived
pride and animosity in the rebuke. This is usually the case when correction is
not carried out the way Scriptures teach it should be done.
Interestingly the word translated “restore” is
used of a dislocated limb reduced to its place or of mending nets. Such is the
tenderness and carefulness with which we should treat a brother in attempting to restore
him to a better state in his Christianity. Unfortunately many times we
literarily “kill” our wounded rather than restoring them. I have been at that
stage before but I thank God He has opened my eyes and I am learning that grace
teaches otherwise.
What God expects of us
is a synthesis of grace of character and presentation to the truth one
proclaims (1st Timothy 5:1 & 2, 2nd Timothy 2:24-26).
The attitude really matters. In Paul’s letter to Titus he advocated the same
sort of graceful attitude in our interactions with “all men” (Titus 3:2) and in
the verses following that admonition he explained why that should be our
approach: we are in a position to correct people simply because God’s grace has
had an effect on our lives (Titus 3: 3-7).
Since we have been recipients and
beneficiaries of God’s grace, we should also extend the same grace to our
fellow believers. We must learn to actually “restore” with the appropriate
grace attitude. That is grace in action.
My song for the week is "Good Good Father" by Chris Tomlin.
Have a nice day and a wonderful week
friends.
No comments:
Post a Comment