“Do not hate your brother in your heart. Rebuke your neighbor frankly so you will not
share in his guilt.” Leviticus 19:17
“Whoever of you loves life and desires to see
many good days, keep your tongue from evil…seek peace, and pursue it.” Psalm 34:12-14
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Choosing the right path to true
peace—discerning between peacemaking and peacefaking— is not always easy. Just knowing that sometimes we must confront,
even though it is uncomfortable, doesn’t solve all the problems that go along
with trying to be wise.
If we move too
quickly in one direction— speak our minds as a sort of knee-jerk reaction— we
might be plagued with regret for the rest of our days for spouting off things
we didn’t really mean after a while.
If
we convince ourselves to wait it out and see if our resentment or hurt indeed
will roll away like water off a duck’s back, sometimes, even if it doesn’t roll
away, we listen to the Evil One as he uses one or more of several tactics to
convince us not to go back and revisit this Thing with our sister or
brother. (Many of us err in the first
way because we are the type who know from past experience that if we convince
ourselves to wait it out and see if our resentment or hurt indeed will roll
away like water off a duck’s back, we might once again end up despising
ourselves for our fearful or slothful paralysis.)
How do we grow a heart of wisdom in this
matter so that we will neither react “knee-jerkfully” nor allow the devil to
falsely placate us into a deadly malaise that will surface in some bizarre way
down the road? My friend Candy calls
this bizarre kind of surfacing “coming out sideways.” That paints a pretty graphic
picture, doesn’t it?
Whether
we can be a duck’s back about an offense or for some reason can’t help being a
sponge about it is important for us to learn and admit to ourselves. Somewhere
in our anger and hurt, we might have missed the possibility that we have
likewise been part of the offense.
If we don’t deal
honestly with ourselves and our brothers and sisters, we might miss the
possibility that we, too, have offended, and according to the spirit of Matthew
5:23-24, our gifts to our Father will not be accepted. What a terrible plight! We must be diligent to pray to be delivered
from such costly deception.
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