Ed Edwards said:
Say, last week I was reading a passage in an old Bible. I finally figured out (after I closed the Bible and put it on the shelf) that the meaning of the passage was: the Lord prefers us in our interactions with other folks to be KIND instead of RIGHT.
I was studying at times the last two chapters of Acts (27 & 28).
Where was I reading?
Did I get the right message?
Thank you for your help &/or criticism (I'm desperate for anything right now :laugh: ).
I am in agreement with the overall sentiment of the posters on this thread.
Given the choice between
1) being right without being kind, versus
2) being kind but not fully right
Scripture prefers the latter.
At Luke 9:52-5, after two of Jesus’ disciples asked to burn a village that rejected Him, “He turned and rebuked them” (NBV); their rightness lacked love,* and He disliked that.
Matthew 7:20-3
“Similarly, you will know people by the deeds they do. Not everyone who says to Me, `Lord, Lord’ will enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of my Father in heaven. For many will say to me on that Day, `Lord, Lord, | we spoke for you. And through you we forced out demons and did many miracles.’ Then I will say to them clearly `Get away from me, you who do evil. I never knew you’” (NBV|ICB).
Let us note the “we spoke for you” part; these people enjoyed speaking on behalf of the Lord, but their overall lives did not involve following the Lord in the simple ways that He spent most of His ministry preaching on.
Many people enjoy `speaking the truth for God' and love to do it with an attitude of nastiness. When it comes to treating people according to the ways and values that He taught, they do not do so. Jesus Christ said we would recognize His followers "the the deeds they do" (NBV) -- not their accuracy.
Titus 3:8b-9a instructs “that they who have believed God may be careful to |devote themselves to good |deeds|. These things are good and profitable unto men: but shun foolish questionings” called “unprofitable and vain.”** Christians should "devote themselves to good deeds" -- not `being right and telling everyone.'
At Matthew 22:37-40, Jesus Christ said “And he said unto him, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second like unto it is this, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. On these two commandments the whole law hangeth, and the prophets” (ASV).
Ephesians 4:15 tells us to be “speaking the truth in love” (ASV). If the two are not together, it is done wrong. It does not matter how `right' the person is, if s/he teaches `the truth' without love, s/he sins.
2 Timothy 2:24-5a says “And the Lord's servant must not strive, but |be kind to everyone|, apt to teach, forbearing|. The Lord’s servant must gently teach those who do not agree with him” (ASV|ICB|ASV|ICB).
There are wrong ways to be `right.' We must not be `right' in the wrong ways. Scripture definitely has priorities between the two. In keeping with that, I would rather be kind in simpleness than right in sinful ways.
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*Pointed out by S. E. Stone, Simply Christians, page 64.
**ASV|ESV|NLT 1996, RSV 1952|ASV.