Do Not Retaliate Against One Another
There is no place in the life of the church for beleivers to seek revenge against another believer. Instead we are to serve those who wrong us.
Terrible Pain of Regret
Eric Zorn writes in the Chicago Tribune of a tragic accident that shows the terrible power of anger.
According to Zorn, a man and woman were driving a van in the far left lane of Chicago’s Northwest Tollway in April 1994. In back were their two children. A white Cadillac driven by an ex-convict suddenly pulled up behind them, tailgating mere inches from their bumper. The man driving the van slowed down. The Cadillac driver pulled into the right lane, passed the van, and then swerved suddenly back in front of the van, so suddenly that the van driver felt he had to swerve to avoid a collision.
The white Cadillac sped away.
The van driver accelerated and gave chase. He eventually pulled alongside the white Cadillac and reportedly began yelling and screaming. According to a witness, the two men gestured angrily at each other.
The driver of the Cadillac then pulled a handgun and fired at the van. The bullet entered the side of the van and hit the baby girl, entering under her left ear and exiting above her right ear. The little girl lived, but she is blind in one eye, half-blind in the other, partially deaf, and suffers severe mental and physical disabilities.
The man who fired the bullet is in jail.
The parents of the little girl must now live with the terrible pain of regret.
Anger usually escalates—often in tragic, tragic ways.
Believer’s Don’t Retaliate!
In other words, when Christians are wronged, regardless of whether that wrong is perceived or real, regardless to the source of that wrong, Christians are to still act like Christians!
Do not return evil for evil (17).
In November 1996 Sports Illustrated reported a bizarre story of competitiveness gone too far. According to the magazine, in a New Mexico high school football game between Albuquerque Academy and St. Pius-X on October 12, 1996, several of the Academy players found themselves with strange cuts, slashes, and scratches on their arms and hands. One boy was bleeding freely from three cuts that later required ten stitches to close. Another boy told his coaches, “It feels like they’ve got razor blades out there.”
Well, almost. Referee Steve Fuller inspected the equipment of the opposing team. What he found on the helmet of the offensive center were two chin-strap buckles sharpened to a razor’s edge. In the investigation that followed, the offending player’s father, a pediatric dentist, admitted to milling the buckles. He had been angered in the previous game by what he thought was excessive head-slapping against his son by opposing linemen. This was his solution.
Sports Illustrated reported, “Several observers describe the father, who was working on the sideline chain gang during the Albuquerque Academy St. Pius game, as a hothead. He was so vocal in his criticism of the officiating during St. Pius’s game against Capital High on Sept. 28 that he was asked to leave the sideline crew.”
Hatred and anger—they’re as ugly and violent as those razor-sharp buckles.
Think before you act!
Be at peace with all men (18).
If possible...
Holiness cannot be sacrificed on the altar of maintaining peace!
...as much as depends on you
The limit to your actions and attitudes is between you and God.
Leave room for God’s wrath (19-20).
You cannot play God and avenge yourself.
In those moments we are being treated unfairly, we commit ourselves to doing right in God’s eyes and allow Him to deal with them in His way and in His time.
In the mean time, treat them with kindness.
William B. McKinley, President of the United States from 1897 to 1901, was a man who understood that principle. During one of his campaigns, a reporter from an opposition newspaper followed him constantly and just as persistently misrepresented McKinley’s views. Eventually during this campaign, the weather became extremely cold, and even though the reporter didn’t have sufficiently warm clothing, he still followed McKinley. One bitter evening, the president-to-be was riding in his closed carriage, and the young reporter sat shivering on the driver’s seat outside. McKinley stopped the carriage and invited the reporter to put on his coat and ride with him inside the warm carriage. The young man, astonished, protested that McKinley knew that he was opposition and that he wasn’t going to stop opposing McKinley during the campaign. McKinley knew that, but he wasn’t out to seek revenge. In the remaining days of the campaign, the reporter continued to oppose McKinley, but never again did he write anything unfair or biased about the future president.
We cannot use kindness as a means to say “here’s your bucket...”
Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good (21).
A certain man purchased a paper at a newspaper stand. He greeted the newsman very courteously, but in return received gruff and discourteous service. Accepting the newspaper, which was rudely shoved in his face, the customer politely smiled and wished the newsman a nice weekend. A friend observed all of this and asked, “Does he always treat you so rudely?”
“Yes, unfortunately he does.”
“And are you always so polite and friendly to him?”
“Yes, I am.”
“Why are you so nice to him when he is so rude to you?”
“Because I don’t want him to decide how I am going to act.”