Listen To Most Current
Grace Notes Archive
March 2023 (4)
February 2023 (4)
January 2023 (4)
December 2022 (5)
November 2022 (4)
October 2022 (5)
September 2022 (6)
August 2022 (4)
July 2022 (5)
June 2022 (4)
May 2022 (4)
April 2022 (7)
March 2022 (4)
February 2022 (4)
January 2022 (5)
December 2021 (5)
November 2021 (4)
October 2021 (5)
September 2021 (4)
August 2021 (4)
July 2021 (6)
June 2021 (4)
May 2021 (5)
April 2021 (4)
March 2021 (5)
February 2021 (4)
January 2021 (5)
December 2020 (4)
November 2020 (4)
October 2020 (5)
September 2020 (4)
August 2020 (5)
July 2020 (21)
June 2020 (29)
May 2020 (28)
April 2020 (31)
March 2020 (5)
February 2020 (4)
January 2020 (5)
December 2019 (5)
November 2019 (3)
October 2019 (5)
September 2019 (4)
August 2019 (5)
July 2019 (4)
June 2019 (5)
May 2019 (4)
April 2019 (4)
March 2019 (4)
February 2019 (6)
January 2019 (4)
December 2018 (4)
November 2018 (5)
October 2018 (4)
September 2018 (4)
August 2018 (4)
July 2018 (3)
June 2018 (4)
May 2018 (4)
April 2018 (4)
March 2018 (4)
February 2018 (5)
January 2018 (4)
December 2017 (4)
November 2017 (5)
October 2017 (4)
September 2017 (5)
August 2017 (4)
July 2017 (4)
June 2017 (5)
May 2017 (4)
April 2017 (5)
March 2017 (3)
February 2017 (4)
January 2017 (3)
December 2016 (5)
November 2016 (4)
October 2016 (4)
September 2016 (5)
August 2016 (3)
July 2016 (4)
June 2016 (5)
May 2016 (4)
April 2016 (5)
March 2016 (4)
February 2016 (4)
January 2016 (5)
December 2015 (4)
November 2015 (4)
October 2015 (3)
September 2015 (4)
August 2015 (5)
July 2015 (5)
June 2015 (4)
May 2015 (5)
April 2015 (2)
March 2015 (4)
February 2015 (4)
January 2015 (5)
December 2014 (4)
November 2014 (5)
October 2014 (4)
September 2014 (4)
August 2014 (4)
July 2014 (5)
June 2014 (4)
May 2014 (5)
April 2014 (4)
March 2014 (4)
February 2014 (4)
January 2014 (5)
December 2013 (4)
November 2013 (5)
October 2013 (4)
September 2013 (4)
August 2013 (5)
July 2013 (4)
June 2013 (3)
May 2013 (5)
April 2013 (4)
March 2013 (4)
February 2013 (5)
January 2013 (4)
December 2012 (4)
November 2012 (5)
October 2012 (4)
September 2012 (4)
August 2012 (5)
July 2012 (4)
June 2012 (4)
May 2012 (5)
April 2012 (4)
March 2012 (5)
February 2012 (4)
January 2012 (4)
December 2011 (5)
November 2011 (4)
October 2011 (4)
September 2011 (5)
August 2011 (4)
July 2011 (4)
June 2011 (5)
May 2011 (4)
April 2011 (5)
March 2011 (4)
February 2011 (4)
January 2011 (5)
December 2010 (4)
November 2010 (4)
October 2010 (4)
September 2010 (5)
August 2010 (4)
July 2010 (6)
June 2010 (4)
May 2010 (4)
April 2010 (4)
March 2010 (5)
February 2010 (4)
January 2010 (5)
December 2009 (5)
November 2009 (3)
October 2009 (6)
September 2009 (3)
August 2009 (5)
July 2009 (4)
June 2009 (4)
May 2009 (5)
April 2009 (4)
March 2009 (4)
February 2009 (4)
January 2009 (5)
December 2008 (4)
November 2008 (5)
October 2008 (4)
September 2008 (5)
August 2008 (4)
July 2008 (3)
June 2008 (4)
May 2008 (5)
April 2008 (4)
March 2008 (5)
February 2008 (1)
Grace Notes

Current Articles | Categories | Search | Syndication

MILQUETOASTS AND MILITANTS
by Philip Owen

      We have been encouraged to believe that real saints are of the Herman Milquetoast variety—weak-willed and malleable.  While it is true that believers are to be meek, gentle, and longsuffering, sometimes occasion demands overt forcefulness; then silence becomes not a virtue but a vice and waiting expresses not calm confidence but craven cowardice.  “Let your speech always be with grace, as though seasoned with salt, so that you will know how you should respond to each person,” Paul advises (Col 4:6).  Our speech is always to be gracious; sometimes, however, graciousness demands spice.  Salt may burn or sting a wound, but it should always be administered without rancor and for the purpose of healing.

      The Scriptures support Christians who never mince words.  For all Scripture is given, not only for doctrine, but also for “reproof” (“conviction, rebuke”), “correction” (“straightening”), and for “training in righteousness.”  Charity requires clarity.  We do no one a favor by refusing to speak clearly and truthfully.  Such is the ploy used by godless, Christ-hating liberals:  sin is not sin, crime is not crime.  Those are ill-chosen, obsolete terms for social injustice and economic privation.

      If their view is true, strange, then, that the Lord would say that some men were of their father the devil (John 8:44) and tell others that they were whitewashed tombs full of dead men’s bones (Matt. 23:27).  Strange, too, that Paul should say to the high priest of Israel:  “God is going to strike you, you whitewashed wall” (Acts 23:3).  Those words out of the “gentle Jesus” and His chosen servant Paul are hardly front-parlor, tea-and-crumpets language.  But the gospel isn’t a lace-shirted, bow-tied religion; it is the power of God unto salvation.  It is spit in the face and blows to the head; it is a beard pulled out and a raw, bloody back.  And it is naked, gasping, wrenching death on a cross.

      We are in a battle.  The gospel knows armor and swords but nothing of women’s banquets or men’s bowling leagues.  It does know of the woman Jael who drove a tent peg through the temple of a sleeping enemy; it does know of Paul who was stoned with stones and left for dead.  It is difficult to maintain the etiquette of diplomacy with ten-pound rocks breaking one’s bones.  That, however, is not the point, for Stephen graciously endured stoning—after fearlessly denouncing the Jews for, among other sins, being “stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears . . . betrayers and murderers” of God’s prophets (Acts 7:51a, 52b).  The point is that the preaching of the Word of God and the declaration of the message of salvation have not been relegated to sissies and pantywaists.  It is a deadly serious commission that divides nations, divides families, divides even individuals as the hand that offends is cut off.

       A man who is plunging headlong over a precipice does not need a lecture on the benefits of a parachute; he needs a clean, abrupt tackle.  For that and that only will save him.  Hospitals, scalpels, and injections may be unpleasant, but they are necessary and wonderful tools of science used to save physical life.  Such is the gospel—a rescuer of men in danger of dying, a curer of men afflicted with the terminal sickness of sin.

      Jude, speaking concerning this age of apostasy, tells us that every real believer has a sevenfold duty.  Among those duties are the following:  “And have mercy on some, who are doubting; save others, snatching them out of the fire; and on some have mercy with fear, hating even the garment polluted by the flesh” (vv. 22, 23).  Some may be rescued by gentle words, the Bible reveals.  Many others, however, must be saved by quickly—even roughly, if necessary—snatching them out of the fire of God’s eternal wrath toward sin.  These are perilous times, times that demand brave, hardy men and women, times that demand we speak the word of warning with charity but also with complete clarity.  For the Lord is coming soon, and His reward is with Him.  It will be too late then.  Let us reprove, rebuke, and exhort as the Lord instructs us; and, as it is necessary, let us accept reproof, rebuking, and exhortation graciously as from the Lord, knowing that the small sting of inoculation will work in us eternal deliverance from the disease of sin and its consequences of defeat and disaster.  Amen.

Actions: E-mail | Permalink

Previous Page | Next Page