Reasonable: Part 4–The Best of Your Ability

(Originally published 5/10/2020 during the lockdown)

If possible, to the best of your ability, live at peace with all people. (Romans 12:18 CEB)

 

Back in Part 3, we gave some examples of the characteristics we ought to be manifesting as we cling to what is good.  Here are some more practical tips from Romans 12 on how to walk this out.

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14 Bless people who harass you—bless and don’t curse them.

 

Most people know that Jesus commanded us to love our enemies.  That notion was just as counter-intuitive 2,000 years ago as it is today.  If we have the capacity for hatred, who better to bear the brunt of it but our enemies?  Isn’t that what enemies are for?

 

Not so much, as it turns out.  Even as Jesus was hanging on the cross, He forgave the people that put Him there.

 

Christians all around the world experience persecution at many levels.  Since Truth Mission has readers all over the world, what you are going through as you read this could be quite different than my experience.

 

Some of you may be harassed on social media. Some of you may be feeling heat from the government.  Some of you may actually have been beaten, fired from a job, or had loved ones tortured and killed for their faith.

 

There are two things we need to remember though.  The first is that the people who persecute us are not our real enemies.  We have one Enemy who seeks our destruction.

 

The second thing is that we have no control whatsoever over how other people respond to the promptings of the Enemy.  We do, however have control over how we respond to the promptings of the Holy Spirit.

 

Therefore, to the best of our ability, we need to follow the example set in Proverbs 25:21-22:

 

If your enemies are starving, feed them some bread; if they are thirsty, give them water to drink. By doing this, you will heap burning coals on their heads, and the Lord will reward you.

 

The “burning coals” bit may refer to an Egyptian custom where people would carry a pan of hot coals on their heads as a sign of repentance.  So the idea here is that if someone is harassing you, and you respond with a blessing instead of a curse, they may take note of that and see you, and God THROUGH you, in a different way.

 

Now will that happen every time?  No, of course not. But if it doesn’t, that’s not your problem.  To the best of your ability, you have followed Christ’s command.  By your actions, you have shared the Gospel and offered a tacit invitation for your “enemies” to turn from their ways and join in the freedom that you enjoy.  But it is up to them to RSVP to your invitation.

15 Be happy with those who are happy, and cry with those who are crying.

 

A healthy church functions as a family, so we always need to be aware of and involved with one another’s lives.

 

We celebrate together at weddings, graduations and baby showers.  We also walk alongside each other at funerals, during illnesses, or when children go astray.

 

This unity has never been more important than it is right now.  As I type this, we have been on COVID-19 lockdown for about eight weeks.  The Enemy has used this “pandemic” as an opportunity to scatter the body of Christ by influencing our State government to keep the churches closed for far longer than necessary.

 

However, to the best of our ability, we must rise up inside this.  We need to get over our technophobia and learn how to do Zoom meetings and participate in online church. Yes, it’s not the same as meeting in person, but a connection is a connection.  We can’t afford to just float away from each other just because meeting virtually is inconvenient.

 

We must stay in the habit of gathering, not just for our own sakes, but for the sakes of those who do not have a church community.  Think about it.  If you are feeling lonely and disconnected right now, and you HAVE a church family, how do you think the people feel who have no one to do life with?  These are the people we need to be reaching out to.  They are more open than ever right now for conversations.  So have some.

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16 Consider everyone as equal, and don’t think that you’re better than anyone else. Instead, associate with people who have no status. Don’t think that you’re so smart.

 

And while you’re planning those conversations, which may be out of your comfort zone anyway, I would like to challenge you further to have conversations with people who aren’t like you.  If God’s invitation is open to everyone, and he uses us to extend that invitation, then we should be doing this anyway.

 

By all means, we should talk to the people we’re around every day.  However, we must also remember that someone who doesn’t live in our neighborhood or work in our office or walk in our social circle also has a gift and a passion that God gave them to build His Church.  We need that person just as much as he or she needs us.

 

Are you educated? Think of the uneducated people you know.  Do you see how hard many of them work, because they haven’t had the occupational privileges that come with a college degree? Don’t you think your church needs someone with that work ethic using spiritual gifts they may not even be aware of until you invite them in?

 

Are you financially well-off?  Try walking your Labradoodle on the other side of the tracks today and wave to everybody you see.  (Or go shake hands once we’re done with social distancing.) That act by itself won’t save many souls, but you have to start somewhere.

 

Are you well-versed in scripture?  Instead of correcting people who misinterpret the Bible in your Facebook feed, maybe you could start an online Bible study group with them and ask them to invite friends that have questions.

 

Bottom line—if we are all equal in the eyes of God, then we should be all equal in one another’s eyes as well.

17 Never pay back evil with more evil. Do things in such a way that everyone can see you are honorable. (NLT)

 

This one is a challenge for all of us.  Our first instinct when someone wrongs us is to get even with our harasser.  Some people just repress that instinct better than others.

 

Nevertheless, repress it we must.  To the best of our ability, we must leave room for God to deal with our accusers.

 

Revenge is a control issue.  When we are wronged, we feel that we must take control of the situation by restoring balance to the equation.  If we take an eye for an eye or a tooth for a tooth, then we feel that we are restoring the equilibrium of justice.

 

But if that were our job, then what would be the purpose of Judgment Day?

 

A reasonable assumption for those who have put their trust in Jesus is that God is in control.  And if God is in control, then the only control we need to be concerned with is self-control.

 

Therefore, to the best of our ability, we use this self-control to resist conforming to the pattern of this world.  We use it to restrain ourselves from following our own understanding when discerning what is evil from what is good. Finally, we exercise our self-control to avoid being conquered by evil, but rather to conquer evil by doing good.

 

That sounds reasonable, right?

 

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Reasonable: Part 3–What is Good

Love must be honest and true. Hate what is evil. Hold on to what is good. (Romans 12:9 NIRV)

 

Back in Part 2, we discussed how God gives various spiritual gifts to individuals, so that we can build up the Church, with each member doing its part, just like the parts of our body.

 

So what does it look like when the Church is functioning this way?  It’s a lot more detailed than making sure the Wednesday night potluck goes off without a hitch!

 

First, we must remember that these are SPIRITUAL gifts, which means that there must have been a spiritual transformation that has taken place already.  The greatest evidence of this is love.

 

Not feelings, but actions.  There is no room in the body of Christ for hypocrisy or two-faced gossiping.  We have to get this part right before we can move on with the rest of verse 9.

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Hate what is evil

 

If this sounds familiar, it is because we covered this verse thoroughly in the Necessity of Being Intolerant series.

 

I feel like I should reiterate, though, that the Bible clearly states to hate WHAT is evil, not WHO.  There are still too many people misinterpreting this verse to justify judgmentalism.  We are not talking about hating people here. We are talking about behaviors and habits.

 

For more details regarding “what is evil,” I would encourage you to review the Necessity of Being Intolerant series, especially part 1.  But for now, I want to focus on the rest of Romans 12:9.

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Hold on to What is Good

 

Verses 10-12 contain several examples of what is good, the things that we should hold on to.  Let’s break this down verse by verse.

 

10 Love one another deeply. Honor others more than yourselves.

 

What is good in this verse is humility. C.S. Lewis once said that humility is not so much about thinking less of yourself, but thinking of yourself less.  When the members of the Church body are focused where they should be, they don’t just use “brother” and “sister” as honorary titles, but truly do treat everyone else in the Church as family.

 

Remember, false humility makes a show of itself to build up the person showing it, but real humility builds up others, and is not self-seeking.

 

11 Stay excited about your faith as you serve the Lord.

 

When you know your calling, your work should be a joy, not a grind.  God’s part is to prepare the work for us and equip us to do it.  Our part is to have a zeal to meet God where He’s already working and join Him in that work.

 

12 When you hope, be joyful. When you suffer, be patient. When you pray, be faithful.

 

Hope does not mean the kind of hope that is desperation mixed with doubt.  This is a joyful expectation.  You’re not wishing that something might happen; you’re eagerly awaiting something good that you are certain is coming.

 

Yet while we are hoping and waiting, sometimes we are suffering.  When I first wrote this on 12/12/2020, many were suffering from the financial fallout of COVID-19. Many still are today.

 

Regardless of our gifts, one of the fruits of the Spirit that all believers receive is patience.  Some older English translations actually use the word “longsuffering.”  If we have joyful hope that what is good is on the way, this helps us to endure what is not so good.

 

And we endure these things by being faithful in prayer.  No matter how grim our circumstances get, we always have the ability to exercise this discipline.  God can handle our anger and our disappointment, but He also wants us to remember that what is good comes from Him, and always at exactly the right time.

 

(For more of what is good, come back for Part 4—The Best of Your Ability)

 

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Reasonable: Part 2–Our Own Understanding

 

Because of the grace that God gave me, I can say to each one of you: don’t think of yourself more highly than you ought to think. Instead, be reasonable since God has measured out a portion of faith to each one of you. (Romans 12:3 CEB)

  

Back in Part 1, we talked about how the best way of finding our calling is to trust in the Lord and not to lean on our own understanding.  But why is that significant?

 

It is perfectly reasonable to expect that the One who prepared the path for us knows where it leads.  Sometimes, that’s not where we thought we were going.  A lot of times, actually.  So if the end of the path we’re preparing for ourselves isn’t in the same place as the end of the path that God is preparing for us, then all of our careful planning is just a recipe for disappointment.

 

Have you experienced this in your own life?  I know I have, in big and small ways.  When I was 18, I was going to be a famous novelist.  I’m 52 now, and that hasn’t happened.  When I got my foot in the door with State Government, I was going to fly through the system to the upper echelon and be a major player in state policy.  All it takes is one change in the Governor’s Mansion to derail that plan.

 

Do I even need to mention my family life?  I already have before, if you need a reminder of all the things I’ve done according to the pattern of this world that I’d rather forget.

 

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The point is that you can’t follow God if you don’t know He’s there to follow.  And even if you do know, you WON’T follow God, unless you believe you can trust Him.  And that trust only comes from taking your faith to the spiritual gym and giving it a workout, through study, prayer and meditation.

 

What I have found is that exercising spiritual discipline doesn’t just help me see God more clearly. It also helps me see myself more clearly.

Spiritual Gifts

 

We all have different gifts. Each gift came because of the grace that God gave us. If one has the gift of prophecy, he should use that gift with the faith he has. If one has the gift of serving, he should serve. If one has the gift of teaching, he should teach. If one has the gift of encouraging others, he should encourage. If one has the gift of giving to others, he should give freely. If one has the gift of being a leader, he should try hard when he leads. If one has the gift of showing kindness to others, that person should do so with joy. (Romans 12:6-8 ICB)

 

 

The Church is often referred to as the Body of Christ.  Just as every part of your physical body has a specific function, so every member of the Church has a role to play in building it up.

 

So as God transforms our minds, and we lean less on our own understanding, He starts to illuminate our path by making us aware of the spiritual gifts he has given us.  We are then more able to discern His will by discovering what He has wired us to do.

 

Sometimes a spiritual gift is a divine enablement that enhances the effectiveness of a talent or skill we already have.  Sometimes it’s something totally new.  Basically, whatever work God has for us to do, He gives us the tools we need to get it done.  The more we stay out of His way and just go with it, the more things start to happen.

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The list in the passage above is not all-inclusive, but does illustrate some of the gifts God gives His Church.

 

Some people receive messages from the Lord. They don’t always make sense to the one receiving them.  But if they exercise faith, and not their own understanding, and deliver the message anyway, then the person or people meant to hear it will know what it means.

 

The same goes for serving, teaching, encouraging, giving, leading and showing mercy.  The members of the Church can be somewhat effective in trying to figure out with their own understanding how to serve strategically with their gifts. But where the rubber really meets the road is when we submit to the leading of Holy Spirit, who brought us the gifts in the first place, and see where that leads us.  It’s usually somewhere we didn’t plan on being around people we never would have thought of being in the midst of.

 

(So what does it look like when the Church is functioning in this way?  Come back for Part 3: What is Good.)

 

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Reasonable: Part 1–The Pattern of this World

Also, do not continue to conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, so that you test and approve what is the will of God—what is good, pleasing, and perfect. (Romans 12:2 EHV)

 

This is my second favorite verse in the entire Bible (I’ll get to the most favorite one a little later), because it is the essence of the Christian walk summed up in a single verse.

 

We were saved from sin so that we would stop sinning.  We are set apart from the world that either has no interest in Truthseeking or wants to define Truth on its own terms.

 

However, the life that we were saved from is the one that encompasses the habits we have developed.  The later in life that we accept Jesus as Lord, the harder it is to overcome these habits.

 

We can’t do this without God’s help.  We can’t change our own nature.  But we can trust in God to do it for us.  True worship is recognizing this reality and acting on it.  That is why the verse immediately before this one reads:

 

I appeal to you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God—this is a reasonable act of worship for you. (Romans 12:1 MOUNCE)

 

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Romans 12 begins with an exhortation to respond to God’s saving mercy by presenting our bodies, and all that we do with them, as a living sacrifice to God.  This means that we should stop doing whatever we want or whatever feels good in the moment and instead go to God for guidance about what we should do and what decisions we should make.  Approaching God in this way keeps him on the throne of our hearts, where He belongs.

 

Paul describes our having this posture of submission toward God as a “reasonable” act of worship, but that word in English fails to convey his full meaning.

 

The Greek word Paul uses here is logikos. I probably don’t even have to tell you what English word comes from that.  It means “logical” or “rational.” It can also be interpreted as “intelligent,” “true,” “appropriate,” “sensible,” “only right,” “authentic,” “fitting,” “not too much to ask,” “proper,” “genuine,” “essential,” “spiritual “ and “in line with God’s mind.”

 

It is only by being spiritually mindful of the fact that we are sinners, incapable of saving ourselves, and yet chosen by God for redemption when we exercise the faith that is a gift from God, that we can find ourselves in a place where true transformation can begin.  We are chosen, but we also make an informed choice.

 

True worship, therefore, happens where faith and logic meet.  Faith and reason are not opposites.  Indeed, they must be used together for us to do the work that God saved us to do.

 

God’s Part and Our Part

 

This is why both the active and passive voice are used in verse 2.  I know that drives English teachers and the Microsoft Word grammar checker nuts, but it’s essential here so that we can understand just how this process of offering ourselves as living sacrifices works.  Let’s break verse 2 down.

 

Do not continue to conform to the pattern of this world.

 

The implication here is that we have been conforming to the pattern of this world, which is true.  As Christians, we always need to remember where we came from.  To be set apart from the world, we had to first be a part of it.  But what is “the pattern of this world?”

 

The pattern is the superficial values and customs of our culture.  Throughout the ages, it has always been about keeping up appearances.  The world judges people and situations by what they can see.  Since faith involves believing, THEN seeing, it doesn’t fit the pattern.  Therefore, the pattern rejects faith.

 

In doing so, the people that do conform to the pattern develop standards (for lack of a better word) that are not based on faith and its outcome.  The pattern molds and shapes them into a hive mind that is opposed to anything that would challenge it.

 

So why is that a problem for Truthseekers?  Because there’s a good chance that a lot of our friends and family are conforming to that pattern.  Sometimes being set apart feels more like being left out.  We are tempted to compromise our faith and convictions to have a sense of belonging that we are comfortable with.

 

This is why God warns us that we have to do our part to resist the pattern.  But while we are doing that, God is doing this…

 

Be transformed by the renewal of your mind.

 

When we make the decision not to follow the lemmings of our culture, we open the door for God to do His transforming work in our lives.  Our minds are renewed through prayer and the study of God’s Word.

 

Have you noticed that the more time you spend with somebody, the more you start to become like them?  You pick up their mannerisms, their accent, maybe even some of their habits.

 

It works the same way with Jesus.  Religion can form habitual rituals, but a relationship with Jesus changes you from the inside out.  Once you have made the decision to follow Jesus, AND made the effort to spend time with Him in prayer and meditation, you start to see your life and the world in a different way.

 

But what is the purpose of this transformation?

 

So that you test and approve what is the will of God.

 

Back to our part. We choose to not follow the culture so that God can transform our minds so that we can use our own logic and reason, in accordance with our faith, to find out God’s will for our lives.

 

This is the process of figuring out the path that has been prepared for us.  If we try to figure it out ourselves without yielding to the Holy Spirit, it won’t work.  This is why it says in Proverbs 3:5-6 (my most favorite verse):

 

Trust in the Lord with all your heart. And do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him, And He will make your paths straight. (NASB)

 

(We shall expound upon this in Part 2—Our Own Understanding)

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