“Bearing with one another and, if one has a complaint
against another, forgiving each other; as the Lord has forgiven you, so you
also must forgive. Above all these put on love, which binds everything together
in perfect harmony.” Colossians 3:13-14
Beloved,
When I was growing up, my two older brothers often had
to “put up with me” hanging around them and their friends. As the youngest, I
struggled to keep up. I’d always fall behind them. The two oldest were obliged to
bear with me as I learned to follow in their steps. They had to tolerate my
silly questions, my slow pace and my lack of understanding. I eventually matured.
I could keep up with them, but as their little brother, they had to be patient
and bear with me. I was part of the family, and family members sometimes have
to simply “put up with” one another.
Paul tells the church at
Colossae to bear with one another. In a church family, there’s always people that
may do things out of immaturity, ignorance or simply, who can’t keep up. As in any family, it’s our obligation
to bear with and help them. A
congregation is full of people with a variety of ideas, opinions and
perspectives. It’s easy to allow such multiplicity to create division or disunity.
Although it may be easy, we cannot allow our individual uniqueness to obscure
the love we’ve been given in Jesus Christ.
Our bearing with one
another has a purpose. Our bearing with one another highlights the Gospel to
each other and to the watching world. We bear and forgive others, because Christ
has forgiven us. If we’re unwilling to bear with others, why expect God to bear
with us? If we are unwilling to forgive others, why expect God to forgive us?
When we put on the love of Christ, we bear with one another and forgive one
another. Instead of thinking about the struggle of having to put up with each
other, think about the precious opportunity to magnify Jesus Christ’s love. He bears with us in our fight against sin, so
we also must bear with others in their struggle with sin.
Beloved, we cannot allow
dissension to fester in our church family. We cannot harbor bitterness towards
one another. We’re a family. Every family bears with each other. So let’s us
not look at what divide us, but what unites us. We all have been purchased with
a price. 1 John 1:7, “If we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have
fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from
all sin.” Let us resolve to walk in the light of the gospel of Jesus Christ by
bearing with one another. Put on love for it, “bears all things, believes all
things, hopes all things, endures all thing.” That bearing and enduring love
will bind us together in perfect harmony.
No comments:
Post a Comment