Staying on the Altar
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Don't pay back evil with evil…My dear friends, don't try to get even. Leave room for God to show his anger…Scripture says, "If your enemies are hungry, give them food to eat. If they are thirsty, give them something to drink. By doing those things, you will pile up burning coals on their heads." Don't let evil overcome you. Overcome evil by doing good (17-21).
The Heidelberg Catechism teaches us that we have a natural tendency to hate God and our neighbor (A 5). That seems about right. To repay evil with good seems overly optimistic.
Getting even is our natural bent. Have you ever seen a three-year-old, when another child takes his toy, offer a second as well? Hardly. The child immediately works to retrieve said toy, often violently. Whether its children playing in the park or adults striving to get ahead, we do not tolerate others doing us harm. Our immediate reaction is to seek retaliation.
But God calls Christians to be different. This is one of the unique qualities of the followers of Jesus. Romans 12 begins with a view of God's mercy, we offer ourselves as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to him. This conclusion, "overcome evil by doing good", is where we keep crawling off the alter! God wants us to return good for evil and we say, 'fat chance', we want justice, in other words, vengeance.
In life, we encounter truly difficult people–individuals who wound us, wrong us, betray us, making us want to strike back. Justice, we think, demands that they know the harm they've caused and receive punishment. We believe that this is our right. Yet, as gospel people, a sincere, forgiving love should be our response.
This is how we embody the gospel of our God in Christ: "overcoming evil with good." This is what Jesus did in his ministry and, ultimately, in his death. Jesus met the evil of this world head on with love and grace, not balled-up fists and merciless judgment. Living in love and harmony with difficult and evil people is what it means to be caught up in the rhythms of the gospel.
That's who we are as Christian people. It's wrong to get the greatest gift of God's grace and then turn right around and take revenge on others. "My dear friends" could be translated, "my dear agape people". Agape is that special, divine love that we get by grace alone. People who have been graced with God's agape can't turn around and live vengeful lives.
Bad things happen. That is an unhappy fact of life in this world. The gospel calls us to absorb such evil, to show Christ to the world not just when doing that is easy but to display the grace of Jesus precisely when it is most difficult. Others will say we have a right to justice; to see the evil doer punished. The gospel demands something else.
The only way into this life is to keep God's mercy towards me clearly in view; to remain submitted to God's way instead of the world's system. We can't do this on our own. But that has been Paul's contention all along, "in view of God's mercy." We have received; therefore, we can give.
As you journey on, go with the blessing of God:
"May God himself, the God who makes everything holy and whole, make you holy and whole, put you together—spirit, soul, and body—and keep you fit for the coming of our Master, Jesus Christ. The One who called you is completely dependable. If he said it, he'll do it" (1 Thessalonians 5:23).