Monday, May 21, 2012

Loving Tolerance

Love...tolerance...two words that have swept the nation, the church, right wing, left wing, churched, and unchurched. Over the last few weeks, these words have been plastered over Facebook and social media. But my heart's desire is not to take what others say as truth but what Scripture says as truth. If we believe the Bible is relevant to today, that it is inerrant, that is is useful for teaching rebuking correcting and living in truth, then what does it say about love and tolerance? What does it teach us? 
Beginning in Genesis and ending in Revelation, there is the call to love. First we must "Love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul, and mind" and second we must "Love our neighbor as ourselves." We are called to love everyone. We are called to live lives that show Christ's love in our actions, words, and deeds. We follow the example of our Creator, or Redeemer, our Lover. Christ loved unconditionally, Christ loved passionately, Christ loved us so much He gave His life as a ransomed for sin. Christ called the sinner, Christ met people right where they were. Christ was not ashamed to call the common and the despised. Christ loved but Christ was not tolerant.
We are called not only to love but to live like the One Who created us. Throughout Scripture it is clear that while Christ loved, He did not tolerate evil and sin. From Genesis to Revelation, there is a demand to live in the Spirit, to live in truth, to turn and sin no more. Christ does not tolerate sin, and neither should we. The Lord told his people as they entered into the promise land to destroy the nations they found, why? Because the nations were worshiping false gods, because they were living in sin. The Lord told Lot to take his family and leave the city, why? Because the city was filled with immorality and was going to be destroyed. As we look to the New Testament, we see story after story of Christ meeting people where they were. He met the woman at the well, He already knew the sin she was living in and He commanded her to leave the life of sin and sin no more. When He called the disciples, He called tax collectors and some of the "lowest of society" and He loved them, but He did not tolerate their sin, He commanded them to live in the Spirit, to abide in the Spirit. When Christ entered the temple to see it being defiled, He in loving anger began to knock over tables declaring the temple had become a den of robbers. The Lord loved the sinner but did not tolerate the sin, and that is how we should live. 
We should live as intolerant people. We should not tolerate sin, we should not tolerate false idols, we should not tolerate false truth, we should not tolerate the things that go against the Word. We are not called to be tolerant, we are not called to coexist. We are called to obey the law of the land, to respect those in position of government authority, but we are not called to obey when the laws are directly against what Scripture teaches. We are called to be set apart, we are called to be intolerant of anything that goes directly against the Word of God.
Unfortunately, what the world sees is a church full of hypocrisy, a church that points out the sins of others, a church that instead of loving the world, pushes the world farther away. However, at the same time, what the world can not and will not understand, unless we show them in love, is that we are sinners, chosen by God, and saved by grace. What the world can not and will not understand is that we all are born into sin, we all are totally depraved apart from the Saviour and that we will make mistakes. But the Lord called us in our mistakes, in our sins, and He, and He ALONE, redeemed us, and poured His Spirit on us and that we can only live in freedom from sin by His grace and mercy daily working in our lives. We, as believers, must love the world around us, we must shine a light that no one else shines, we must be an aroma of Christ that lingers when we are no longer present. We must first confess our sins, repent of our sins, and realize our need of a Saviour. We must not judge others or place sins on a hierarchical system. We must love all but not love sin. 
The Lord calls us to be holy as He is holy, He calls us to love as He loves, He calls us to serve as He serves. He calls us to live in the Spirit, not in the flesh. He calls us to abide in Him. He calls us to be either hot or cold, not lukewarm. He calls us to love and love passionately, but we should not tolerate sin.
‎"Our struggle is never that we are too angry; but that we are never angry enough. Our anger is always pitifully small when it is focused against a person or object; it is meant to be turned against all evil and all sin -- beginning first with our own failure of love."~quote taken from a Joni E. Tada devotional




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