not returning evil for
evil or reviling for reviling, but on the contrary blessing, knowing that you
were called to this, that you may inherit a blessing. – 1 Peter 3.9
Nobody – I mean nobody – likes to be attacked or
reviled or be on the recipient of evil. It is never any fun. Christians are no
exception.
But something we forget today is that evil and attacks
and reviling and persecution are part of what the church has dealt with since
the day it was born. There have been good times and bad times for some of the church.
There are parts of the church that have always been persecuted and attacked. I
am sure that, like now, there were a lot of questions about how we are to
respond. We could go through example after example of how Christians have
responded throughout history and today.
A few years ago a large Christian college was targeted
by a gay pride group not happy with the college’s view on homosexuality. They
set up a demonstration and even trespassed on campus with goal of being
arrested. Instead of a negative response the college sent out box lunches for
the demonstrators.
Just last week 21 Coptic Christians were beheaded by
ISIS in Libya. Instead of calling for retribution Christians in the area
printed up a gospel tract and determined to pray for the attackers. From what I
understand a couple of ISIS members who have taken part in attacks have now
been saved.
There are a lot of calls for violent responses to the
church’s attackers – and yet here Peter says that when people do evil we are
not to respond with evil. When we are reviled we are not to respond with more
reviling.
So how is the church to respond? In fact, how do we
respond when we are reviled and attacked for our faith?
Peter says to respond with blessing.
I have to admit that doesn’t sit well with my flesh. My
flesh says ‘that’s not fair!’
But then was it fair that an innocent Jesus had to go
to the cross for me?
I don’t have all the answers, I wish I did. But it
looks like the historical church was willing to take a lot more opposition than
we are today. We seem to want to respond with bombs and jets and guns and
armies or meanness and ugliness and name calling and half-truths and lies and
deceptions.
It seems so simple, but it seems so complicated.
May God give all of us His grace to know how to
respond.