February 10, 2008
READ: Matthew 5:38-48
I tell you not to resist an evil person. But whoever slaps you on your right cheek, turn the other to him also. Matthew 5:39
The pastor of an inner-city church told his congregation: Some people believe in an eye for an eye. But in this neighborhood, its two eyes for an eye. You can never even the score; you can only raise the stakes. The people nodded in solemn understanding of the reality they faced each day.
Weve seen it happen on a school playground or in our own homesa child bumps into another during a game. The one who was bumped pushes back, and the shoving quickly grows into a fight. Its the process of retaliation and escalation in which each act of revenge exceeds the one that provoked it.
In Matthew 5, Jesus tackled a number of key relational issues by raising the standard to the one that pleases God: You have heard that it was said . . . . But I tell you . . . (vv.38-39). His words about turning the other cheek, going the second mile, and giving to those who ask may sound as radical and unrealistic to us as they did to those who first heard them (vv.38-42). Are we willing to ponder and pray about His teaching? Are we ready to apply it when we are wronged at home, at work, or at school?
The cycle of escalation can be broken when a courageous, faith-filled person refuses to strike back.
This is just beautiful, Dolly!
Love your picture of Niagara Falls, Dolly!