
November 10, 2009
Does Doctrine Apply to Neighborhood Bullies?
Alex Crain
Editor, Christianity.com
"And forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors."
Matthew 6:12
My family is blessed to live on a cul-de-sac where our seven-year-old boy freely rides his bike and plays for hours without having to contend with busy traffic. The contention he faces most often is unfortunately the unkind words and actions of others.
Knowing that our little guy isn't perfect, my wife asked our son after one recent occurrence if he had done anything to provoke the attack. "No, mom" he replied as he held the little spot on the side of his head where a hardened dirt clod missile had made impact just a few moments earlier. "He's just mean. I'm never playing with him again." She commended him for walking away from the fray instead of taking matters into his own hands—an impulse which generally tends to make matters worse.
While we have tried to help our son (and ourselves) understand that we live in a sinful world in which things like this happen, we still struggle to respond in a way that demonstrates the grace of the Lord to neighbors He has called us to reach.
Thomas Watson, the great Cambridge scholar and Puritan preacher from the 1600s, wrote commenting on Matthew 6:12 ("Forgive our debts as we forgive our debtors") "We are not bound to trust an enemy; but we are bound to forgive him." (Body of Divinity, p. 734). Going further (p. 734), he asks: When do we [know that we have] forgive[n] others?
Answer: "When we strive against all thoughts of revenge; when we will not do our enemies mischief, but wish well to them, grieve at their calamities, pray for them, seek reconciliation with them, and show ourselves ready on all occasions to relieve them--this is gospel forgiving."
Watson, being the biblical scholar that he was, did not derive his answer from thin air. Each part of it comes straight from Scripture:
As I said, the struggle isn't over, but Watson's biblical counsel is the right antidote.
Intersecting Faith & Life:
In what situations are you tempted to harbor unforgiveness? How does God look upon unforgiveness? (read Matthew 6:15).
Further Reading
Thomas Watson, A Body of Divinity