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MUTUAL
FORBEARANCE
J.R. Miller, D.D.
Among all Christian duties, there are few that touch life at more points
than the duty of mutual forbearance, and there are few that, in the observance
or the breach, have more to do with the happiness or the unhappiness of
life. We cannot live our lives solitarily. We are made to be social beings.
It is in our intercourse with others that we find our sweetest pleasures
and our purest earthly joys. Yet close by these springs of happiness are
other fountains that do not yield sweetness. There often are briars on
the branches from which we gather the most luscious fruits. Were human
nature perfect, there could be nothing but most tender pleasure in the
mutual comminglings of life. But we are all imperfect and full of infirmities.
There are qualities in each one of us that are not beautifulmany
that are annoying to others. Self rules in greater or less measure in
the best of us. In our busy and excited lives, we are continually liable
to jostle against each other. Our individual interests conflict, or seem
to conflict. The things we do in the earnest pressing of our own business
and our own plans and efforts seem at times to interfere with the interests
of others. In the heat of emulation and the warmth of self-interest, we
are apt to do things, which injure others.
Then, in our closer personal contact, in society and in business relations,
we are constantly liable to give pain or offence. We sometimes speak quickly
and give expression to thoughtless words, which fall like, spark on other
inflammable tempers. Even our nearest and truest friends do things that
grieve us. Close commingling of imperfect lives always has its manifold
little injustices, wrongs, oppressions, slights and grievances.
Then we do not always see each other in clear and honest light. We are
prone to have a bias toward self, and often misconstrue the bearing, words,
or acts of others. Many of us, too, are given to little petulances
and expressions of ill-humour or bad temper, which greatly lessen the
probabilities of unbroken fellowship.
Thus, it comes about that no Christian grace is likely to be called into
play more frequently than that of mutual forbearance. Without it, there
can really exist no close and lasting friendly relations in a society
composed of imperfect beings. Even the most tender intimacies and the
holiest associations require the constant exercise of patience. If we
resent every apparent injustice, demand the righting of every little wrong,
and insist upon chafing and uttering our feelings at every infinitesimal
grievance, and if all the other parties in the circle claim the same privilege,
what miserable beings we shall all be, and how wretched life will become!
But there is a more excellent way. The spirit of love inculcated in the
New Testament will, if permitted to reign in each heart and life, produce
fellowship without a jar or break.
We need to guard first of all against a critical spirit. It is very easy
to find fault with people. It is possible, even with ordinary glasses,
to see many things in one another that are not what they ought to be.
Then some people carry microscopes fine enough to reveal a million animalcules
in a drop of water, and with these, they can find countless blemishes
in the character and conduct even of the most saintly dwellers on the
earth. There are some who are always watching for slights and grievances.
They are suspicious of the motives and intentions of others. They are
always imagining offences, even where none were most remotely intended.
This habit is directly at variance with the law of love, which thinketh
no evil.
We turn to the Pattern. Does Christ look upon us sharply, critically,
suspiciously? He sees every infirmity in us, but it is as though He did
not see it. His love overlooks it. He throws a veil over our faults. He
continues to pour His own love upon us in spite of all our blemishes and
our ill-treatment of Him. The law of Christian forbearance requires the
same in us. We must not keep our selfish suspicions ever on the watch-tower
or at the windows, looking out for neglects, discourtesies, wrongs, or
grievances of any kind. We must not be hasty to think evil of others.
We had better be blind, not perceiving at all the seeming rudeness or
insult. It is well not to hear all that is said, or, if hear we must,
to be as though we heard not.
Many bitter quarrels have grown out of an imagined slight, many out of
an utter misconception, or perchance from the misrepresentation of some
wretched gossip-monger. Had a few moments been given to ascertain the
truth, there had never been any occasion for ill-feeling.
We should seek to know the motive also which prompts the apparent grievance.
In many cases, the cause of our grievance is utterly unintentional, chargeable
to nothing worse than thoughtlessnesspossibly meant even for kindness.
It is never fair to judge men by every word they speak or everything they
do in the excitement and amid the irritations of busy daily life. Many
a gruff man carries a good heart and a sincere friendship under his coarse
manner. The best does not always come to the surface. We should never,
therefore, hastily imagine evil intention in others. Nor should we allow
ourselves to be easily persuaded that our companions or friends meant
to treat us unkindly. A disposition to look favourably upon the conduct
of our fellow-men is a wonderful absorber of the frictions of life.
Then there are always cases of real injustice. There are rudenesses and
wrongs, which we cannot regard as merely imaginary or as misconceptions.
They proceed from bad temper or from jealousy or malice, and are very
hard to bear. Kindness is repaid with unkindness. We find impatience and
petulance in our best friends. There are countless things every day in
our associations with others, which tend to vex or irritate us.
Here is room for the fullest exercise of that divinely-beautiful charity
which covers a multitude of sins in others. We seek to make every possible
excuse for the neglect or rudeness or wrong. Perhaps our friend is carrying
some perplexing care or some great burden today. Something may be going
wrong in his business or at his home. Or it may be his unstrung nerves
that make him so thoughtless and inconsiderate. Or his bad health may
be the cause. A large-hearted spirit will always seek to find some palliation
at least for the apparent wrong.
Another step in the school of forbearance is the lesson of keeping silent
under provocation. One person alone can never make a quarrel: it takes
two. A homely counsel to a newly-married couple was that they should never
both be angry at the same timethat one should always remain calm
and tranquil. There is a still diviner counsel, which speaks of the soft
answer, which turneth away wrath. If we cannot have the soft answer always
ready, we can at least learn not to answer at all. Our Lord met nearly
all the insults He received with patient uncomplaining silence. He was
like a lamb dumb before the shearer. All the keen insults of the cruel
throng wrung from Him no word of resentment, no look of impatience. As
the fragrant perfume but gives forth added sweetness when crushed, so
cruelty, wrong, and pain only made Him the gentler and the love that always
distinguished Him the sweeter.
It is a majestic power, this power of keeping silent. Great is the conqueror
who leads armies to victories. Mighty is the strength that captures a
city. But he is greater who can rule his own spirit. There are men who
can command armies, but cannot command themselves. There are men who by
their burning words can sway vast multitudes who cannot keep silence under
provocation or wrong. The highest mark of nobility is self-control. It
is more kingly than regal crown and purple robe.
Not in the clamour of the crowded street,
Not in the shouts and plaudits of the throng,
But in ourselves, are triumph and defeat.
There are times when silence is golden, when words mean defeat, and when
victory can be gained only by answering not a word. Many of the painful
quarrels and much of the bitterness of what we call so often incompatibility
of temper would never be known if we would learn to keep silence
when others wrong us. We may choke back the angry word that flies to our
lips. The insult unanswered will recoil upon itself and be its own destruction.
There is also a wonderful opportunity here for the play of good nature.
There are some people whose abounding humour always comes to their relief
when they observe the gathering of a storm, and they will have a little
story ready, or will suddenly turn the conversation entirely away from
the inflammable subject, or will make some bright or playful remark that
will cause the whole trouble to blow off in a hearty laugh. It would not
seem impossible for all to learn to bear insults or grievances in some
of these ways, either in silencenot sullen, thunder-charged, but
loving silenceor by returning the soft answer which will quench
the flame of anger, or by that wise tact which drives out the petulant
humour by the expulsive power of a new emotion.
There are at least two motives, which should be sufficient to lead us
to cultivate this grace of forbearance. One is that no insult can do us
harm unless we allow it to irritate us. If we endure even the sorest words
as Jesus endured His wrongs and revilings, they will not leave one trace
of injury upon us. They can harm us only when we allow ourselves to become
impatient or angry. We can get the victory over them; utterly disarm them
of power to do us injury, by holding ourselves superior to them. The feeling
of resentment will change to pity when we remember that not he who is
wronged, but he who does the wrong, is the one who suffers. Every injustice
or grievance reacts and leaves a stain and a wound. All the cruelties
and persecutions that human hate could inflict would not leave one trace
of real harm upon us, but every feeling of resentment admitted into our
hearts, every angry word uttered, will leave a stain. Forbearance thus
becomes a perfect shield, which protects us from all the cruelties and
wrongs of life.
The other motive is drawn from our relation to God. We sin against Him
continually, and His mercy never fails. His love bears with all our neglect,
forgetfulness, ingratitude and disobedience, and never grows impatient
with us. We live only by His forbearance. The wrongs He endures from us
are infinite in comparison with the trivial grievances we must endure
from our fellow-men. When we think of this, can we grow impatient of the
little irritations of daily fellowship? We are taught to pray every day,
Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors. How can we
pray this petition sincerely and continue to be exacting, resentful, revengeful,
or even to be greatly pained by the unkind treatment of others?
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