Live and Let Live?

I am grateful for the week to rest and seek to grow deeper in my relationship with You!

Me: Good afternoon, Jesus!

Jesus: Good afternoon, Jon!

Me: You are awesome beyond compare! Despite my tendency to focus on myself, You are endlessly faithful. Your mercy is great and Your love is obvious in that You gave Yourself in our place to the cruel death that would be just punishment for us. You are innocent of all wrong. I am not. Yet you have exchanged Your innocence for my penalty and my penalty for Your innocence. I recognize that time does not constrain you in the way that it does flesh. All eternity is present and open before You. I do not see how that would exclude the cross and the shame of my own transgressions. Let me shy away from every sin that I might not heap up more of my guilt for You to have to bear.

I do have a question for you. (Don’t I always?)

Jesus: Yes?

Me: I have heard several speak this week about the principle of “tacit approval”. (I think that was the way Bill Federer put it). He brought out a number of scriptures that dealt with the idea that the failure to object is taken as complicity or approval in law and that the principle derives from scripture. I know one scripture that he used was in Numbers 30; that if a woman still under her father’s authority made a vow and her father heard of it and failed to veto it – kept silent – then her vow would stand. Likewise with a woman and her husband. However, if the father or husband objected, then the woman would be innocent of the vow before You.

I think he also spoke of a duty to reprove. Here is an example where you have deferred Your reproval and yet make it clear that it is coming.

Thou sittest and speakest against thy brother; thou slanderest thine own mother’s son. These things hast thou done, and I kept silence; thou thoughtest that I was altogether such an one as thyself: but I will reprove thee, and set them in order before thine eyes. Now consider this, ye that forget God, lest I tear you in pieces, and there be none to deliver.

Psalm 50:20-22

Mr. Federer did talk of the passage that tells us to take the log out of our own eye before attempting to remove the spec of sawdust from our brother’s eye. And, of course, we all have our own sin.

So, my question is, what is our responsibility to call out the sin among us? You have given us free will to do the very things in question, things that grieve You when they are done.

Jesus: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you (Luke 6:31). Speak the truth in love (Ephesians 4).

I remind you Bill used this passage from Proverbs:

If thou forbear to deliver them that are drawn unto death, and those that are ready to be slain; If thou sayest, Behold, we knew it not; doth not he that pondereth the heart consider it? and he that keepeth thy soul, doth not he know it? and shall not he render to every man according to his works?

Proverbs 24:11-12

Are not those walking in habitual or intentional sin, who do not know Me, being drawn unto death? One who loves with My love will earnestly seek to point them to Me. If they refuse, it is upon their own head.

You know of the so-called “live and let live” philosophy. It supposes that the misdeeds of another are none of your concern. A better approach is to live and help live, if you are seeking to draw near to Me and the other will allow your exhortation. I will also point out that much of what you hear of is not within your sphere of influence. There is plenty, however, that is.

Me: Thank You Jesus! I love You! I pray that You will help me to have Your heart toward all.

Jesus: You are welcome! I love you! All that I Am working in you is toward transforming your heart in My love.

In Sterling Colorado

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Jon

Awestruck son of the Sovereign of the universe, from whom all rights and responsibilities of men derive.

10 thoughts on “Live and Let Live?”

  1. I recently had a similar conversation with a friend of mine at work. We are concerned with new teammates coming in who have a desire to be called by a certain pronoun that does not match their born gender. Our employer is full onboard with the WEF, so we know anyone who may deliberately ignore using the pronouns of choice will likely face consequences. The scriptures you shared reminded me of the phrase “what you don’t address, you allow”. Should we ever be confronted with that situation, we both have chosen to remain true to our God and our faith, and to lovingly shine the light of His glory into their desperate souls that we know are searching for their true identity. How can we not share the truth with them when we know it will set them free?

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    1. I doubt that any company over 1000 employees remains that has not emblazoned wokeness in their employee manual. I work for one that touts itself as a Christian company. Yet the Legal and H. R. departments take pains to insure all the current social trends are in the controlling documents. It is hard to blame them for the judicial system has made all but Christians a special “protected class”. The law began to go off the rails at the first instance of legislation that began to name particular individuals or groups of them, leaving behind the power of “all men are created equal “. God Almighty allows us to choose our own path to blessing or cursing. But He doesn’t do it while making it illegal to speak the truth in love.

      Liked by 3 people

  2. I never considered “tacit approval” before, and now I’m wondering if I’ve inadvertently given it. As for speaking up, I really think the “do unto others as you would have done unto you” is the clarifying scripture. I’ll continue thinking about this, friend!

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Wise words rooted in Scripture. If we see someone, even a stranger, walking heedlessly towards a cliff’s edge, wouldn’t we shout and warn them? We don’t worry about offending them. We worry about them. Hell is worse than walking off a cliff. Let’s warn others before it’s too late.

    Liked by 2 people

  4. “Live and help live.” I love that! That’s what our group was intending to do at the Pride Parade. (I see you read my posts about it.) The bottom line of my approach was “from one sinner to another.” For me, sharing the gospel was just one beggar telling another where to get bread.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You were brave. Approaching strangers who are still in rebellion to the Lord sometimes looks like the scene the angels found when they came to rescue Lot. I reckon that is why Jesus spent so much time telling his followers to fear not.

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