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God’s Gentleman Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 6, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: I am more convinced every day that true power is in gentleness. Like the silent gentle rays of the sun are the most potent factors in natural life, so the gentle kindness of the Christian is the most potent factor in spreading the spiritual life.
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History is the record of the battle of competing ideas and
philosophies that clash with one another in their effort to gain the
allegiance of men. The whole world is under the pressure of such
competing ideologies. Is theism or atheism the truth? Is liberalism
or conservatism the way to go in politics and theology? The whole
question of force or freedom is ever with us all the way from
international relations to our own family relations. The question is,
which is best, which is right, which is most effective in a given
situation? Is it ruthless self-assertion or gentle self-sacrifice? Which
is most effective in dealing with a nation you have defeated, or in
dealing with a criminal or a person with anti-social behavior?
The natural tendency of man is to choose force, for any thing
else is a sign of weakness. Peter was a good man, but he was
persuaded that the sword was the best way to handle things in the
Garden of Gethsemane. Jesus rebuked him and told him that those
who lived by the sword will perish by the sword. Paul was a
Pharisee of the Pharisees, and he was zealous for God. He was
throughly convinced that force was the best policy. He persecuted
and arrested Christians. He was involved in the stoning of Stephen.
Paul received authority to do this, and he asserted that authority.
Might is right was the philosophy controlling him, but he met a
greater master on that road to Damascus, and he received a new
heart and new instructions. He was now given the authority to go to
the Gentiles with the good news that Jesus Christ died for them, and
if they would believe they could be released from the chains of sin
and darkness. We want to look at the way in which Paul carried out
these new orders for his life. In contrast to his old ways, we see him
being God’s gentleman for the Gentiles.
The first thing we notice in this statement is the contrast from
what he was as a faithful Jew. Paul did not come to the
Thessalonians with an army, and with a sword in hand. What has
happened? Is Paul less zealous for Christ than he was when he was
against Christ? Has he lost his zeal? No! He has gained a new and
greater zeal and power, and it is the power of gentleness. He has
discovered that you only win a person when you convince them, and
not when you coerce them. Many have tried to force people into the
kingdom of God, but it is folly, for it does not work. People only
really become a part of the family of God by choosing to receive
God’s gift in Christ. You cannot force people to love Jesus.
Jesus had all power, and He sent disciples into all the world to
teach and preach. Paul was under that same commission, but he
was no longer to go with a sword of steel, but with the sword of
speech. He was not to go with weapons to cut and blast, but with
words to convince and bless. He was to go, not with soldiers to
compel, but with the Spirit to convince. Paul was to enter the
Gentile kingdom of darkness with the gentle weapon of light. Jesus,
the captain of our salvation, holds us each responsible for the use of
this weapon. He said, “Let your light so shine before men that they
may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in
heaven.” The Gospel is to spread by the power of gentleness and not
force.
When the church has forgotten this, and began to use physical
force to compel people to believe, it became corrupted by paganism.
Force has always failed to advance the faith, but love has never
failed. This is a principle in history that the philosopher Locke
observed as applying to all of men’s efforts. He wrote, “Gentleness
is far more successful in all its enterprises than violence; indeed,
violence generally frustrates its own purpose, while gentleness
scarcely ever fails.” We see this principle illustrated in so many
ways Western and gangster films. The bad guys are often defeated
by their own greed for power and possessions. They double cross
and betray one another. Little do the producers of these films
realize that they are promoting the principles of God.
Paul and many others since have proven the same true:
“Gentleness wins more hearts than sternness.” George H. Colvert
said, “The gentleman is a Christian product.” The whole idea of
persuading men and winning men by the gentle process of
enlightenment and friendship is foreign to men outside of Christ.
Force was everything in the ancient world, and still is in much of the