The Messiah's attitude toward the
spiritually weak is pictured by Isaiah in the following words: "A bruised
reed will he not break, and a dimly burning wick will he not quench"
(Isaiah 42:3).
In our zeal for purity and strength in the
church, we may be guilty of doing the very thing that our Lord does not want
done. We create a mental image of what the ideal church ought to be, and
then go about to establish one. Every member is going to attend every
service. Every member will be "sound" in his convictions. Worldliness will
not be tolerated. This church is not going to have the weaknesses that
characterize other churches we know of. This is going to be a strong church,
a model church.
A new convert is made, and immediately he
is indoctrinated in what this church is, and the contribution he is expected
to make to the maintaining of this ideal. Each newcomer is viewed as a
potential threat. If he's not going to "line up," we don't want him. Weaker
members are handled with a "shape up or ship out" attitude. People soon
recognize that there is far more concern for the image of the church as an
organization than for them as struggling and weak children of God. While the
Messiah is tenderly and delicately nursing the "bruised reeds" back to
health, we may be there crushing them. While He cups His hand around these
fluttering, dimly burning flames to protect what fire is left, we may be
there quenching them.
We are not suggesting that unrepentant
false teachers and immoral members ought to be tolerated. They must be
warned, marked, and withdrawn from. Nor are we suggesting that the weak
ought to be left alone in their weakness. They must be taught, encouraged,
reproved, rebuked, and exhorted, but with all longsuffering, and with a view
toward strengthening them. "Admonish the disorderly, encourage the
fainthearted, support the weak, be longsuffering toward all"
(I Thess. 5:14).
Ask not what they can do for the church but what the church can do for them.
As long as there is a little life in that
"bruised reed," there is hope. Don't crush it! As long as there is a little
fire left, it might be fanned to burn more brightly. Don't extinguish it!