I like
brown shoes, and wear them most of the time. However, if you insist upon
wearing black shoes I will argue the point. Go right ahead! I'm a very
tolerant man with respect to shoes.
But some of
my friends tell me I am intolerant in religious matters. They can't
understand why a kind hearted, tolerant fellow like me would say they
MUST obey God's commands and practice in religion ONLY that which God
has authorized. (Well, maybe that is the way they put it.)
Some
intolerance" is born of egotism-- self-loving individuals who think they
are the center of the universe, hence their ways must be accepted by
all. This is bad
(Jas. 4:11-12).
But there is an "intolerance" of a sort, which is born of love. I love
my granddaughter, and insist that she not eat the shoe polish. (The
brown, that is.) And there is an "intolerance" born of respect for
superior authority, and deep concern for those who fail to respect that
authority. Paul contended with the Israelites frequently (a) because he
loved them, and (b) because he knew they could not be saved while they
followed their own erroneous ways.
It is well
and good to be tolerant in matters of indifference--and in matters where
the rights of men are equal. But to "tolerate" sin and transgression of
God's law is to assume the right to "judge" that law
(Jas. 2:9-f.)
or to
relegate divine matters to the category of black and brown shoes.
“Tolerance”
is often a disguise for lack of concern! -
Truth Magazine - February 1963
Other
Articles by Robert F. Turner
If I Had But One Sermon
Prayer and Fasting
Local
Church is no Sham
Those "Other" Sinners
A Bit of Methodist History on
Instrumental Music
Careful to
Answer
A Man Called
David
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