“So
whatever you wish that others would do to you, do also to them, for
this is the Law and the Prophets.” –Matthew 7:12 (ESV).
We
know this statement from Jesus as the Golden Rule. It stands as a
summary of the Law (Torah) and Prophets (the remainder of the Old
Testament). And Jesus had said already in Matthew 5:17: “Do not
think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets. I have
not come to abolish them but to fulfill them.” How do I want
to be treated? With respect, with love, with dignity? Then I must
treat others in that same way. Behavior and human interaction are
reciprocal. If we are “nice” (a word we use to cover acceptable,
respectable conduct) in our behavior and interaction with others, we
can expect to be treated in that manner. However, if our conduct
toward others is undesirable, then how can we expect to be treated
well? “But,” I hear arguments beginning to arise. “In this
day in which we live, it’s a ‘dog-eat-dog’ society. People
have forgotten how to treat each other with respect and dignity. I
can’t treat people with respect or they will run all over me. It’s
a cruel world in which we live!”
Yes.
We hear these negative evaluations of our times on every hand, as if
this mind-set allows us—Christians—to conduct ourselves in the
same manner as those who do not believe in the Lord Christ. We
forget that He told us, “You are light. You are salt. You are
yeast. You are My children.” These metaphors Christ used to
describe His followers indicate that we are to make a difference
where we are. We initiate Christ-like behavior. In that way, the
Golden Rule takes on a new and very purposeful dimension:
“Whatsoever you wish that people should do to you, do you to
them,” for this is the Lord’s way. The Christian is
responsible for initiating the good and respectable treatment of
others. This should be practiced deliberately as a way of life for
those who love the Lord God with all their “heart and soul and
mind and strength and their neighbor as themselves” (see Mt.
22:37-40 and Luke 10:27). In the book of Tobit, a popular Jewish
writing, the Prophet Tobias teaches his son, “What you hate
yourself, do not do to any man.” This gets near to the heart of
the Golden Rule, a tenet we find not only in Jewish and Christian
teachings, and pronounced by the Lord Himself, but in other writings
as well. In fact, many of our laws are based on the premise in the
Golden Rule. And certainly our Christian conduct should be grounded
in a good understanding of it.
The
term “Golden Rule” does not exist in the Bible. It is the name
designated by scholars to denote Jesus’ teaching in Matthew 7:11
and Luke 6:31. It is found in many religions, sometimes stated a bit
differently. But Jesus’ wording of it, and His command that we
practice it, makes it special and unique, and of extreme importance
in how we conduct our human relationships. Pray that we may be more
conscious of the truth of the Golden Rule and begin this very day to
put into practice its positive approach to human relationships. Dr.
Warren W. Wiersbe has this comment: “Remember that practicing
the Golden Rule means paying a price. If we want God’s best for
ourselves and others, but others resist God’s will, then they will
oppose us. We are salt, and salt stings the open wound. We are
light, and light exposes dirt.” (New Testament
Commentary. Matthew. 2007, p. 26). Are we up to praying the
price to follow the Golden Rule?
-Ethelene
Dyer Jones 10.19.2014
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