| DEAL GENTLY 
												Recently in my regular Bible reading I came to that tender appeal 
			of King David to his generals as they were going forth to fight with 
			Absalom: "Deal gently for my sake with the young man, even with 
			Absalom" (2 Sam. 18:5), and my heart was touched with its likeness 
			to Jesus. 
 Absalom was in rebellion against David the king, his father, and had 
			driven him forth from his throne, had outraged his father's marital 
			ties, had sacrificed filial affection and trampled upon filial and 
			civic duty, and was now seeking his father's life. But David knew 
			him only as his wayward boy, loved him still, and commanded his 
			warriors to deal gently with him in the coming battle. He would have 
			the rebellion crushed, but the rebel saved; the sin destroyed, but 
			the sinner rescued.
 
 How like Jesus that is! Is not that the way Jesus feels toward the 
			most desperate backslider, the most careless sinner? Does not His 
			heart yearn over them with unutterable tenderness? And is not this 
			written for our admonition? Does He not say to us, "Deal gently for 
			my sake"?
 
 The battle went against Absalom that day, and hardhearted, willful, 
			stubborn old Joab slew him deliberately in spite of the king's wish. 
			And so it often is today. Joab's tribe has increased, and while 
			Jesus would have the backslider and sinner dealt with gently, Joab 
			rises up and thrusts him through with reproaches and bitter words 
			and sharp looks, slays him utterly, and the heart of Jesus is broken 
			afresh, as was the heart of David. The elder brother, with his 
			ungenerous jealousy and cruel words and hardness of heart, as surely 
			grieved the loving old father as did the prodigal with his riotous 
			living.
 
 There are many reasons why we should deal gently.
 
 1. That we may be like Jesus. When Peter denied Jesus and cursed and 
			swore, Jesus loved him still, and turned and gave him a tender look 
			that broke his heart, and he went out and wept bitterly. And after 
			the resurrection Jesus did not rebuke and reproach Peter, but 
			tenderly asked him, "Lovest thou Me?" and then commissioned him to 
			feed His lambs and sheep.
 
 Should we, then, who at our best are only "sinners saved by grace," 
			despise the example of our Lord and deal roughly with His sheep that 
			have gone astray? Since He has freely forgiven us our ten thousand 
			talents, shall we not forgive our brother a hundred pence? (Matt. 
			18:23-35.)
 
 2. We should deal gently with them lest we ourselves grieve the 
			Spirit and become backsliders. Paul wrote to the brethren in 
			Galatia, saying, "Brethren, if a man be overtaken in fault, ye which 
			are spiritual restore such an one in the spirit of meekness, 
			considering thyself, lest thou also be tempted." (Gal. 6:1.) I have 
			noticed that when professing Christians bear hard upon backsliders 
			it is usually only a question of time when they themselves shall 
			backslide. In fact, it is pretty certain that they are already 
			backsliders in heart. In the very act of killing the rebellious 
			Absalom Joab himself rebelled against the expressed wish and command 
			of his king, though he did it under the cloak of loyalty.
 
 And so men today who are severe in their dealings with sinners and 
			backsliders under the cloak of zeal for righteousness and loyalty to 
			truth are themselves rebelling against the example and spirit of 
			Jesus, and unless they repent, the world shall surely soon witness 
			their fall.
 
 I have in mind now two prominent religious leaders who were 
			unsparing in their criticisms and judgment against a notorious 
			backslider until their spirit became as surely un-Christlike as was 
			his in spite of their loud profession and fair outward appearance. 
			At last one of them fell through gross immorality and the other was 
			caught in the same snare, and practically followed in the footsteps 
			of the man he had so fiercely condemned. "Let him that thinketh he 
			standeth take heed" to his way and spirit in dealing with those who 
			are away from Jesus, "lest he fall" We can only save ourselves as we 
			keep the sweet spirit that impels us to "deal gently" for Jesus' 
			sake.
 
 3. We should deal gently that we may save the backslider. Jesus 
			loves him still, is married to him, seeks him continually and waits 
			to forgive him and cleanse him and restore to him the joy of 
			salvation the moment he returns, and we must not hinder, but help. 
			But we shall not do so unless we deal gently. Harsh dealing would 
			not win us, nor will it win him.
 
 Paul wrote to Timothy, "The servant of the Lord must not strive, but 
			be gentle toward all men, apt to teach, patient; in meekness 
			instructing those that oppose themselves, if God peradventure will 
			give them repentance to the acknowledging of the truth; and that 
			they may recover themselves out of the snare of the devil." (2 Tim. 
			2:24-26.) But this gentleness is not inconsistent with great 
			firmness and unswerving loyalty to the truth. In fact, it is only 
			when it is combined with these sturdy virtues that it commends 
			itself to the judgment and conscience of the wrongdoer, and is 
			likely to really win him from the error of his ways.
 
 Firmness of manner may unite with great gentleness of spirit. I may 
			be as tender in spirit in warning and commanding my child to beware 
			of the fire, as I am in soothing him after he is burned.
 
 While harshness and severity will only harden the wanderer from God 
			on the one hand, a gospel of gush will fill him with indifference or 
			contempt on the other. The soul-winner, then, must not have the 
			hardness and brittleness of glass or cast iron, nor the malleability 
			of wrought iron or putty, but rather the strength and flexibility of 
			finest steel that will bend but never break, that will yield and yet 
			retain its own form.
 
 It is generally true that holy mothers have more influence with and 
			win more willful boys and girls than do the fathers, not because the 
			mothers are more ready to compromise principle and sacrifice truth, 
			but rather because while unwavering in their fidelity to 
			righteousness, they mingle mercy with judgment and a passion of 
			gentle, unfailing love and tenderest solicitude with firmness and 
			loyalty to the claims of God's perfect and holy law.
 
 But how shall one who has not this spirit of perfect gentleness 
			secure it? There is but one way. It is a fruit of the Spirit, and is 
			to be had only down at Jesus' feet.
 
 Jesus is like a "lamb slain," mutely gentle, and yet again He is 
			"the Lion of the tribe of Judah" -- firm and strong. He combines the 
			strength of the lion with the gentleness of the lamb.
 
 You, then, that would have His Spirit, confess wherein you have it 
			not. Are you hard, harsh, critical, severe and unrelenting? Tell Him 
			and ask Him to destroy this carnal mind and give you His mind. 
			(Phil. 2:5.) And as you ask, believe. "All things are possible to 
			him that believeth."
 
 To maintain this spirit you must walk in the footsteps of Jesus and 
			feed on His words. Only to those who seek Him day by day with the 
			whole heart, and that with joy, is it given to be like Him in these 
			heavenly tempers and dispositions.
 
 "Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus." Amen!
 
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