TALK THIRTY-ONE. BEING EASILY ENTREATED
Not long since I saw in the report
of a meeting a statement something like this:
“The brethren were easily entreated, and so all
personal difficulties were easily settled.”
One of the greatest problems that ministers meet and
one that requires the most patience and wisdom is the
problem of settling personal difficulties. These
difficulties are often found existing between those
professing to be Christians. And sometimes they
are very hard to get settled. There is just one
reason for this: those involved are not “easy
to be entreated.” James tells us that this
is a quality of that “wisdom that is from above.”
The quality of being easily entreated is a mark of
true piety and of a Christlike spirit. Where it
is wanting, spirituality is always below normal.
It is not hard to settle troubles if people want to
have them settled; for if they really want them settled,
they are willing to settle them the right way.
Peace and harmony mean more to them than any other
consideration, except truth. Division and discord
can not exist unless people are willing to have it
so; that is, unless one or both parties place a higher
value upon something else than they do upon peace
and harmony.
Abraham is an example of a man who
is easily entreated. When strife arose between
his herdmen and those of Lot, it grieved him, and he
said to Lot, “Let there be no strife, I pray
thee, between me and thee, and between my herdmen
and thy herdmen; for we be brethren” (Ge:
8). He therefore proposed to give Lot his choice
of all the land and to take what was left.
What does it mean to be easily entreated?
It means to be kind and just and reasonable and self-sacrificing
in one’s attitude toward others. The man
who possesses this quality habitually manifests this
temper in his life. There are those who are very
tenacious of their rights. They feel that people
do not respect those rights as they should; so when
any question involving them arises, they feel as though
they must “stand up for their rights.”
They often lose sight of everything else; kindness,
mercy, forbearance, patience, Christlikeness in
fact, nothing counts but their rights. Their
rights they will defend; and very often their rights
prove to be wrongs, or in insisting on their rights
they do that which wrongs others. Really spiritual
people are not so particular and insistent concerning
their rights. They would far rather sacrifice
their rights than to contend for them, unless something
vital is involved, which is rarely the case.
When a spiritual man is compelled to defend his rights,
he will do it in a meek and quiet way, a way that
has in it nothing offensive or self-assertive.
When they were about to scourge Paul unlawfully, his
only assertion of his rights was to quietly ask, “Is
it lawful for you to scourge a man that is a Roman,
and uncondemned?” (Acts 22: 25). But
there are those who will not yield in the least; they
know their rights, and they will not yield to anyone!
Very often their rights would look quite different
if such persons possessed more of the spirit of Christ.
Things sometimes look very different
to different people, and no amount of talking and
arguing will make them see alike; and the more of such
there is, the further apart people drift. That
is the reason so many church troubles are always being
settled but are never really settled. The
trouble is in the hearts. The members are not
willing to be entreated. Let them get their hearts
warm toward each other, and be filled with the spirit
of brotherly kindness. Until such is the condition,
one might as well try to weld two pieces of cold iron.
As before stated, when people desire unity and harmony
they can have it. But they must desire it enough
to be willing to sacrifice for it all those things
that prevent it.
Another thing that hinders is self-will.
So many people like to have their own way. If
others will do their way, such persons can be very
gracious and kind; but if they do not have their way,
they manifest a very different disposition. They
are ready to “balk”; their kindness is
gone; they become stubborn; if there is trouble, they
are very slow to yield. It is very hard for them
to submit even when they are convinced that they should
do so. When they do seem to yield, it is often
only an outward yielding, the heart remaining the
same. How much trouble this self-will makes,
and how different it is in spirit from him who said,
“Not my will, but thine, be done”!
We are commanded to submit ourselves one to another.
When we demand that all the submission be on the part
of the other person, it shows that we are self-willed,
that we care more about having things go our way than
we do about having them go right, or than we care to
manifest a Christlike disposition.
Still another thing that prevents
our being easily entreated is pride. A lady was
recently talking with me about a conversation she had
just had with some other ladies. She had been
advocating a certain doctrine which they did not receive.
In speaking of it she said: “I grew a little
warm in the discussion of it. I did not mean
to let them best me.” So many people have
this disposition. They will not be “bested.”
They will hold to their position even when they are
in the wrong, and know it. If they did not take
such a position, they might acknowledge the other to
be right; but when they have taken the stand, they
will not yield. What is the trouble? Pride
in the heart is the secret. This disposition always
has its root in pride; humility never acts in this
way. Pride keeps people from acknowledging truth;
it keeps them from changing their attitude. Pride
of opinion keeps them from being willing to listen
patiently to others who differ with them. Pride
is at the root of many church and personal troubles;
pride is what they feed on, and the only way to cure
them is to get rid of the pride.
The minister who would settle such
troubles has need to look for one or more of these
three things. He may expect a search to disclose
either selfishness, self-will, or pride; for if the
trouble is not easily settled, he may be assured that
some or all of them are in the way. His task,
then, is not so much to get at what seems to be the
trouble, as to give attention to these underlying
things which are the life of the trouble. No
trouble is truly settled till these elements are purged
out of the heart.
O brethren! what we need in all the
churches and in every heart is that “wisdom
that is from above” (Jas. 3: 17).
We are told that it is “first pure.”
By wisdom James does not here mean what we usually
mean by that term, but in it he includes the whole
of the gift of God that comes to us in our salvation.
It is “first pure,” then as a natural consequence
of that purity it is “peaceable.”
It loves peace; it seeks to be at peace with all.
It is “gentle.” That gentleness which
was manifested in the life of Jesus reveals itself
anew in the hearts of those who are “first pure.”
Love has no harsh words, no harsh feelings. It
is full of mercy and easy to be entreated. Where
this heavenly wisdom abides, there will not be a disposition
to assert one’s own rights, to be self-willed,
or to hold fast to one’s own ways; on the contrary,
if its blessed presence fills our souls, we shall
be merciful, kind, forgiving, long-suffering, pitiful,
and we shall have the same tender feeling for our
brother who has done us wrong as the father had for
the prodigal. We shall be ready to run to meet
him. We shall be ready to forget all the past.
Our hearts will be filled with joyfulness at the expected
reconciliation. O brethren there is nothing needed
quite so much today and every day as that heart-quality
that makes people “easy to be entreated.”