Ephesians 4:2 (NLT)
2 Always be humble and gentle. Be patient with each other, making allowance for each other’s faults because of your love.
2 Always be humble and gentle. Be patient with each other, making allowance for each other’s faults because of your love.
In this verse we
are encouraged to understand humility, which allows us to consider another’s
point without being puffed up with our own thoughts. Gentleness keeps us from
provoking others and from allowing others to easily provoke us. Patience allows
us time to provide grace and mercy. Christians
need to bear one with another and to make the best of one another, to brink out
another’s graces and not a bitter response. It should be our desire to overlook
faults so that we might encourage and help others out of love.
The American missionary Adoniram Judson arrived in Burma,
or Myanmar, in 1812, and died there thirty-eight years later in 1850. During
that time, he suffered much for the cause of the gospel. He was imprisoned,
tortured, and kept in shackles. After the death of his first wife, Ann, to whom
he was devoted, for several months he was so depressed that he sat daily beside
her tomb. Three years later, he wrote: God is to me the Great Unknown. I
believe in him, but I cannot find him.
But Adoniram's faith sustained him, and he threw himself
into the tasks to which he believed God had called him. He worked feverishly on
his translation of the Bible. The New Testament had now been printed, and he
finished the Old Testament in early 1834.
Statistics are unclear, but there were only somewhere
between twelve and twenty-five professing Christians in the country when he
died, and there were not churches to speak of.
At the 150th anniversary of the translation of the Bible
into the Burmese language, Paul Borthwick was addressing a group that was
celebrating Judson's work. Just before he got up to speak, he noticed in small
print on the first page the words: "Translated by Rev. A. Judson." So
Borthwick turned to his interpreter, a Burmese man named Matthew Hia Win, and
asked him, "Matthew, what do you know of this man?" Matthew began to
weep as he said,
We know him—we know how he loved the Burmese people, how
he suffered for the gospel because of us, out of love for us. He died a pauper,
but left the Bible for us. When he died, there were few believers, but today
there are over 600,000 of us, and every single one of us traces our spiritual
heritage to one man: the Rev. Adoniram Judson.
But Adoniram Judson never saw it!
And that will be the case for some of us. We may be
called to invest our lives in ministries for which we do not see much immediate
fruit, trusting that the God of all grace who oversees our work will ensure
that our labor is not in vain. [Adapted from Julia Cameron, editor, Christ Our
Reconciler (InterVarsity Press, 2012), pp. 200-201]
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