oljames3 wrote:troglodyte wrote:... Romans 14 states ...
I find Romans 14 to be instructive. I find 1 Corinthians 8 to be compelling, especially verse 9:
9 Be careful, however, that the exercise of your rights does not become a stumbling block to the weak.
Through this winter, I will be wearing my suit coat. Incidentally, the coat will cover my OWB holster and pistol. Other than inside the sanctuary, I will take off my coat whenever that would be more comfortable. Inside the sanctuary, I'll carry concealed.
We should be able to achieve a balance between our rights and our responsibilities.
Both passages give good direction. Now don't make me separate you two!
One way I look at it is this: I have many rights before man (Constitution of the United States), but only
one right before God, and that is the right to call him Father (John 1:12)......but only because he has graciously allowed me to be part of his family (Eph 2:8-10). When a congregation is gathered for worship, teaching, and/or fellowship, there are always going to be people who are further along their spiritual walk than others, and that may necessarily include new believers, or even seekers. What's more, I have found in my essentially conservative baptist church several people who have pretty liberal political viewpoints. I have one friend whose commitment to Christ is admirably carried out in his life walk, who also happens to be very anti-gun, and he (like me) is one of the active leaders in the congregation. So while I naturally believe my own views to be correct, in God's economy there are higher priorities than my own.....or the other guy's. This requires humility (not that I have attained it to any degree, but I can keep trying), and humility requires (among other things) a willingness to not
unnecessarily give offense, and a willingness to not always have the last word.
In God's economy, my
secular right to openly carry a firearm PALES in comparison to my spiritual obligation to welcome a newcomer into my church, or to contribute to the well-being of my brothers and sisters in the faith. If I have a habit that sets another person's teeth on edge, and I am aware of that habit, then I have a spiritual obligation to moderate it........not codependently by expecting equal treatment in return, but because I believe that is what God requires of me. So I have no trouble at all with the decision to continue concealing at church.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
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