“Strength in Submission”
BIBLE
READING: Philemon 1
During
the Reformation, when Martin Luther and Ulrich Zwingli were exchanging strong
words about Biblical interpretations and ecclesiastical practices, Zwingli
spent a troubled morning walking the mountain trails of his beloved
Switzerland. From a distance he observed two goats making their way toward each
other on a path barely stitched to the side of a cliff. It was obvious that
these nimble creatures could not pass one another.
As the goats
approached each other, each feinted a power move at the other in what looked
like the beginning of a battle. In a surprise twist, however, one goat suddenly
collapsed onto the narrow ledge so the other goat could walk over its back.
Then each moved on.
Zwingli was
impressed. Here was strength defined by submission. It allowed two opponents to
survive a crisis so both could get on with more important things. Zwingli
applied the lesson to his next encounter with Luther.
The same
principle is evident in Paul’s words to Philemon. Philemon’s slave Onesimus had
run away, met Paul in Rome and become a Christian. Now Paul was sending the
slave back to his master, urging Philemon to receive Onesimus, not as mere
property, but as a brother. Instead of butting heads with Philemon, Paul
extended a hand of love. Was this a sign of weakness? Psychological manipulation?
Both
possibilities and a variety of others enter a marital relationship. Sometimes
we badger one another. Sometimes, like goats poised for battle on a mountain
trail, we come close to butting heads. Sometimes we spit and snarl and lash
out. Sometimes we sit together and lovingly hash things out.
What is helpful
and healthy in good relationships is honesty. Not just truthfulness that blurts
out every last thought, but self-awareness that is not deceptive. It is as
important that I learn to be honest with myself as it is to be truthful with my
partner. If Paul was in touch with his own thoughts and feelings when he wrote
to Philemon, he could state his case without deploying manipulative or
subversive tactics. He could focus on Philemon’s well-being and circumstances
while maintaining his own perspective.
Too often we
allow our emotions to derail relationships because we are blinded by excessive
self-importance. The strength of our emotions, especially when we are at odds
with each other, inflates our tendency for self-preservation and diminishes our
sense of the other’s importance in our lives. We need to keep relationships
personal and issues impersonal as we build faithfulness with one another.
Disagreements
are inevitable in any relationship. But the ways in which we work through them
can bind us more tightly together in love. Paul’s kindness to Philemon offers a
very good example to follow. -Selected
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