Accept without Condoning – Romans 15:7

by | Book of Romans

7 Therefore, accept one another, just as Christ also accepted us to the glory of God.

We cannot be reminded enough about how we are to treat our fellow Christians. Accepting one another is not optional; we are not free to pick and choose which Christians we accept and which we don’t. We are part of the same family. But what does “accept” mean? Does it mean we condone another Christian’s behavior that we think is unwise, or worse, sin?

On one level, Paul’s inspired train of thought began in Romans 14:1: “Now accept the one who is weak in faith, but not for the purpose of passing judgment on his opinions.” The context has to do with disagreements in the gray areas, behaviors that some Christians choose to engage in while others do not—and both have principled reasons for their respective choices. Some Christians really believed it was sin to eat food that had been used in idol worship and then later sold in the marketplace. Were they now commanded to condone those who ate that kind of meat, against their conscience?

That is not what Paul is saying here. We do not accept an activity that we think is sin, but we accept the Christian who engages in that activity. There is a big difference. So what then does it mean to accept a person who does things we feel are sin, activities we cannot condone? The example is Christ accepting us, even when we have sinned against Him. “While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us” (Rom 5:8). He “demonstrated His own love toward us,” so we should demonstrate our own love to our fellow Christians even though we can’t condone what we believe is sin. We should not marginalize them or speak ill of them. While we cannot fellowship with them in the activity we cannot condone, we can and should fellowship with them in every other area of normal, vibrant Christian community.

What about 1 Corinthians 5, where a believer should be put out of the church for sinful behaviors? In that situation, gross sin was involved—in fact, a man having sex with his stepmother. That is not a “gray area” matter. Even the non-Christian world saw that as an abomination. That passage goes on to list other qualifying sins for discipline, including: direct idolatry, drunkenness and financial deception. So how does one distinguish between sins worthy of discipline and gray-area issues? For example, direct idolatry is to be disciplined, but not eating food offered to idols. It’s a judgment call. Mature Christians should lead the way in providing guidance and insight in these matters. But in all things we should make every effort to accept one another despite differences.

Lord, help me be gracious and accepting of ________, just as You accepted me.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

A Blessed Celebration of Our Lord’s Birth!

May God bless you with a wonderful celebration of our Lord's birth. What an amazing thing to contemplate as we look on the nativity scene on the mantle or 'neath the decorated tree. Eternity intersected time and space; the Creator entered his creation. "For a child...

In Praise of Feminine Beauty: A Mother’s Day Message

With each passing decade of motherhood, we gradually exchange perishable beauty for the imperishable kind. It starts when we are young, our bellies expanding to grow and nourish children. Stretch marks and loose skin arrive, perhaps to stay, sometimes accompanied by...

Pure Praise – Psalm 150

1Praise the Lord … 6Let everything that has breath praise the Lord. Praise the Lord. This psalm concludes the inspired biblical collection of one hundred and fifty psalms (also called poems, songs, or chapters). The six verses of Psalm 150 are saturated with thirteen...

Priesthood for “Average” Believers

If you are a believer in Jesus Christ, redeemed by the blood of the Lamb, then you are a believer-priest. That’s amazing! What?? Let me explain. In the New Testament (NT), there is no special clergy class that is holier than the rest of us, a cut above the rank and...

Superlative Praise – Psalm 149

1Praise the Lord! Sing to the Lord a new song, and His praise in the congregation of the godly ones. Superlative praise, extolling God ‘to the max,’ is the theme of this psalm. There is nothing meager about this kind of praise. It is the antidote to an old and tired...