We all experience a gap between what we wish to be and what we are. Every day we fall short of the ideal. And while we tend to focus on mistakes we make or sins we commit, the biggest gap in our experience is not in our doing wrong, but in our failure to do right.
Jesus is not concerned with preventing sin as much as He is in promoting righteousness. Consider the parable of the talents. His displeasure was clear with one who declined to use what he had because he was afraid to make a mistake.
Sometimes, when we wish to justify our lack of action, we function like a man in prison who reaches out to touch the bars, because they remind him of his limitations. Whenever he feels grief about how little he can do for himself or others, touching the bars help him cope with his sense of failure. The bars remind him he is powerless to do anything in this moment. “Perhaps,” he tells himself “some day I will be able to make everything right…”
“Touching our bars” (focusing on our limitations) reassures us that we are okay to remain just as we are. We don’t have to feel so badly about not being there for others if we have no possibility of being there for them. Reminding ourselves we are in prison is our comfort.
We cannot be expected to make a difference if we have no time to spare, no resources, and no opportunities. If we tell ourselves the task is too big, no one will support us, we don’t know enough or we are not talented enough, then we do not have to feel so badly about the suffering around us and our lack of action.
We get good at exempting ourselves from feeling grief that children perish daily for lack of food and that millions face eternity without God. We let ourselves off the hook and focus on our limitations because it makes us feel better. We reach out only as far as the bars allow.
But what if our limitations are there partly because we need them? What if we would rather see ourselves as inadequate and weak so we can let ourselves off the hook, rather than risk trusting God and stepping out in faith?
One day, we will all give an account.
On that day, Jesus will separate us. He will honor those who live with eyes open to problems and possibilities, and He will renounce those of us who keep ourselves comfortably unaware of our power to reach the hurting souls nearby.
“When did we see you…?” is the question we will ask.
And the King will say, “Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.” (Matthew 25:31-46)
What is limiting you? What keeps you from doing the good you know to do? Are you finding comfort in your limitations? Is your helplessness reassuring?
God cares about our sins of the flesh, but cowardice and unbelief are damnable as well.
To the thirsty I will give water without cost from the spring of the water of life. Those who are victorious will inherit all this, and I will be their God and they will be my children. But the cowardly, the unbelieving, the vile, the murderers, the sexually immoral, those who practice magic arts, the idolaters and all liars—they will be consigned to the fiery lake of burning sulfur. This is the second death. – Revelation 21:6-8