ValleyGal
Well-Known Member
- Dec 19, 2012
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Okay. First off, you are WRONG that Jesus whipped the money changers. That is nothing more than an erroneous inference. The Bible says he created a whip out of rope and drove the money changers out....it does NOT say he whipped them.I think of being nice as being a sin and I don't think what Jesus did was nice but it was right and the Father's will. In tenth grade World History my teacher taught me that "nice" was a bad word to use when I was describing the cotton gin. She gave me the punishment of looking in a thesaurus for a better word to use so I did. She was a good Christian black woman and later on I wrote to her that she was my favorite teacher in a letter a couple years later. About Jesus, he wasn't nice because he whipped the money changers but that wasn't a sin, it is what He was supposed to do. I don't like it when people are nice to me or expect me to be nice and my earthly father is not very nice but is strict but he is a good father and he really isn't nice to a lot of people but I think that is a good thing.
Is that rude enough for you?
Or I could say the same thing tactfully (nicely): I believe you are referring to John 2:15, Mark 11:15, or Matthew 21:12 - none of which state he whipped the money changers; rather, he "drove" them out, turned tables, and scattered their money. Sometimes having difficult conversations are part of facing truth, and so I encourage you to research the verses more carefully so as not to believe in something that is inferred rather than stated.
There is nothing wrong with using tact and being nice. The Bible talks about kindness, gentleness, self-control, peace-seeking. You can be firm and assertive and still be tactful, kind, gentle, and peaceful.
The other part of this is that Jesus had a righteous anger. It was against those who abused the Temple of God. It had nothing to do with the people themselves, or about himself. It had to do with an injustice. His outburst motivated him to demonstrate spiritual justice, not to further his own cause. When you are "not nice" you need to check your motives, check your goals, and check your ego.
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