"What do I regret?” That was the question New York Times
bestselling writer George Saunders answered in his 2013 commencement
speech at Syracuse University. His approach was that of an older person
(Saunders) who shared one or two regrets he’d had in life with the
younger people (graduates) who could learn something from his examples.
He listed a few things people might assume he regretted, like being poor
and working terrible jobs. But Saunders said he really didn’t regret
those at all. What he did regret, however, were failures of kindness—those opportunities he had to be kind to someone, and he let them pass.
The apostle Paul wrote to the believers at Ephesus answering this
question: What does the Christian life look like? It’s tempting to rush
in with our answers, like possessing a particular political view,
avoiding certain books or films, worshiping in a particular manner. But
Paul’s approach didn’t limit him to contemporary issues. He does mention
abstaining from “unwholesome talk” (Ephesians 4:29) and ridding
ourselves of things like bitterness and anger (v. 31). Then to conclude
his “speech,” in essence, he says to the Ephesians as well as to us,
“Don’t fail to be kind” (v. 32). And the reason behind that is because
in Christ, God has been kind to you.
Of all the things we believe the life in Jesus to be, one of them, surely, is to be kind.
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