Turning the other cheek:
Immediately following His arrest, Jesus was
interrogated by the high priest. When He provided an
"unsatisfactory" answer, one of the officials
struck Him in the face. Instead o literally offering
His other cheek to be slapped, the Savior calmly
challenged the man's unjust action. The Lord did
not defend Himself or retaliate, but He also
refused to accept the abuse unquestioningly, even
though He knew He would receive more. (John
18:21-23)
The Bible passage telling us to turn the other
cheek confuses many Christians. Are we to stand
still while someone beats us up physically or
emotionally? No. But we are not to make a defense or
retaliate in kind. Pride will certainly trigger a
desire to take revenge on the coworker who stole
credit for our work or the family member who
repeatedly says unkind words. Yet we are not to "repay
evil with evil or insult with insult, but with
blessing" (1 Peter 3:9 NIV).
In daily practice, the form a righteous response
takes depends on the situation. We may need to
ignore the other person's actions, walk away from
abuse, or confront our enemy. Confrontation
designed to seek understanding and reconciliation is
not defensive. In fact, Jesus instructs us to
transform rivals into friends by means of respectful
discourse. (Matthew 18:15) Asking, "Why do you
feel about me as you do?" can reveal the strength of
agape-unconditional love-to minister to a hurting
soul despite the potential for injury.
To whom might God be calling you to show agape?
Pray for the desire and power to "turn the other
cheek" as Christ did.