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It
happens frequently. Some one, presiding at the Lord's Supper,
prays for the participants ("to partake in a worthy
manner") but fails to give thanks for the bread or fruit of
the vine. (See 1 Cor. 11:23-25) Rarely is the omission noticed —
more rare still is its correction. But recently we heard a man
stop the process, acknowledge his error, and then pray anew,
making correction. The matter was handled discreetly, with no
great fuss or splutter.
And
it occurred to me people may have been taught more about proper
procedure by this humble correction than by several sermons on the
subject. I'm not knocking preaching — just saying this presented
the lesson when we could relate to the situation and were ready
for the truth.
Perhaps
this is the psychology back of some "sawdust trail"
evangelists who admit, "I once stole turkeys, drank whiskey,
etc." The people relate to this say, "he's a regular
fellow," and can be drawn into the fold. Well, I do not
advocate sensationalism — gimmicks or carnal tactics to catch
attention. But genuine repentance and correction on our part may
be the missing
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element in our teaching efforts.
Getting
people to want the gospel is the hard part. This is done
better by demonstration than by our proclamation. We prove the
pudding by eating it. And the frank admission of error, followed
by efforts to correct, can be a potent persuader. Our actions
declare, better than our sermons, that we do not regard ourselves
as the standard, but constantly strive to improve our conduct and
conform to the divine standard.
Stopping,
backing up, and correcting an error also says convincingly that
here is a man more concerned with being right than with
maintaining his pride. We have not truly given ourselves to the
Lord until "His way" is our first concern.
And
if there was no teaching to be done, no example to set, none to
witness and profit by our example — the child of God corrects
errors because he lives in His Father’s presence.
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