Silas
Beloved
It cuts deeply when you have to set a firm boundary with people who are causing harm, especially those who claim the name of Jesus and even sit in the pews with you. You carry both the sting of that necessary separation and a genuine, heavy-hearted concern for their well-being. That tension is a hard place to live, and it’s right to bring it before the Lord.
What you are seeing, painful as it is, is not a new problem. From the very beginning, corrupt thinking and sick patterns of behavior have tried to take root within the fellowship of believers. The early churches, even those planted by the apostles, had to fight this very battle. In Ephesus, the Lord commended them because they could not bear those who were evil and had the purging power to protect the body. A healthy body knows how to identify and expel poisons for its own survival. Your action, taken with a grieving heart, reflects that same necessary, biblical instinct to guard your own soul and to refuse fellowship with darkness disguised as light.
Yet, guard your heart against a bitter root. The command to be strong and to stand fast in the faith is always linked directly with the higher command to be loving. These troubled individuals you’ve described are not just a problem to be managed; they are souls who are desperately ill and, as you said, truly need the Lord. They may claim to know him, but their fruit shows a profound disconnect. The tragedy is not just what they’ve done to you, but that they persist in a state that lacks real love, a state from which the Spirit’s presence has long been withdrawing. Do not let their sickness become your sin. Pray that God would give them the help that no human professional alone can offer, a deep, supernatural repentance that starts in the heart and heals the mind.
Remember, Jesus Christ is the head of his body, his church. He sees every toxic situation, every misused claim of his name, and every genuine lamb caught in the crossfire. He walks among the lampstands; nothing escapes his notice, and he loves the church far more than we can comprehend. In his time and his way, he will rebuke and chasten, for those he loves he disciplines. Your part now is not to fix them, but to release them into the hands of the only one who can truly say "my church." You can’t join it by human effort, and you can’t fix its members by human strength, you have to be born into it by the Spirit, and only the Spirit can change them. Commit them to the Lord who is able to keep them from falling, and then refocus your energy on that place of service in the body where he has called you to be healthy, faithful, and full of his love.
What you are seeing, painful as it is, is not a new problem. From the very beginning, corrupt thinking and sick patterns of behavior have tried to take root within the fellowship of believers. The early churches, even those planted by the apostles, had to fight this very battle. In Ephesus, the Lord commended them because they could not bear those who were evil and had the purging power to protect the body. A healthy body knows how to identify and expel poisons for its own survival. Your action, taken with a grieving heart, reflects that same necessary, biblical instinct to guard your own soul and to refuse fellowship with darkness disguised as light.
Yet, guard your heart against a bitter root. The command to be strong and to stand fast in the faith is always linked directly with the higher command to be loving. These troubled individuals you’ve described are not just a problem to be managed; they are souls who are desperately ill and, as you said, truly need the Lord. They may claim to know him, but their fruit shows a profound disconnect. The tragedy is not just what they’ve done to you, but that they persist in a state that lacks real love, a state from which the Spirit’s presence has long been withdrawing. Do not let their sickness become your sin. Pray that God would give them the help that no human professional alone can offer, a deep, supernatural repentance that starts in the heart and heals the mind.
Remember, Jesus Christ is the head of his body, his church. He sees every toxic situation, every misused claim of his name, and every genuine lamb caught in the crossfire. He walks among the lampstands; nothing escapes his notice, and he loves the church far more than we can comprehend. In his time and his way, he will rebuke and chasten, for those he loves he disciplines. Your part now is not to fix them, but to release them into the hands of the only one who can truly say "my church." You can’t join it by human effort, and you can’t fix its members by human strength, you have to be born into it by the Spirit, and only the Spirit can change them. Commit them to the Lord who is able to keep them from falling, and then refocus your energy on that place of service in the body where he has called you to be healthy, faithful, and full of his love.
