Of Enemies

by Melanie on January 24, 2014

in Catholicism, Nonfiction, Spirituality, Your Daily Tripod

Note: On Fridays, you can find me at Your Daily Tripod, owned by my friend TonyD. A longer version of the post below appears there.

Who is the biggest enemy you’ve ever had in your life, not counting yourself? Perhaps it’s person who injured you or a loved one physically. Or maybe it’s the person who successfully wooed the man or woman you considered the love of your life, or that annoyingly perfect person who always manages to ace you out of promotions at work or plum assigndavidandsaulments in ministry. What would you do if you had the opportunity to rid yourself of that enemy once and for all, to exact retribution and wipe him or her off the face of the earth forever?

That felt good for a moment or two, didn’t it, imagining that person getting his or her just desserts?

Now think of David, one of most magnificent, flawed people we meet in the Bible. Saul’s been hunting him down with three thousand of Israel’s finest. But when David has the advantage of surprise, he does nothing more than cut off an end of Saul’s cloak. He confronts Saul, and in today’s lectionary first reading from 1 Samuel, says he will leave it to God to determine the ruler. That’s hardly what one would expect of a cunning military tactician.

It seems insanely risky, this decision of David’s to let Saul go when he could have permanently destroyed his one-time mentor. Yet it typifies David’s grand faith, his total ability to trust more in God than in himself, on those occasions when he resisted his impulses to act rashly and worry about the consequences later. May we do the same in our relationships with friend and foe alike.

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

craig smith January 30, 2014 at 12:03 pm

Mel, thanks for the special reminder.
Uncle Craig
Hope all is going well with you and Maureen.
Take Care

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