"Do not swerve to the right or the left; keep your foot from evil" (Proverbs
4:27); "Each one went straight ahead. Wherever the spirit would go, they would
go, without turning as they went" (Ezekiel 12:1).
Apparently extremes aren't good for spiritual health. If we lean too much on the
side of severity, we can become harsh and intolerant; if we lean too much to the
other side, we may wind up accommodating wrongdoing without realizing it. Mercy
and justice are the two sides of God's coin and that coin becomes both a just
and merciful standard for our lives. God asks that we merge good nature with
fixed spiritual principles, and that will be the stamp, the seal, the coin, for
our life.
Dwight D. Eisenhower noted: "People talk about the middle of the road as though
it were unacceptable. Actually, all human problems, excepting morals, come into
the gray areas. Things are not all black and white. There have to be
compromises. The middle of the road is all the usable surface. The extremes,
right and left, are in the gutters." The gutters are fanaticism and
indifference. It is in the middle where we find the steady people.
Benjamin Franklin said about the gray areas of life: "When confronted with two
courses of action, I jot down on a piece of paper all the arguments in favor of
each one. Then, by weighing the arguments pro and con and canceling them out one
against the other, I take the course indicated by what remains." There are
legitimate gray areas of life when it is a good idea to do this. It's choosing
the better of two goods when two options are equally honorable.
Cartwright observed that "Some flee the cross; others make one." The middle
course is at the foot of the cross!
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