One of these is unlike the others: love, joy, peace, patience,
kindness, niceness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.
According to Paul’s letter to the church at Galatia, all but one of
these is what he refers to as the fruit of the Spirit, which is to say,
visible evidence of the presence of the Holy Spirit in the life of a
Christian. If you are a Christian, your life will necessarily be marked
by this kind of character. But which one is foreign to the
list? Niceness.
Humans
seem to be naturally drawn to niceness. Niceness is comfortable. To be
nice is to be pleasant in manner, to be agreeable, to adhere to social
conventions. We like to be around people who are nice at least in large
part because we are comforted by their pleasant words or deeds and by
their adherence to whatever social custom dictates. It is an attractive
quality, but it can also be a deceptive one. It is, after all, an
external trait, and one that has no necessary correlation with what is
going on at an internal, spiritual level. Christians can be nice, but so
too can unbelievers. The Holy Spirit may help us be nice, but niceness
is not necessarily proof that we are living in the Spirit and by the
Spirit. Some of the most evil people are also the nicest people.
Brian
McLaren may well be the nicest guy around. He recently faced a good bit
of criticism for leading a commitment ceremony following his son’s
same-sex wedding—a ceremony that included “traditional Christian
elements.” In the aftermath, McLaren was as nice as he has ever been. On
his blog
he answered a former fan who now understood that he could no longer see
McLaren as a mentor. This person was reeling, trying to figure out who
could now help guide him in his understanding of the Christian faith.
McLaren’s answer was nice; it had the appearance of humility and
genuinely sorrowful affection. Yet it was radically opposed to the
Bible. He rashly changed the way we interpret Scripture, denying what
the Bible makes so clear. If you allow him to, Brian McLaren will “nice”
you straight to hell. Continue at Tim Challies
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