The story...
"Live and let live" is a life giving saying that suggests that we mind our own business and allow others the dignity and respect to live their own lives. This frees us up from the burdens of "trying" to live out other people's lives - a burden that was never ours to carry.
My house has a deck out back with floodlights mounted under the eaves. I enjoy working there when the weather's nice - the floodlight is above my head. In the spring, invariably, a robin will attempt to build a nest above the flood light. It was my habit to remove the nest, in various stages of build, three or even four times, before they gave up and moved elsewhere. In 2021, I decided to practice "live and let live" and accommodate the robin. I moved my "work" chair and endured the momma's chirping as she instinctually protected her chicks. We even replanned gatherings that'd need the deck space. Embarrassingly, I bragged about this good deed to all who would listen - "oh... what a proud man I can be." One day, when the chicks were about ready to leave the nest, I witnessed a barred owl swoop down to the nest and swallow all the chicks. My emotions ran deep.
What's the moral of the story? Kill the barred owls! Please don't, I love 'em. Two of them are hooting "who cooks for you" as I write. Do you "live and let live" at the risk of hurt and pain? For me, I'll continue to "live and let live" but I'm also going to remove even the first twig from that lamp - I know better. The barred owls in the woods are real.
Would the people of the only church in town be allowed the freedom to live out their own lives with dignity and respect? I hope the answer is yes. Surely, we all need to be heard and occasionally helped along our way. Yet the risk of allowing people the freedom to live out their own lives is worth it. Who knows what might happen as God works through the people of the only church in town.
Just for today...
"Before anyone else can pick up the ball, I need to be willing to drop it." Hope for Today (p. 77)
"Difficult situations often bring out qualities in us that otherwise might not have risen to the surface, such as courage, faith, and our need for one another." Courage to Change (p. 77)
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