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If You Bite & Devour One Another: Galatians 5:15: Biblical Principles for Handling Conflict
 
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If You Bite & Devour One Another: Galatians 5:15: Biblical Principles for Handling Conflict [Paperback]

Alexander Strauch

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 177 pages
  • Publisher: Lewis & Roth Publishers; Reprint edition (April 26 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 093608331X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0936083315
  • Product Dimensions: 21.8 x 15 x 1.5 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 249 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #411,570 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Practical and helpful!, May 5 2011
By LittleL "LittleL" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: If You Bite & Devour One Another: Galatians 5:15: Biblical Principles for Handling Conflict (Paperback)
It doesn't get more practical or straightforward than this book. Alexander Strauch lays out the clear Biblical instructions about conflict to demonstrate that "no group of people should be as well equipped to handle conflict as Bible-believing Christians" (8).

Conflict is a pervasive issue in the history of Christianity and the church; Strauch teaches in this book that although we can't avoid all conflict, we do need to avoid destroying our brothers and sisters or damaging the church whenever we disagree.

The book follows a very practical and clear outline:

Chapter 1 (Act in the Spirit) encourages believers to seek the guidance of the Holy Spirit and to avoid the works of the flesh. Chapters 2 & 3 study love and humility--two Christian virtues that are the fruit of the Spirit's work in your life. Strauch emphasizes that we must love our brothers and sisters enough to overlook flaws, disagreements, and even forgive their errors, and that we must put others' interests before our own. If Christians would only follow the simple, Biblical principles in these first three chapters, we'd have fewer conflicts and less damage as a result of the conflicts we did have!

The next three chapters of the book provide very practical insight into the importance of self-control (another fruit of the Spirit!) in conflict. Strauch emphasizes that we must control our anger, our tongues, and our criticism while in conflict. Although this book was written with the church in mind, I found these three chapters really convicted me about how I was dealing with conflict within my own family. My husband and I have made an effort to control ourselves from being critical and sarcastic since reading this book.

Chapters 7 & 8 of the book emphasize the importance of peace and reconciliation--ultimately, Strauch wants us to catch Jesus' vision for the church as a place where people of varied backgrounds would be able to come together and worship the Lord in unity and peace. Even in the midst of great conflict, we should always be praying that we will eventually be reconciled with our brothers and sisters.

The final chapters address specific kinds of conflict (False Teachers and Controversy). The chapter on false teachers reminds us that, unfortunately, sometimes we must separate from those false teachers who attempt to corrupt the gospel. The chapter on controversy, on the other hand, reminds us that we must make an effort to love even those believers with whom we disagree on important but secondary doctrines.

Over and over, this book reminds believers to walk by the Spirit--to live the Christian life by the Spirit's enabling power and leading! This is a powerful and convicting book that every believer should read. As Strauch tells us, we must prepare ourselves for conflict and "decide beforehand how (we) should respond toward those with whom (we) disagree" (26).

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Practical Guidance for Handling Conflict in a way that Honors Christ, Aug 29 2011
By Aaron Armstrong - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: If You Bite & Devour One Another: Galatians 5:15: Biblical Principles for Handling Conflict (Paperback)
I'm not a big fan of conflict, but I can't seem to get away from it. Whether at home, at work or at church, wherever sinners are gathered together, conflict almost inevitably shows up. While there's nothing wrong with some conflict, we need to address it in a godly way. That's why, in If You Bite & Devour One Another, Alexander Strauch examines the Scriptures to instruct readers to handle conflict in a way that honors Christ and encourages peace and unity among believers.

Strauch breaks his study into four categories--how to act, what to control, what to pursue and what to confront. The first two deal heavily with character, which is the best place to start any book on conflict. We are completely incapable of handling conflict faithfully if we're a train wreck in terms of character. "Every conflict reveals whether we practice what we preach . . . Every conflict reveals the genuineness of our Christian life," he writes (p. 22). Will we act in the Spirit, displaying His fruit, or in the "ugliness of the flesh" when faced with conflict? Are we characterized by "love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control" (Gal. 5:22-23) or do we almost relish quarrelling, causing dissensions, divisions and rivalries? And will we not also in love and in humility?

If it's true that love covers a multitude of sins (1 Pet. 4:8), then we ought to show love to others, deciding beforehand how we will respond to those with whom we disagree (especially on issues of conscience). True Christian love is a self-sacrificing love. "To practice liberty-limiting love," writes Strauch, "is to imitate Christ's self-sacrificing love on the cross for our salvation. . . . If Christ was willing to die for the weak believer, surely we can give up some of our freedoms and rights to build up and protect such a person from stumbling into sin" (p. 35). This is an attitude that requires us to be humble and to practice what we preach and carefully examine our own motives when entering into debate with another.

Sadly, any of us could easily point to numerous examples of conflict (particularly on the firestorm of virtue that is the Internet) and quickly see numerous examples of our own hypocrisy (Lord knows I'm as guilty of it as anyone). It's just easier to start chucking rocks at straw men than actually try to understand a position that we may disagree with, but isn't necessarily unbiblical. While there is always a time and a place for appropriate discussion, needless conflict prevents us from actually being effective in our ministry and service to others.

Consider the ongoing debate over the so-called "Young, Restless, Reformed" crowd's position on alcohol. While no doubt there are some who have absolutely abused their Christian liberty in this area and caused others to stumble (a grave sin to be sure), we must be careful to avoid caricaturizing them as a bunch of drunkards who flaunt excess in the name of being free in Christ. Likewise, it's dangerous and foolish for those who would have a less reserved view of alcohol consumption (permissible, but in moderation) to broad brush those who advocate teetotalism as grumpy. To do so causes nothing but strife and division among believers and hinders our own ministries; we can become so busy chucking rocks that we forget that our goal is to glorify Jesus.

It's no wonder then, as Strauch points out, we need to be careful to control our anger, our critical attitudes and especially our tongues. "Too often, when conflict erupts, people become angry and seem not to care what they say," he writes. "At the very moment they need to bridle their tongue, they lose control and use words as weapons to hurt people. . . . The person who controls the tongue is truly the spiritual believer, able to handle people and conflict constructively" (p. 65).

Our words have a devastating effect on others when they're used as weapons, something I'm sadly all too familiar with--from both the giving and receiving end. And Strauch's (and Scripture's) admonition to speak even harshly in love is so important. "Love and concern must be our motive whenever we must rebuke or speak pointedly to fellow believers about their stubborn waywardness or erroneous belief," he writes (p. 76).

Again, how we handle conflict comes back to our character. We act either in love or from pride. Acting in love allows us to control our critical attitudes, to pursue genuine reconciliation (even allowing us the humility to be the first to apologize when conflict does occur) and increase our desire for and pursuit of peace.

So what do we do when there's a genuine need for confrontation, as in the case of those teaching false doctrine or legitimate controversy over important, but ultimately "secondary" matters (what some would call in-house debates)? Strauch reminds us in the final two chapters of If You Bite & Devour One Another that these situations are handled very differently.

Using the story of Wolfgang, a fictional German missionary in India, Strauch shows how false teaching can sneak into even the most healthy church and how it must be confronted and corrected. What Strauch does exceptionally well is illustrate the pastoral heart behind this kind of confrontation. All of Wolfgang's efforts stem from his love for the fledgling church he helped to found. He contended against false teachers not because he wanted to be right, but because he wanted to protect his brothers and sisters in Christ, which should be the motivation for all our contending.

Perhaps one of our greatest corporate sins over the last 20 plus years has been in not effectively dealing with false teachers. Rather than contending well, we became complacent--so much so that whenever concern has been raised (such as D.A. Carson in his very balanced and helpful Becoming Conversant With the Emerging Church), we have either ignored it or outright rejected it. And when a New Kind of Christianity or a Love Wins type of situation happens, everyone's left wondering what to do.

In these instances, when the false teaching cannot be avoided, our duty is not to tolerate, but to courageously contend for the faith. Sometimes this means naming names specifically. Other times it means describing the kinds of teaching and explaining why they're antithetical to biblical Christianity. But by no means does it ever include tolerating damnable heresy within the church, not even for the sake of conversation. So those who are teaching false doctrine are to be expelled if they're within the body and those who have become caught up in their teaching are to be corrected with gentleness and firmness.

This, too, is an area where perhaps we would benefit from some improvement. Again, looking back to the Love Wins situation, we could probably say that a good job was done of warning and contending (at least by a number of those who responded to the book)... but I'm not sure we did an adequate job correcting with gentleness. Far too often, our words (including my own) have been laced with sarcasm when they should be infused with mercy toward those who have been deceived. This is a difficult balance to strike, but it's an area where I greatly desire to see personal growth.

When it comes to important and legitimate doctrinal divisions, however, we don't treat those with whom we disagree as if they're heretics. R.C. Sproul Jr. insightfully pointed this out in a recent blog post when he wrote, "Can we both agree that being wrong on baptism is not a damnable heresy, and also affirm that it is an issue that matters?" Strauch exhorts us to remember "that Bible-believing Christians all agree on the essential, foundational truths that save our souls and give us new life" (p. 153). Our disagreements matter, but not to the degree that we should lose sight of this important reality.

By way of application, this chapter has reminded me that the one of the worst places for dealing with this kind of controversy among believers is the Internet. Perhaps it is because we've become conditioned to read it as such, but unless a blog is very carefully worded, it almost always skews negative. None of us can adequately grasp the author's tone and we must be very wise in responding to anything online. "Let all that we do be done in love," Strauch again exhorts.

Conflict is, and will continue to be, unavoidable. While we can't control whether or not we will face conflict, we can choose how we will handle it. In If You Bite & Devour One Another, Alexander Strauch has offered much-needed guidance in doing exactly that. Conflict must be handled well; let's handle it with grace and wisdom.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Worth a second copy, Jun 11 2011
By Dan - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: If You Bite & Devour One Another: Galatians 5:15: Biblical Principles for Handling Conflict (Paperback)
I just came back for my Kendle copy! Some books just need to be in your pocket ready to share. This is one of those books. Having read several of Alex's books over the last few decades I was fairly sure I could predict the content. One gets a feel for an authors work. I had in the back of my mind some specific issues that I would soon face,testing the methods I expected to glean from this book. "Bite and Devour" is so much more than I expected and in under 200 pages.
Every chapter ends in a list of key points to remember. I fully intend to memorize all of them. Chapters 1 through 6 need to burn in every Christians heart. They are all about spirit controlled love, humility, and self control, but if you expect the authors comments are predictable you need to buy a copy of the book. I read chapters 7 and 8 with a lump in my throat. They are about reconciliation and peace. Imagine solving terrible disputes and it ending with burning love for your brother or sister! The last two chapters are great but you'll need to read them to find out what they are about.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 10 reviews  5.0 out of 5 stars 

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