“Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart: thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour, and not suffer sin upon him.” (Le 19:17 AV)
This is a fascinating verse. The mark of hatred is remaining silent toward another who is in sin. Some commentators assume the sin was or is directed toward the silent one of the beginning of the verse. In other words, if we have been offended by another person’s sin and we do not speak up, we in essence hate our brother. Not because we have been wronged. Rather, because we don’t say anything. However, there is a more general possibility. If they do not rebuke a person living in obvious sin, then God considers us in hatred against to offender. If we do not say something when we see something, we do not genuinely love. I believe the latter understanding to be more accurate. If we see someone living and acting wickedly and ignore it when we can intervene, then we cannot say we have love for others.
Confrontation is not comfortable. At least for most of us, it is not comfortable. For the most part, we avoid it. We don’t want to tell someone they are in the wrong. That is why witnessing for Jesus is so difficult. It is difficult telling someone they are utterly wicked and deserve the torments of hell forever. These truths rarely go over well. Most people do not like to confront, nor do they like to be confronted. But saying nothing causes harm to a situation that might have changed. I love doctors. But doctors are often not blunt enough. If there is something we are doing that is causing our poor health, I would hope they would respect their profession enough to say something. Our childhood pediatrician was like that. He shot from the hip. He was blunt. If he thought my mother was making mistakes, he would not hold back. He would give her a dressing down right there in the exam room with her child(ren) present. In fact, he preferred it that way. He could read our mother the riot act, and by our presence, we got it, too. Believe it or not, we children did not take exception to the tongue lashing my Mom received. Deep down in our hearts, we knew the doctor was right, and it was more our fault than our Mom’s fault. Praise the LORD, he was professional enough and cared enough for his patients that he did not hold back the truth.
Solomon says that if we see someone engaged in harmful sin, it us our obligation to rebuke. If someone is engaged in destructive behavior, to say nothing is to hate the person. To say something when we see something means we love the individual and are saving them from a multitude of sins. Most of the time, rebuke is rejected. Most of the time it is mocked. But ‘most of the time’ should not exclude ‘some of the time’. Even if we are mocked or ignored, there still may be that one who will be honest enough to repent. If we are always silent, we will never know.