DEPLORABLES
“When we are
slandered, we try to conciliate; we have become as the scum of the world, the
dregs of all things, even until now.” 1
Cor. 4:13
Being a deplorable is not a new term. Hillary borrowed it
from the NT. Did Paul become a Christian for reputations sake? No; those with
whom he united were held in universal contempt; their Leader had been put to
death as a criminal among thieves; the chiefs of the cause that he had espoused
were illiterate men. On the other hand, the wisest and the greatest men in all
the land indignantly rejected the teachings of this new sect. The preaching of
Christ crucified was to the Jew a stumbling block and to the Greeks
foolishness. There was no reputation for the great disciple of Gamaliel in
parting with his splendid honors and identifying himself with a lot of ignorant
fishermen. He would only be execrated as a deserter and betrayer of the Jewish
cause, and he might rest assured that the same bloody knife that slew the
Shepherd of the scattered flock would soon be unsheathed against himself. All
the reputation that he had so zealously built up was gone the hour that he went
over to the new religion, and from that day on contempt was his portion. He was
accounted as the filth of the world and the off scouring of all things. He
became a deplorable.
And did Paul enter Christianity for the sake of wealth? No, all
the wealth was in the keeping of those whom he had forsaken; the poverty was on
the side of those with whom he now identified himself. So poor had they been,
that those among them possessed of any little property sold whatever belonged
to them in order to provide for the dire necessities of the rest. Indeed, one
of the burdens afterwards laid upon Paul was to collect means for those who
were threatened with starvation. Such was the humble condition of these early
Christians, that he often refused to take anything from them even for the bare
necessities of life, but labored himself to provide for his scanty needs. To
the Corinthians, he writes, "Even unto this present hour we both hunger,
and thirst, and are naked, and are buffeted, and have no certain dwelling
place; and we toil working with our hands." (1 Cor. 4:11, 12, 13. See also
2 Cor. 12:14; 1 Thess. 2:4-9; 2 Thess. 3:8, etc.) In his farewell to the elders
of Ephesus, he appeals to them as knowing it to be true that, "I coveted
no man's silver or gold or apparel. Ye yourselves know that these hands
ministered unto my necessities, and to them that were with me" (Acts 20:33,
34). He forsook the great Jewish hierarchy with its gorgeous temple and its
overflowing treasuries, where his zeal in putting down the hated sect of the
Nazarene would have been almost certainly rewarded with a fortune. He cast in
his lot among the poverty-stricken disciples of Jesus Christ, among whom it was
his ambition to be poor. Near the end of his life he presents to us the picture
of an old man shivering in a Roman dungeon and pathetically asking for a cloak
to be sent him to cover his naked and suffering limbs during the severity of an
Italian winter.
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