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During
World War II, Hitler commanded all religious groups to unite so that he could
control them. Among the Brethren assemblies, half complied and half refused.
Those who went along with the order had a much easier time. Those who did not,
faced harsh persecution. In almost every family of those who resisted, someone
died in a concentration camp.
When the war was over, feelings of
bitterness ran deep between the groups and there was much tension. Finally they
decided that the situation had to be healed. Leaders from each group met at a
quiet retreat. For several days, each person spent time in prayer, examining his
own heart in the light of Christ's commands. Then they came together. Francis
Schaeffer, who told of the incident, asked a friend who was there, "What did you
do then?" "We were just one," he replied. As they confessed their hostility and
bitterness to God and yielded to His control, the Holy Spirit created a spirit
of unity among them. Love filled their hearts and dissolved their hatred.
When love prevails among believers,
especially in times of strong disagreement, it presents to the world an
indisputable mark of a true follower of Jesus Christ. Our Daily Bread, October 4, 1992
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