“Have mercy on those who doubt; save
others by snatching them out of the fire; to
others show mercy with fear, hating even the garment stained by the flesh.”
To treat a medical condition helpfully, a doctor must first be an accurate diagnostician. If a physician fails to correctly
discern the root cause of the problem, nothing he prescribes is likely to solve it. If he fails to correctly assess the
current progress of an affliction, he may offer a solution that would have been helpful two weeks ago but will
do nothing useful now. And if he fails to note the attendant risks associated with the problem, he may contract a communicable
disease himself and spread it instead of restraining it.
A single approach to sin in the lives of others will not do. Some sins are infectious; others are merely repulsive. Some sinners need a sharp rebuke, others gentleness.