Love is not deceived . . . but it is always
ready to give the benefit of the doubt.
Thomas Inman, in the 19th century, recommended
that his fellow doctors not prescribe a medicine for a cure if they weren’t
sure it would work. They were to give the patient “the benefit of our doubts.”
This phrase is also a legal term meaning that if a jury has conflicting
evidence that makes the jurors doubtful, they are to give the verdict of “not
guilty.”
Leon
Morris, in the Tyndale New Testament Commentaries, says this about the phrase
“believes all things”: “To see the best in others . . . . This does not mean
that love is gullible, but that it does not think the worst (as is the way of
the world). It retains its faith. Love is not deceived . . . but it is always ready
to give the benefit of the doubt.”
When
we hear something negative about others or we’re suspicious about the motive
for their actions, let’s stop before we judge their intentions as wrong or bad.
Let’s give them the benefit of the doubt.
-MMM-