Many years ago at the University of Wisconsin, there was an undergraduate literary club. The club consisted of male students who had demonstrated outstanding talent in writing. At each meeting one of the students would read aloud a story or essay he had written, and then submit it to the others for criticism. The criticism was brutal. Nothing was held back. The students showed no mercy in dissecting the material line by line. So hateful were the sessions that the members called themselves "The Stranglers."
Then a similar club was formed. It was called "The Wranglers." The Wranglers were female students also with outstanding writing ability. Like their male counterparts they would read their writings at meetings and would critique one another. There was one noticeable difference. The Wranglers' criticism was gentle, thoughtful, positive and kind. They lifted each other up and encouraged one another.
Twenty years later, a university researcher looked at the careers of the members of both groups. Not one of the bright young talents in "The Stranglers" had achieved a literary reputation of any kind. "The Wranglers," on the other hand, had produced half a dozen prominent, successful writers. What was the difference? The formats of both groups were similar. Both groups had very talented students. The difference was that "The Stranglers" cut each other down while "The Wranglers" lifted each other up. "The Stranglers" strangled the life out of one another. "The Wranglers" were life enhancing. And then there's the church. Stranglers or wranglers?
Nine-year-old Jessica was nervous the first Sunday she was scheduled to be the acolyte. Before the worship service began the head usher attempted to assure her that everything would be all right. As the prelude began Jessica picked up the lighter she would use to ignite the candles and turned to the usher to have him light it for her. She smiled at him and said, "It's all right if I make a mistake, because I'm in church." Out of the mouth of babes. "It's all right if I make a mistake, because I'm in church." Stranglers or Wranglers?
Our lesson from the Acts of the Apostles gives us a glimpse of a church filled with Wranglers. A sense of excitement, love and purpose permeated every meeting. They ate together and worshipped together. They experienced unity. And the results were truly amazing. "And day by day the Lord added to their number those who were being saved."
Wouldn't it be great to recapture the enthusiasm and energy of that early church? Wouldn't it be great to have that same kind of love and harmony? Maybe we can. Let's look at some of the things that made that first church so alive, so powerful. How was it that they were Wranglers and not Stranglers?