To meddle, says Webster, is to busy oneself in what is not one’s concern. Years ago in one of our local Churches of the Brethren, the Elder-in-Charge’s wife (“Mabel”) was known as a meddler. Loose-tongued and conniving, she made it her business to interfere wherever and whenever she pleased.
“Mabel” and her husband lived next door to another family in the congregation who had a small poultry operation. It seems that every time the egg man came to pick up the week’s eggs, “Mabel” would sit on her porch and keep a running total of the egg crates being shipped. If her vantage point from the porch didn’t afford her a perfect view of the goings-on, she’d go to a second-floor window and keep tabs from there.
When it came time for the Annual Deacon Visit, “Mabel” would always approach her neighbors, informing them how much they ought to be contributing to the church treasury based on the number of eggs they shipped during the year. (In that agrarian context, offerings weren’t lifted each Sunday, so not all that much was actually donated to the church during the year; but when the deacons made their rounds each fall for the Annual Visit, hefty contributions were expected!)
“Mabel” wanted to make sure her neighbors were contributing their fair share to the Lord’s work. The ironic thing, however, is that she always based her calculations on the jumbo price of eggs, and anyone familiar with poultry knows you only get a few jumbo eggs in comparison to the total production!
Every congregation, it seems, has its share of “Mabels.” Such persons, both men and women, are resented by their victims and avoided by others. Proverbs 20:3 refers to meddlers as fools, and 2 Thessalonians 3:11 speaks of them as busybodies.
Meddling should never characterize the Church of Jesus Christ. As with other sins, the Apostle Paul would likely say (regarding meddling), Let it not once be named among you!
July/August 1995