Love

Love Does What is Best for the Other Person

By Wendy Wood

Love does what is best for the other person.  As a biblical counselor, you are probably thinking this is obvious.  We look at Christ on the cross and see God’s love in action for those He loves.  We look at Christ showing compassion to the woman at the well and the confrontation that she not only doesn’t have a husband, she’s had five.  Jesus doesn’t ignore the truth to protect her feelings, but points out the sin and gently restores.  While we clearly see this principle of love throughout scripture, many of my counselees struggle to believe that loving someone may be saying “no” to what the other person wants or exposing sin and calling for genuine repentance.


Worldly love focuses on what we get from another person.  We feel loved when someone makes much of us.  When someone goes out of their way to do something for us, we feel loved.  When someone gives us a gift that we’ve wanted for a long time, we feel loved.  When someone showers praises and kind words on us, we feel loved.  When we get what we want, we feel loved.  Sadly, many counselees believe that making other people feel good is what it means to love them.  


Typically I go to John 11 to help my counselees understand this truth about love.  In John 11, Jesus and his disciples are traveling outside of Judea.  Mary and Martha send word to Jesus that Lazarus is sick and dying.  The sisters refer to Lazarus as “the one whom you [Jesus] love”. Jesus’ response is that the sickness will not lead to death but is for the glory of God to be displayed.  John records again, “Now Jesus loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus.”  This is repeated three times in the passage because it is essential to know that Jesus is acting out of love.  Jesus doesn’t rush to cure Lazarus. He doesn’t immediately fix the problem.  John 11 says Jesus stayed where he was two more days.  Then he tells his disciples they will return to Judea.  And, they had to walk to Judea.  This wasn’t a quick trip where they arrived a couple of hours later.  This took them several more days to arrive.


Martha and Mary are upset, as anyone would be at the death of their brother.  But, they also know that Jesus could have done something to change the outcome, and He didn’t.  They still have faith in His ability to do whatever He purposes but are deeply grieved that he didn’t come in time and that Lazarus died.  Jesus knows the plan ahead of time.  Verses 14 and 15 “So then he told them plainly, “Lazarus is dead, and for your sake I am glad I was not there, so that you may believe.”  These verses are amazing and turn the definition of love upside down.  It was better for Lazarus to die so that their faith may increase and for God to be glorified as His power and grace are displayed.  


Jesus allowed Lazarus, Mary, and Martha to suffer greatly.  That was loving them best!  Jesus knew that a confident faith in Him was better than making life easier for them.  Love did what was best by giving them what drew them closer to the Lord.  


In Matthew 16, Jesus again does something surprising, yet extremely loving, with Peter.  Jesus had just been telling the disciples that He would suffer and die in Jerusalem.  Peter is upset and concerned for Jesus and himself.  Peter doesn’t want Jesus, his good friend, to suffer and he doesn’t want to be without his good friend.  Peter exclaims that he will never let Jesus suffer.  This seems like a loving thing to do.  After all, he is trying to protect his friend.  But Jesus responds with “Get behind me, Satan! You are a hindrance to me. For you are not setting your mind on the things of God, but on the things of man.”  Jesus loves Peter too much to let him go on thinking that Jesus shouldn’t suffer.  Jesus knows that suffering is part of God’s wonderful plan for sinners.  Loving Peter meant giving him a sharp rebuke.  Jesus draws Peter closer to Him by showing him that God’s plan is always better and showing him what it means to submit to God’s purpose.


Jesus demonstrates this love with unbelievers, too.  In Matthew 23 Jesus issues seven “woe” statements to the Pharisees.  It’s not loving to let the Pharisees believe that they know God.  They are far from God but are so deceived they think their legalism is pleasing God when in fact it is self-righteous and self-focused and has nothing to do with loving God.  Jesus is loving them by showing them their hypocrisy.  The Pharisees respond with anger, but that doesn’t change the fact that Jesus showed them love.  This is important for our counselees to understand.  The other person’s response does not determine if love was shown.  Only God’s definition of love, doing what brings the other person closer to Him, is truly love.  The Pharisees had a worldly view of love and wanted to be praised and adored as they were.  Jesus’ true love was rejected and that may happen to us and our counselees as we live out God’s word.


How does your counselee need to love someone in their life?  Do they need to confront someone who is caught in a sin and seek to gently restore him or her? (Galatians 6:1).  This confrontation may or may not be received as love, but God declares that it is the most loving thing to do!  Does your counselee need to bring along another person to confront the sinner with them? (Matthew 18:15-20).  Maybe your counselee needs to say “no” to an adult child or teenager who could respond angrily.  Does your counselee need to tell their spouse they are no longer going to participate with him or her in sinful actions like pornography or lying?  


Perhaps it is you, counselor, who needs to be reminded that loving your counselee could mean having very difficult conversations with him or her.  Do you need to address a sinful habit or a concern over their salvation?  Do you need to help them see an area of their heart that they are blind to?  The most loving thing you can do is help them see Christ and how to draw closer to Him.


Love does what is best for the other person.  Love doesn’t do what is easy.  Love doesn’t do what feels good for self or the other person.  Love looks at God and is willing to do whatever is most beneficial to the other person’s relationship with God.


Do You Feel Loved by God?

By Colin Smith

Several years ago, I heard about a professor at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School who posed this question to her class: Do you believe that God loves you?

Out of these 120 Christian students preparing for ministry, how many do you think said, “Yes?” Two! The rest gave answers like this:

“I know I’m supposed to say, ‘Yes.’”

“I know the Bible says He loves me, but I don’t feel it.”

“I’m not sure I can really say I believe it.”

How can this be? 

Surely every Christian knows the love of God. Did we not learn this in Sunday school? “Jesus loves me this I know, for the Bible tells me so.”

Jonathan Edwards used a simple analogy to get to the heart of this:

There is a difference between having a rational judgment that honey is sweet, and having a sense of its sweetness. [1]

You can know honey is sweet because someone tells you, but you don’t really know its sweetness until you’ve tasted it. You can know God loves you because your Sunday school teacher told you, but you don’t really know God’s love until you’ve tasted His love.

Many Christians live at a great distance from this felt experience of the love of God. So much Christianity in the West is shallow and satisfied. It affirms a creed but it so often lacks spiritual life.

Across the country there are millions of people who have a faith, who’ve been brought up to believe Jesus died and rose, they’ve gone to church, but they have no living experience of God’s love.

We need this prayer:

May the Lord direct your hearts into God’s love and Christ’s perseverance (2 Thess. 3:5, NIV).

This is Paul’s prayer for the church. It’s a prayer that God will do something in us who believe but do not always feel that God loves us. He’s speaking to Christians going through great difficulties, and he says, “My prayer for you is that God will direct your hearts into the love of Christ.”

That means it’s possible to endure persecution and not to feel the love of Christ. It’s possible to go through seminary and not to feel the love of Christ. It’s possible to worship in the seats of an evangelical church for 20 years and to not feel the love of Christ.

I don’t want to be there! And neither do you. People who are not Christians endure great pain and carry great sorrows. They do it by gritting their teeth. They do it in Britain with a stiff upper lip.

Paul is saying to these believers, “I want something better for you. I want your soul to be filled with the love of God.”

Three Ways to Experience More of God’s Love and Christ’s Patience

1. Become dissatisfied with your present spiritual experience.

Cultivate a holy discontent. The person who prays the prayer of 2 Thessalonians 3:5 is looking for something more than he or she already has: “Lord, direct my heart into Your love.”

We live in a “been there, done that” culture, and the great danger is in developing a “been there, done that” form of Christianity: “I know God loves me, that Jesus died for me, and that my sins are forgiven. So, what’s next?” Then one day someone says, “Do you really believe that God loves you?” And your shallowness is exposed.

A.W. Tozer says:

We have been snared in the coils of a spurious logic which insists that if we have found him, we need no more seek him… In the midst of this great chill there are some who will not be content with shallow logic. They want to taste, to touch with their hearts the wonder that is God. I want deliberately to encourage this mighty longing after God. [2]

Don’t settle for a faith in which you cannot feel the love of God and the patience of Christ.

2. Ask God to direct your heart into His love.

2 Thessalonians 3:5 is a prayer, so use it. Make it your own. The Scriptures tell us what we should pray for.

Yet, some of you carry a lot of baggage on this. Whenever you think about God, your first instinct, though you believe, is to picture Him with a frown on his face. You feel that He is angry with you and that He is condemning you. You need this prayer.

Listen to this wise counsel from John Owen:

So long as the Father is seen as harsh, judging and condemning, the soul is filled with fear and dread every time it comes to Him… But when God… is seen as a Father, filled with love, the soul is filled with love to God in return… If your heart is taken up with the Father’s love… it cannot help but choose to be overpowered, conquered and embraced by him. [3]

Some of you think God is cold and aloof and harsh and demanding, and these thoughts are deeply rooted in your mind.  Ask God to direct your heart into His love, and go on asking until—like snow melting in the warmth of the sun—your heart begins to thaw in the warmth of the love of God.

3. Gaze into the love of God in Jesus Christ.

Have you ever noticed that people who don’t like each other will merely glance at one another? People who like each other will look at one another. People who are desperately in love will gaze at each other.

As the Psalmist says, “One thing I ask of the Lord, this is what I seek: that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life, to gaze upon the beauty of the Lord and to seek Him in His temple” (Ps. 27:4). Survey, gaze, ponder, and meditate on the love of God and the patience of Christ.

What is Your Response?

How would you describe your current experience of God’s love and Christ’s patience?

Perhaps 2 Thessalonians 3:5 awakens something in you—deep calls to deep. Maybe you’re thinking, “I want more of what Paul’s talking about.” For you, this Scripture sounds like a church bell drawing you in, calling you to seek after God.

If this is you, settle it today, in your heart and mind, that you will pursue a sweeter taste, a deeper experience, a clearer glimpse of the love of God and the patience of Christ. Go after it. And don’t ever stop.

Or, maybe you are thinking that Paul’s prayer is not so much like the sound of a church bell drawing you in as the sound of an alarm clock waking you up.

If you are not awake to the love of God, shouldn’t you be concerned about the condition of your soul? I hope you’ll ask, “What is wrong with me? I have no interest in the love of God. Why am I so satisfied, when others are hungry and thirsty for God?” I pray you’d ask these questions.

Perhaps God will use this to rouse you from the deadness of spirit in which you have been sleeping for far too long.

_____

1. Jonathan Edwards, “A Divine and Supernatural Light” (sermon delivered in 1734), http://www.monergism.com/thethreshold/articles/onsite/edwards_light.html.

2. A. W. Tozer, “The Pursuit of God” (Christian Publications, 1982), 16-17.

3. John Owen, “Communion with God”(Banner of Truth, 1991), 18, 32.

Posted at: https://unlockingthebible.org/2020/12/do-you-feel-loved-by-god/

What Do You Love About God?

Audio Transcript of John Piper

Happy Monday, everyone! Welcome back and thank you for listening to the Ask Pastor John podcast. Pastor John joins us today remotely over Skype. Our question today comes from a listener named Sam, who lives in Los Angeles. He sent in a really short question, but an important one. “Dear Pastor John, what do you love most about God?” That’s it. Pastor John, what do you love most about God?

In a sense, to answer this question authentically, I probably ought not spend any great time theologizing, studying, doing exegesis, or assessing God’s attributes. I ought to simply blurt out — just blurt out — what I feel about God, what I really treasure about him and value and admire. Wouldn’t that be the most authentic answer to the question “What do I love about God?” rather than some long-studied, complicated, fill-up-an-APJ, theological answer? And I think the answer to that question is yes, that’s right. So, that’s where I’ll start.

Flavored with Grace

My first, most visceral, immediate, heartfelt answer to the question is this: I love the grace of God.

  • I love the mercy of God.

  • I love being loved by God.

  • I love being treated graciously and kindly and patiently by God.

  • I love being accepted and forgiven by God.

  • I love God’s grace toward me.

Piper: “I hope to be spending the rest of eternity knowing and loving all of God’s excellencies better and better.”TweetShare on Facebook

I think all of those statements I just tumbled out there are ways of saying that the grace of God is very, very, very precious to me. I would be undone without a God of grace. Late at night, early in the morning, facing conflict, facing guilt feelings, facing judgment from him — ultimately, possibly — or from critical people, facing the world, I would be undone without the grace of God. It is on the front burner of my affections for God all of the time. Even when I’m thinking about all kinds of other attributes of God or ways of God, they’re all flavored with the grace of God.

So, that’s my most visceral, heartfelt, unreflective, immediate, desperate response to the question of what I love most about God.

Love the True God

But the reason I said that answering this way is in a sense the right way to answer this question is that there’s another sense in which the Bible encourages us not just to speak from our inmost or most immediate perception of things, but to ponder — in the light of God’s word and in the light of God’s action — what we mean by what we most immediately say, and whether there might be contained in this immediate response aspects of God’s grace and mercy and kindness that need to be made explicit for the sake of our own souls, as well as for the sake of others, lest we fail to honor God as we ought, and lest we subconsciously find ourselves loving not God supremely, but our own selves.

There are numerous instances in the Bible where people showed some measure of spontaneous devotion to God. And then when God said something or did something that they didn’t like, their devotion evaporated, which means that what they said was love for God wasn’t really love for the true God, but only a love for their imagined God, their picture of God. And then the real God does something out of step with their expectations, and their love is gone. Now, that love was not really love for God.

So, even though it’s right — and I’m going to say it again — for me to give a spontaneous, heartfelt, visceral, gut reaction to what I love most about God, every person who lives under the authority of the Bible, including me, will want to discern from the true, real God revealed in the Bible whether what I’m saying corresponds to reality. Is God really like what I say I love about him? And is my heart so much attuned to the true God that no matter what he reveals about himself, I will still be totally committed to him, and in love with him, and valuing him, and treasuring him, and cherishing him, and being satisfied in him? Then, with the Bible’s help, I’ll know that I love the true God, and not just a figment of my own religious imagination.

The Greatest Gift of Grace

So, what John Piper needs to do, having given his immediate, heartfelt answer — “I love the grace of God toward me in Jesus” — is ask, “Piper, what do you mean by ‘the grace of God’? If you love that most, you should have some sense of what you’re talking about. Or are those just empty words?”

And my answer (now I’m doing the reflective thing: testing my guts and my spontaneity) would be this: God’s grace is his disposition and action to give the greatest possible blessing to the least deserving creatures at the greatest cost. That’s my definition of God’s grace.

  1. The cost is the suffering and death of his one and only Son, Jesus Christ. Romans 8:32: “He . . . did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all.”

  2. The least deserving creatures are human beings — me — who have desecrated God’s glory by committing treason in preferring other things above God. Romans 5:6–8 says, “Christ died for the ungodly. . . . God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”

  3. The greatest possible blessing purchased at the greatest cost for the least deserving is . . . Think to yourself, Now, what’s that? And at this point we are at the most critical juncture. How shall we state the greatest possible blessing that grace gives to the least deserving recipients like me? And it won’t work to say, “Well, the greatest possible gift of God’s grace is grace.” That’s just talking in circles; that’s not going to answer the question.

So, you can see why it’s an inadequate answer when John Piper says that the greatest thing I love about God is his grace until I’ve answered the question, What’s the greatest blessing that God’s grace has given to me in treating me so much better than I deserve at the cost of his Son’s life? To love the grace of God in a way that honors God is to love grace because of the specific content of the blessing given by the grace of God — namely, God. The greatest gift grace gives is God for our eternal friendship and enjoyment.

  • 1 Peter 3:18: “Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God.”

  • Romans 5:10: “While we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son.”

The grace John Piper says he loves about God is not the grace of God unless the capstone of that grace is the gift of God himself. And the love that I say I have for that grace is not a love for God unless what I love most about the grace is that it brings me to God.

Eternal Excellencies

And I think this is why, in Ephesians 1, Paul says that the eternal election of God and his predestination and his planned adoption of redeemed people through Christ, all according to the good pleasure of his will, has as its ultimate goal “the praise of his glorious grace” (Ephesians 1:6). And that glory, the glory of grace, is the beauty of how all the attributes of the eternal God — his goodness, his righteousness, his unimpeachable justice, his unfathomable wisdom, his omnipotent power, all that he is in his God-ness and his holiness — how all of that unites, fits together beautifully, to plan and perform creation and redemption in a way that magnifies the capstone of his deity — namely, the glory of his grace.

“The greatest gift grace gives is God for our eternal friendship and enjoyment.”TweetShare on Facebook

In other words, the eternal excellencies of God give rise to the wise ways of God, for the praise of the glory of the grace of God, so that when we say we love the grace of God, we ought to mean that we have some sense of those eternal excellencies and those wise ways of God.

All of which brings me back to where I began: I love the grace of God, which now means

  • I love that he’s the kind of God who didn’t spare his own Son.

  • I love that he’s the kind of God who justifies the ungodly.

  • I love that he’s the kind of God that gives to the least deserving the greatest blessing — namely, himself.

And I hope to be spending the rest of eternity knowing and loving all of his excellencies better and better.

Posted at: https://www.desiringgod.org/interviews/what-do-you-love-most-about-god?utm_campaign=Daily+Email&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=94483232&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-81oi0MLEWVYN7eR-hkpbWUC7vplXtLOP0gEYJhQ47Alj_MM7bprs0ZPX5d01UmCcpxZddLRYFNxMfQfS2RPE_Up2EVug&utm_content=94483232&utm_source=hs_email

Idolatry: A Right View of God's Love

Dave Jenkins

In Exodus 3:14, God says, “I am who I am.” Such a declaration is powerful because the Lord God was declaring not only who He is at His absolute essence, but also declaring to the world, “I am the only God!” As we fast forward to the New Testament, the Lord Jesus Christ declares seven times, “I Am!” in the Gospel of John. In Leviticus 11:44-46, we are taught that God is holy, meaning He is set apart. In 1st Peter 1:13-15, we are taught that as a result of God’s holiness, He requires Christians to live holy lives. Gaining a right understanding of the love of God requires a biblical understanding of His holiness. The matter of understanding the holiness and love of God is so serious because, if we get His holiness wrong, we diminish and undermine His character. If we get the love of God wrong, then we have a God who will crush humanity in judgment, not love us through Christ alone.

The Love of God and the Christian Faith

In the book of 1st John, the Apostle John roots the assurance of the Christian using the interplay between external evidence and the internal testimony of grace. To abide in Christ is the result of the work of the Holy Spirit at work in the Christian. The Holy Spirit provides assurance that the people of God belong to Jesus, but never operates apart from outward evidence of faith. The presence of the Holy Spirit is discerned both by His internal testimony and by obedience to the commands of Jesus given through His apostles (1st John 4:6).

Some of the other commands of John include belief in the Son Jesus (1st John 3:234:1-5) and love for one another as Christians (1st John 3:23). Love, to John, is a critical mark of the Christian who has genuine faith. Those who have not been born of God do not know God, nor can they know that “God is love” (1st John 4:8). Love is essential to the nature of God. Those who have become partakers of the new nature (2nd Peter 1:4) are the people of God. They alone increasingly reflect the holy and loving character of God and love others. The transformed hearts of Christians respond to the call of God to love one another.

John is addressing those in 1st John who thought love made God too personal. Many today follow along with John’s original audience believing “God is love”, but do not believe what the Bible teaches about the rest of God’s character. Such people often recoil at the idea that the way to heaven is narrow (Matthew 7:13-14) and restricted by Christ only through Him (John 14:6Acts 4:14).

When Christians speak of the love of God, we are not minimizing the other characteristics of God. For example, the simplicity of God tells us the love of God never operates apart from the holiness, mercy, omnipotence, justice, or other divine attributes. It is loving, therefore, to seek justice and demand holiness, but never to do so at the expense of mercy. Christians need the help of God and the wisdom He provides to apply His love into every phase of our lives.

THE LOVE OF GOD AND HIS DISCIPLINE

Within God’s perfect love is the reality that God chastens those whom He loves. Hebrews 12:5-7 reminds us, “You have forgotten the exhortation which speaks to you as to sons: My son, do not despise the chastening of the Lord, Nor be discouraged when you are rebuked by Him; For whom the Lord loves He chastens, And scourges every son whom He receives. If you endure chastening, God deals with you as with sons; for what son is there whom a father does not chasten?”

Christians should both expect and embrace the discipline God gives them. The divine discipline of God is intended to help the people of God grow in a relationship with our heavenly Father. Revelation 3:19 states, “Those whom I love I rebuke and discipline. So be earnest and repent.”

Throughout the book of Proverbs, Solomon speaks about a father disciplining and correcting their children out of love. To the biblical writers, rejecting correction from the Lord God is to walk in the way of foolishness and wickedness. To walk in the light according to the biblical writers, is to accept correction, repent, and become wise. Such Christians understand that the loving embrace of God involves the guiding rod and staff wielded by the Chief Shepherd, Jesus.

THE LOVE OF GOD AND THE JEALOUS GOD

In Exodus 34:14, we find the command, “Worship no other god, for the Lord, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God.” John Frame in Systematic Theology explains, “God’s jealousy is not inconsistent with his love or goodness. On the contrary, his jealousy is part of his love.”

THE LOVE OF GOD AND THE CHRISTIAN’S SECURITY

In Romans 8:31-39, Paul writes about the love of God and how down to the nanosecond the Christian is held secure in His sovereign hands. Only those who are truly Christ’s will be held until the end, for they have true faith in Him. Times of doubt may come, and the storms of life may assail them, but if we belong to Christ, we are held by Him and will belong to Him always. Such biblical truth should cause Christians to draw near humbly to the throne of God to know and grow in the love of God.

Posted at: https://servantsofgrace.org/idolatry-and-getting-a-right-understanding-of-gods-love/

Salvation According to His Word

Chris Poblete

Psalm 119:41, “Let Your mercies come also to me, O LORD— Your salvation according to Your word.”

Notice that this stanza in Psalm 119:41-48 begins with a request. It begins with a cry for the mercies (or steadfast love) of Yahweh.

And the Psalmist seems to know that he does not deserve such love, nor can he attain it by his own volition. “Let Your mercies come to me,” he cries. In other words, this steadfast love can only be given by the One who offers it. The psalmist cannot produce it himself; it must be received as a gift.

What about you? Do you long for such divine mercies? Do you know your need for them? Are you aware of your need for God’s steadfast love? Our greatest need in life is to be reconciled with the Creator through the steadfast love that is expressed in Jesus Christ. However, many of us live as though our greatest need is something else outside of God.

But God has created us to be dependent upon Him—His mercies and steadfast love. Sure enough, He does not have to give us anything. From the time He first spoke creation into existence and formed our first parents from the dust of the ground, He has not owed us one thing. And yet, He freely gives to all. Water, food, air, you name it—these are all gifts from a good and gracious God.

Yet, there is one gift of love that supersedes all others. It is the gift that every soul yearns for: the gift of saving love—steadfast love. This love does not produce just a fuzzy feeling but a salvific deliverance! God alone defines the terms of such love, and as the psalmist states, it is a love delivered “according to [His] promise.”

We want love and salvation from God for all sorts of things. We want Him to save us from our critics, from our financial shortages, from our conflicts with people, and from the long, hard days. But this is love according to my word, my will, my idea of what is good and right with the world.

The Psalmist does not respond this way. He is different. His cry is for saving love on God’s terms, not his own.

The way we look at God and His promises toward us is confronted here in Psalm 119:41.  Do I want God’s love to come to me according to my preferences or according to His?

What are the things you think about every day? What are the dreams you are engrossed in? Do they revolve around your own desires, or do they revolve around God’s? When our desires revolve around us, then we lose perspective. We begin to think that God’s love is best expressed in relief from our circumstances. The Psalmist refused to fall prey to this way of thinking. He did not elevate His own interest over God’s promise and redemptive plan. He knew that God’s ultimate goal for His people is not to give them new circumstances but to make them new creations. And God does so through the limitless power of His Word.

About the Author: Chris is a Christian, husband to Alyssa, works as Executive Director of The Gospel for OC and Writer and Editor at Blue Letter Bible. Chris and his wife Alyssa worship and serve at Reverence Bible Church in Mission Viejo, California. He is the author of The Two Fears: Tremble Before God Alone.

Posted at: https://servantsofgrace.org/salvation-according-to-his-word/

Above All These, Put on Love Part 13 (Loves Hope All Things and Endures All Things)

Love Hopes All Things and Endures All Things

By Wendy Wood

Love hopes all things.  The Greek is elpizō.  Hope means to wait with full confidence and joy.  A Christian lives a life of hope in the gospel of Christ.  A believer doesn’t cross their fingers or wish for an unsure future, but is rock solid in the guarantee of salvation by grace through faith in Jesus Christ.

Consider what the Bible says about HOPE!

1 Peter 1:3-4  “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! According to his great mercy, he has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead;  to an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven for you,”.  We are born again to a living hope!  Our hope is living because our Savior is living.  Christ rose from the dead and ascended to be in heaven as our living advocate and mediator.  Our hope is alive and we know that we will live eternally in God’s presence because of this promise.  Our hope is imperishable - we can’t lose our salvation!  Our hope is undefiled - it cannot be tainted in any way!  Our hope is unfading - it is eternal!

Colossians 1:27  “To them God chose to make known how great among the Gentiles are the riches of the glory of this mystery, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory.”  Christ is our hope.  He indwells every believer.  We receive His power and His presence!  Our hope is in a real person who lived, died, and rose.

Colossians 1:23  “if indeed you continue in the faith, stable and steadfast, not shifting from the hope of the gospel that you heard, which has been proclaimed in all creation”.  The hope of the gospel is that it is the power of God to save and sanctify people for the Lord (Romans 1:16).  Our hope is in God’s power and His decisive will to save to the uttermost those who believe (Hebrews 7:25).

Hebrews 6:17-18  “So when God desired to show more convincingly to the heirs of the promise the unchangeable character of his purpose, he guaranteed it with an oath, so that by two unchangeable things, in which it is impossible for God to lie, we who have fled for refuge might have strong encouragement to hold fast to the hope set before us.”  God does not change.  Our hope is secure because He will never change!  God swears by His own name.  There is no variation or shadow due to change in our God (James 1:17). He does not change so our hope is unwavering.

Hebrews 6:19  “We have this as a sure and steadfast anchor of the soul, a hope that enters into the inner place behind the curtain”.  Our hope is in Christ, who was our perfect substitutionary atonement, who opened the way for us to be in relationship with God.  The inner place behind the curtain was only for the high priest in the old testament who would make sacrifices once a year for the sins of the people.  When Christ died on the cross, the curtain in the temple was torn from top to bottom.  This is a picture of God now providing access to Himself through faith in the atoning work of Christ.  We are not dependent on a priest because Christ was the final High Priest whose sacrifice was once for all sins.

Romans 15:13   “May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope.”  God is the God of hope!  God confidently and joyfully knows the future.  God isn’t an angry person expecting doom.  God is directing all things to bring about His purpose and is 100% guaranteed that purpose will stand.  He fills believers with joy and peace so that by the Holy Spirit, which He gives us, we abound in hope too!

These are just a few of the many verses about our hope.  Hope is trusting God’s nature, His attributes, so that we live in a way that demonstrates how sure His promises are.  

So what does this have to do with “love hopes all things”?

Do your relationships reflect a hope that God is who He says He is, that Christ is all you need, and that your future is in heaven with God? 

Do your relationships show that you know eternity with God is your real home and that in this life you are an exile, sojourner, a mist that will vanish soon?

When we are not living in this hope, we tend to act like we need to make sure we get what we want now.  Oftentimes, our responses to others show we believe we have to be treated with respect to be happy.  Maybe we are tempted to be “right” and prove it because our hope is in justifying ourselves.  Maybe our dream of what life will be like is so important to us that we prioritize our job or financial security over God.  Maybe for you, it’s the picture of what a Christian family looks like that is where you place your hope and you will fret and stew with anxiety over a mistake or sin your child is involved in.

When “love hopes all things” we live with confident and joyful hope in God.  We trust His promises that He rewards those who earnestly seek Him (Hebrews 11:6)  and that giving up our desires now will lead to great reward (Mark 10:30).  If we truly place our hope in Christ, that relationship with Him is what will bring joy and peace and satisfaction, we won’t need to seek those things from other people.  We will be able to respond with love even when others do not.  Knowing that our hope is secure because it is in Christ, should change how we are in relationship with family, friends, church members, neighbors, and even enemies.

Where do you place your hope?  

Is your hope in having your circumstances change or is it in God?

Is your hope in having people around you change or is it in God’s promises?

Is your hope in being loved and respected by people or is your hope in what Christ has already made you to be?

Is your hope in your career, family, status, or possessions, or is your hope in heaven?

The way we interact with people shows where we are placing our hope.  Do you live in such a way that you display the greatness and surety of God’s promises?

Love endures all things.  Love perseveres.  You’ve studied the multi-faceted love God calls His children to live out.  Love endures all things means that there is never a time when these evidences of love should stop.  Love will continue to be patient and kind.  Love will continue to put aside arrogance and boasting and be humble.  Love will honor others ahead of self.  Love will continue to respond with grace and mercy when wronged.  Love will persevere in forgiveness even when sinned against repeatedly.  Love will grieve over sin and rejoice when God is honored.  Love will continue to cover over other minor sins and be gentle in correction.  Love will give charitable assumptions until it is wise to draw other conclusions based on evidence.  Love will place its hope in the only One who is secure and steadfast.   Love will endure because God has loved us this way!

Application:

  1. What did you learn about love in this section?

  2. Based on how you respond to your circumstance, where do you place your hope?

  3. Write your own summary of the hope we have in Christ.

  4. What scripture about hope do you need to meditate on and memorize?  Write it out and start working on it!

  5. What will it look like in your relationships to demonstrate your hope is in Christ?

Above all These, Put on Love Part 12 (Love Believes all Things)

Love Believes All Things

By Wendy Wood

Love believes all things.  Other translations say “love always trusts”.  This might sound a little crazy. Of course we shouldn’t believe everything we hear. We live in the era of “fake news” and people spouting conspiracy theories and saying whatever it takes to get attention. Proverbs 14:15 even warns us “The simple believes everything, but the prudent gives thought to his steps.”   We should consider what we hear and evaluate it closely.  Proverbs 18:15 says, “An intelligent heart acquires knowledge, and the ear of the wise seeks knowledge.”  This proverb tells us to acquire knowledge and to seek knowledge.  We need to consider whether information is true and right to be wise.  In the New Testament we are given the same instruction.  First Thessalonians 5:18 says, “Test everything, hold fast what is good.” Surely testing everything is not a gullible way to believe all things.  God expects us to engage our minds and consider, ponder, and test what is said and done.  We know scripture doesn’t contradict itself so deeper study is needed.  

The Greek for believes is pisteuō which means to “have confidence in”.  So what does Paul mean?  “I believe that he meant that if we are loving people, we will not allow suspicion, cynicism, or a judgmental, critical attitude to become a dominant feature in our relationships.  Love’s believing all things means that if we are living a life of love, we will put the best possible interpretation on what another person has done or said until we have the facts that prove to the contrary.  It means that if we do not have the cold hard facts that prove what the other person has done is evil, malicious, or unbiblical, we will always opt for the most favorable possibility.”*  Jerry bridges brings the definition of judgmentalism home in saying, “Most of us can slip into the sin of judgmentalism from time to time.  But there are those among us who practice it continually.  These people have what I call a critical spirit.  They look and find fault with everyone and everything.  Regardless of the topic of conversation - whether it is a person, church, an event, or anything - they end up speaking in a disparaging manner.”**  Love chooses to place the best possible light on a situation until there is proof of wrongdoing. 

One of the ways we fail to love this way is in making assumptions and judgments of other people’s motives.  When someone says something that hurts our feelings, we are quick to assume that they meant to be hurtful and therefore are unkind, mean people.  When someone does something that we think is inconsiderate of our feelings, we are quick to accuse them of selfishness and intentionally making our life harder.  “Love believes all things” tells us that this way of assuming and judging are sinful and definitely not loving.


Consider these scenarios:

  1. A woman you just met at a church event walks past you in Costco without saying ‘hello’.  Do you assume she is avoiding you and doesn’t want to be friends?  Or do you believe the best and think she just didn’t see you?

  2. Your husband forgets to stop for milk on the way home even though you called him an hour before he left work to remind him.  Do you accuse him of doing it out of selfishness or  to make your life more difficult?  Or do you believe that he just forgot and that there was no harm intended?

  3. A person in your life group is quieter than normal.  She says nothing is wrong.  Do you spend the evening wondering if she’s being honest and stew over what she might be upset about?  Or, do you believe her and pray for her?

  4. An extended family member forgets your birthday.  Do you feel hurt and upset that they don’t like you as much as they like the other members of your family?  Or do you give them the benefit of the doubt and believe they forgot and quickly move on to how you can love them well?

  5. Your 10 year old runs in from outside with dirt all over their shoes and tracks footprints all over the kitchen.  Do you get upset and assume your child did this to spite you and force you to clean again so you respond with anger?  Or, do you patiently explain the situation and ask them to think carefully about their cleanliness before running inside next time?


These are just a few situations when we tend to jump to negative judgments on the words and actions of others. Maybe your suspicions are rooted back to how you were treated in past (or current) relationships.  Someone may do something kind for you and you are quick to assume that they want something in return.  When love fails to believe all things, a nice compliment or a gift can’t just be an expression of appreciation, the giver must want you to reciprocate and so you can’t enjoy the gift.  Failing to love as Paul commands us is to live with a suspicion of other people’s motives.  Failing to love this way means you are the judge of other people’s hearts.  This is contrary to scripture.  Jeremiah 17:9 tells us our hearts are deceitful and we often do not even understand our own hearts, let alone other people’s hearts.  Psalm 139:23-24 tells us we need God to search our hearts and reveal the right way to go.  And Hebrew 4 tells us that it is the Word of God that discerns the thoughts and intentions of the heart.  That’s not our job and there’s no way we can do it correctly or accurately.  

Up to this point we’ve considered how you need to be loving in how you think about the words and actions of others toward you.  “Love believes all things” also applies to when you receive information about other people.  A loving person will believe the best of someone who is being gossipped about or slandered about until facts are obtained that would drive us to a different conclusion.  Proverbs 18:17 warns us about making snap decisions about others based only on a small amount of information.  “The one who states his case first seems right, until the other comes and examines him.”  Love is not gullible.  Love doesn’t just believe every word that is said.  Love is wise in determining if what is said is true and right.  It is wise to not assume everything you hear, including negative information about other people, is right.  Give the person who is not even there to defend themselves the benefit of the doubt and think well of them.  In the face of indisputable facts, our conclusion may change, but don’t let judgmentalism be the default setting in your thinking.

* See “Maximum Impact” by Wayne Mack

**See “Respectable Sins” by Jerry Bridges

Application:

  1. What stood out to you about “love believes all things”?

  2. On a scale of 1 - 10, how big a problem is judgmentalism or a critical spirit for you?  Are you quick to assume bad motives or to believe the worst (10) or are you charitable and assume the best (1)?  why?

  3. Write out Philippians 4:8.  Next to each word that should describe our thinking, write a definition of what it means.  Then, write something about God that would fit each category.  How can this help you when tempted to think critically of others?

Above all These, Put on Love Part 12 (Love Bears all Things)

Love Bears All Things

By Wendy Wood

Love bears all things.  The Greek word for “bears” is stegō. Literally translated this means “roof”. Paul is saying that love protects and covers.  Wayne Mack is helpful in describing this. ‘According to the Greek dictionary, [1 Corinthians 13:7] can literally mean “to put a roof over what is displeasing in another person,” “to throw a cloak of silence over what is displeasing in another person,” “to pass over in silence or to keep confidential or to protect and preserve by covering.” “In other words, it means to cover over with silence, to keep secret, to hide or conceal the errors of faults of others. What Paul is saying in verse 7 is that when we tell someone, “I love you,” we are telling that person that we will function as an umbrella or roof that will shield and protect that person from harm or unnecessary and unhelpful exposure.”*

It will be helpful to look at other scriptures to get a really clear picture of what is meant by ‘love bears all things’.  When we read that description, we immediately want to jump to our own defense of confronting others when we are sinned against.  That “inner lawyer” in us that wants to defend ourselves reveals a self-justifying heart.  We need to pay attention to rising up in our hearts.  Our desire to self-justify is a rejection of Christ’s justification on our behalf.  When you feel that need to prove yourself right, take time to examine what’s really going on in your heart.  Why do you feel the need to prove yourself?  Is this a time to quiet your heart, ask God to make you teachable, seek to learn to discern truth from scripture, and rejoice that you can’t and won’t ever be able to justify yourself!

The Apostle Peter says something very similar in 1 Peter 4:8 - “Above all, keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers over a multitude of sins”.  Similar to being long-suffering or patient, bearing with other people’s sin means we don’t have to point out every offense or wrongdoing.  We can endure graciously with the faults of others knowing that God has dealt graciously with our sin.  Real love covers over and protects other people from unnecessarily or unhelpful exposure of their sin.  By unnecessary and unhelpful exposure I mean that love doesn’t gossip or tell others who don’t need to know about the sin.  We’ll discuss this further in a moment.

Proverbs 17:9 says, “Whoever covers an offense seeks love, but he who repeats a matter separates close friends.

Proverbs 10:12 says, “Hatred stirs up strife, but love covers all offenses”.

Love never enjoys exposing the sin of others.  Put yourself in the place of the sinner.  When you have done something wrong, do you want others who are not involved, who do not have your best interest in mind, or may not even know you, to hear about your sin?  Would you feel loved if your husband or friend told other people about how you sinned?  Of course not!  A loving relationship provides the safety of cover and a promise of concealment when sin happens.  Not because sin doesn’t matter, but because love is willing to overlook sin knowing that we are all sinners.  To love someone means that you will be a safe place for others to learn, make mistakes, and grow in becoming more like Christ.  

But the bible also tells us to confront sin at times. In fact, Paul confronted sin in the bible.  Paul was writing 1 Corinthians in response to the Corinthian church sinning in disunity, adultery, marriage issues and more. His letter pointed out their sin and called them to change their ways.  Jesus confronted sin also.  When talking with the woman at the well, Jesus asked her about her husbands and told her to “go and sin no more”.  Matthew 18:15 tells us “If your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone. If he listens to you, you have gained your brother.”   And, Galatians 6:1-2 says, “Brothers, if anyone is caught in any transgression, you who are spiritual should restore him in a spirit of gentleness. Keep watch on yourself, lest you too be tempted.  Bear one another's burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.”  Clearly there are times to confront sin and not “cover” it up.

First, when deciding if love should cover something up, assess whether or not what has happened is actually sin, or just a preference issue.  Sometimes, in our pride, we elevate what we want to have happen to the level of right.  Just because you don’t get what you want or are offended by something doesn’t necessarily mean that sin has occurred.  Take time to assess if God’s law has been broken, not just yours.  This may just be a time to humble yourself and accept other people’s differences.

Second, is this a one time offense or is this a pattern of sin in the other person’s life.  Galatians 6:1 uses the term “caught”.  “If anyone is caught in any transgression”.  Caught implies that someone is bound up in or unable to get free from something.  The Greek phrase of “is caught” pictures someone that is taken over by something.  So, when deciding if you should cover over a sin or confront it, it is important to assess the seriousness of the sin in the sinner’s life.  If the sin falls into a pattern of behavior that the sinner is unaware of or if the pattern of sin is harming their walk with God, it is time to confront the sin.  Everyone of us needs to be practicing sanctification with putting off old ways of living and putting on new, Christlike ways of living.  If exposing the sin to the sinner would help them to grow in godliness and holiness, it may be time to talk with them.  

Third, are you truly able to cover the sin and not let it affect your relationship with the person.  Covering a sin doesn’t ignore sin, but rather covering a sin acknowledges that God is grieved by this sin, you or someone else has been hurt by this sin, and is a choice to absorb the cost of the sin. If you cover over the sin, but allow then replay the sin in your mind or any way hold that sin against the other person, the sin has not been covered over.  The protection or roof concept of love means that the relationship stays safe and completely reconciled.  Jay Adams puts it this way:

“Covering sins means not allowing offenses to come between brothers.  It doesnot mean ignoring them.  God allows no grudges or resentment.  One must cover sins in such a way that they never bother him anymore.  If some sin keeps throwing the covers off, then you must confront the brother and bring the matter to a successful conclusion.  God does not allow for unreconciled relationships.  Nor does covering sins mean never offering help to another who is stuck in some trespass out of which he is not extricating himself.”**

Psalm 32:1 says, “Blessed is the one whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered.”  God covers our sin so completely that we do not need to fear that He holds it against us.  Covering sin means that it is no longer an issue.  If the offender has done something that you cannot truly cover over, it is better to have a conversation about the offense and bring the relationship to reconciliation.

When you believe that the sin must be confronted, attitude and motive are crucial.  The desired outcome is repentance.  First and foremost, we must desire to see the sinner repent to God and be drawn closer to Him.  We must desire that the sinner be exposed for their good in leading them to put off sin and put on living in a godly way.  Love seeks the good of the other person ahead of its own comfort or preference.  Selfish attitudes and motives must play no part in exposing the sins of others.  When you are sinned against and are about to expose the sin, consider these issues:

Am I about to confront this sin because it inconveniences me to sinned against in this way?

Am I about to confront this sin because I want to be proven right in this matter?

Am I about to confront this sin because I’ve been called out on the same sin and I don’t want to be the only one?

Am I about to confront this sin because I am angry at this person?

Am I about to confront this sin because it makes me feel better about my own sin?

The right motive to expose sin is to help the other person acknowledge and confess their sin to God.  To seek forgiveness and to turn from the sin to please and honor God in their thoughts, words, and actions.  It’s not about you.  It’s not about your life being easier if this sin stops.  Love for God and love for others is the only God pleasing motive when confronting the sin of others.

Galatians 6:1-2 also talks about keeping a watch on ourselves.  This is similar to the idea of examining and removing the log in our own eye before dealing with the speck in the other person’s eye.  Before talking about other people’s sin, we must deal with our own.  We must be living a lifestyle of repentance.  We need to be aware of our need for God’s grace and forgiveness and be deeply grateful for it.  We need to humble ourselves and see ourselves as fellow sinners and not approach the other person in a condescending way.  Starting with our own sin first makes us a credible voice in someone’s life.

We must approach someone else with a spirit of gentleness.  Another word for gentleness is meekness.  Jesus was “gentle and lowly of heart” (Matthew 11:28-30).  Meekness or gentleness is about being under God’s authority and submitting your will and desires to God’s.  It is also about being compassionate toward other people.  Gentleness is a heart attitude that overflows into our speech, body language, and actions.  A gentle heart is patient and kind.  A gentle heart is focused on being sensitive to other people’s feelings and needs.  Meekness involves seeking peace, a willingness to let go of preferences and yield to other people’s way.  

Consider these examples from Wayne Mack:

“Restoring in the spirit of gentleness means that we will:

  • Be sensitive to the feelings of others; be reluctant to do or say anything that would embarrass them.

  • Do what we can to make others feel at ease, gentle people don’t enjoy making people squirm.

  • Be willing to hear different ideas, even foolish ideas, without doing or saying anything that would belittle or demean someone else.

  • Treat people with respect and dignity even when we disagree with them or think they are wrong

  • Avoid unnecessary and unhelpful criticism

  • Avoid the use of intimidation, coerciveness, violence, manipulation, or authoritarianism

  • Use “soft answer” not harsh words (Proverbs 15:1-2)

  • Uses words that build up, fit the occasion, and give grace to those who hear (Ephesians 4:29)

  • Approach others with a servant attitude rather than as a master or lord.

  • Avoid talking to others about someone else’s sin unless to do so is absolutely necessary for knowing how to help the person stuck in sin

Love does not take pleasure in pointing out the sins of others.  Yet our sinful nature delights to report on the sins of others.  We see it in children who can’t wait to tattle on a sibling or report a fellow student to the teacher.  Yet we do the same thing when we try to hide our uncovering of sin (gossip) in the pretext of a prayer request or in getting help to deal with the situation when we don’t really want or need help but it just feels good to share the information.  Love doesn’t take pleasure in exposing sin so that you feel better about yourself.

Jay Adams explains what it looks like to restore someone in the spirit of gentleness:

“Meekness is difficult to define; it is more easily understood by describing its 

opposite  To say to a brother caught in sin, “Well, I guess this is to be expected.

 After all, how many times have I said…,” is to kick him when he is down.  No,

 any such superior attitude is the opposite of meekness.  Meekness acts more

 like this, “Brother, I am here, not because I consider myself better than you, but

 because in Galatians 6:1, God tells me to come.  As a matter of fact, I may need

 you to help me out of some difficulty in the future.”

Humility is key in knowing when to cover over sin or expose it.  Humility is key when we know we need to expose sin because how we do it is just as important as if we do it.  The only motive that honors God in confronting sin is to help bring the fellow sinner to repentance so that God receives glory as His power is on display in a changed life.  Proverbs 19:11 says,  “Good sense makes one slow to anger, and it is his glory to overlook an offense”.  Always ask yourself, can I overlook this offense.  Can I choose in love to absorb the cost of this sin and not say anything and treat this person like nothing has happened in our relationship?  Have I examined my own life for sin and am I humble about being a fellow sinner?  Is this a sin that needs to be confronted so the other person has the opportunity to repent and change?  Am I aiming to please myself or God in this confrontation?  Once those questions are answered rightly, then, and only then, should you proceed.

See “The Christian Counselor’s Commentary: Hebrews, James, 1 and 2 Peter” by Jay Adams

See “Maximum Impact” by Wayne Mack

Application:

  1. What were the two things that stood out to you the most in this facet of love?

  2. Rate yourself.  Are you careful to cover sin (1) or are you quick to expose others failures (10)?

  3. Who do you tend to be quick to confront and correct and what motive do you tend to have in doing so?

  4. Thinking through the people and situations you wrote in #3, which of these is it appropriate to cover over or bear?

  5. Still in regards to #3, what would it look like to confront these sins with humility and seeking to honor God and not self?

Above all These, Put on Love Part 11 (Loves Does Not Rejoice in Wrongdoing but Rejoices with the Truth

Love Does Not Rejoice in Wrongdoing, but Rejoices in the Truth

By Wendy Wood

Love does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth.  The original Greek language use adikia for wrongdoing.  This is translated as “unjust” or “unrighteous”.  And “truth” is alētheia which is the truth pertaining to God.  Truth pertaining to God are things that are righteous or “right with God”.  The character of God is righteous; He always does what is right.  Obedience to God’s word is righteousness.  So love approves and celebrates what God declares to be right.  Conversely, love never approves of or celebrates what God says is wrong.  Any thought, word, action, or desire that aligns with God is righteous and should be rejoiced in.  But any thought, word, action, or desire that falls short of God’s character and word must not be enjoyed.

Romans 12:9 tells us “abhor what is evil, hold fast to what is good”.  It might seem obvious to hate evil and love good.  But living this out with sinful hearts requires more than just agreeing with these statements.

Consider how this might look in your life.

Love does not enjoy hearing about someone else’s sin.  This may be a celebrity who’s exploits make the news.  It might be a friend who was able to “get back” at her husband who wronged her.

Love does not enjoy watching other people sin.  This includes watching sin on your favorite television show.  Love does not enjoy watching unmarried people live together or watching characters make sarcastic, hurtful comments at someone else’s expense.

Love does not take pleasure in watching evil happen to others.  Maybe a murderer in prison was murdered by other inmates or a television show where the hero of the story exacts vigilante justice.

Love does not enjoy watching others suffer loss or make a mistake.  Love is compassionate and sympathizes with others struggles and errors.

Love does not enjoy making people feel foolish or uncomfortable.  This may be evident in times when you want others to know you are right or correct someone’s speech or fact rather than being gracious.

Love does not enjoy exposing other people’s sin.  Maybe someone you don’t like very much sinned and you enhance your position in the group by gossiping about it.

Love is grieved by the sins in the world - the violence, brutality, and crime that happens in the world daily and is reported on the news.

The things that we are glad about and enjoy reveal our heart’s desires.  When we feel good about anything sinful, we reveal our desire for self-righteousness.  We enjoy the feeling that we would never do such a terrible thing.  We are way better than that sinner! We feel superior to those who sin and take pleasure in “not being like other men”.  We are the Pharisee standing in the temple praying loudly, “God, I thank you that I am not like other men, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even like this tax collector” (Luke 18:11).  Instead of being grateful and celebrating Christ’s righteousness and the righteousness we have through faith in Him, we pridefully congratulate ourselves that we’ve never murdered or committed adultery or whatever “worse” sin we’ve witnessed.  Our hearts reveal our desire to feel superior rather than be grieved at what grieves God.  To have a heart after God’s heart, we must be sad and pained by any and all sin, and especially our own.

Love rejoices with the truth.  Love celebrates what is revealed as good in God’s word. Any obedience to God’s word is to be celebrated.  When a friend who has been struggling with a sin excitedly shares with you how she is growing, this is the time to celebrate with her, not be jealous that you continue to struggle and are jealous of her sanctification.  When someone confronts your sin and speaks truth to you from God’s word, that is time to celebrate that God’s word is right and be grateful for correction.  When a sinner repents because of the truth of the gospel, love celebrates.

Love rejoices with the truth of Jesus.  Jesus came to us with grace and truth (John 1:17).  Jesus perfectly lived out God’s character and God’s word.  Love celebrates Christ’s righteousness.  Love celebrates that any believer in Christ is covered by His perfect life and has His robes of righteousness covering their sin.  So you express joy and gladness in Christ’s life?  Do your family members see you rejoicing in the truth of Christ as you go to Him for forgiveness, strength, hope, and peace.  Do you display joy that you are forgiven and in relationship with God because of what Christ has done?

Love rejoices with truth when honesty is demonstrated.  We as sinners are so quick to fib, stretch the truth, exaggerate, tell half-truths, leave out the inconvenient parts of a story, embellish, or deceive in some way to make ourselves look better.  Maybe you blameshift and put the responsibility on others.  After all,you reason, you wouldn’t have gotten mad if he hadn’t done that. Yet the truth of God’s word is clear that everything that proceeds from our mouth comes from the heart.  Love does not shade the truth.  Love seeks to be honest, open and takes responsibility for thoughts, words, actions, and desires.  When others are honest, we should be rejoicing.  

John MacArthur said;

“Love does not focus on the wrongs of others.  It does not parade their faults for the entire world to see.  Love does not disregard falsehood and unrighteousness, but as much as possible it focuses on the true and the right.  It looks for good, hopes for good, and emphases good.  It rejoices with those who teach and live truth...Love appreciates the triumphs of ordinary folk.  Our children are built up and strengthened when we encourage them in their accomplishments and in their obedience.  Love doesn’t rejoice in falsehood or wrong, but its primary business is to build up, not tear down, to strengthen, not weaken.”*

We must always remember that we cannot love this way on our own.  “We love because He first loved us” (1 John 4:19).  We must have the indwelling Holy Spirit at work in us to love this way.  Love is the fruit of the Holy Spirit (Galatians 5:22).  We need to pray and ask God to help us love this way as we seek to put these things into practice.

*See John MacArthur’s commentary on 1 Corinthians

Application:

What stands out to you as you read about love not rejoicing in wrongdoing but rejoices in what is right?

What are some ways that you rejoice in sin?

What are some ways that you should be grieved by sin more?

How do you demonstrate that you celebrate righteousness?

How do you need to show you celebrate righteousness more?

Above all These, Put on Love Part 10 (Love Does Not Keep a Record of Wrongs)

Love Doesn’t Keep a Record of Wrongs

 

Love does not keep a record of wrongs.  Other translations say “Love does not keep score”, “Love takes no account of evil”, “Love is not resentful”, or “Love does not take into account wrongs suffered”.  The Greek is a combination of two words logizomai, which is an accounting term and means “to reckon, count, compute, calculate, count over, or to weigh”.  The other word kakos means “of a bad nature, troublesome or injurious”.  Taken together, these words paint the picture of keeping a tally of the bad, injurious things that have happened to you. But, love does not keep this tally or score.  Love forgives.  At the heart of this facet of love is the idea that a loving person doesn’t dwell on the sins of other people or rehearse wrongs that have happened.  A loving person forgives quickly, consistently, and avoids bitterness.

 

Colossians 3:13 and Ephesians 4:32 command us to “forgive as the Lord has forgiven you” and “forgive as God has forgiven you in Christ Jesus”.  We are given many word pictures of God’s forgiveness.  Psalm 103:12 tells us God removes our sins “as far as the east is from the west” which is a distance incalculable since the directions go on forever in opposite directions.  Micah 7:19 uses the picture of God casting our sins into the depths of the oceans where they presumably could never be uncovered or dredged up.  Isaiah 43:25 simply says, “I, I am he who blots out your transgressions for my own sake, and I will not remember your sins.”  God is so gracious and forgiving that He chooses to remove our sins from our record (keeping no record of wrongs) and chooses to not even remember them.  That is a picture of love!

 

When we are sinned against and experience a hurt, we have two choices.  We can choose to forgive or we can choose to not forgive and allow bitterness to take root and begin to grow.  Our response to being hurt, like all other responses, comes from our heart.  We reveal what we treasure in our hearts most when we are hurt and suffering.  It is easier to forgive if the offender admits he was wrong and asks for forgiveness.  That doesn’t remove the hurt or even make up for the hurt, but most of us feel better if the wrongdoer admits it.  When a sinner repents, we can be honest that the hurt was real, there was a cost to the sin that must be absorbed by the hurt person, and it is a choice to not hold the sinner accountable for his sin.  Some sins are easier to forgive in this way than others.  A one time harsh word is easier to forgive and not keep a record of than being on the receiving end of an angry, abusive parent for 18 years or married to an oppressive spouse for 20 or more years.  There is so much more to forgiveness in these long term situations that I will not address that here.  Please seek biblical counsel for long term abusive situations and allow a counselor to guide you through forgiveness.  Forgiveness is an event, meaning it needs to happen as a decisive point where forgiveness is granted, but is also an ongoing event, meaning that when a memory or thought of the sin comes back the forgiver must choose to forgive again and again.  Luke 17:4 is clear, when someone repents, a believer in Christ must forgive.  When forgiveness is asked for and granted, this completes the reconciliation process and the relationship is restored.  The promise to forgive contains three parts.  First, forgiveness is the promise to not dwell on or think about the offense anymore.  Second, forgiveness is the promise to not talk to other people about the offense.  Third, forgiveness promises to not bring up the offense to the offender, unless the same type of sin comes up again and this offense is used as an example of the greater pattern and is helpful in bringing the sinner back to repentance.

This facet of love clearly states that the loving response to being sinned against is forgiveness.  So what if the person who sinned against you does not admit wrong and does not ask for forgiveness?  True reconciliation requires repentance and forgiveness. Scripture tells us to forgive as God forgives us.  We must repent to be reconciled to God.  We must turn from our sin and place our hope and trust in Christ as Savior and Lord.  Reconciliation is dependent on this transaction of asking for forgiveness and the offended person offering forgiveness.  This is how we are reconciled to God.  However, sadly, many times the offender does not repent and does not even admit wrongdoing.  How do we then forgive?  Romans 12:9-21 gives clear direction.  

Let love be genuine. Abhor what is evil; hold fast to what is good. Love one another with brotherly affection. Outdo one another in showing honor.  Do not be slothful in zeal, be fervent in spirit, serve the Lord.  Rejoice in hope, be patient in tribulation, be constant in prayer.  Contribute to the needs of the saints and seek to show hospitality.

Bless those who persecute you; bless and do not curse them. Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep. Live in harmony with one another. Do not be haughty, but associate with the lowly.  Never be wise in your own sight. Repay no one evil for evil, but give thought to do what is honorable in the sight of all. If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all. Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God, for it is written, “Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord.”  To the contrary, “if your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him something to drink; for by so doing you will heap burning coals on his head.” Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.”

Working our way from the end of this passage backwards, forgiveness in the hurt person’s heart starts with trusting God and God’s justice.  We are called to leave vengeance to God.  God is a just God.  He does not ignore sin.  God hates sin and must punish it because He is holy.  Holiness cannot overlook evil.  Sin is either paid for through Christ’s blood shed on the cross or will be paid for by the sinner in eternal separation from God.  If the person who sinned against you is a believer, Christ has paid the price for that sin.  God has wiped that sin away because His wrath was satisfied by Christ making payment for the sin.  When we realize God has already forgiven a believer’s sin, who are we to not forgive?  Is your justice more right than God’s?  Are your standards better than God’s?  Is Christ’s sacrifice enough for this sin?  To be unforgiving reveals your heart in this matter.  Can you trust God to deal with this sin?  God is all-knowing, all-wise, all-good, all-just, and only He can discern the motives and intentions of the heart perfectly.  

So, if the one who sinned against you is unwilling to repent, we are called to trust God with the hurt and forgive by continuing to love that person well.  The relationship is not reconciled fully as it would be if transactional repentance and forgiveness had happened.  Yet, we are called to forgive in our hearts, trusting God that He has purpose in the hurt and we are called to love even our enemies.  We’ve been describing what love looks like for many pages, and will keep on going.  All these aspects of love apply, even to someone who has wronged you and not repented.  Romans 12 tells us that by loving them “you will heap burning coals on his head”.  This has a few different interpretations by Bible scholars.  Matthew Henry offers both takes on this.  First, it could mean "melt him into repentance and friendship, and mollify his spirit towards thee”.  By being kind, patient, loving, providing for your enemy, you might be an agent God uses to bring this person to repentance.  The love could open his eyes to his sin and he would repent as he sees what Christ has done in your heart.  Or, Matthew Henry says "It will aggravate his condemnation, and make his malice against thee the more inexcusable.”  After seeing Christ’s love in action through a loving person, this person will be without excuse and further bring judgment on themselves.

As you continue to look at Romans 12 we see that forgiveness is extended by meeting the sinner’s needs and responding with honor even in the face of bad treatment.  It means seeking to make peace which might be gently pointing out the sin and calling the sinner to repent. Just because you seek peace doesn’t mean it will happen, but love is willing to try.  Romans 12 tells us to be patient in the affliction and to pray, both for our hearts to forgive and for the sinner.  While a fully reconciled relationship requires the transaction of repentance and forgiveness, the offended party is still called to forgive and continue to love the sinner.  (Again, there are some so abusive and power oriented relationships that sometimes the injured party must love from afar, so please seek biblical counsel if necessary.)

Bitterness is the opposite of forgiveness.  I said at the beginning of this section, there are two choices: to forgive or not to forgive and allow bitterness to take root.

Bitterness is the result of not forgiving in your heart.  Bitterness is what Romans 12 would call, “being overcome by evil.”  Being bitter is letting the other person’s sin overcome you.

In his booklet “Bitterness: The Root that Pollutes”, Lou Priolo says don’t allow your offender’s sin to overcome you.

You may not retreat.

You may not surrender.

You may not give up.

You may not throw in the towel.

You may not wimp out.

You may not allow his evil to prevail against you.

You may not allow his sin against you to provoke you to sin.

So how do you know if you are bitter?  Lou Priolo again shows us some possible actions that reveal a bitter heart.

 

*Thoughts of resentment toward your offender.

*Telling yourself things like “He’ll never change” or “I just can’t put up with the  person any longer.”

*Unnecessarily limiting the scope of your communication because of unsuccessful attempts to resolve conflicts with him in the past.

*Allowing anger to keep you from confronting him biblically.

*Allowing yourself to become sinfully angry, anxious, or depressed about the ways in which he has hurt you.

*Allowing your ‘hurt feelings’ to keep you from fulfilling your biblical responsibilities - especially toward the person at whom you are bitter.

*Resorting to sinful, retaliatory actions such as:

  • Abusive speech

  • Gossip

  • Name-calling

  • Pouting

  • Quarreling

  • Slander

  • Sulking

  • Temper tantrums

  • Threats

  • Withdrawal

If you have any one of these, you are allowing sin to overcome you and are allowing bitterness to take root in your heart.   Which of these do you see in your life? How have you allowed someone else’s sin to overcome you?

Bitterness affects relationships in many ways.  When you dwell on someone’s sin, you are hardening your heart and that always impacts your thoughts, words, and interactions with others, and not just the person who offended you.  As bitterness grows within you, you start to distrust others and are quicker to anger, especially in areas related to how you have been sinned against.  It becomes easy to assume the worst of others’ intentions and be guarded rather than reaching out in love.  A bitter person is usually impatient.  A bitter person is quick to find faults with others.  A bitter person may use sinful speech in sarcasm or condescending words.  A bitter person may withdraw and avoid contact with people.  Bitter people tend to lack joy because bitterness (focusing on how you have been hurt) brings you down.  Bitter people often have trouble submitting to authority because they assume others are trying to prevent them from good things.  Bitterness separates you from God because you are not thankful for your salvation in Christ as manifested by not forgiving as you have been forgiven. Bitterness separates you from God because you are not embracing His sovereignty over man and you are not surrendering to how God uses suffering in your life.

Stop and do an inventory of your relationships.  Which of these evidences of bitterness apply to you?  What sins have been done to you that you are holding onto?

Bitterness begins in your thoughts.  When you dwell on past offenses you allow the root of bitterness to take hold.  So the first step in your journey out of bitterness is to repent of your sinful thoughts.  This is recognizing that your thoughts about past sins is sinful. You are now sinning in response to what has happened to you.  This is sin against God.  You are judging God’s wisdom and goodness in what suffering He has allowed in your

life.  After confessing your sin and asking for forgiveness, you must turn away from this type of thinking and replace it with loving thoughts.  So, you must decisively choose forgive now.  And then, when the temptation to think about past offenses comes up, you must again ask God to help you forgive and take thoughts captive.  It is a choice to think about things that are true, right, honorable, lovely, pure, admirable, and things worthy of praise (Philippians 4:8).

So what does that look like when you are thinking about how you have been treated unfairly or when you have been hurt by someone?

True thoughts - God is sovereign. What man means for evil, God means for good (Genesis 50:20).  God has purpose in all our suffering (Romans 5:1-5).  Jesus, who was perfect, paid for your sins (2 Corinthians 5:21).  Are you concerned about fairness?  Things that are true conform to reality.  God defines reality as the Creator.  How he tells us to think and live are ultimate truths.

Right thoughts - You have been forgiven by the blood of Christ (Ephesians 1:7).  You are called to forgive others because you have been forgiven (Ephesians 4:31).  The one who sinned might see Christ in you and repent to God (Romans 12:20).  God is righteous.  Things that conform to God’s will are righteous.

Lovely thoughts - The way Christ had compassion and patience is beautiful and lovely.  The way Christ chose to be humble and take on human form, the form of a servant, and was obedient to death is lovely (Philippians 2).  When you become like Christ, you are lovely (1 Peter 3:3-4). Lovely is the beauty of God’s character on display.

Pure thoughts - Patient, kind, contented, selfless, humble, forgiving thoughts are pure (1 Corinthians 13:4-7).  The idea of something being pure means it doesn’t have impurities in it.  It is 100% what it should be.  Psalm 86:11 is a prayer to God to “unite my heart to fear Your Name”.  Pure thoughts are focused on God and His way.

Admirable thoughts - What do you admire?  Admiration is given to those who are regarded well and thought highly of.  Christ is our example to follow (John 13:15).  When Jesus washed His disciples feet, He said we would be blessed if we followed His example (John 13:17).  Admirable thoughts consider how you can serve others well.

Changing your thoughts is the first step.  

Second, do good.  What will you do to continue to show love to the people around you, even those who have sinned against you?  

**See “Bitterness: The Root that Pollutes” by Lou Priolo

Application:

  1. What aspects of “love keeps no record of wrongs” stood out to you?

  2. What past hurts do you dwell on?   Make a list of offenses that still replay in your thinking.

  3. Repent.  Confess that these thoughts are sin.  Agree with God that you are judging Him in allowing these hurts to have happened.  Commit to trust God’s plan for your suffering and surrender to His plan for your life.  Ask God to help you forgive.  Commit to take those thoughts captive. 

  4. What thinking do you need to change?  Be specific.  Look at the list of offenses you listed out.  For each one, write out what Philippians 4:8 thinking will look like.

  5. What loving actions do you need to put on?  Look back at the ways that bitterness shows itself.  Do you need to re-engage in a relationship?  Do you need to speak encouraging words rather than sarcasm?  As you read back through the descriptions, ask God to reveal to you how you have harbored bitterness in your heart.