Loving Others

Love One Another

Pastor Larry

John 13:12-15, 34-35

“When He had finished washing their feet, He put on His clothes and returned to his place. “Do you understand what I have done for you?” He asked them. “You call Me ‘Teacher’ and ‘Lord,’ and rightly so, for that is what I am. Now that I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also should wash one another’s feet. I have set you an example that you should do as I have done for you…

A new command I give youLove one anotherAs I have loved you, so you must love one anotherBy this everyone will know that you are My disciples, if you love one another.”

 

Even in that small group of disciples there were men that normally would not associate with one another. They were from different backgrounds- education, vocations, politics- they were just different from one another. But He was asking them to set the pace, be the examples- to learn it, put it into practice and teach it to others. To really love one another. And it would be a sign to the world that something very different was happening here!

 

Today, in my reading plan we looked at Acts 6.  This is an interesting episode in the early days of the church. Starting a church with new believers of Jewish background (but from so many different countries and cultures) was going to be a challenge! The ones from Greek backgrounds thought they were being overlooked in the daily provision, or was it perhaps that the traditional Jews were getting preference!

“Looks like y’all have been taking care of yer older folks pretty well and somehow, our widows are hard for y’all to see. That ain’t right!”

 

And tensions probably began to rise. It didn’t seem fair. They were assuming motives, like it was happening on purpose. Something had to be done to fix this if these believers from so many different backgrounds were going to be able to stay together as one church.

 

On that day of Pentecost, when Jews from all over the known world gathered together in Jerusalem for one common celebration, they came from different cultures and languages and traditions. Sure, they were all Jews but they were all so different! Then something happened! They got saved and the Spirit of God began to work in them! They became one very large, diverse, and potentially very dysfunctional extended family! (Just wait until God begins to draw in Gentiles from all kinds of VERY different backgrounds!) How were they going to live and function together? Whose culture and traditions would reign supreme?

 

So the leaders of the church had to do something, they couldn’t ignore this distribution problem, hoping it would fade away. They couldn’t just say ‘you’re being too sensitive, get over it, that’s not what they meant.’ It had to be addressed so that they could keep Jesus’ command to serve one another and love each other- the world was watching!

 

They decide to give these distribution responsibilities to godly men in the group and then the apostles would be able to focus on ‘the ministry of the word of God!’ They didn’t treat these deacon responsibilities lightly. The ‘deacons’ they chose were full of the Spirit, with power and grace! They got to work, distributed what was needed to take care of the body and it appears that the problem was solved! Everyone was recognized, needs were met and relationships were repaired.

 

Everyone could get on with the main purpose of their mission as a church. “So the word of God spread, more and more believers were added to their number and even many priests believed!’ But in order for the world to listen to their message, they had to be living as His disciples, loving one another as He loved them!

 

At the same time, there was also a divisive attack coming from outside the church, from the world. The Jews who didn’t believe continued to complain as well, with false charges brought against Stephen and eventually to many, many others. As the church stood united in love for one another, focused on Jesus and full of God’s Spirit, the world hated them the same way they hated Jesus. It’s always been that way. Jesus told us in advance. But that division can’t come from inside the church against one another.

 

Today, in our country we see division and preference among people from so many different backgrounds and we, as a country and as a community, must work to insure justice and equality for all.

But the challenge is the same in the church. Believers are coming from so many nations, cultures, traditions, ways of life; groups that typically would not be playing well together are now taking communion together. Instead of starting lots of different fellowships based on our unique differences of education, color, country of origin, politics, God calls us around His throne to be one people from every nation, tribe, language and people group. He calls us to love and accept and respect and care for one another in a very unique ‘unity’ that the world doesn’t often see!

 

The way He loves us, extravagantly and unconditionally, is the way He calls us to love one another! This unity, that overcomes our differences and loves one another completely, is the one way, the main way, the big thing, the way that the world will know that we are His disciples! We, as believers, must lead the way, be the examples, be the proof that He is truly the answer for the condition of the world.

 

This unity is first taught and lived out in our homes, then instructed and put into practice in our church and ultimately demonstrated and declared to the world.

“Love one another as I have loved you!”

 

 Pastor Larry

Canyon Hills Community Church

 

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 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.

Above All These, Put on Love Part 1

By Wendy Wood

Jesus summed up the entire law in two commandments (Matthew 22:37-39) saying love God, and love others. Throughout Scripture, believers are commanded to love. We are commanded to love fellow believers (John 13:34) , neighbors (Leviticus 19:18), family (Ephesians 5:25, Psalm 103:13), and enemies (Matthew 5:44); meaning we are to love all people. This command comes from God who defines Himself as love. 1 John 4:8 tells us “God is love”. God’s very character is the definition of love. Love is not a feeling we have when we feel warmly toward someone else. Love is action oriented and is aimed at the other person’s well-being. Genuine love is a heart posture that desires the good and well-being of another person.1 When Scripture tells us to “put on love”, we are replacing our sinful habits of selfish attitudes and our sinful ways of interacting with others and replacing it with Christ-like love. Colossians 3:12-15 tells us

“Put on then, as God's chosen ones, holy and beloved, compassionate hearts, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience, bearing with one another and, if one has a complaint against another, forgiving each other; as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive. And above all these put on love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony.”

Love is to be put on “above all” because it is necessary to do any of the other attitudes, actions, and words listed above. Without love, we may be able to occasionally show kindness or sometimes bear with one another, but only genuine love is a God glorifying motive for relating to people in relationship. We can only show this type of love when we know this kind of love from God. Put on then, is key. Preceding this section of verses, Paul recounts that we have been raised with Christ, we have died to sin and our lives are hidden with Christ in God. We are reminded that we will appear with him in glory. We are called to love in Christlikeness because we are united with Christ by grace through faith. As the scripture above tells us, we are God’s chosen ones who are holy and beloved. Christlike love only comes after God has opened our eyes to faith and has put within us a new heart that is able to love sacrificially. Christian love must look different from the world’s love.

Our culture has much to say about love. Sometimes we hear about “falling in love” as though love were something that happens to us spontaneously and accidentally. Unfortunately, if this is the axiom you live by, you can also “fall out of love” and no longer feel obligated to be married to or in relationship with that person anymore. “Falling in love” is an emotional high, not the high calling of selfless, sacrificial attitude and actions towards others. Countless “love songs” talk all about warm, fuzzy emotions that focus on how the person experiencing the feelings likes how they feel. This is a selfish and distorted version of love. When we enjoy the exhilarating feelings of someone new that we are attracted to, we “love” how that person makes us feel. We feel excited, or we are comforted, or we are hopeful and are happy to be feeling this way. Really, we are focused on taking care of ourselves and enjoying how we experience the relationship rather than being focused on how to serve the other person. This is not biblical love.

Biblical love is about sacrificially choosing the other person’s well being over your own. Philippians 2:3-4 tells us to “count others more significant than ourselves”. The word “count” means to consider, calculate, and to reckon. We are to choose to place ourselves below others and intentionally place their needs ahead of our own. Biblical love seeks to emulate Christ and how he interacted with others. Philippians 2:5-8 shows us the extent of Christ’s sacrificial love.

“Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.”

Jesus’ love was humble and intentional. He “counted” Himself a servant to others. He wasn’t concerned about His own well-being, but rather was willing to give up His life for others.

Our hearts are deceitful (Jeremiah 17:9). We can easily fool ourselves into thinking we are doing something out of love for others, when we are really being selfish and serving ourselves. Only what we do with the right motive (desiring to love God and please Him through loving others) will be considered God honoring in his sight. God knows our hearts and intentions perfectly (Hebrews 4:12). We cannot fool Him. Therefore, we must learn to love Him and others more from a genuine heart. We must continually be growing in loving God and others.

The importance of doing things with love cannot be overstated. First Corinthians 13 begins with saying that you can have absolutely amazing gifts of prophecy and faith, but if they are not done with love they are nothing. Worse, the picture Paul uses is a “noisy gong or a clanging cymbal”. I remember when my boys were quite small and would pull pots and lids out of the cupboard. They would bang away enjoying the loudness and cacophony of sound. I would cringe and barely be able to tolerate the sound for a few minutes. That awful, irritating, and annoying sound is what we believers are like when we act without love. We fail to produce anything good (like well orchestrated music) and additionally, others don’t want to be around us. Even to try to help someone or share the gospel with them, without love, is useless and frustrating to others. Jerry Bridges talks about putting an entire row of zeros on a paper.2 You may be able to line up 30 zeros and have a 30 figure number. What is it worth? Nothing! But put a single numeral one in front of those zeros and suddenly there is tremendous value. That is what love does to the gifts God has given us. When we are loving others from the heart, our service to God matters.

Wayne Mack compares love to a diamond.3 A diamond has many facets that make up the total value and beauty of a diamond. When buying a diamond you may consider cut, clarity, color, carats, and shape. These facets complement each other and are essential to making the diamond complete. Yet, they are all unique in the quality they bring to the diamond. Love is like a diamond. It is made up of many facets, all of them essential and unique to the way love is expressed. In 1 Corinthians 13:4-7, Paul shows us the many facets of love. Without these different qualities of love, our impact for Christ will be nothing. With these qualities of love growing in us, we will bring honor and glory to God as His love is displayed through us.

I’ve already mentioned that we need to learn to love as God loves because without love our gifts and service to God are nothing. Then, after Paul explains the facets of love, he gives us another reason we need to learn to love well. First Corthinians 14:1 begins with “Pursue love”. To purse means to run after or to press on to reach a goal. Wayne Mack says, “God does not just zap this kind of love into our hearts. We must search for it, train for it, reach for it! It takes effort and sacrifice and prayer for us to be able to lay hold of this precious love.”4 We are commanded to love.

1 Maximum Impact by Wayne A. Mack

2 Respectable Sins by Jerry Bridges

3 Maximum Impact by Wayne Mack

4 Ibid

Seeing the People in Front of You

Darby Strickland

As I read the gospels, I am struck by how attuned Jesus is to the people around him. Many encounters start with the simple introduction of who he sees.

  • Jesus sees Andrew and Peter following him, and he engages their inquiring hearts (John 1:38).

  • Jesus sees Nathanael and encourages his devout worship (John 1:47-50).

  • Jesus sees the paralyzed man and heals him (John 5:6–10).

  • Jesus sees the hungry crowd and feeds them (John 6:5–11).

  • Jesus sees the grief of Mary and Martha and weeps with them (John 11:33).

As Jesus looks around, his eyes are active and engaged. He notices people. And he looks long enough to see people’s physical and spiritual needs. But what he sees is just the start of the story; he then moves in and is present with them.

My question is: Is this true of me? There are many days when I am distracted and don’t notice the people around me. My eyes are open, but my brain is elsewhere. There are other days when I choose to look past the people around me and toward something I deem more essential or enchanting.

Jesus lived a life that was practiced at seeing. So much so, that even as he hung on the cross, experiencing intense and unrelenting pain, he saw his mother in distress and asked his friends to care for her (John 19:26). At that point, we would not expect him to be noticing others, but he did. As he struggled for breath, he would have been right to focus on the much more significant and critical task of securing our eternal union with God. But even at that moment, Jesus sees the people around him and cares for them.

I want to grow in this. I want to notice the precious people that the Lord has surrounded me with. But it is not easy to do. There are so many things that compete for my attention. There have been moments I have been too engrossed with a task, or something on my phone, to even look up! Yet, I am challenged by how the gospel writers bring us into Jesus’ line of sight, and how what Jesus sees directs his next steps. So I must ask myself, who is in my midst that I am not seeing? I continue to ask the Lord to give me his eyes to see.

And I assume I am not alone in this. Do you hide behind the shield of busyness, thinking that what you are engaged in at the moment is more important than those the Lord has placed in your path? I do. Seeing takes work. It means looking away from myself (and what I am doing) and entering into the world of another. And it takes practice. Here are a few questions to get you (and me) started:

  • Are you, like me, failing to see?

  • What captures your attention as you move through your day?

  • What do you notice yourself looking at?

  • Are you careful with what steals your attention?

  • Do you see your affection growing for what you spend time seeing (both good and bad)?

It helps me to know that Jesus sees me even now. We are never alone as he invites us to see and bless the people he places in our midst. I want to grow in doing what Jesus himself did. Will you pray with me that we grow in seeing?

Posted at: https://www.ccef.org/seeing-the-people-in-front-of-you/?mc_cid=fd1450e036&mc_eid=90be5e29a6

How a Man Loves a Woman

Article by Ben Stuart, Pastor, Washington, D.C.

“How do I love my wife well?” Young husbands frequently ask me this question, and it is a great one to ask. They are often faced with a laundry list of good tips: prioritize date nights, lead family prayer times, organize evening devotionals, take walks together, buy her flowers, write poetry, help around the house, etc.

I have found that these lists can be extremely helpful examples or extremely tyrannizing laws. If you anxiously try to accomplish them all, the stress could steal the joy of your marriage.

So, what do we do? Is there one guiding principle that can help us navigate marriage well? I believe so. I believe we see it clearly in Genesis.

God Initiates

Genesis 1:2 presents a problem: “The earth was without form and void.” “Formless” means quite literally that it lacked form; it had no structure. “Void” means that it had no content. It was not full of anything. No form, no fullness. No structure, no content.

Then God initiates. He spends the first three days of creation building structure: first air, then sea, then land. He fashions the static systems necessary to sustain life.

Then in the following three days he fills these structures with content. He fills the air with birds, the sea with sea creatures, then the land with animals.

God sees formlessness and void and responds by bringing form and fullness. He creates order, but not stuffy, stifling order. It is order specifically designed to maximize the flourishing of life! This is our God. He brings structure, then content; form, then fullness; order, then flourishing.

Foundations for Flourishing

“Men are meant to create structures so that life can flourish.”TweetShare on Facebook

You see a similar rhythm play out in Genesis 2. God places the man in the garden. Though the garden is truly a “delight,” it is not yet all that it could be. Thus, God commands the man “to work it and keep it” (Genesis 2:15). God charges the man to take the raw materials he has been given and structure the environment in such a way that promotes the flourishing of all the living things under his care. This is the role of man in the image of God!

Men are meant to create structures so that life can flourish. We create farms where the conditions can be perfectly calibrated to maximize the fruitfulness of the trees. We create ranches where animals can grow strong. We create financial structures where investments can reach their full potential. And, in the home, we create an environment where our wives and children can flourish in every area under God.

This is the mindset we are meant to take into our marriage: “How do I structure our family life so that everyone can flourish?” Certain constants will be present in every Christian home: study of the Bible, prayer, time together, time apart, etc. And yet we have the freedom to organize these constants in a way that best suits our particular spouses and children.

Crucial Questions to Ask

Therefore, as husbands we wake up every day and ask ourselves, How can I best organize the time, energy, money, and relationships that the Lord has given me to enable my wife to best flourish as a woman under God? Regarding time, have I given her enough time alone, away from the kids, to meet with God devotionally? How much time does she need? How will I create that space?

Have I given her enough time to meet with other women for support and encouragement? Have I given her enough time with me? With regard to our money, have I allocated it in the best way in order to fund those things that stir her affections for the Lord? How can I make that happen? What best helps her rest well? Vacation? Hobbies? Books?

“Jesus Christ gave all in order to create the ideal circumstances for us to flourish as children of God.”TweetShare on Facebook

For some of you the greatest gift you can give your wife is a night to get dressed up and hit the town. Others of you could go for a cheaper date night and use those funds to buy some lumber so she can build a picnic table (don’t laugh; that’s where my wife comes alive!).

With this approach, we are not tyrannized by a list of things we are supposed to be doing, but rather we are liberated to be excellent students of our wives. We are free to consider how we can use the resources God has given us to best love them.

Just Like Jesus

In many ways that is what Jesus did for us. He gave his life in order to create an environment where we can flourish under God. What do we need to be fully alive in God? The word of God? He came and preached it. The removal of our sin? He took it away on the cross. The indwelling power of God? He released the Spirit into us! A community of brothers and sisters? He created the church.

Jesus Christ gave all in order to create the ideal circumstances for us to flourish as children of God. We husbands are called to love our wives the same way. We give of our resources so that they can be all they were meant to be as the daughters of God. This pleases him and blesses them.

Ben Stuart (@Ben_Stuart_) is pastor of Passion City Church, which he helped plant in Washington, D.C.

Posted at: https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/how-a-man-loves-a-woman

The Fifth Commandment: Root of Honor

by Kevin D. Gardner

In Romans 1:28–32, the Apostle Paul goes through a litany of offenses committed by those who don’t see fit to acknowledge God. Many of the charges make sense, including that such people are “full of envy murder, strife, deceit, maliciousness” (v. 29). Yet there is one offense that might seem out of place: they are “disobedient to parents” (v. 30).

This phrase tended to make an impression on the teenagers with whom I used to work. It’s easy to say that we are not murderers or filled with malice. We might protest that we are not “gossips, slanderers, haters of God, insolent, haughty, boastful, inventors of evil” (vv. 29–30; although we might have a hard time credibly denying the first two). But who has never disobeyed his parents? We might think that disrespectful children are a uniquely modern phenomenon, but the problem certainly existed in Paul’s day. The law of Moses even prescribed death for intractably rebellious children, a penalty that seems unspeakably harsh to people today (Deut. 21:18–21).

Clearly, the Bible takes obedience to parents seriously. The fifth commandment tells us, “Honor your father and your mother, that your days may be long in the land that the Lord your God is giving you” (Ex. 20:12). Let’s explore why this commandment is included among the Ten Commandments and what it means for us.

The fifth commandment is the first on the so-called second table of the law. The first table has to do with our duties toward God, while the second table has to do with our duties toward our fellow man.

It may seem strange that a command to honor one’s father and mother is the first of the commands regarding man. But it makes sense. The first commandment begins the first table of the law by telling us that we are to have no other gods before God (Ex. 20:3). God is setting up a structure of authority: He is God, and we are His people. We are to have no other Gods. We are to recognize His authority alone and to act accordingly. In the same way, God has set up authority structures on earth, and so He begins the second table of the law by addressing the most basic of these structures, the family—one man and one woman for life, together with their children. In this context, children learn what authority is, and they learn to obey. In the same way that we are to recognize and abide by our heavenly authority, we are to recognize and abide by earthly authorities.

As God is due honor by virtue of His being our God, so our fellow man is due honor by virtue of His being God’s image bearer.  SHARE

Recognizing this parallel, the Westminster Standards expand the meaning of the fifth commandment to encompass our duties in all of our relationships. The Westminster Shorter Catechism says that the commandment requires “the preserving the honor, and performing the duties, belonging to every one in their several places and relations, as superiors, inferiors or equals” (WSC 64). The reference here is not to superiors and inferiors in terms of dignity or value but in terms of authority. The Westminster divines understood that while fathers and mothers are the first and most basic authorities in our lives, they are not the only ones. The divines also included authorities in the church and the state; we might add authorities in the classroom and the workplace.

In each of these contexts, we have various relationships. Sometimes we are superior, sometimes inferior, and sometimes equal. In each case, we have various duties and are liable to commit certain sins, and the Westminster Larger Catechism expands at length on these duties and sins (WLC 123–33). In so doing, the Larger Catechism unfolds the meaning of honor as paying what is due to them—to superiors, reverence, prayer, obedience, imitation of their godly virtues, maintenance of their dignity, and bearing with their infirmities (WLC 127); to inferiors, love, prayer, instruction, rewards, correction, and protection (WLC 129); and to equals, recognition of their dignity, deference, and rejoicing in their advancement (WLC 131).

To fail to honor those around us, whether superiors, inferiors, or equals, is to engage in rebellion against God. Especially in the case of our superiors, casting off earthly authorities is tantamount to casting off our heavenly authority, the One who placed those earthly authorities over us. This is why rebellion against parents was such a grievous sin under the old covenant and why Paul included disobedience to parents among the grave offenses committed by the ungodly.

As God is due honor by virtue of His being our God, so our fellow man is due honor by virtue of His being God’s image bearer, and so also our superiors are due honor by virtue of their having authority “by God’s ordinance” (WLC 124). When we honor our fellow men in their several relations, we honor the God who placed us all where we are.

Rev. Kevin D. Gardner is associate editor of Tabletalkmagazine and a graduate of Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia. He is an ordained teaching elder in the Presbyterian Church in America. 

Posted at: https://tabletalkmagazine.com/article/2019/02/fifth-commandment-root-honor/?fbclid=IwAR3qBVKPGVQsCzgJXXCZ6TVo3SdYnr_jHC2JlkKk8PLL2EInIlVLPpxl9vo

6 Ways to Love Others Every Day

Paul Tautges

“To have love as the guiding principle of our lives means that our continual mindset in all we do should be “What will serve the other person?” So writes Matt Perman in his excellent book, What’s Best Next. “It is not ‘What will serve me?’ but ‘What will serve them?’ The guiding mindset of our lives is to be: how can I do good for others? How can I benefit my neighbor?” Here are six practical pieces of counsel:

  1. Have real goodwill toward the other person. “Motives count. The essence of love is having real goodwill toward others–that is, truly wanting the best for them and delighting in it.” (Phil. 1:15-16.

  2. Put the other person first. “This means finding out what others need and making those needs your priority, not your own….Putting the interest of others first involves finding out what matter to them. It is not loving to impose our own grid onto others!” (Matt. 20:26-28Rom. 15:1-3).

  3. Be eager in meeting the needs of others, not begrudging and reluctant. “If love is genuine concern for others, then we see that things done from love are done joyfully and eagerly, not backwardly and reluctantly.” (Titus 2:14)

  4. Be proactive, not reactive, in doing good. “Don’t simply wait for needs to come your way. The Christian ethic is to be on the lookout to identify needs proactively and then take action to meet those needs.” (Mark 12:31)

  5. Avoid a self-protective mindset and take pains to do good for others. “We are to do good even it if requires a sacrifice on our part. Radical generosity, not self-protection, is the Christian ethic (Matt. 5:42; see also the parallel in Luke 6:32-36).”

  6. Be creative and competent in doing good, not lazy and shoddy. “If we are about serving others, then we need to be competent in serving them because incompetence does not serve people. For example, if you are helping a friend remodel his kitchen, and you cut corners, will that serve him? You are making things easier for yourself at his expense; instead of going through the trouble to do it right, you are making something that will work less effectively for him down the road, transferring the burden from yourself to him (which is the opposite of Gal. 6:2).

How Jesus Trains Husbands

Article by Guy Richard

Most of us know that Ephesians 5:25 calls husbands to love their wives “as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her,” but I am not so sure that we know what this Christlike love is supposed to look like in practice. There are no details given in Ephesians 5, no list of ten ways that husbands can accomplish this challenging command. There are no pictures showing us exactly how to do it and no warning lights to alert us when we are missing the mark. There are no indicators to encourage us when we are in the general vicinity of Christlikeness.

My marriage would certainly benefit from these kinds of helps. It has taken me far too long to understand even a little of what Ephesians 5:25 is calling me to as a husband. And my experience as a pastor tells me that most men are struggling at least as much as I am to understand what it means to love their wives. That is why I would like to take up this difficult subject and to talk about it here. I want to spend some time exploring, first, what it means to love our wives in a Christlike way, and second, how we can evaluate whether we are succeeding. My hope is to encourage husbands to give themselves more energetically to the work of loving their wives in a Christlike way.

CHRIST’S STANDARD

So, in the first place, let’s consider what it means for husbands to love their wives as “Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her.” When we look at the text before us, we can say for sure that our love for our wives must be sacrificial. And this means that we must be willing—should it be required of us—to lay down our lives on behalf of our wives and thereby make the ultimate sacrifice. But, as important as this is, most of us will never be asked to make this kind of sacrifice. So while we can readily acknowledge our willingness to love our wives in this way, it remains only theoretical and hypothetical for the vast majority of us.

It is far more difficult to daily sacrifice our pride, our reputation, our selfishness, our perceived “rights,” or our desires to be served than it is to sacrifice our lives. And yet, these daily sacrifices are part and parcel of what it means to love our wives sacrificially. I have never met a husband who would not willingly lay down his life for his wife. But I have met many who refuse to sacrifice themselves in the smaller ways and, therefore, make life very hard for their wives on a daily basis.

Jesus paid the ultimate price, laying down His life for the sake of His bride, the church. 

 

Jesus exemplified both aspects of sacrificial love. He did not come into the world in order “to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many” (Mark 10:45). He laid down His “rights,” setting aside many of the prerogatives that belonged to Him as the God of the universe (Gal. 4:4), emptying Himself (Phil. 2:7). He laid down His own will and subjected it to that of His Father in heaven (cf. Matt. 26:39). He came to serve rather than to be served. And He paid the ultimate price, laying down His life for the sake of His bride, the church.

God has given those of us who are husbands a tremendous privilege to model Christ to our wives and our families: to lay down our lives every day, to serve them rather than seeking to be served by them, and to give ourselves on their behalf. That is a tremendous privilege. I often hear men say that they feel like they are giving more in their marriage than they are getting out of it or that they are giving more than their wife is giving. My response is usually something like this: “Congratulations! That is exactly the way it is supposed to be.” God calls us as men to give ourselves every day in service to our wives, to lay ourselves out sacrificially—to spend and be spent—just as Christ gave Himself sacrificially in every way for His bride.

Now I will be the first to admit that I fall short of achieving this standard in my marriage. I do not consistently love my wife in this kind of Christlike way. I am far too often prideful and selfish. Frequently I want to have my own needs met and to get more out of my marriage than I give. And so I need to be reminded that Jesus’ sacrificial love for me covers over all of my own failings to love my wife sacrificially. I need to be reminded that He loved me to the end despite my sins and my failings. And I need that love to “train” me to love my wife in a way that reflects His love for me (Titus 2:11–12).

THE BRIDE’S SANCTIFICATION

In the second place, consider how we can know if we are actually succeeding in loving our wives in a Christlike way. Some of us go through life convinced that we are fulfilling Ephesians 5:25, either because we have watered down Paul’s command to mean only that we should literally lay down our lives on behalf of our wives or because we are judging ourselves by our intentions rather than by our actions. Either way, we are fooling ourselves. How can we know for sure? Is there something we can look for in our wives to know whether or not we are loving them in a way that even remotely resembles the love of Christ? I believe that there is. And I think we see that in Ephesians 5:26–27. These verses indicate that the result of Christ’s sacrificial love for His bride is that His bride becomes sanctified, “holy and without blemish.”

Remember that Augustine defined perfect beauty in terms of God Himself. For Augustine, God is the source of all beauty and the standard by which all beauty is to be measured. That which best reflects the image of God is the most beautiful. The Scriptures teach us that Jesus is the perfect image of God: “He is the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature” (Heb. 1:3); “He is the image of the invisible God,” and “in him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell” (Col. 1:15, 19). This means that Jesus is the most beautiful person, the standard by which our beauty is to be measured. If we understand the process of becoming “sanctified” as a process of becoming more like Christ, then Ephesians 5:26–27suggests that the result of Christ’s sacrificial love is that His bride, the church, becomes more and more beautiful over time.

I have found this to be especially helpful in diagnosing the condition of my own marriage and in determining how well (or not) I am loving my wife in a Christlike manner. If I am giving myself sacrificially to my wife, then I should expect that over time my wife will become more and more beautiful. Her beauty is the test by which I know how I am doing as a husband. If she is bitter or beat down with discouragement or feelings of insignificance, then this is an indication that I am probably doing something wrong. I remember the day when I saw this for the first time in Ephesians 5 and I realized that I was not loving my wife in a Christlike manner. It was a difficult day, but it was a good day. It was a day in which I could repent for my failures and seek God’s and my wife’s forgiveness, a day in which I could begin striving to understand more and more of Christ’s sacrificial love for me and start applying that love to my wife. If you have been struggling to love your wife, I pray that today will be that day for you.

This post was originally published on September 6, 2017.

Dr. Guy M. Richard is executive director and assistant professor of systematic theology at Reformed Theological Seminary in Atlanta. He is author of What Is Faith? and The Supremacy of God in the Theology of Samuel Rutherford.

Posted at: https://tabletalkmagazine.com/posts/2019/02/jesus-trains-husbands/