Following Jesus Christ is
counter-intuitive. Always has been.
In His famous “Sermon the Mount,” Jesus teaches that life in the Kingdom of
God is antithetical to what most mortals think and feel.
For instance, if someone attacks you, Jesus says don’t defend yourself nor
retaliate.
If someone mistreats you, forgive them.
If someone offers sincere correction, receive it in humility without being
defensive or taking offense.
If someone compels you to go one mile, go two.
If someone steals your shirt, give them your coat also.
If someone hates you, love them.
If someone trashes you (gossips, slanders, invokes curses on your head),
don’t act in kind. Pray for them.
In other words, even when you’re being hated, spoken evil of, lied about, and
mistreated, keep the love on.
Never turn it off.
Now that doesn't mean you are to have warm fuzzy feelings in your belly
toward those who act like sub-human pigs.
That’s not what Jesus meant by “love.”
Nor does it mean that you are to trust people who act in fleshly ways. While
love is unconditional, trust is conditional and must be earned.
Nor does loving a person mean that you are to fulfill their every request or
whim.
Rather, Jesus defines love quite clearly for us in the Gospels: It’s treating
others the same way we want to be treated in every situation.
To illustrate, here are some examples of people I've known in the past who
kept the love on.
Jeff excelled at his job and earned the favor of his boss as well as a
promotion and a raise. Two people (who were buddies with each other) now had a
common enemy. Both of these befuddled souls were insanely jealous of Jeff and
began fabricating false narratives about him in an effort to knock him off his
horse. Some who were gullible in the office believed the lies and stopped
talking to Jeff.
Jeff kept the love on. He forgave those two people and didn't retaliate
by spreading lies about them as they had done to him. A few noticed that Jeff
was taking the high road and their respect for him only increased. A year later,
one of Jeff’s detractors got fired. The other had a mental breakdown. Jeff was
promoted again.
“The one who states his case first seems right, until the other comes
and examines him.” ~ Proverbs 18:17
“Things the Lord hates . . . a false witness who breathes out lies, and
one who sows discord among brothers.” ~ Proverbs 6:19
Don was coaching a baseball team. He had to cut someone from the team because
Don and the assistant coach didn't feel the guy had what it took to be on the
team. When the guy was told that he was being cut, he became livid and shortly
thereafter began demonizing Don and the other coach. One of Don’s friends —
someone quite naive — believed the false rumors and broke their friendship with
Don over it.
Don kept the love on. Don forgave the guy who was spreading the lies and
he also forgave his friend who believed them. Don never spoke ill of either men.
When people asked why he cut the guy from the team (after he was whining about
it to everyone who would listen), Don answered honestly without exaggeration.
Eventually, Don’s friend came to his senses and saw through what was going on.
And the friendship was restored. Last I heard, Don was still coaching
successfully and things were going great in his life.
“A troublemaker plants seeds of strife; gossip separates the best of
friends.” ~ Proverbs 16:18
“It is to one’s glory to overlook an offense.” ~ Proverbs
19:11
Sarah’s boss made her the manager of a group of people at her local store.
One of the women who wanted Sarah’s position disagreed with her method of
leadership. This person tried to persuade Sarah to take on her vision
and methods. Sarah listened graciously, but choose not to go in the woman’s
direction. The woman was insulted that Sarah didn't adopt her views. So she
began laying plans to subvert Sarah’s leadership by trying to win the favor of
the other workers who were under Sarah, seeking to persuade them that Sarah was
incompetent.
Sarah kept the love on. She forgave the hater and didn't retaliate. She
kept silent on the matter, except when she was specifically asked about what the
woman was saying about Sarah in private. Eventually, the hater at Sarah’s job
eventually fell on her own sword. She got in trouble with Sarah’s boss over
another matter and was fired.
“If one gives an answer before he hears, it is his folly and shame.” ~
Proverbs 18:13
“Whoever conceals hatred with lying lips and spreads slander is a
fool.” ~ Proverbs 10:18
In all of the above scenarios, people opted to walk in their flesh by
becoming jealous and/or taking needless offense.
Sadly, it’s often your fellow “Christians” who are the purveyors of this kind
of fleshly conduct.
Even so, following Jesus Christ is taking the high road when others opt for
the gutter.
When God’s people hear the way of Jesus in this regard, their natural
response is usually, But this is so hard!
No, it’s not hard. It’s humanly impossible.
But we aren't called to live as “mere mortals” – 1 Corinthians 3:3-4.
It’s only possible when we learn to live by
the indwelling life of Christ.
For His life knows the cross – death to self, losing, yielding, laying your
life down.
And it will always lead you up a hill during times of mistreatment.
In addition, the nature of His life is love. But the word “love” is cheap
these days.
If you love someone, you won’t lie about them or distort the truth.
If you love someone, you will always think the best of their intentions.
If you love someone, you will treat them the way you want to be treated in
every circumstance.
Following Jesus Christ today — or as I've put it so often, “following your
spiritual instincts” — means transcending the reactions of the flesh.
And in so doing, God gets glory, for you are a child of the most High — the
One who allows His rain to shine on the wicked and the righteous alike.
So keep the love on . . .
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