The depths of love

Rachel HauckCorinthians, like Jesus, Love, Romans, transformation 2 Comments

I posted before on owing no one anything except love. Paul wrote to the Roman church, “don’t run up huge debts, except the huge debt of love you owe each other.”


Lately I’ve been meditating on true, real, heart issued love. Loving when we’re wronged, when we’re cheated or over looked. Keeping our mouths shut when we have a right to say, “I told you so.”

I want to love like Jesus loved. When He was chained to a poll or stone and whipped, He said, “Father forgive them.” As they nailed Him to the Cross, He endured.

Love is patient and kind. Keeps no record of wrong. Endures. Does not seek it’s own, it not arrogant.

Can I say I love in this manner? No. But more and more my heart yearns to love with all sincerity. I find comfort in the back row, being forgotten, over looked.

Yet, here’s where love can crash into the ditch. I’ve seen it in many true believers who desire to exemplify Jesus. They embrace sin.

Loving like Jesus doesn’t require us to embrace sin. It actually challenges us to speak out against sin. How can a man or woman turn from their “wicked ways” if we don’t point the way to Jesus and the Cross?

If loving my fellow man means I look like the world instead of heaven, then I can’t love. But I’m convinced loving my fellow man demands I look like and act like heaven.

For me, it means I don’t grumble or complain. I don’t compare myself and wonder why this person is getting that thing instead of me. It means I give of myself without demand or expectation of return.

It requires prayer and devotion to the Word in order for my heart to be changed. Love is not about others changing, but me becoming conformed to the image of Christ.

“Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your minds,” Paul wrote to the Romans.

Loving like Jesus transforms. I’m convinced of it. In ’09, I want to love. To walk in humility. I’m confident He loves me, has good in store for me. I don’t need to elbow my way into the future.

What about you? Can you think of areas of your heart and mind love can transform? Are you waiting for someone else to change? Really, your prayer should be, “change me, Father.”

Let’s take the journey of love in ’09. Real love. Study 1 Corinthians 13.


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