“. . . pursue
righteousness, faith, love, peace with those who call on the Lord out of
a pure heart”
(2
Timothy 2:22).
Love liberates us from
the main thing we need to be liberated from:
absorption with ourselves.
Sin turns us entirely inward; it twists our thinking into a selfish
shape. And if we’ve been sinning long enough that it’s become a habit,
our thinking and our values, motives, desires, and goals have probably
come under the control of one basic consideration:
what we want. Even
when we do good deeds for others, we may do them because, basically,
such acts of kindness help us to feel about ourselves the way we want to
feel. Sin captures us in a very selfish cage.
One of the grand effects
of the gospel of Christ is that it frees us from this preoccupation with
ourselves. Paul said that the goal or object of Christian teaching is
love: “The purpose of the commandment is love from a pure heart, from a
good conscience, and from sincere faith”
(1
Timothy 1:5). This
kind of love is the very antithesis of selfishness. It lifts us out of
the bog of self-centered thinking and sets us free to enjoy a new and
better focus. It gets us out of ourselves and into a connection with all
those things external to ourselves that we were meant to be related to.
Love is clearly vital to
our connection to other human beings, especially our fellow Christians.
Without the self-sacrificial love produced by the gospel, we wouldn’t be
able to love others, at least with the highest kind of love
(John
13:34, 35). But
what a difference the gospel makes! “Since you have purified your souls
in obeying the truth through the Spirit in sincere love of the brethren,
love one another fervently with a pure heart”
(1
Peter 1:22).
But more importantly,
love is vital to our connection to God. Sin is the root of the problem,
certainly, and until that barrier is removed by the gospel, we can’t
have any fellowship with God. But even with our past sins forgiven,
there can be no fellowship if we remain self-centered. So if we’re
Christians, we need to let our hearts be transformed —
opened up — by
love. “Let all those who seek You rejoice and be glad in You; and let
those who love Your salvation say continually, ‘Let God be magnified!’”
(Psalm
70:4).
Other Articles by Gary Henry
Loving What is Right
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