If I dared to pick any fault in the way the Bible is written (and I wouldn't dare), I would say that the Bible too often makes the most fundamental statements in only a dozen
words or less, and we mere mortals are prone to run over them without pause and to miss their importance. One such statement is the starting point for
"Let all that you do be done in love"
Oh how we abuse that vord "nice." It means "fine" but we abuse that word too. When I use the word "nice", I refer to the elegance of that which has been carefully selected from the mass, like a vase fashioned from the lump of clay by the skilled potter, or the oil distilled from a herb. When your life is carried upon the wind like a sigh, and the wind whispers the summation, will the wind be saying that you did all in love? What a "nice" life
Is this an ideal beyond achievement? No, it is a command from God, therefore we must be able to achieve it, for God does not command the impossible
How can we be so
Say you get sick of taking the kids to school. You know it has to be done. They need you to do it for them. The way to their school is neither short nor safe. But it cuts into your day,ties you down. So easy to be sharp, to snap, "Hurry up you dawdler!" when the kid isn't really to blame. You can change that habit. You can make the going to school time a happy start to the day for your kids. Or, if you've got one of those kids who's like a bear with a sore head in the morning, then you can at least make yourself tolerant. You can
Christianity is called "The Way" and our living the Christian life is called a "walk"
The trouble with this sort of stuff, is that you grasp it for awhile, but it becomes a nine day wonder when it was meant to become a habit. The dedicated Christian is not loving in fits and starts, but loves constantly. How do we succeed in forming the habits that lead to achieving the ideal? We saw in our first point that the ideal is attainable. We saw in our second point that the secret is to form good habits. Yet we seem to have
One of the reasons we don't manage to do ALL things in love, is that we try to do too many things. If we could simplify
Jesus says, "Seek first God’s kingdom and his righteousness..."