“You have heard that it was said, ‘Love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.” Matthew 5:43-44 (NIV)



Unfairness is an unfortunate part of the human condition. Between politicians and religious people, you can’t live on this earth for long without feeling like someone has targeted or treated you unfairly.


Maybe it’s a parent who put you through a miserable childhood. Maybe is an ex who continues to share lies about you. Maybe it’s a neighbor who’s spreading gossip about you in your neighborhood. Maybe it’s a co-worker who is making false accusations against you at work.

 

You can choose to respond to the people who hurt you by hurting them. That’s the easiest choice to make, no doubt about it, but it’s not what God calls you to do.


God gives us another option in his Word: “You have heard that it was said, ‘Love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you” (Matthew 5:43-44 NIV).


When people hurt you, they expect you to retaliate.

They expect you to seek revenge.

But God wants you to do the exact opposite—

he wants you to respond in love and pray for them.


Responding to mistreatment with love keeps the other person from controlling you. You can’t control when another person treats you unfairly, but you can control whether you get bitter in the process. You can control your response to injustice.


Just because you respond to an offender lovingly doesn’t mean you continue to allow injustice to happen. On the contrary, we must lovingly seek justice. We must work for justice in the world without retaliating. The Bible commands us to “be fair-minded and just. Do what is right!” (Jeremiah 22:3 NLT).


Martin Luther King Jr. was a great example of this. He fought against injustice without violence. He overcame evil through the power of love. He followed the example of Jesus, who chose to forgive his persecutors even as they were killing him.


That’s our calling as followers of Jesus. Unfairness and injustice may be part of the human condition, but we must not feed into it. Instead, God calls us to respond in love.

Blessings,

Pastor Bob

New Series starts this Sunday!

The Bible has over 7,000 promises listed for the believer and one of them is that we are “blessed coming in and going out.” Sunday, I start a new series – “The Keys to a Blessed Life: The Beatitudes.” Each week, we’ll take a look at the individual Beatitudes that Jesus spoke of during the Sermon on the Mount.

I hope you will make an effort to join us this coming Sunday as we study what “Poor in Spirit” really means. I know it will help you understand how to depend on God more than yourself – it’s FAITH in Him.

 

Keys to a Blessed Life – The Beatitudes

“Blessed are the poor in Spirit!”



Sunday – 10:30 am at Crossroads Community Church. 

Invite someone to join you this Sunday!

Only One more Sunday for Pastor Appreciation Month


Here are 6 Easy Ways to Thank Your Pastor for hearing God and starting our church home, and then not quit when times were tough.


Send Pastor Bob a quick note of Thanks - click here!

When you give to support your local church, you give what you could keep for yourself and spend on our own desires. 


Supporting a church home is a privilege and a necessity. We give to be obedient to the Word and to make sure that there is a place where others who don’t know God’s love can find a safe place to meet him and worship Him.


Thank you for loving our community enough to help insure they have a place to come, worship and learn about how much God really loves them!





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