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THE
CHRISTIAN HEART
Do you treat others
like you would want them to treat you? We think that if people were
nicer to us, we could be nicer to them, don’t we? But that’s the
Problem. Jesus didn’t say, “Treat people the same way they treat
you.” He said, “Treat people like you would want them to treat
you.”
We should know that one of the best compliments a person can give us
is to listen to what we are saying. Think about your own
experiences: Whenever a person really listened to you, it made you
feel positive, didn’t it? But when someone did not want to listen
to you, it made you feel very negative. A very good rule of thumb is
this: “Listen to others as you would have them listen to you.”
Today, we are going to be talking about the Golden Rule. We all know
it … Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. But there
is an exception to that. Let me explain.
When my daughter was a teenager, I became a very protective father.
I had three rules that her boyfriends has to read, every time they
came over.
1-
If you pull up and honk, you’d best be delivering pizza, because
you are not taking my daughter out.
2- You do not touch my daughter in front of me. In fact, you
do not even so much as glance at her in front of me. And after you
go out, if your hands touch my daughter, I will have them removed.
3- Do not try to be my friend, as while you are dating my
daughter, you are my enemy. The only thing I want to hear from you
is what time you are bringing her home, and the only word I am
looking for is “early.”
Now, sometimes I
tried to be nice. Like the time a young man came to pick her up and
I met him at the door. I shook his hand with a grip that could turn
coal into diamonds. Noticing the pierced eyebrow, I asked him if he
had that done because he was stupid, or just because he wanted to
look stupid.
So we need to apply the Golden Rule to every situation except when
your daughter is of dating age. Then it is optional if you are a
father.
Getting past the humor, we do need to treat others as well as we
would like for them to treat us. But to do it effectively, we must
do something first. We must love our fellow man. Notice I said love,
not like. You can love a person without wanting to become best
friends or go out to dinner with them. You can love them enough to
want them to go to heaven. You must love them enough to treat them
with the same caliber of respect that you desire.
MATTHEW 5:43-44 tells us,
“You have
heard it said, ‘Love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ I
tell you, ‘Love your enemy and pray for those who persecute
you.”
We are commanded to
love everyone. That is how Jesus lived on this earth, and if we are
Christians, we must strive to be like Christ. How will the world
know that we are Christians?
They will not know that by reading a sign over our doors. They will
only know that by the love we have in our hearts for other people.
Is your relationship with God a part of your relationship with men?
Did you know that failure in one will cause failure in the other?”
Did you know that there are more important things in your life than
you? It is true. We are a part of those things in our life, but we
are not always the most important thing in our life.
For instance, I take part in spreading the word of God. But I am not
more important than the word of God. Even though I might be doing
something, I might not be the most important element in that
something.
That being said, it is still nice to have somebody encourage you in
what you are doing by giving you a sincere compliment. There is an
old saying that goes: “A pat on the back is only a few vertebrae
away from a kick in the pants, but the results are much better.”
1. WHAT HAS YOUR ATTITUDE BEEN LIKE LATELY?
Have
you been able to show the Golden Rule in your attitude lately? Many
people will say they can do that with ease, “if only” –
·
· · they would do things the way I do
· · · they would see things like I do
· · · If only, if only, if only
Jesus
did not say to do these things “if” they do something for you
first. He commanded us to love people, even when they don’t do
anything for us; or even when they ridicule us and persecute us.
Remember that the one area in our lives that is the most troublesome
is how we deal with other people. Too many times, we find ourselves
in negative and unhappy relationships with others and neither one
wants to be flexible enough or be the first to give, even if it
would save the relationship.
There is an old expression that says, “A smile is a crooked line
that sets a lot of things straight.” If you start looking at
everyone you meet as a person who is, or could be, a Christian – I
promise that your relationships and your own happiness will change
for the better.
There was a man once sitting by a tree near a creek, reading his
Bible. Something caught his eye and he looked to see a scorpion
caught between two roots of the tree.
The man reached over to help the scorpion loose, but each time he
tried to grab it, the scorpion tried to sting him. A man who was
standing nearby watching this said, “Don’t you know it is the
scorpion’s nature to sting? Why don’t you just forget it and let
it die there?”
The man smiled and looked up and replied, “Should it be necessary
that I change my nature to accommodate someone else’s nature? The
scorpion stings and I help, that is our natures.” When God’s
love fills your heart, you cannot help but share it – with all
things.
Jesus knew there are two ways of giving. One way is to give in hopes
that you will get something out of it. That is like the man who
bought his wife a ping-pong table for her birthday.
He knew she wanted it, but he expected to use it as much as she did.
In effect, he didn’t just give to her; he gave to her with the
expectation that he would have it, too. When we give with
expectations of getting something back, we aren’t really giving in
the first place.
The other way is to give with absolutely no expectation of getting
anything back. That is what Jesus is talking about. That is the best
way to show your love is to freely give, just because you want
someone else to be fulfilled in some way. You sacrifice your own
feelings for someone else’s feelings.
What you feel on the inside of your heart determines what you show
on the outside of your attitude. It is necessary to remember that
having a positive does not depend on your circumstances but on your
attitude. Or as one person said, “A cloudy day is no match for a
sunny disposition.”
PHILIPPIANS 2:5, says,
“Your
attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus.”
Unfortunately,
in too many cases, our attitudes are all about demanding our rights
while shunning our responsibilities. And our biggest responsibility
is to be Christ-like in our hearts. And the best way we can show
that is by being Christ-like to other people – ALL other people,
even those who have done you wrong. Jesus was beaten, whipped, hung
on a cross and killed, but He continued to love those who did it. A
person who looks up to God does not look down on other people – no
matter who they are.
Has your attitude towards others been positive lately?
2.
HAVING A GODLY ATTITUDE
The
ancient Israelites were slaves in Egypt. They were not free and
could not live up to their potential as humans. They wanted to be
free, and finally, when they turned to God as one, God listened and
God led them out of captivity. What they did not realize was that
God was with them all the time, but He rarely intervenes without
somebody asking Him to.
Many in the church are slaves today, too! They are slaves to
materialism; to their jobs; or even to relaxing in general! We allow
things to control us! You might disagree with that, but watch how
fast you jump when circumstances tell you to!
We need to do what the Israelites did. We need to cry out to the
Lord in unison, as one voice, and ask for deliverance – both
individually and nationally. There is just something about talking
to God that lifts a person’s attitude up.
Another thing: Our attitudes would be much more positive if we could
forget our troubles as quickly as we forget our blessings.
Jesus made a statement that explains His entire ministry was about.
It is so basic that even a child can understand it, yet it is so
profound that none of us can live up to it without the power of
Jesus.
What is the statement that Jesus made? It is the one that most of us
learned as children. It is in MATTHEW 7:12.
“So
in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you,
for this sum’s up the law and the Prophets.”
Jesus’
whole ministry was one of seeking the blessings of God. But right in
the middle of it, He seems to have thrown us a curve ball. Now, not
only do we have to live in right standing with Him, but we also have
to live in right standing with other people. He is basically telling
us that if we treat others as good as we want to be treated, we will
receive God’s blessings for doing that.
We are evaluated by God, and rewarded in direct proportion to the
way we treat and feel about other people. That is scary, isn’t it?
But to be successful as Christians, we must do this.
There is a story of a young boy who had been invited to attend a
friend’s birthday party and was eagerly awaiting the day he could
go. On that day, however, there was a near blizzard outside, and his
father thought it was too dangerous for him to walk the short 3
blocks to his friends house, and it was much too dangerous to drive
the boy.
The little boy reacted tearfully and begged his father to let him
go. Finally, the father recanted and gave his permission. The boy
bundled himself up started walking down the street. The wind and
snow blew so hard against him that what should have only taken 10
minutes took nearly an hour.
Finally, the boy got to the house. As he rang the doorbell, he
looked back to see the shadowy figure of his father disappearing
into the snow. His father had followed every footstep to make sure
the boy was safe.
It is all about sacrifice, isn’t it? When we are able to sacrifice
what we want; what we need; what we think; so that we can freely
give to someone else what they want or need, we have proven
ourselves successful as a Christian.
If your attitude has been Christ-like, it has been positive. But
there is another question we must ask ourselves.
3. HOW DO YOU TREAT OTHERS?
A
brother and sister were in the attic looking through the letters
their parents had written to each other many years ago. The boy
asked, “Are you sure these belong to mom and dad?” The sister
assured him that they did. He then told her, “That’s not the
names they call each other now!”
Did you know that each time you talk negative to your spouse, you
are actually robbing him or her of some of their self-worth? Yet,
how many times do we come home very tired or get busy concentrating
on something just to snap at the other?
In those situations, we would never think about saying that we
didn’t love them, so why are we talking to them in such a way that
says it to them?
The marriage counselor told the husband to start being more
attentive to the wife and start treating her with more love. So, one
day he comes home a little early with a dozen roses in one hand and
a box of chocolates in the other.
His wife opens the door, sees him and burst into tears. In between
sobs, she says, “Little Johnny threw up, your parents called and
said they were coming over for dinner, and to top it all off, you
come home drunk!”
This describes too many people today. Now, if we cannot treat our
families better than that, how are we going to be able to treat
other people better than that?
There are many people who have completely severed their
relationships with family just because of something that happened
years ago. In some cases, they remember something happened, but have
no idea what happened. And there they sit, in pride, thinking about
how much they have been hurt and refusing to reach out to the person
in the family who hurt them.
Billy Graham used to have a daily column in a newspaper. One day, he
got a letter from a man who said his dad was dying and wanted to see
the grown son one more time. But the son wrote that his dad had left
him when he was a kid, and wanted to know why he should go see the
father now.
Billy Graham wrote back and told the son to put himself in the shoes
of his father. He said, “If you messed up your relationship with
your family, wouldn’t you pray for one more chance to make things
right before you died? Wouldn’t you want one last chance to tell
them you were sorry? Wouldn’t you want one more chance to be some
kind of a blessing to them? That is what your father is trying to do
now.”
He went on to say, “It isn’t about your dad’s need of
forgiveness, but your willingness to extend your forgiveness. It
isn’t about how somebody else has treated you, but how you are now
treating them.
In
PHILIPPIANS 2:4-5, we are told how our attitudes are supposed
to be.
‘Each
of you should look not only to your own interests, but also to the
interest of others. Your attitude should be the same as that of
Christ Jesus.’
But
we cannot have the same interests that Jesus has unless we first
have Jesus. He is not just somebody who lived a long time ago. We
can have a personal relationship with Jesus. We can laugh with Jesus
and we can cry with Jesus. We can go to Him in our time of need and
He will help us.
You reap what you sow. What have you been sowing for the Lord
lately?
Little Chad was in 2nd grade. He was a little slower than the other
children and that made them shun Chad.
A couple of weeks before Valentines’ Day, Chad came home and told
his mother that he wanted to make cards for everyone in his class.
She knew how they treated her son, but she helped him make 35 cards.
On Valentine’s Day, she waited by the curb for the school bus to
bring him home. When it got there, she saw all the kids laughing and
getting off the bus, and then she saw Chad walking by himself near
the back of the bus.
When he got off the bus, he was very happy, and told his mother that
he didn’t forget a single classmate, that he remembered them all.
They still shunned Chad, but he remembered each one of them with a
card.
We have shunned Jesus Christ from the very beginning, too, but He
has remembered each one of us in His love. And He wants us to show
that love to other people, too, just like Chad did – for the sake
of loving, not for the purpose of receiving anything back.
Obedience is not always easy. Chad’s classmates were not treating
him very well, but he continued to treat them the way he wanted to
be treated, not the way he was being treated. That little boy was
living the Golden Rule. How many of us can say the same thing?
If this lost and hurting world is going to come to the saving
knowledge of Jesus Christ, it will not be from some epiphany of
sorts. It will be from people like you and me showing the love of
Christ to others from our hearts.
Do you remember the man I told you about who tried to free that
scorpion so it could live? Jesus came to earth in hopes of freeing
us so that we might also live.
Here is an old Bible and a new Bible. What is the difference in
them? One is newer, one has all the pages, one hasn’t been marked
in very much.
Do you think God loves this old Bible? Do you think He loves this
new Bible? Why? Because they say the same thing – His words, and
He wants us to use them to help other people come to Him, doesn’t
He?
Those Bibles are us. Some are younger and some are older. Some are
taller and some are shorter. What I am getting at is that our
differences make no difference in the eyes of God. And when He looks
down upon mankind, He expects us to look at those around us and see
us looking past our differences. God wants us to look at each person
we meet as a person who might work in His kingdom.
We have no problem loving our friends, but Jesus tells us to love
our enemies, too. We can only do that if our attitude is
Godly-positive and not worldly-negative.
We need to realize that He is the Giver and we need to receive what
He has given. He can give all day long, but unless we make a choice
to accept it, His gift does us no good whatsoever.
INVITATION
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