
Volume 1 Issue 1
WHAT’S LOVE GOT TO DO WITH
IT?
|
“B |
ut I have {this} against you, that you have left
your first love.” (Revelation 2:4)
Speaking to the first of the Seven Churches in Revelation Jesus confronts the
Ephesians with this truth. He says many good things about them, but also points
out this failing concerning love.
A few years ago singer Tina
Turner had a hit song entitled “What’s Love Got to do with It?” It demeans love
as nothing more than a “second-hand emotion”. Sadly, our world, and even
Christians, that is, true, born-again Christians, have a tendency to allow love
to become unnecessary, something that takes second place to doing. Jesus told
the Ephesians, “I know your deeds and your toil and perseverance, and that you
cannot endure evil men, and you put to the test those who call themselves
apostles, and they are not, and you found them {to be} false; and you have
perseverance and have endured for My name's sake, and have not grown weary.”
(Revelation 2:2-3) What a wonderful commendation; one that any Christian would
be glad to have said about him. However, Jesus goes on to say, “But I have
{this} against you, that you have left your first love.” (Revelation 2:4)
The name, Ephesus, means
“Desirable”, but what we as human beings find desirable, the Lord finds fault
with. The Ephesians were known for their deeds, and toil, and perseverance, all
things worthy of praise, and the Lord points them out as good, BUT something
was missing.
The word deeds used here
means “works or the result or object of employment”. It speaks of our day to
day activities and the result of those activities. That can be good or bad
depending on what we busy ourselves with. If we help a little old lady across
the street that, of course, is good. The result being she safely comes to the
other side unharmed. On the other hand if we sell drugs to a child that is bad.
The result being either a drug addict or an early death. These types of deeds
are obviously good or bad, but what about good deeds, from a human point of
view, that God views as bad? What makes a good deed a good deed? Did not Cain
and Abel both bring an offering to the Lord? Yet, only Abel’s was accepted. The
story of these offerings and why God accepted Abel’s and not Cain’s is long and
deep, but it comes down to love. Abel offered the best that he had, not
counting the cost; Cain brought his grain offering, but not the firstfruits,
not the best that he had. He had counted the cost and found it too high a price
to pay, but wanting to APPEAR to worship the Lord he went through the actions
(deeds) of offering a sacrifice, but love was missing. Cain offered his
sacrifice to be seen as righteous before man not God.
This is a spirit that has
been found among the Lord’s followers throughout the ages. Jesus said, “The
scribes and the Pharisees have seated themselves in the chair of Moses;
therefore all that they tell you, do and observe, but do not do according to
their DEEDS; for they say {things,} and do not do {them.} And they tie up heavy
loads, and lay them on men's shoulders; but they themselves are unwilling to
move them with {so much as} a finger. But they do all their deeds to be NOTICED
by men; for they broaden their phylacteries, and lengthen the tassels {of their
garments.}And they love the place of honor at banquets, and the chief seats in
the synagogues, and respectful greetings in the market places, and being called
by men, Rabbi.” (Matthew 23:2-7) The
deeds of the Pharisees and scribes were not necessarily wrong. It was the
SPIRIT in which they were done that brought Jesus’ condemnation. After all, He
told those listening to Him to do and observe, but not as they themselves did
them. Our righteousness is not to bring glory to ourselves, but to the Lord. The
RESULT of the self-righteous deeds of the Pharisees and scribes was just the
opposite of that; they got the glory that belongs to the Lord alone.
Christians sometimes suffer
from a disease that could be called “do-gooditis”. It is as if we believe that
if we do enough good deeds God will accept us. This is an idea that has plagued
mankind since the dawn of time. It has such a tenacious hold on us because it
appeals to the flesh. The thought of charity is repulsive to fallen man. Satan
would have us believe that salvation is achieved the old fashioned way: we earn
it. Satan does not care if we do good for others as long as we do it for the
wrong reason, because he knows that our goodness is one of his most effective
weapons he has to keep us from the salvation that God offers. Paul clearly
states, “He saved us, not on the basis of deeds which we have DONE IN
RIGHTEOUSNESS, but according to His mercy, by the washing of regeneration and
renewing by the Holy Spirit.” (Titus 3:5) Deeds without love is of value only
to us. “Let us consider how to stimulate one another to love and good deeds.”
(Hebrews 10:24) Notice the order here: love first, good deeds second. This is
the proper way to do the works of God. “They said therefore to Him, ‘What shall
we do, that we may work the works of God?’ Jesus answered and said to them,
‘This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent.’” (John
6:28-29) Love begins with a knowledge of Jesus Christ. Once that knowledge
begins to grow we find ourselves doing unto others as we would have them do
unto us regardless if we get recognized for it or not.
However, even beyond our
deeds there are those things that we toil at. The word literally means to
“cut”, implying a reducing of strength. It speaks of beating the breast in
grief, a wailing as we face the worst life throws in our face. It is those
things that tear at our heart and makes us fight to the point of exhaustion at
times. There are those who battle against abortion, homosexuality, pornography,
child or spousal abuse, sexual promiscuity, and persecution of Christians here
in America and abroad where Christians are dying for their faith at the hands
of godless governments.
These and many other causes
are worth fighting for and we should. Someone once said that, “All evil needs
in order to triumph is for good men to do nothing”. This is true. We should
fight for those things that the Lord has placed upon our hearts. Nevertheless,
there is a right way and a wrong way to do this. Because these burdens upon our
hearts are sometimes very painful, it is easy for us to strike out at the
PERSON rather than the SIN. Is it the abortionist we fight or abortion,
homosexuals or homosexuality, the pornographer or pornography, abusers or
abuse, adulterers and fornicators or adultery and fornication? We must never
forget that as we are fighting the good fight, Jesus died for the homosexual,
the pornographer, the abuser, the adulterer, the fornicator. David prayed,
“Blessed be the LORD, my rock, who trains my hands for war, {and} my fingers
for battle.” (Psalms 144:1) Yes, we are in a war in this world, but “our
struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the
powers, against the world forces of this darkness, against the SPIRITUAL
{FORCES} OF WICKEDNESS IN THE HEAVENLY {PLACES.} (Ephesians 6:12) How hard this
is! It is easier to hate someone who does things that wound us within our
hearts and the hearts of our children than to love them as the Lord does.
This is not to say we should
not punish evildoers or seek to pass laws that will protect society. Abortion
is murder and those who practice it and deceive others into believing otherwise
must be stopped. Homosexuality is a sin and those who are indoctrinating our
society and especially our children with the lie that it is simply a legitimate
alternate lifestyle must be exposed and resisted. Pornography is not the
victimless vice the world would have us believe. Wives and children and
families are torn apart by it. Abuse toward members of our families should
never be excused. Adultery is a crime that wounds the heart in a way that few
ever recover from. Fornication, once condemned by society is now so common even
some Christians find nothing wrong with multiple sex partners before marriage
or living with someone outside the sanctity of marriage. Fatherless households
are tearing the very fiber of our society apart. Our sons are not taught what
it means to be a man, to take responsibility for himself and his family.
Daughters are not given the love they desperately need from the one man in
their lives that can teach them of the priceless gift the Lord has given them
by being a woman and sharing her life with her husband. It has come to the
point that women have become more masculine and men have become more feminine.
The feelings and emotions that make a woman a woman are looked upon as
weaknesses as women compete with men for secular careers, placing more
importance upon their jobs than their children.
The fact that so many men
neglect to provide for the children they fathered by not paying child support
speaks volumes about how far as a nation we have fallen. Women too have
lessened the value of motherhood, forgetting the old saying, “The hand that
rocks the cradle rules the world”. Who is rocking our children now? One of the
jobs of the older, more mature women is “that they may encourage the young
women to love their husbands, to love their children.” (Titus 2:4) For years I
read that verse and understood that a woman would have to learn to love a
husband because men and women are so different in many ways, but not until a
few years ago did I understand why a woman would have to be taught to love
their children. After all, that is what maternal instinct is. Loving children
just comes natural. But Jesus warned that “because lawlessness is increased, most
people's love will grow cold.” (Matthew 24:12) The word “love” here is the
Greek word for divine, self-sacrificing love. The love that will freely give up
everything, even life, for the sake of the one loved, regardless if the love is
deserved or not. Yet, in our society, lawlessness, iniquity is increasing at an
ever escalating rate and because of this even the love of a mother toward her
children is becoming a burden. Hence, abortion. Abortion is the single greatest
sin our nation engages in and we are suffering the consequences of it as seen
in younger and younger children committing more heinous crimes; crimes that
were once only committed by adults who were so hardened within their hearts
that remorse was never expressed. If women loved their children as they should
abortion would cease.
As Christians these are some
of the things we toil at; some of the things that “cut” us deeply and sap our
strength to the point we either want to give up the fight because it is too
painful or lash out at the guilty person instead of the sin.
The Ephesians were commended
because of their toils, but condemned for their lack of love. We must remember
that even concerning those things that we feel strongly about - crime,
immorality, or injustice, there is a right way and a wrong way to fight, to
war. We should always have the well-being of the person in mind and “keep
yourselves IN THE LOVE of God, waiting anxiously for the mercy of our Lord
Jesus Christ to eternal life. And have mercy on some, who are doubting; save others,
snatching them out of the fire; and on some have mercy with fear, HATING EVEN
THE GARMENT polluted by the flesh.” (Jude 1:21-23) Yes, hate the GARMENT, but
not the BODY.
It is easy to give up, to
despair of overcoming the evil both within us and around us, but the Ephesians
did not give up. They were commended for their perseverance concerning their
deeds and toils. Perseverance is a Greek word that literally means “to remain
under”. It speaks of steadfastness, patience, unwavering loyalty, CHEERFUL
endurance. This is a quality that few possess. So much of the time we are
tempted to pray our way OUT OF a situation or circumstance rather than OVERCOME
it. Escapism is a condition that afflicts young Christians and old alike. We
are deceived into believing that the Lord does not mean for us to suffer and we
look for the nearest exit. This, however, is contradictory to the Bible. “No
temptation has overtaken you but such as is common to man; and God is faithful,
who will not allow you to be tempted beyond what you are able, but with the
temptation will provide THE WAY OF ESCAPE also, that you may BE ABLE TO ENDURE
IT.” (1 Corinthians 10:13) This verse in itself seems contradictory. It says a
way of escape will be provided, but then says we will endure it. Actually,
there is no contradiction. It is just that we think of escape in a different
way than God does.
If a man is an alcoholic and
becomes stranded upon a deserted island for a period of months and did not
drink during that time, is he still an alcoholic? It can easily be proven when
he is rescued. Once back where alcohol is available he drinks again. Thus,
while he escaped from alcohol for a few months it was because he had no
opportunity to drink. He was not cured. God does not work that way. When He causes
us to escape from those things in life that bind us He does it by giving us the
strength necessary to remain IN our situation until we OVERCOME it. Otherwise,
we will live in constant fear that we will fall again at the next opportunity
to sin. Does that make sense? If the Lord gives us the inner strength to not
indulge in something, whether it be alcohol, smoking, gambling, or any number
of other things then we have truly ESCAPED from it. Not by running from it, but
by OVERCOMING it. This is why the promises given to the Seven Churches
addressed in Revelation are given to the OVERCOMERS.
The Ephesians were doing
this. They were not trying to pray themselves out of their circumstances. Day
by day they faced life doing good; they struggled against evil as they toiled
to overcome, not just run away from the burdens God had placed upon their
hearts. They were following the injunction Paul gave to the Romans. “Do not be
overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.” (Romans 12:21) They stood their
ground and fought the good fight.
Further, Jesus commends them
for not enduring evil men. The word “endure” here means “to lift up with the
hands, to sustain, to carry a load”. The Ephesians were not about to hold up as
an example any man who practiced evil; they were not going to support him in
any way. Unlike churches today who ordain practicing homosexuals and lift them
up as examples because they are “good” people and give them financial as well
as moral support in the name of tolerance, the Ephesians would not sanction
such an arrangement.
The Ephesians are also
commended for testing those who called themselves apostles. This means that
they questioned very carefully those who sought to have a position of authority
among them. They did not take at face value what these men said. Instead they
heeded the words of Jesus: “For false Christs and false prophets will arise,
and will show signs and wonders, in order, if possible, to lead the elect
astray.” (Mark 13:22) They understood that someone who appears righteous on the
outside may be totally evil. “For such men are false apostles, deceitful
workers, disguising themselves as apostles of Christ. And no wonder, for even
Satan disguises himself as an angel of light.” (2 Corinthians 11:13-14) The
outward appearance of a person or even their ability to perform signs and
wonders is no guarantee that they are born-again Christians. Only their actions
on a day by day basis will let us know if they are genuine or not.
All this the Ephesians had
going for them and had “not grown weary”. (Revelation 2:3) Paul urged the
Thessalonians toward this goal also. “But as for you, brethren, do not grow
weary of doing good.” (2 Thessalonians 3:13) They had persevered for Jesus;
they had sought the spiritual gifts, taught and preached in Jesus’ name,
increased their knowledge and wisdom, had the faith to face each day doing good
and toiling to overcome evil, gave of their money and time and if needed their
very selves. So what could they possibly be lacking that Jesus would find fault
with?
“But I have {this} against
you, that you have left your first love.” (Revelation 2:4) The word “left”
means to “send away, to let go” and is used for a husband divorcing his wife.
What Jesus is saying is that just as close as a husband is to be to his wife,
to the degree that they are bound (glued) together in marriage by God, so is
love, the divine, self-sacrificing love, supposed to be the foundation upon
which ALL that we think, say, and do is based. Jesus, having washed the
Disciple’s feet (including Judas Iscariot) said, “By this ALL men will know
that you are My disciples, IF YOU HAVE LOVE for one another.” (John 13:35) Not
just a love for friends and family, but a love for all God’s creation. “You
have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor, and hate your
enemy.’ But I say to you, love your enemies, and pray for those who persecute
you in order that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven; for He
causes His sun to rise on {the} evil and {the} good, and sends rain on {the} righteous
and {the} unrighteous. For if you love those who love you, what reward have
you? Do not even the tax-gatherers do the same?” (Matthew 5:43-46) This is the
attitude we are called to as Christians, even as we battle the evil around us.
What’s love got to do with it? Read 1 Corinthians chapter 13 and find out for yourself.
Return to my Homepage.
|
|