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The
Family of God
By Michael Morrison
If we are going to
live with God forever, we will also be living with each other
forever. We were designed not for eternal isolation, but for living
together and interacting with one another. Life’s greatest joys come
in our relationships with other people.
Life’s greatest hurts come
from other people, too. So if eternal life is going to be happy, we
need to learn to get along with people without hurting them. The
essential ingredient we need here is love. The most important
commandment, Jesus said, is to love God, and the
second-most-important command is, "Love your neighbor as yourself"
(Mark 12:31).
If we are going to be like
Jesus, we need to love people—even people who are hard to love.
Jesus set the example for us, coming to die even for the people who
hated him. As good parents know, love means a willingness to be
inconvenienced, a willingness to set aside our own concerns to
attend to the needs of someone else. Love is a lot more than good
feelings—it must also include good actions.
Willing to serve
God is good not because he is
powerful, but because he is good. He always uses his power to help
other people, not to serve himself. We praise people who risk their
lives to save others; we do not praise people who had the power but
refused to use it. We admire self-sacrifice, not selfishness.
Jesus came to serve, not to
lord it over people (Matthew
20:28). He told his
disciples they should not be like power-hungry rulers, but should
set an example by helping people. "Whoever wants to become great
among you must be your servant" (verse 26). Jesus shows us what the
Father is like (John 14:9)—not just what he was like 2,000 years
ago, but what he is like all the time.
True
greatness is not in power, but in service. God sets the example; as
does Jesus. The meaning of life is not in having authority over
others, but in helping people. That is the only way that eternal
life is going to be enjoyable for everyone.
Jesus set many examples of service. A special
one happened the evening before his crucifixion. He got down and
washed the 12 disciples’ feet as a lesson in humility and service.
"I have set you an example," he said, "that you
should do as I have done for
you" (John 13:15). Don’t consider yourself too important to kneel
down and help somebody. Leaders in the church should be servants.
Paul said we should "serve
one another in love" (Galatians 5:13). "Carry each other’s burdens," he wrote, "and in this way you will
fulfill the law of Christ" (Galatians 6:2). "Do nothing out of
selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider others
better than yourselves" (Philippians 2:3).
If we are selfish, we will
never be satisfied, but if we serve, we will find it self-rewarding.
We are more satisfied when we help than when we take. Jesus told us
this because it is so unlike the assumptions that most people make.
"This is love: not that we
loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning
sacrifice for our sins. Dear friends, since God so loved us, we also
ought to love one another" (1 John 4:10-11). If we want to be like Jesus, if we want to have a meaningful
life, then we need to serve others.
Serving in the church
One way that we serve others
is by being active participants in a community of believers—a
church. No church is perfect, just like no person is perfect, but
the church is something that God designed to help us on our journey
with Jesus. The church teaches us about Jesus, reminds us of his
grace and promises, and gives us opportunities to worship together.
The church helps us keep our purpose in focus.
The church also gives us
opportunities to exercise patience and forgiveness. We may not like
these "opportunities," but they still help us learn to be more like
Jesus. Paul reminds us of the example we follow: "Bear with each
other and forgive whatever grievances you may have against one
another. Forgive as the Lord forgave you" (Colossians 3:13). "Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other,
just as in Christ God forgave you" (Ephesians
4:32).
Educators know that we learn
by listening, but we learn much more when we participate. Jesus
taught his disciples not just in words, and not just in his example,
but also by giving them work to do. "He sent them out to preach the
kingdom of God and to heal the sick" (Luke 9:2). After his
resurrection, he again assigned them work: "You will be my witnesses
in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the
ends of the earth" (Acts 1:8). And they learned as they went.
If you want to be like Jesus,
get involved in his work. He left it to us, not because we could do
a better job than anyone else, but because it is for our good. We
will learn more, and be changed more, by getting involved.
Different talents
Have you ever noticed that
different people have different strengths? Believing in Jesus does
not eliminate our differences. Being like Christ does not mean that
we all have to look alike, dress alike and act alike. In fact, God
purposely gives different strengths to different people (1
Corinthians 12:11). We are not to brag about our abilities, nor to wish we had someone
else’s (verses 14-26). Rather, we are to use our skills "for the
common good" (verse 7).
Some people are very
talented, but no one has all the talents that society needs. God
makes sure that everybody is lacking something, so that we learn to
work together. "Each one should use whatever gift he has received to
serve others, faithfully administering God’s grace in its various
forms" (1 Peter 4:10). The church is a great place to learn to be like Jesus by serving
other people.
We are to serve people’s
physical needs, and also their spiritual needs. One of the biggest
spiritual needs that this world has is the message of salvation in
Jesus Christ. The church is called to take this message to the
world; each believer has a message that can encourage and help many
others, and we will become more like Jesus if we become less
self-conscious and more willing to share the message.
Why do we share the gospel?
It is not a means of getting brownie points with God. It is not a
way for us to brag about how good we are. Rather, it is a way to
serve others, to help them with one of their most serious needs in
life.
People need to know that God
loves them, that their lives have meaning and purpose, that there
really is hope even when physical life seems pointless. God has good
news for them, and we share it because people need it.
Of course, it is deeply
satisfying to be used by God to help someone else. Sharing the
gospel gives us a tremendous sense of significance, because we are
taking part in a work of eternal worth, sharing in the work of God
himself. That’s part of what it means to be like God, to be like
Jesus. God made us in such a way that we would find our deepest
satisfactions in doing the work that he himself does. We were made
for this!
Relationships of grace
We are saved by grace, not by
our works. God sent Jesus to die for us, and he forgives us, not on
the basis of our works, but because of his mercy. Now, if God is
like that, and we were born to be like God, what does this say about
our relationships with one another? It totally transforms them!
If we follow Jesus, grace needs to fill our
families, our friendships and our
workplaces. Being like Jesus
means that we are not always demanding to get our own way. We are
not bragging about ourselves or insulting others. Paul describes the
results of God at work in our lives: "The fruit of [God’s] Spirit is
love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
gentleness and self-control" (Galatians 5:22-23).
"Honor one another above
yourselves," Paul writes (Romans 12:10). "Live in harmony with one another" (verse 16). "Be completely
humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love"
(Ephesians 4:2).
"Encourage one another and
build each other up.... Always try to be kind to each other and to
everyone else" (1 Thessalonians 5:11, 15).
Husbands, how would it make a
difference in the way you treat your wife? (See Ephesians 5:25.)
Wives, how would it affect you? (See verse 22.) Those who are
employed, how would it affect your work? (See Ephesians 6:5-8.)
We all start out unlike
Jesus. We start as sinners, as enemies of God, as selfish,
self-seeking people. And yet that is precisely what we need to be
saved from, to be rescued from. So there’s a lot of changing that
needs to happen.
If we are to be like Jesus,
our relationships may have to change a lot. It won’t be easy, and it
won’t happen overnight. It takes time, so we need patience with the
process, both in ourselves and in others. We need faith that God
will finish the work he has started in us.
God has the most fulfilled,
most satisfying life possible—and he wants us to enjoy eternal life,
too. He wants us to be like he is. God is "compassionate and
gracious ... slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness,
maintaining love to thousands, and forgiving wickedness, rebellion
and sin" (Exodus 34:6-7).
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