Episode 1. Love Rejoices in the Truth
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There are so many people in this world who are living a lie. Bold statement I know, but just look around. How many people see themselves for what they truly are? How many people see others the way …
I have to be honest with you, for the first 36 years of my life, I was pretty much living a lie. Here’s what the lie looked like. You’re told in this world that if you work hard enough, you do anything that you want to do. You can be anyone you want to be. You can have anything you want to have. Just work hard and you’ll make it. Just work hard and you’ll be successful.
So I did. I worked incredibly hard – as a military officer, then in my own IT consulting firm – and with my business partners we built a pretty successful, international practice. I drove a big, expensive car. Lived in a big house and was on my way to real success.
The problem was that on the inside – and let’s face it that’s where we live, that’s where our emotions and our feelings and our thoughts are – it didn’t feel satisfying.
That was a real insight for me. Success isn’t satisfying. The world will tell you it is, but it simply isn’t. It’s hollow. Any happiness or satisfaction it brings you is fleeting – here today, gone tomorrow.
So in a very real sense, I felt like a fraud. Other people looked at me and saw success, but I was discovering something else entirely. And when other people looked at me, they saw a tough, hard nosed so and so, that would climb over anybody to get where he was going.
You see that’s the other part of the lie that I was living. I didn’t see people for who they really were. I didn’t see other people’s gifts and abilities and talents and creativity. Other people didn’t have any real worth to me, except to the extent that they could act as stepping stones for me to walk over, to get to where I was going.
That’s quite an admission really isn’t it. But there you go, that was the lie I was living. And these days, as I look around, I see so many other people living out their versions of life’s lie. You’ll be happy if you have this, if you buy a cute puppy, then you’ll be happy. If you hit budget this month, if you do this, if you do that … then you’ll be successful. And so what happens is that the world has become uber–competitive. The world has become transactional. And in the middle of all that, love has become conditional.
As I said earlier, we’re in the middle of a series of messages called “Love Is” based on that powerful Scripture about love that we find in 1 Cor 13. Let’s have a listen:
1 Cor 13: 4–7 Love is patient; love is kind; love is not envious or boastful or arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.
And the part that I’d like to take a brief look at today, is the bit where it says that love doesn’t rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth. To be honest, I think most of us don’t think all that often of love and truth in the one sentence. What does truth have to do with love, after all? Good question.
And the answer is, rather a lot. I mentioned earlier how badly I treated people back in those days when I was living my personal version of the lies that we live. And that’s what happens. When we’re living a lie, when we’re kidding ourselves, when we’ve lost site of the truth, we treat people badly.
And we justify that, by telling ourselves that our career is more important, or success is more important or whatever it is that we’re striving for is more important. And so what we end up doing is exactly what the Apostle Paul writes there in 1 Cor 13 verse 6, we end up rejoicing in wrongdoing.
Now not everyone is a Type A driven person like me. Some people live their lie at the opposite end of the spectrum. Some people believe the lie that they’re worthless. No good. Failures. There’s no hope. Nothing’s ever going to change. These days we have a label for all that – we bundle it together and call it low self–esteem. And those people end up living their lives as victims, and in the process, they treat other people badly as well, because they have no love to give. They’re so insecure, that whenever anyone disagrees with them, whenever anyone doesn’t treat them exactly the way they believe they ought to be treated, they start behaving badly.
Love doesn’t rejoice in wrongdoing. Love rejoices in the truth. Makes sense when you look at it that way. There’s a parable that Jesus told that’s had a huge impact on me, in helping me to see the truth. Have a listen:
Luke 18:9–14: He also told this parable to some who trusted in themselves that they were righteous and regarded others with contempt: “Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. The Pharisee, standing by himself, was praying thus, ‘God, I thank you that I am not like other people: thieves, rogues, adulterers, or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week; I give a tenth of all my income. ’ But the tax collector, standing far off, would not even look up to heaven, but was beating his breast and saying, ‘God, be merciful to me, a sinner! ’ I tell you, this man went down to his home justified rather than the other; for all who exalt themselves will be humbled, but all who humble themselves will be exalted
I used to be like that Pharisee, all full of self–righteousness. The thing that changed me was encountering Jesus. Having a personal encounter, getting to know Him, giving my life to Him. It didn’t take long for me to realise, in the presence of Jesus, that I was living a lie. And now when I go to God, I feel so much more like the tax collector, totally reliant on God’s grace to deliver me from my sin. Jesus said this very same thing in a different way in His famous sermon on the mount.
Matthew 5:3: Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
In other words those who are going to inherit the kingdom of God are the ones who realise their spiritual poverty. Those who get real with themselves. Those who see things for what they are – who see themselves and others for who they are.
Okay, so I’ve laid my soul bare before you today. I’ve shared with you part of my journey from a life of lies, to a life of truth – a journey which, by the way, has a long way to run yet. None of us has arrived yet … at least I haven’t. But what about your life. To what extent are you living a life that’s tainted, distorted, misdirected by some lies that the world has dropped on your head and into your heart.
As I mentioned earlier, I really would love to send you a free copy of our latest life application booklet. It’s called Love Is. And as well as picking up on the teaching in this series, each chapter has a series of life application questions, to help you apply God’s Word to your life. To help you lay hold of the freedom that Jesus came to bring you.
So, you can request your free copy right now online at christianityworks.com. You’ll see that free offer right there, front and centre on the home page. Just click on it, pop in your name and email, and it will be winging its way to your inbox in just seconds.
And while you’re there, don’t forget that you can have instant access to the free eDevotional – words of inspiration, hope and encouragement delivered right to your inbox each weekday. It’s all about helping you to live each day in victory.
The name of that free booklet is Love Is … and that web address, is christianityworks.com.
Jesus came to set you free …
What are you striving for perhaps? Or what sense of inadequacy is robbing you of the ability to love? They’re hard questions, but questions that need to be answered if you’re going to live in the freedom that Jesus came to bring you.
It can be scary to confront those lies. It’s hard to admit that we’ve not been loving people the way we should, because we’re the ones who have been getting things wrong. But there’s no need to be afraid. The Apostle John puts it this way:
1 John 4:18: There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear; for fear has to do with punishment, and whoever fears has not reached perfection in love.
My friend, Jesus came to set you free. And as He said of Himself, when the Son of Man sets you free, you will be free indeed. The reason we’re chatting about this today, is that I believe that Jesus wants to set you free today – not just a little bit, but completely. Free indeed.
How about it. Love doesn’t rejoice in wrongdoing. Love rejoices in the truth.
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