Thursday, 28 August 2008

  • Matthew 7:12

    I normally wouldn't do this, but I feel very inspired to at the moment. This post is actually going to be a chapter from a book I'm reading. I hope I'm not going against any copyright laws as it's only a few paragraphs and I'll give proper credit. I just feel that I need to share it.

    While reading it I couldn't help but feel that it sums up everything that Christianity really stands for -- What God wants from us. Granted there is a lot more depth to it all, but this has got to be one of the most inspiring and true statements I've read in awhile. I'd try it in my own words but doubt I could do a better job. So please, read on. Maybe God can speak through it to you as He did me.

    The following writing is taken from Thoughts From the Mount of Blessing - by Ellen G. White.

    Chapter 6, pages 134-137. Full chapter and book can be found online here.


    "Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them." Matthew 7:12.

    On the assurance of the love of God toward us, Jesus enjoins love to one another, in one comprehensive principle covering all the relations of human fellowship.

    The Jews had been concerned about what they should receive; the burden of their anxiety was to secure what they thought their due of power and respect and service. But Christ teaches that our anxiety should not be, How much are we to receive? but, How much can we give? The standard of our obligation to others is found in what we ourselves would regard as their obligation to us.

    In your association with others, put yourself in their place. Enter into their feelings, their difficulties, their disappointments, their joys, and their sorrows. Identify yourself with them, and then do to them as, were you to exchange places with them, you would wish them to deal with you. This is the true rule of honesty. It is another expression of the law. "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." Matthew 22:39. And it is the substance of the teaching of the prophets. It is a principle of heaven, and will be developed in all who are fitted for its holy companionship.

    The golden rule is the principle of true courtesy, and its truest illustration is seen in the life and character of Jesus. Oh, what rays of softness and beauty shone forth in the daily life of our Saviour! What sweetness flowed from His very presence! The same spirit will be revealed in His children. Those with whom Christ dwells will be surrounded with a divine atmosphere. Their white robes of purity will be fragrant with perfume from the garden of the Lord. Their faces will reflect light from His, brightening the path for stumbling and weary feet.

    No man who has the true ideal of what constitutes a perfect character will fail to manifest the sympathy and tenderness of Christ. The influence of grace is to soften the heart, to refine and purify the feelings, giving a heaven-born delicacy and sense of propriety.

    But there is a yet deeper significance to the golden rule. Everyone who has been made a steward of the manifold grace of God is called upon to impart to souls in ignorance and darkness, even as, were he in their place, he would desire them to impart to him. The apostle Paul said, "I am debtor both to the Greeks, and to the barbarians; both to the wise, and to the unwise." Romans 1:14. By all that you have known of the love of God, by all that you have received of the rich gifts of His grace above the most benighted and degraded soul upon the earth are you in debt to that soul to impart these gifts unto him.

    So also with the gifts and blessings of this life: whatever you may possess above your fellows places you in debt, to that degree, to all who are less favored. Have we wealth, or even the comforts of life, then we are under the most solemn obligation to care for the suffering sick, the widow, and the fatherless exactly as we would desire them to care for us were our condition and theirs to be reversed.

    The golden rule teaches, by implication, the same truth which is taught elsewhere in the Sermon on the Mount, that "with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again." That which we do to others, whether it be good or evil, will surely react upon ourselves, in blessing or in cursing. Whatever we give, we shall receive again. The earthly blessings which we impart to others may be, and often are, repaid in kind. What we give does, in time of need, often come back to us in fourfold measure in the coin of the realm. But, besides this, all gifts are repaid, even in this life, in the fuller inflowing of His love, which is the sum of all heaven's glory and its treasure. And evil imparted also returns again. Everyone who has been free to condemn or discourage, will in his own experience be brought over the ground where he has caused others to pass; he will feel what they have suffered because of his want of sympathy and tenderness.

    It is the love of God toward us that has decreed this. He would lead us to abhor our own hardness of heart and to open our hearts to let Jesus abide in them. And thus, out of evil, good is brought, and what appeared a curse becomes a blessing.

    The standard of the golden rule is the true standard of Christianity; anything short of it is a deception. A religion that leads men to place a low estimate upon human beings, whom Christ has esteemed of such value as to give Himself for them; a religion that would lead us to be careless of human needs, sufferings, or rights, is a spurious religion. In slighting the claims of the poor, the suffering, and the sinful, we are proving ourselves traitors to Christ. It is because men take upon themselves the name of Christ, while in life they deny His character, that Christianity has so little power in the world. The name of the Lord is blasphemed because of these things.

    Of the apostolic church, in those bright days when the glory of the risen Christ shone upon them, it is written that no man said "that aught of the things which he possessed was his own." "Neither was there any among them that lacked." "And with great power gave the apostles witness of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus: and great grace was upon them all." "And they, continuing daily with one accord in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house, did eat their meat with gladness and singleness of heart, praising God, and having favor with all the people. And the Lord added to the church daily such as should be saved." Acts 4:32, 34, 33; 2:46, 47.

    Search heaven and earth, and there is no truth revealed more powerful than that which is made manifest in works of mercy to those who need our sympathy and aid. This is the truth as it is in Jesus. When those who profess the name of Christ shall practice the principles of the golden rule, the same power will attend the gospel as in apostolic times.


    Take from it what you will. Some really awesome points were made in those pages.  Please feel free to share your thoughts on it, and I highly recommend reading the entire book. It's been incredibly inspiring to me the past while.

    Blessings and Love,
    Sarah

Comments (2)

  • ProvokingThought
    yay!

    Matthew 7 is an intense chapter on human interaction for the believer. It starts with how not to judge, whom not to apply biblical expectations upon, encourages us to pray to God for what we need, tells us how necessary it is to be concious of our actions and words. He then warns us about false prophets (the paradox of 1-5 and 15-20) and then shows us how our joy can be found in His commands --in Him.


    Enjoy the book.  I have read and enjoyed many commentaries and sermons on Matthew 7. I found the most interesting to be it shows as a chapter how things must be held in tension in our  walk with Him and the only we we can really hold it in tension properly is to be in Christ, because in ourselves, we will tend to lose the balance that the tension creates.. It is a great chapter to really meditate on. His blessings to you Soli Deo Gloria

  • IntoTheCrimsonSky

    @ProvokingThought - Thanks for the comment.


    I couldn't agree more. Matt 7 is an awesome chapter. I have often thought that almost every verse in it could be turned into a whole discussion on their own. There aren't too many chapters that have this kind of power or influence. You get something new from it everytime you read it, too.


    God bless!

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