2 Corinthians 5:14
On my first trip missions trip overseas, I was struck with the power of this verse, and used it in the first meeting that I had with a group of preachers in that country. No matter where we are from, or what our backgrounds are, it is the love of Jesus Christ that holds us together and makes us one big family. It is both the love that He has for us and the love that we have for Him that gives us a mutual interest.
“Constraineth” is “hold together” in Greek. There is a law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus that is at work in every believer (Romans 8:2). This law has made us free from living under sin and its partner, death. Acknowledging the love of Christ in us confirms in our heart that we are as dead to sin as Jesus is, which the rest of this verse brings out: “if one died for all, then were all dead” (2 Corinthians 5:14).
In a world of varying cultures and creeds, it seems almost fantasy that there could be one simple code that would bind these various entities together. The finished work of Jesus Christ is that one beautiful, simple thing that makes us who we are. There is something warming and encouraging about being in a foreign land, where you are thousands of miles from anyone else that you know, and hearing the name of your Jesus mentioned with worship and praise. The peace that He has given to you has also been given to others and it has a lasting effect on both your relationship with Him and your ability to show forth His love to others.
No one that does not know how loved that they are in the eyes of God can ever truly show forth His love to a lost and dying world. We do not have perfect love to give, neither are we capable of generating it. Even the love that we have for our children, which is as close to God’s love as we can naturally formulate, is imperfect in that it is effected by emotion. God’s love is a perfect love which knows no ups and downs and when we know that love, there is no room in our hearts for fear or for torment (1 John 4:18).
The further promise of the constraining love of Christ is that we are alive with Christ in His resurrection. We live this Christian life not after our own fleshly lusts and desires but we live it “unto Him which died for them, and rose again” (2 Corinthians 5:15). Living our lives for Him means that we dwell on Him and His finished work, not on us and our unfinished work. Acknowledge that the old things are passed away and that all things are become new (5:17), and you will know that all things are of God (5:18), and that you have been reconciled to Him by the finished work of the cross. When we have this knowledge, we gladly accept the ministry of reconciliation.
I believe that those who do not rest in the love that the Father has for them can never fully embrace the ministry of reconciliation. Without a personal revelation of His love and forgiveness, you are always trying to impress Him and reconcile yourself to Him through your performance. The only way that you can reconcile yourself back to God is through His prescribed order and that is the cross of Jesus Christ.
May you go with God’s abundant grace and favor today, held together by the wonderful love of Jesus!
On my first trip missions trip overseas, I was struck with the power of this verse, and used it in the first meeting that I had with a group of preachers in that country. No matter where we are from, or what our backgrounds are, it is the love of Jesus Christ that holds us together and makes us one big family. It is both the love that He has for us and the love that we have for Him that gives us a mutual interest.
“Constraineth” is “hold together” in Greek. There is a law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus that is at work in every believer (Romans 8:2). This law has made us free from living under sin and its partner, death. Acknowledging the love of Christ in us confirms in our heart that we are as dead to sin as Jesus is, which the rest of this verse brings out: “if one died for all, then were all dead” (2 Corinthians 5:14).
In a world of varying cultures and creeds, it seems almost fantasy that there could be one simple code that would bind these various entities together. The finished work of Jesus Christ is that one beautiful, simple thing that makes us who we are. There is something warming and encouraging about being in a foreign land, where you are thousands of miles from anyone else that you know, and hearing the name of your Jesus mentioned with worship and praise. The peace that He has given to you has also been given to others and it has a lasting effect on both your relationship with Him and your ability to show forth His love to others.
No one that does not know how loved that they are in the eyes of God can ever truly show forth His love to a lost and dying world. We do not have perfect love to give, neither are we capable of generating it. Even the love that we have for our children, which is as close to God’s love as we can naturally formulate, is imperfect in that it is effected by emotion. God’s love is a perfect love which knows no ups and downs and when we know that love, there is no room in our hearts for fear or for torment (1 John 4:18).
The further promise of the constraining love of Christ is that we are alive with Christ in His resurrection. We live this Christian life not after our own fleshly lusts and desires but we live it “unto Him which died for them, and rose again” (2 Corinthians 5:15). Living our lives for Him means that we dwell on Him and His finished work, not on us and our unfinished work. Acknowledge that the old things are passed away and that all things are become new (5:17), and you will know that all things are of God (5:18), and that you have been reconciled to Him by the finished work of the cross. When we have this knowledge, we gladly accept the ministry of reconciliation.
I believe that those who do not rest in the love that the Father has for them can never fully embrace the ministry of reconciliation. Without a personal revelation of His love and forgiveness, you are always trying to impress Him and reconcile yourself to Him through your performance. The only way that you can reconcile yourself back to God is through His prescribed order and that is the cross of Jesus Christ.
May you go with God’s abundant grace and favor today, held together by the wonderful love of Jesus!
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