Text: 2 Corinthians
6:11-13
Key Verse: "Our mouth is open to you,
Corinthians; our heart is wide" (2 Corinthians 6-11 RSV).
Paul loved these people in
Corinth, and he has manifested that love in various ways toward them. He has
demonstrated it, as he says here, by two special things. Our mouth is open to
you, he says. That means he communicated with them; he told them what was going
on in his own life; he shared with them his feelings, struggles, failures,
pressures, and problems, and he let them know how he coped with them. That is
always a mark of love. To open up to others is to love them. Conversely, to
close up and not communicate is to violate love.
This is a frequent problem in
churches today. Christians actually think it is right for them to be closed in
on themselves, to be private persons, unwilling to communicate who they are and
how they feel and where they are in their lives. That, of course, is the way of
the world. The world teaches us to let no one see who we are. But we need to understand
that when we become Christians, we must learn to open up to one another.
Our heart is wide, he says. He
means there is no favoritism; he includes the whole congregation. He did not
merely love the nice people among them. He loved them all: the difficult ones,
the ones who were struggling, and the hard-to-get-along-with ones as well.
There were no preconditions that he demanded before he would love somebody in
the congregation either. He accepted them as people. Though he knew their
struggles, their weaknesses, their heartaches, their failures, and their
resistance, he loved them.
The problem was that they did not
love him in return. This is the problem in churches, in individual lives, in
homes, in families, and in marriages today. It is a failure to understand the
reciprocal nature of love. Love is a two-way street. It always is; it is
inherently so. Love requires a response. Paul was loving them, but they were
not loving him back. They were closed; they were unresponsive; they were coldly
self-contained toward him. And the result? Paul puts it in one word: They were
restricted (2 Corinthians 6:12 RSV). What does that mean? It means they were
limited; they were imprisoned within the narrow boundaries of their own selfish
lives.
That is why Paul pleads here with
these Corinthians: Oh! Corinthians, widen your hearts unto us. You are not
restricted by us. You are restricted by yourselves, in your own affections. If
you really want to experience the richness of love, then love back when you are
loved. This is one of the most important lessons we can ever learn in life.
Love must respond. When you are loved, what do you do? Do you love back, or do
you say, What a wonderful feeling! I hope they will keep that up? Do you expect
it all to come to you without a reciprocal response from you? No, that is
impossible. Love must respond.
*** Ray Stedman Minsistry Daily Devotional | www.raystedman.org ***
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