Neighborology: Living Out Christ's Compassion預覽
Becoming People of Compassion
The character we need for caring is found in Jesus and the power of our resurrected Savior. We are then able to consciously and consistently model His love and do what does not come naturally, that is, minister selflessly, serve with compassion, seek the welfare of others, and love our enemies.
Only by personally knowing Christ’s love and concern are we able to care for others. It is by His “breathing” in us that we are once and forever changed. We move higher and deeper into a meaningful relationship with Him, with His help. In this relationship, we know and enter into His care and compassion and become part of His incarnated ministry through us on Earth. His heart of compassion asks us to come alongside those in need. In his book The Search for Compassion: Spirituality and Ministry, theologian Andrew Purves says, “Compassion asks us to go where it hurts, to enter into places of pain, to share in brokenness, fear, confusion, and anguish. Compassion challenges us to cry out with those in misery, to mourn with those who are lonely, to weep with those in tears.” He says that we need to be people of compassion who will not be too quick to take away pain but will have the spiritual and mental toughness to walk alongside another, sharing in their journey to the point where woundedness can be confronted.
Compassion is a hands-on ministry that requires servant hearts. It demands love. Compassion is ministry without limits. It is evangelical, bringing persons to a place where they may “taste and see that the Lord is good” (Ps. 34:8). Purves writes:
Compassion is the ministry of Jesus Christ by which he enters into another’s brokenness. . . . It means suffering with another. Compassion bridges the gap between social and pastoral ministry. Compassion demands a spiritual relationship with Jesus Christ.
Our faith and our compassion are a biblical demonstration that Jesus is the Lord of our lives.
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Loving others is hard. It goes against our heart's natural tendency to live for ourselves. It challenges us to put the needs of others above our own and model Christ's compassion. It calls us to give up our desires, resources, and time. This devotional shows our need for Christ's equipping to develop a servant's heart. Based on the book "Neighborology: Practicing Compassion as a Way of Life" by David Apple.
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