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“We face the same problem today, for the more secularized and post Christian our society becomes, the greater temptation there is to love only our fellow believers who are righting by our side in the “culture wars.” We retreat from the command to love all people aw we consider those outside the church as too wordly, as too dangerous to our spiritual well-being. Rather then loving them, we feel constrained to keep ourselves separate from them, to strive for a purity of being uncontaminated by having no contact with the “sinners” out there. But, as Schaeffer points out, this is not the kind of purity that God’s word has in mind for us. The Lord calls us to love all people, including those who are enemies of the gospel and those who blaspheme. This may not be comfortable, and it may not be easy, but his is the gospel of Christ, for He loved His enemies so much that He died to save us.
Love, Schaeffer says, cannot be a banner that we carry around, or a slogan that we repeat like a mantra. Love must be evident in practice. All truly great Christians, he writes, have gentleness and tenderness about them, a gentleness and tenderness that is manifest in the delight they take in spending time with little children and the energy they gladly expend on “little people.” Such love demonstrates that a believer truly has met with the Lord. For the Lord carries little children close to his heart. The Lord does not break “the bruised reed” or quench “the smoldering wick.” The Lord has time for every one of his people – not matter how insignificant they may seems to the Christian leader who has his own big agenda in mind.”
From True Spirituality, by Francis Schaeffer
And this was only the introduction by Jerram Barrs.
Just imagine how good the rest of it is.
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