Friday, 17 October 2014

Impossible yet Possible

Impossible yet Possible
Matthew 5:44
One of the most amazing commands of Christ is to love our enemies. In our flesh, we naturally want to retaliate or fight back when we are treated unkindly or persecuted. But our willingness to love and pray for those who persecute or mistreat us mystifies unbelievers, and yet this is the lifestyle to which we are called by God. We are to love all people regardless of how they treat us. Although some may set themselves up as enemies against us, they are people in need of a saving relationship with Jesus and an understanding of His Lordship in their lives. The Word of God instructs us to love them, praying that they might enter into His kingdom! Before reading any further, bring someone to mind whom you would consider to be your enemy. Have your family members do the same. Read, study, apply and pray the truths from God’s Word that your enemies might be drawn to Jesus’ kingdom.

There is a book called “Legenda Aurea,” – the Golden Legend – which extensively deals with the lives of the saints. It’s there that we learn the story of Saint Valentine. According to that version, St Valentine was persecuted as a Christian and interrogated by the Roman Emperor Claudius II in person. Claudius was impressed by Valentine and had a discussion with him, attempting to get him to convert to Roman paganism in order to save his life. Valentine refused and tried to convert Claudius to Christianity instead. Because of this Claudius ordered his execution and threw him into the prison in Rome to await his fate.

No one knows how long Valentine spent in the Mamertine before his execution, but it’s safe to say it wasn’t an overnight stay. Against this backdrop of extended, unjust and cruel imprisonment, torture and execution that the Legenda Aurea tells this story of Valentine’s last day:… then he prayed to God, saying: Lord Jesus Christ very God, which art very light, enlumine this house in such wise that they that dwell therein may know thee to be very God. And the (jailer) said: It marveled me that thou sayest that thy God is very light, and nevertheless, if he may make my daughter to hear and see, which long time hath been blind.

The author of “Legenda Aurea,” goes on to say that Valentine’s heart filled with compassion and forgiveness for the jailer and his long-blind daughter, restored her sight through intercessory prayer. Certainly that’s the lesson of the Saint Valentine story. In the face of his unjust and torturous imprisonment and execution, does he call down the wrath of a justice-wielding? No. He took compassion on his jailer and called forth healing mercy to cure the jailer’s long-blind daughter – no strings attached. That’s the lesson held up to us as the model in all the lives of the saints. Divine love and forgiveness is unconditional, and we are all invited to take the spiritual journey to that place in our own hearts.

It is impossible for us to follow this amazing command of our Lord on our own. But remember the very Word of God which says “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible” (Matthew 19:26). That which God demands, only He can accomplish, including the demand to love our enemies. What is impossible for man becomes possible for those who give their lives to Jesus Christ through the power of the Holy Spirit who lives in our hearts. 

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