Monday, September 18, 2017

Love God Love Others

Since this semester started a few weeks ago God has been drilling the two greatest commandments into my head and into my heart. The two greatest commandments are to love God, and to love others, as can be seen in Matthew 12. Every meeting, every class, and most conversations with peers have this topic being talked about in some way. Even with some of my friends that are not Christians, I have had conversations about these two greatest commandments. I am not entirely sure what it is that God is attempting to get me to realize or prepare me for, but I know that it has something to do with these two greatest commandments.

In fact, because of God getting my attention about this particular passage I have been pondering it for a while now. You know how you get a thought stuck in your head and you just can't stop thinking about it? I like to call it my "brain kitchen", you see, I like to cook experimentally. Sometimes when I cook with something new, or try something I've never tried before it turns out absolutely delicious, other times it turns out to be absolutely disgusting and not fit for human (or otherwise) consumption.

I didn't make that meal, I promise. However, I can't think of a time I wouldn't say no to a hot dog and mac and cheese.

The point I'm trying to make is that I've been cooking with Matthew 12 and the two greatest commandments. As Christians we are called to love God, and to love people, everything else falls in line with these two commandments. Loving God is the first greatest commandment for a reason, by loving God and making him central in our lives we experience a paradigm shift. Once we reach that point where we receive a shift in our priorities and God is no longer at the top or the bottom, but is instead the basis of everything, then we will love people. Being a Christian is more than simply doing what the Bible says, it is a change of who we are. We BECOME a Christian, we do not simply act as a Christian. The paradigm shift that is experienced with a re-orientation of the believer's life, changes who that person is.

Have you experienced that paradigm shift? If you have not then I beg you to explore what that would look like in your life.


Re-orientation of our lives as Christocentric is essential.
Jesus loves you man
Alex Gebert