The Lord created us to live passionately for Him, not only for the joys we will experience in a relationship with the Creator but also for the benefit of those around us. Just as the warmth and beauty of flames draw people toward a hearth, God uses our passion to draw others to Himself (Matthew 5:16). Our spiritual vitality is never merely a private matter; it radiates outward, affecting everyone within our circle of influence.
This truth becomes particularly evident in Luke 10:25-29, where a lawyer's question about eternal life reveals the heart of what it means to live with spiritual fire. The passage offers profound insights into maintaining, and when necessary, rekindling the passionate devotion God desires from His people.
The Question That Reveals Our Hearts
The encounter begins with a lawyer who "stood up and tested Him" (Luke 10:25, ESV). The Greek word used here is ἐκπειράζων (ekpeirazōn), which can mean to test, tempt, or put to the proof. While this word sometimes carries negative connotations of tempting someone to do evil, the context here suggests something more nuanced. This may well have been a sincere question from a genuine seeker, though one who was also testing whether Jesus' teaching aligned with traditional Jewish understanding.
The lawyer's question, "Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?" uses the Greek verb κληρονομήσω (klēronomēsō), meaning "to inherit or receive as an inheritance." This word choice is significant. An inheritance isn't something earned through merit; it's received as a gift, typically from a father to a child. Yet the lawyer asks what he must do to inherit it, revealing a fundamental tension in his understanding. He's asking about action while using inheritance language—mixing works and grace in a way that many of us still do today.
The concept of αἰώνιον ζωήν (aiōnion zōēn), eternal life, also deserves careful attention. The adjective αἰώνιον doesn't merely refer to duration but to quality and origin. This is life that belongs to the age to come, life that flows from God Himself. It's not simply existence that continues forever; every human soul will exist forever, either in heaven or hell. Rather, eternal life is a particular quality of life, God's own life, that believers can experience beginning right now, not only after death.
The Law's Perfect Standard
Jesus responds by redirecting the lawyer to Scripture: "What is written in the Law? How do you read it?" The phrase ἐν τῷ νόμῳ (en tō nomō) "in the Law" refers specifically to the Torah, the five books of Moses that formed the foundation of Jewish life and practice. Jesus' question πῶς ἀναγινώσκεις (pōs anaginōskeis) "How do you read it?" carries the sense of "How do you understand or interpret it?"
The lawyer responds with a masterful synthesis of Deuteronomy 6:5 and Leviticus 19:18: "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind, and your neighbor as yourself" (Luke 10:27, ESV).
Let us examine each element of this commandment, for in understanding what God requires, we discover where our spiritual fire may have dimmed.
Loving God With All Your Heart
The Greek word καρδίας (kardias), heart, represents far more than emotions in biblical thought. The heart is the center of one's entire being, encompassing intellect, will, and affection. It's the command center from which all decisions and desires flow. To love God with all your heart means to orient your entire inner life toward Him, every thought, every choice, every desire.
Consider honestly: Has your heart remained fully devoted to God, or have other loves crept in to share the throne? The human heart is like a garden that requires constant tending. Left unattended, weeds of worldly affection inevitably take root. When we notice our passion for God cooling, it's often because we've allowed our hearts to become divided, loving Him alongside, rather than above other things.
Loving God With All Your Soul
The word ψυχῆς (psychēs) soul, can refer to one's life force, one's essential self, or one's entire being. In this context, it emphasizes the totality of who we are. We are to love God with our entire existence, holding nothing back. This isn't a compartmentalized faith where God receives our Sundays but not our Mondays, our prayers but not our business practices.
The soul represents the animating principle of life itself. When we love God with all our soul, we're offering Him not just religious observance but the very essence of who we are. A rekindled spiritual fire requires us to examine whether we've been giving God our leftovers, the energy that remains after we've pursued everything else, or whether He truly receives the firstfruits of our life and vitality.
Loving God With All Your Strength
The term ἰσχύος (ischyos) strength refers to power, might, and ability. This encompasses our physical energy, our resources, and our capabilities. Loving God with all our strength means engaging our bodies, our time, our talents, and our material possessions in service to Him.
This component of the commandment reminds us that spiritual passion isn't merely an internal, emotional reality. It manifests in concrete action. When our spiritual fire burns brightly, it energizes us for kingdom work. Conversely, when we find ourselves too exhausted or too busy to serve God, when we have strength for entertainment but not for prayer, for hobbies but not for Scripture reading, we must question whether we're truly loving Him with all our strength.
Loving God With All Your Mind
The word διανοίας (dianoias), mind, refers to understanding, intellect, and thoughtful reflection. God doesn't call us to mindless devotion but to engage Him with our full intellectual capacity. We are to think deeply about who He is, study His Word with diligence, and allow biblical truth to shape our worldview.
In an age of distraction and sound-bite theology, loving God with all our mind requires intentional effort. It means prioritizing serious engagement with Scripture over passive consumption of spiritual content. It means wrestling with difficult theological questions rather than settling for easy answers. When our minds wander during prayer, or our Bible reading becomes mechanical and superficial, it's a sign that the fire needs rekindling.
The Impossible Standard
Jesus affirms the lawyer's answer: "You have answered correctly; do this, and you will live" (Luke 10:28, ESV). The verb ποίει (poiei) do, practice, carry out, is in the present imperative, suggesting continuous action. "Keep on doing this, and you will live." The verb ζήσῃ (zēsē) you will live, promises life as a result of perfect obedience.
But herein lies the rub: no one has ever loved God with absolutely all their heart, soul, strength, and mind, except Jesus Himself. The commandment's impossibility is precisely the point. It functions like a mirror, revealing our inadequacy and driving us to seek God's grace. The lawyer asked what he must do to inherit eternal life. Jesus essentially responds, "If you want to earn it through doing, then you must perfectly and continuously fulfill this comprehensive love command."
The very impossibility of this standard should ignite in us a deeper passion for the One who met the requirement on our behalf. Christ loved the Father with all His heart, soul, strength, and mind, and in our union with Him, His perfect love is credited to us. This should not lead to spiritual complacency but to grateful, passionate devotion.
Loving Your Neighbor as Yourself
The second part of the lawyer's answer, "and your neighbor as yourself," employs the phrase τὸν πλησίον σου ὡς σεαυτόν (ton plēsion sou hōs seauton). The word πλησίον (plēsion) means neighbor or one who is near. The comparison ὡς (hōs) as indicates the standard and manner of this love: in the same way you naturally care for your own wellbeing, care for others.
This isn't a command to develop self-love before we can love others. Rather, it recognizes the reality that humans instinctively care about their own interests, comfort, and advancement. The commandment redirects that same energy and concern toward others. We spend significant time thinking about what we need, what would make us happy, what would serve our interests—imagine channeling that same attentiveness toward our neighbor's needs, happiness, and interests.
The lawyer, wanting to δικαιῶσαι ἑαυτόν (dikaiōsai heauton) justify himself, asks, "And who is my neighbor?" The verb here means to prove righteous, to vindicate, or to show oneself to be in the right. He's looking for a limiting definition that would allow him to claim he's fulfilled the command. If "neighbor" means only fellow Jews, or only people in his community, or only people who are friendly to him, then perhaps he could make a case for his righteousness.
But Jesus' response, the Parable of the Good Samaritan that follows this exchange, demolishes every attempt to narrow the definition. Your neighbor is anyone whose need you can meet, regardless of ethnicity, religion, or whether they're predisposed to like you.
The Connection Between Loving God and Loving Others
The lawyer's greatest error was thinking he could fulfill the first commandment while questioning his obligations under the second. 1 John 4:20-21 makes the connection explicit: "If anyone says, 'I love God,' and hates his brother, he is a liar; for he who does not love his brother whom he has seen cannot love God whom he has not seen. And this commandment we have from him: whoever loves God must also love his brother."
This is where the metaphor of spiritual fire becomes so apt. A fire that burns hot produces both light and warmth. The light represents our worship, our devotion directed upward to God. The warmth represents our love and service flowing outward to others. You cannot have genuine fire that produces only light without warmth, or only warmth without light. Similarly, authentic love for God inevitably manifests in love for others.
This is why our spiritual condition matters not only for us but for everyone in our circle of influence. When our passion for God diminishes, our love for others inevitably cools as well. We become more irritable, more self-focused, less patient, less generous. Conversely, when we're walking in close fellowship with God, His love flows through us to bless those around us, our families, our colleagues, our church communities, even strangers we encounter.
Steps to Rekindle the Fire
If you sense that your spiritual passion has diminished, if your love for God has lost its fervor, take heart. The indwelling Holy Spirit, the πνεῦμα ἅγιον (pneuma hagion), actively works to restore believers who have drifted. Consider these steps to realign yourself with God:
First: Evaluate Your Spiritual Condition
Ask God honestly whether your fire has dwindled to embers. The Greek word for the Holy Spirit's role as our helper, παράκλητος (paraklētos), means one called alongside to help. The Spirit doesn't condemn but comes alongside to convict and restore. Allow Him to search your heart. Examine whether you're loving God with all your heart—is He still your supreme treasure? With all your soul—are you holding anything back? With all your strength, are you actively serving Him? With all your mind, are you still growing in biblical understanding?
Second: Acknowledge Distance and Repent
The word μετανοέω (metanoeō) to repent means to change one's mind, to turn around. If you've allowed distance to develop between you and your heavenly Father, acknowledge it honestly and turn back. Repentance isn't merely feeling sorry; it's reorienting your life back toward God. This might mean confessing specific sins, turning away from particular habits, or simply admitting that you've grown spiritually complacent.
Third: Refocus on Jesus
The writer of Hebrews exhorts us to be "looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith" (Hebrews 12:2, ESV). The Greek verb ἀφορῶντες (aphorōntes), looking to, suggests fixing one's gaze, staring intently. Don't just glance at Jesus occasionally; make Him the focal point of your attention.
Spend quality time in Scripture daily, not as a duty but as a means of encountering Christ in His Word. The λόγος (logos) Word is living and active (Hebrews 4:12). Ask the Lord to speak to you through it. Read slowly, meditatively, allowing truths about Jesus to sink deep into your heart and mind. Observe how He teaches His followers to live, His priorities, His values, His responses to various situations.
Fourth: Rely on the Holy Spirit
We cannot manufacture spiritual passion through human effort alone. The Holy Spirit must guide us back to an intimate and exciting relationship with the Father. Paul writes in Romans 8:14, "For all who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God" (ESV). The verb ἄγονται (agontai) are led is passive, indicating that the Spirit is the active agent. Our role is to yield, to follow, to cooperate with His work in us.
Cry out earnestly to God, seeking His guidance and wisdom. The Greek word δέησις (deēsis) supplication or earnest petition suggests urgent, heartfelt prayer. Don't approach prayer casually when your spiritual life is at stake. Pour out your heart to God, expressing your desire to return to vibrant fellowship with Him.
Fifth: Love and Serve God
Finally, express your renewed devotion through worship and service. The word λατρεύω (latreuō) to serve or worship, encompasses both religious worship and the service that flows from it. True worship isn't confined to Sunday gatherings; it encompasses offering our entire lives as living sacrifices (Romans 12:1).
Serve God by loving others practically. Remember that you cannot separate love for God from love for neighbor. Find tangible ways to demonstrate Christ's love to those around you. As you serve others in Jesus' name, you'll often find your own passion for Him rekindled. There's something about getting outside ourselves and our own spiritual struggles to focus on others' needs that refreshes our souls.
The Worth of the Effort
Living closely with God is well worth the effort required to maintain or rekindle your spiritual fire. The lawyer in Luke 10 sought a minimum standard, a way to justify himself by carefully defining his obligations. But Jesus calls us to something far greater: wholehearted, unreserved, passionate devotion to God that naturally overflows in love for others.
When you love God with all your heart, soul, strength, and mind, your life becomes a beacon that draws others to Him. People are attracted to authentic spiritual vitality. They notice when someone possesses a joy that circumstances can't shake, a peace that defies explanation, a love that extends even to difficult people. Your rekindled fire becomes part of God's plan to warm and enlighten a cold, dark world.
Moreover, the quality of life that comes from walking closely with God, that αἰώνιον ζωήν (aiōnion zōēn), eternal life is available to you right now. You don't have to wait for heaven to experience an abundant life. Jesus said, "I came that they may have life and have it abundantly" (John 10:10, ESV). The word περισσὸν (perisson), abundantly, means overflowing, more than enough, exceeding the standard measure. This is the life God offers those who remain close to Him.
Conclusion
The passage in Luke 10:26-28 confronts us with the totality of what God requires: comprehensive love for Him and genuine love for our neighbors. It reveals our inability to meet this standard perfectly through our own efforts, driving us to depend on God's grace. Yet it also paints a picture of what passionate, wholehearted devotion to God looks like, a fire that burns with all our heart, soul, strength, and mind.
If that fire has diminished in your life, don't accept spiritual mediocrity as inevitable. The same God who ignited your initial love for Him stands ready to fan it back into flame. Through honest self-evaluation, genuine repentance, renewed focus on Jesus, reliance on the Spirit, and active love for God and others, you can rekindle the fire.
Your spiritual condition matters not only for your own joy and fulfillment but for everyone whose life you touch. When you burn brightly with love for God, you become part of how He draws others to Himself. So guard your fire carefully, tend it diligently, and when necessary, take the steps needed to rekindle it. The Lord created you to live passionately for Him, and living closely with Him is well worth every effort required.