Monday, May 4, 2026

Do Not Lose Heart in Doing Good


Galatians 6:10 issues a call to do good to others. This command drafts every Christian into service. No Christian can dodge this draft. It is not a suggestion, recommendation, or even an invitation. It is a divine mandate. The word of God commands us to do good for others to the glory of God.

The Christian life is about more than what you know, say, or feel. It is about what you do. We have a spiritual duty to serve others in practical ways. Grammatically, this command to do good is in an emphasis that denotes continual action or habitual activity. It is about more than random acts of kindness. Doing good is to be our daily lifestyle, not a special event.

A life of doing good is not something we can do in our own strength, wisdom, or resources. Galatians 5:22 says the fruit of the Spirit is goodness. By the indwelling Spirit of God, we are to reflect the character of the Lord Jesus Christ by doing good to others. Peter testifies about Jesus, "He went about doing good" (Acts 10:38). The same should be said of every disciple of Christ. True Christians live to do good to others.

Do Good Because You Have Been Saved


Doing good is not a means of winning God's approval. Salvation is not a reward you earn by works. It is a gift you receive by grace. This is the burden of Paul's letter to the Galatians. Paul preached the gospel in Galatia. As sinners repented and trusted Christ for salvation, a church was born. But false teachers claimed obedience to the law must be added to faith in Christ for salvation to be complete. Paul wrote this letter to call the saints to live in the freedom of Christ: "For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore, and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery" (Galatians 5:1).

Faith in Christ sets us free from to-do list religion. We are not saved by what we do for God. We are saved by trusting what God has done for us through Christ. But freedom in Christ is not a license to do your own thing: "For you were called to freedom, brothers. Only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for the flesh, but through love serve one another" (Galatians 5:13). Freedom is not free. Our freedom in Christ binds us to serve one another in love. This is the spiritual duty of Christian freedom. We are not saved by good works (Ephesians 2:8-9). We are saved for good works (Ephesians 2:10). We are saved to serve.

Do Good to Receive an Eternal Reward


Galatians 6:10 is the climax and conclusion of Paul's Gospel applications in this letter. The passage begins in verse 6 with a call to generosity: "Let the one who is taught the word share all good things with the one who teaches."

The Greek verb κοινωνείτω (koinōneitō), translated "share," carries rich theological meaning. This word comes from the root κοινωνία (koinōnia), which means fellowship, partnership, or communion. It is not merely about financial transactions, but about entering into a genuine partnership with those who labor in teaching God's Word. The present imperative form of this verb indicates that this sharing is to be a continual, ongoing practice, not an occasional gesture of goodwill.

The phrase "all good things" (πᾶσιν ἀγαθοῖς, pasin agathois) encompasses both material and spiritual blessings. While the primary emphasis in context is on material support for teachers of the Word, the comprehensive nature of πᾶσιν (all) suggests that nothing should be withheld in caring for those who faithfully minister the Word.

Then verses 7-8 warn: "Do not be deceived: God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap. For the one who sows to his own flesh will from the flesh reap corruption, but the one who sows to the Spirit will from the Spirit reap eternal life." This is the Law of the Harvest. You are determining your eternal reward by how you live day-by-day.

The word "mocked" translates as μυκτηρίζεται (myktērizetai), which literally means "to turn up one's nose at" or "to treat with contempt." The imagery is vivid. God cannot be treated with disdain or dismissed as if He were unaware or uncaring about our actions. The present passive form emphasizes that God, by His very nature, cannot be mocked. Those who think they can give little and receive much, or sow to the flesh and avoid consequences, are engaging in self-deception (μὴ πλανᾶσθε, mē planasthe), literally "stop being led astray."

The agricultural metaphor of sowing and reaping was familiar to Paul's readers. The verb σπείρει (speirei, "sows") in the present tense indicates habitual action. This is not about a single decision or isolated act, but about the pattern and direction of one's life. To "sow to the flesh" (εἰς τὴν σάρκα) means to invest one's time, resources, and energy into selfish pursuits and earthly pleasures. The harvest from such sowing is φθοράν (phthoran), corruption or destruction, a withering away of all that is temporary.

Conversely, to "sow to the Spirit" (εἰς τὸ πνεῦμα) is to invest in that which is eternal. The harvest is ζωὴν αἰώνιον (zōēn aiōnion), "eternal life," not merely life that lasts forever, but life that partakes of the quality and character of the age to come.

It often seems that those who pursue worldly things have it going on. And those who pursue spiritual things have to struggle. But verse 9 says, "And let us not grow weary of doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not lose heart." Harvest does not happen in a hurry. But present labor results in a future reward.

The exhortation "let us not grow weary" uses the subjunctive mood with μὴ ἐγκακῶμεν (mē enkakōmen), which can be translated "let us not become discouraged" or "let us not lose heart." The verb ἐγκακέω suggests a weariness that comes from prolonged effort without visible results. It is the exhaustion of the long-distance runner, not the sprinter. Paul includes himself with "us," acknowledging that even apostles face this temptation.

The phrase "in due season" (καιρῷ ἰδίῳ, kairō idiō) is crucial. Unlike χρόνος (chronos), which refers to chronological time, καιρός (kairos) refers to the appointed, opportune, or proper time, God's time. The harvest will come at the divinely ordained moment, not according to our human timetable. The condition "if we do not lose heart" (μὴ ἐκλυόμενοι) uses a participle that means "not becoming faint" or "not giving up." Perseverance is essential.

This does not guarantee a "happily-ever-after" ending to your story on earth. Many faithful servants of Christ end their lives without seeing the fruit of their labor. Our hope is in eternal rewards. If we remain faithful to the end, we will receive a reward. There are many ways that doing good in this life brings rewards. Doing good is its own reward. But even if we do not receive earthly rewards, do good to receive an eternal reward.

The principle of sowing and reaping is not merely a spiritual platitude; it is a law embedded in the very fabric of creation. Just as physical seeds produce according to their kind, so spiritual seeds produce spiritual fruit. The farmer who plants corn cannot expect to harvest wheat. Neither can the person who invests in temporal, selfish pursuits expect to reap eternal, spiritual rewards.

This principle applies not only to the quantity of our giving but also to its quality and motivation. God is not impressed with outward displays of generosity that mask inward greed or pride. He sees the heart. He knows whether we give grudgingly or cheerfully, whether we sow bountifully or sparingly, whether our motivation is love for Him and others or merely a desire to receive in return.

The Corinthian church learned this lesson when Paul wrote to them about financial support for the Jerusalem believers. He reminded them: "The point is this: whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully. Each one must give as he has decided in his heart, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver" (2 Corinthians 9:6-7). The quantity of our sowing matters, but so does the attitude of our hearts.

Paul's use of the present tense throughout this passage is significant. The verb σπείρων (the one who sows) is a present participle, indicating ongoing, continuous action. This is not about a one-time decision or a single generous gift. It is about a lifestyle pattern of investing in what matters for eternity. Day by day, moment by moment, we are sowing seeds that will produce a harvest.

The warning not to grow weary is especially relevant for those who have been faithful for many years without seeing dramatic results. The temptation to quit, to become cynical, to pull back from doing good is real. We look around and see wickedness rewarded and righteousness mocked. We wonder if our efforts make any difference. We feel like the farmer who has planted his fields but sees no sign of growth, only bare soil and waiting.

But God calls us to faith and patience. The harvest is coming. The reaping will happen. We must not measure success by immediate, visible results but by faithfulness to the calling God has given us. Abraham waited decades for the promised son. Joseph endured years of slavery and imprisonment before seeing God's purpose fulfilled. Moses spent forty years in the wilderness before God called him to deliver Israel. These servants of God had to trust that their labor was not in vain, even when circumstances suggested otherwise.

Do Good as You Have the Opportunity


Verse 10 opens with "Therefore" (Ἄρα οὖν, Ara oun), which serves as both a conclusion and a transition. Paul is drawing together everything he has said about sowing, reaping, and not growing weary into a practical imperative.

The phrase "as we have opportunity" translates ὡς καιρὸν ἔχομεν (hōs kairon echomen). Here again we encounter καιρός, not mere chronological time, but the right time, the opportune moment, the divinely appointed season. The present tense of "have" (ἔχομεν) indicates that we currently possess this opportunity. This is not an exhortation to search for opportunities to do good; it is an assumption that we already have them. Every moment is a καιρός, a God-given opportunity.

We do not have the same personal responsibilities, spiritual gifts, or divine callings. But we all have the opportunity to do good. Do not minimize this duty. Paul is not saying you should do good whenever you get a chance. This is not an exhortation to find opportunities to do good. It is an assumption that you have the opportunity to do good. Your life is an opportunity to do good. But you must choose how to spend your life.

You have a divine opportunity to do good. Yet it is a limited opportunity. Paul exhorts, "Look carefully then how you walk, not as unwise but as wise, making the best use of the time, because the days are evil" (Ephesians 5:15-16). Time is passing. The opportunity to do good will not last forever. We must seize the moment.

The urgency of Paul's exhortation cannot be overstated. The phrase "making the best use of the time" translates the Greek ἐξαγοραζόμενοι τὸν καιρόν (exagorazomenoi ton kairon), which literally means "buying up the opportunity" or "redeeming the time." The verb ἐξαγοράζω was used in commercial contexts to make a strategic purchase or seize a favorable market opportunity. Paul uses it to urge believers to recognize and seize every God-given opportunity for doing good.

Every day presents us with countless opportunities to do good. The question is whether we will recognize them and act upon them. Will we see the lonely neighbor as an opportunity to show Christ's love, or will we walk past, absorbed in our own concerns? Will we view the financial need in our church as an opportunity to practice generosity, or will we hoard our resources for ourselves? Will we recognize the teachable moment with our children as an opportunity to invest in their spiritual formation, or will we let it pass in favor of more pressing matters?

These opportunities are not theoretical or abstract. They are concrete, specific, and immediate. They are knocking at our door right now. But they will not knock forever. The neighbor will move away. The need will be met by someone else. The child will grow up. The moment will pass. This is why Paul writes with such urgency: "as we have opportunity." Not "if we have opportunity" or "when we find opportunity," but "as we have opportunity," acknowledging the present reality that the opportunity is already here.

The scarcity of time makes each opportunity more precious. None of us knows how many days we have left. None of us can guarantee we will have another opportunity to do the good deed that presents itself today. James warns, "Come now, you who say, 'Today or tomorrow we will go into such and such a town and spend a year there and trade and make a profit', yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring. What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes" (James 4:13-14). Life is short. Opportunities are fleeting. We must act now.

Do Good for the Benefit of Others


We are not doing good to meet a goal, exercise a gift, or fulfill a calling. And it is not about buildings, programs, or activities. It is about people. People matter to God.

The command is clear: "let us do good" (ἐργαζώμεθα τὸ ἀγαθόν, ergazōmetha to agathon). The verb ἐργάζομαι (ergazomai) means to work, to labor, to be active in accomplishing something. This is not passive goodwill or kind intentions, it is active labor. The present subjunctive indicates continuous, habitual action. Doing good is to be the ongoing work of the Christian life.

What is "the good" (τὸ ἀγαθόν) we are to do? The definite article points to something specific and well-defined. In the context of Galatians, ἀγαθός (agathos) refers not merely to moral goodness in general, but to practical acts of kindness, generosity, and service that meet real needs. This is goodness that can be seen, felt, and experienced by others.

Do good to everyone. The scope of our good works is universal: "to all" (πρὸς πάντας, pros pantas). The preposition πρός indicates direction or orientation toward others. The adjective πάντας means "all" without exception or qualification. There is no category of person excluded from our obligation to do good.

Paul writes elsewhere, "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus" (Galatians 3:28). Our oneness in Christ leaves no room for racism, classism, or sexism. So does the call to do good. We are to do good to all persons, whether or not they are Christians.

Many schools, hospitals, orphanages, charities, and movements that have blessed society have been Christian causes. This does not include the countless Christians who have done good for others without their left hand knowing what their right hand was doing. The Lord wants to so use you to do good to people in your life.

What if the person does not deserve to receive good? Jesus teaches, "So whatever you wish that others would do to you, do also to them, for this is the Law and the Prophets" (Matthew 7:12). The Golden Rule makes no exceptions for deserving or undeserving recipients. We do good because it reflects the character of our Father in heaven, who "makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust" (Matthew 5:45).

Do good to the household of faith. While our good works extend to all, there is a particular priority: "especially to those who are of the household of faith" (μάλιστα πρὸς τοὺς οἰκείους τῆς πίστεως, malista pros tous oikeious tēs pisteōs).

The adverb μάλιστα (malista) means "especially," "above all," or "most of all." This establishes a priority, not an exclusion. We do good to all, but we give special attention to fellow believers. Why? Because the church is family.

The phrase "household of faith" is rich with meaning. The word οἰκείους (oikeious) refers to household members, family members who live under the same roof. This is not an extended family who gather occasionally for holidays. These are the people you see every day, whose lives are intertwined with yours. The genitive τῆς πίστεως (tēs pisteōs, "of faith") describes the household in terms of its defining characteristic: faith in Christ.

It is wrong when Christians do not do good for others. It is also wrong when Christians do good in the world but not for other Christians. We are to prioritize doing good to one another. The church is a spiritual family in Christ. But it is more than a family. Verse 10 calls it "the household of faith."

It is one thing to have family on the other side of the country. It is another thing to have family members who live in the same house. The church is a household, not a hotel. Hotels are nice. You can hang the "Do Not Disturb" sign on the door. They have an "At Your Service" button on the phone. Someone cleans up after you every day. You can order room service when you are hungry. You don't have to fight over the remote control.

But it does not work that way at the house. And it does not work that way in the church. In a household, everyone contributes. Everyone serves. Everyone bears burdens. Everyone shares joys and sorrows. When one member suffers, all suffer together. When one member is honored, all rejoice together (1 Corinthians 12:26).

As you have the opportunity, do good to everyone, especially to those who are of the household of faith.

A Life of Active Goodness


The call to do good in Galatians 6:6-10 is comprehensive and compelling. It is grounded in the Gospel; we do good because we have been saved by grace, not to earn salvation. It is motivated by eternal reward; we sow to the Spirit with confidence that we will reap in due season. It is urgent; we must seize the καιρός, the God-given opportunity we have right now. And it is person-centered, we do good to all people, especially to the household of faith.

The present-tense verbs throughout this passage underscore the continuous nature of this calling. Κοινωνείτω (share) in verse 6, ἐργαζώμεθα (let us do) in verse 10; these are not occasional acts but habitual practices. Doing good is not an event on your calendar; it is the calendar itself.

Paul includes himself in this exhortation. He writes, "let us not grow weary," "let us do good." Even the great apostle needed this reminder. Even he faced the temptation to become discouraged when the harvest seemed delayed. If Paul needed encouragement to persevere in doing good, how much more do we?

The imagery of sowing and reaping is both sobering and encouraging. It is sobering because it reminds us that our choices have consequences. What we invest our lives in matters eternally. We cannot mock God by living for the flesh and expecting to reap the Spirit. We cannot sow sparingly and expect to reap bountifully.

But the imagery is also encouraging because it assures us that no good deed is wasted. Every act of kindness, every word of encouragement, every gift given in faith is a seed planted. It may not sprout immediately. The harvest may seem delayed. But if we do not lose heart, we will reap in due season. God is faithful. He sees. He remembers. He rewards.

The question before each of us is simple: What will we do with our καιρός? We have an opportunity today, right now, in this moment. We have resources, whatever God has entrusted to us, whether great or small. We have people around us, family, friends, neighbors, fellow believers, who need to experience the goodness of God through our hands, our words, our presence.

Will we invest in the flesh or in the Spirit? Will we live for temporary pleasures or eternal rewards? Will we grow weary in doing good, or will we persevere with patient hope, knowing that the harvest is coming?

Peter testified of Jesus, "He went about doing good" (Acts 10:38). May the same be said of us. May our lives be marked by active, sacrificial, Spirit-empowered goodness toward all people, especially toward those who are of the household of faith. May we labor faithfully, not seeking immediate results but trusting in God's perfect timing. May we not grow weary, knowing that in due season we shall reap, if we do not lose heart.

This is the divine mandate: As we have opportunity, let us do good to all, especially to those who are of the household of faith. May we answer this call with wholehearted obedience, to the glory of God our Father.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

.When Love Demands Everything


How we respond to our enemies exposes what truly rules our hearts. In a culture that thrives on outrage and rivalry, the downfall of an opponent is often treated as entertainment. We celebrate public failures, share stories of humiliation, and quietly feel justified when someone we oppose stumbles. This spirit seeps into our conversations, our politics, and even our faith.

From an early age, this reaction feels natural. When someone trips or fails, laughter comes easily. As adults, that same instinct matures into something darker. We find satisfaction when our enemies lose influence, credibility, or power. Sometimes we even frame their misfortune as evidence of God's favor toward us. Scripture, however, confronts this instinct head-on. God warns that rejoicing over another's fall, even the fall of an enemy, displeases Him.

Jesus carried this wisdom further and made it central to life in His kingdom. He did not merely say, do not hate your enemies. He commanded something far more demanding. Love your enemies. Do good to those who hate you. Bless those who curse you. Pray for those who mistreat you. This teaching cuts against every instinct of self-protection and self-justification. Loving enemies is not about approval or agreement. It is about obedience to the heart of God.

Rejoicing in another's failure requires no effort. It comes naturally. Loving an enemy requires intention, humility, and surrender. It calls us to resist the urge to keep score or seek revenge. It invites us to see others through the lens of God's mercy rather than our own grievances. Jesus calls His followers to live differently in a world that delights in division.

God's mercy does not discriminate. He sends rain and sunshine on both the righteous and the unrighteous. He extends patience even to those who oppose Him. If God does not delight in the downfall of the wicked, neither should His people. To celebrate another's suffering, even when it feels deserved, reveals a heart still shaped by pride rather than grace.

The true measure of our faith is not how kindly we treat those who agree with us or support us. It is revealed in how we respond to those who oppose us, criticize us, or wish us harm. Loving enemies is not weakness. It is a strength shaped by trust in God's justice. It frees us from bitterness and allows God to remain the judge.

When we refuse to gloat over failure and choose mercy instead, we reflect the character of our Father. In doing so, we bear witness to a kingdom that operates by love rather than retaliation. This kind of obedience is costly but also transformative. It changes us, and it may even open a door for healing where hostility once ruled.

The Enemy Who Falls: Understanding אוֹיֵב

The Hebrew word for enemy in verse 17 is אוֹיֵב (oyev). This term appears throughout the Old Testament to describe those who actively oppose, hate, or seek harm against another person. The word carries intensity. It does not refer to casual acquaintances or people with whom we disagree. It describes those who position themselves against us, who wish us ill, who work toward our downfall.

In the Psalms, David frequently cries out to God about his אוֹיְבִים (oyevim, plural form). These are not abstract threats. They are real people plotting real harm. They slander, scheme, and pursue with malice. When Proverbs speaks of your enemy falling, it describes a scenario in which someone who has genuinely wronged you, opposed you, or wished you harm experiences their own collapse.

The natural response to such a moment is vindication. After enduring hostility, watching your enemy stumble feels like justice. It feels deserved. It feels satisfying. Proverbs does not deny that satisfaction exists. Instead, it commands us not to indulge it. The word שָׂמַח (samach), translated "rejoice," means to be glad, to celebrate, to take pleasure in something. God forbids us from taking pleasure in the downfall of those who have hurt us.

This command strikes at the core of our sense of fairness. We want to believe that celebrating justice is righteous. But God distinguishes between His justice and our gloating. He alone knows the full story of every heart. He alone can judge with perfect righteousness. When we rejoice over another's fall, we assume a position that belongs to God alone. We declare ourselves competent to assess who deserves suffering and who does not.

The prohibition extends beyond outward celebration. The verse continues, "do not let your heart be glad when he stumbles." The Hebrew לֵב (lev), translated "heart," refers to the inner person, the seat of emotions, thoughts, and will. God is not merely concerned with external behavior. He addresses the internal posture of our souls. Even if we refrain from public celebration, inward gladness still displeases Him.

This reveals how deeply God cares about the condition of our hearts. He knows that bitterness and vindictiveness poison us from within. They distort our perspective, harden our compassion, and distance us from His character. When we harbor secret satisfaction over another's suffering, we align ourselves with the spirit of the accuser rather than the spirit of mercy.

The Stumbling and the Fall: כָּשַׁל and נָפַל

Two Hebrew verbs in verse 17 describe the enemy's downfall: נָפַל (naphal, "falls") and כָּשַׁל (kashal, "stumbles"). These words paint a vivid picture of collapse and failure. נָפַל often refers to falling in battle, being overthrown, or experiencing a dramatic defeat. It suggests a complete loss of standing or power. כָּשַׁל, on the other hand, conveys stumbling, staggering, or failing under a burden. It can describe physical stumbling or moral and spiritual failure.

Together, these terms encompass the full range of human downfall. Whether sudden and dramatic or gradual and shameful, the collapse of an enemy tempts us toward celebration. The specificity of these words reminds us that God sees every kind of failure. He knows when someone loses their reputation, security, health, or influence. He sees the public humiliations and the private devastations. And in every case, He commands the same response: do not rejoice.

This dual imagery also suggests that no fall is too small or too great to escape God's notice. Whether your enemy experiences a minor setback or a total ruin, God calls you to resist the urge to gloat. The size of their failure does not determine the appropriateness of your response. Your obedience to God's heart does.

Consider the implications. If someone who has slandered you loses their job, God says do not rejoice. If a family member who has wronged you faces public embarrassment, do not let your heart be glad. If a political opponent you despise suffers a scandal or defeat, resist the temptation to celebrate. This command confronts the narratives we create to justify our contempt. It dismantles the idea that some people deserve our scorn.

God's Displeasure: רָעָה בְּעֵינָי יְהוָה

Verse 18 presents a startling consequence: "or the Lord will see, be displeased, and turn His anger away from him." The phrase translated "be displeased" comes from the Hebrew רָעָה בְּעֵינָיו (ra'ah be'eynav), literally "evil in His eyes" or "displeasing in His sight." This expression appears throughout the Old Testament to describe actions that deeply offend God's character and purposes.

When God sees our rejoicing over an enemy's fall, it is רָעָה בְּעֵינָיו—evil in His eyes. This language is striking. The same term used to describe idolatry, oppression, and rebellion is applied to our celebration of another's suffering. God places gloating in the category of serious moral offense. It reveals a heart that has strayed from His character of mercy and compassion.

The reason becomes clear in the second part of the verse: God may turn His anger away from the fallen enemy just to address our pride. The Hebrew אַף (aph), translated "anger," refers to God's righteous displeasure and judgment. When God says He will turn His anger away from the enemy, He is not endorsing their sin or excusing their wrongdoing. He is asserting His sovereignty over justice.

This is one of the most sobering warnings in all of Scripture. God reserves the right to redirect His discipline from the guilty party to the one who gloats. Why? Because in that moment, the one rejoicing has revealed a heart problem more urgent than the enemy's offense. Pride, vindictiveness, and lack of mercy are serious sins. They poison our relationship with God and others. They demonstrate that we have forgotten how much we ourselves have been forgiven.

God's response here reflects a principle woven throughout Scripture: He opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble. When we take pleasure in another's downfall, we position ourselves above them in pride. We declare ourselves worthy of better treatment, more deserving of God's favor. This attitude repels God's grace. It places us in opposition to His heart.

The Cost of Love in a Retaliatory World

To love when it costs us means to surrender our right to satisfaction when justice appears to vindicate us. It means releasing the scorecard we keep in our minds, the tally of wrongs done and wrongs repaid. It means trusting that God's justice is sufficient, even when we do not personally witness it.

This kind of love is not passive. It does not mean tolerating abuse or enabling sin. It does not require us to maintain close relationships with those who harm us. Boundaries are biblical. Protection is wise. But even as we guard our hearts and set limits, we can refuse to rejoice in another's suffering. We can pray for their repentance rather than their ruin. We can hope for their restoration rather than their destruction.

Jesus modeled this costly love throughout His ministry. He wept over Jerusalem even as the city rejected Him. He prayed for those who crucified Him. He extended mercy to Peter after betrayal and offered restoration to the very people who had abandoned Him in His darkest hour. Jesus did not minimize sin or excuse wrongdoing. He confronted evil directly. But He never rejoiced in the suffering of those who opposed Him.

The early church carried this witness forward. Stephen prayed for his executioners as they stoned him. Paul, who had persecuted the church, became its greatest missionary through the mercy of God and the forgiveness of believers who had every reason to reject him. The testimony of the gospel has always been inseparable from the radical forgiveness and love shown by those who follow Jesus.

This is the love that transforms enemies into neighbors, opponents into image-bearers of God, and failures into opportunities for redemption. It refuses to see anyone as beyond the reach of God's grace. It recognizes that we were once enemies of God ourselves, reconciled only through His mercy. How then can we delight in the downfall of others who stand where we once stood?

When Justice and Mercy Collide

One of the great tensions in the Christian life is the relationship between justice and mercy. We long for justice. We ache for wrongs to be made right. We want to see evil punished and righteousness vindicated. These desires are not wrong. God Himself is just. He will bring all things to account. He will not allow sin to go unpunished forever.

But God's justice operates on a timeline and with a wisdom that far exceeds our own. He knows when judgment serves correction and when it hardens hearts. He knows when mercy will lead to repentance and when patience will be mistaken for approval. He sees the beginning and the end of every story. We see only fragments.

When we rejoice in the fall of an enemy, we rush ahead of God's plan. We declare that now is the time for judgment, that this person has received what they deserve, and that justice has been served. But God may have other purposes. He may be using their downfall to humble them, to draw them to repentance, to open their eyes to their need for Him. Our celebration can hinder the very work God is doing.

This is why the warning in verse 18 is so significant. God may turn His wrath away from the enemy to address our own hearts. He prioritizes the condition of our souls over the punishment of those who have wronged us. He would rather interrupt His discipline to correct our pride than allow us to continue in self-righteousness.

This does not mean God ignores sin or abandons justice. It means He operates with a complexity and care that we cannot fully grasp. He balances mercy and judgment in ways that accomplish His purposes for all involved. When we insert ourselves into that process through gloating or vindictiveness, we disrupt His work and reveal our own need for transformation.

The Spiritual Discipline of Enemy Love

Loving enemies is not a feeling we summon. It is a discipline we practice. It begins with prayer. Jesus commanded us to pray for those who persecute us. Prayer shifts our focus from the offense to the person. It reminds us that they, too, are made in the image of God. It opens our hearts to compassion even when we do not naturally feel it.

Prayer for enemies forces us to confront our own sin. It is difficult to pray genuinely for someone's well-being while nursing bitterness against them. It is nearly impossible to ask God to bless someone while simultaneously hoping for their downfall. Prayer exposes the contradictions in our hearts and invites the Holy Spirit to bring alignment.

This discipline also includes choosing our words carefully. We live in an age of constant commentary. Social media, news cycles, and casual conversations provide endless opportunities to speak about those we oppose. Every comment, every share, every sarcastic remark reveals what we truly believe about mercy and judgment. Loving enemies means refusing to participate in mockery, even when it is popular or feels justified.

Additionally, we practice enemy love by resisting the urge to broadcast their failures. When someone who has wronged us stumbles, the temptation to tell others can be overwhelming. We want witnesses to their downfall. We want validation that we were right about them all along. But love covers a multitude of sins. Love does not delight in exposing the faults of others, even when those faults are real.

This kind of restraint costs us. It costs us the satisfaction of being vindicated. It costs us the support of those who would rally around us in shared contempt. It costs us the sense of control that comes from managing narratives and shaping perceptions. But it gains us something far greater: conformity to the character of Christ.

The Transforming Power of Costly Love

When we choose mercy over vengeance, something shifts within us. Bitterness loses its grip. Resentment fades. The weight of carrying anger and nursing grievances begins to lift. This is not because the offense was trivial or the harm was small. It is because we have entrusted justice to God and freed ourselves from the burden of being judge and jury.

Costly love can also transform others. When an enemy expects celebration over their fall and instead encounters compassion, it disrupts their assumptions. It challenges their understanding of who we are and what we value. It may plant a seed of conviction or create an opening for reconciliation where none seemed possible.

History is filled with stories of former enemies reconciled through unexpected mercy. Wars have ended through forgiveness. Families have been restored through grace. Communities have healed through the willingness of the wronged to extend compassion rather than condemnation. These transformations do not happen easily or quickly, but they begin with individuals who refuse to rejoice in the suffering of those who oppose them.

More importantly, costly love reflects the heart of God to a watching world. In an age of division and contempt, the witness of believers who love their enemies stands out. It testifies to a power greater than human nature. It points to a kingdom where mercy triumphs over judgment, where love is stronger than hate, where forgiveness breaks the cycle of retaliation.

This is the gospel made visible. God did not wait for us to deserve His love before extending it. He loved us while we were still sinners, still enemies, still opposed to Him. Christ died for the ungodly. If God loved us at our worst, how can we withhold love from others at theirs?

The Costly Call to Christlikeness

Proverbs 24:17-18 confronts us with a costly command. Do not rejoice when your enemy falls. Do not let your heart be glad when they stumble. The cost is our pride, our sense of justice, our satisfaction in being right. The cost is the comfort of shared contempt and the validation of public vindication. The cost is the narrative we have built around our grievances and the identity we have formed in opposition to others.

But the gain is immeasurable. We gain freedom from bitterness. We gain alignment with the heart of God. We gain the opportunity to reflect His mercy to a world desperately in need of it. We gain the transformation that comes only through obedience to the hardest commands.

Loving when it costs us is the mark of true discipleship. It separates those who follow Jesus in name from those who follow Him in practice. It reveals whether our faith is shaped by cultural norms or biblical truth. It tests whether we trust God's justice more than we trust our own instincts for revenge.

The Lord sees how we respond to our enemies. He sees the secret gladness we harbor when they fail. He sees the pride that fuels our contempt and the bitterness that shapes our prayers. And He calls us to something higher. He calls us to love as He loves, to forgive as we have been forgiven, to extend mercy because mercy has been lavished upon us.

This is the way of the kingdom. It is narrow and costly. It contradicts the wisdom of the world and challenges the instincts of the flesh. But it is the path Jesus walked, and it is the path He calls us to follow. When love costs us everything, we discover what it means to truly belong to Him.

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