Be Like
Christ
The
Scripture in Philippians says; “Do nothing from selfishness and empty
conceit, but with humility of mind regard one another as more important than
yourself; do not merely look at your own personal interests, but also for the
interests of others.” Phil. 2:2-3 (NASB) What is selfishness? Merriam-Webster says its:
“concerned excessively or exclusively with oneself : seeking or concentrating on one's own
advantage, pleasure, or well-being without regard for others; and arising from
concern with one's own welfare or advantage in disregard of others.” (Mirriam-Webster.com) As I look at this definition one thing is
repeated and that is “without or disregard of others.” We are told not to be selfish which at times
can be a hard thing to do. Today we live
in a very self-serving world and let us look at selfishness and what we can do
about it.
The
greatest commandment in scripture is: “‘You
shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and
with all your mind.’ This is the great and foremost commandment. The second is
like it, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ On these two commandments
depend the whole Law and the Prophets.” Matthew 22:3-40 (NASB) When you look at just the ten
commandments you will see that the first five deal with loving God. The Second five are all about loving
others. Maybe, that is why we want to
remove the ten commandments from public view so we are not reminded to love
others. If you didn’t follow them you
could disobey parents, murder, committee adultery, basically do what every you
wanted. Yet would that be paradise? When we obey those commandments, we show true
love for others and the impact can be great.
When you obey parents, it goes well with you. When you cheat on your spouse it leads to
pain far greater than just your spouse. Love is an amazing thing and can change
the whole course of one’s life.
Some
might say it would be so awesome to just do what I want. To live this life, and have a complete
disregard to how what you do would affect others. Take what you want do what you want causes
pain that maybe you won’t feel until those actions are taken against you. The golden rule is what it is because it has
truth to it. To do unto others as you
would have don unto you, is to live a life above self. We might think this is only for children but
it’s a truth for all of us. A life lived
in love and above the line will also, in most cases, protect you from being
known as a hypocrite. Many Christians who don’t live by the golden rule are
known to be this because they say one thing and their actions show the
opposite. Then to make matters worse they get mad when they aren’t treated the
way they should have been treating others.
Paul in
this passage also talks about conceit. Which has its roots in pride and strong opinion
about one’s self. It walks hand in hand with being selfish. The world teaches to look to self and take
care of self as number one yet most don’t like it when they are around a
conceited person. There are somethings
that we might do exceptionally well at, which we all want to boast about. We can cross that line to conceit when we
forget others. Even worse is when that
conceit is empty, meaning we aren’t as good as we thing we are. Those people really will drive us nuts
because we can see their faults. We need to check our self, because humility is
something we all could spend more time on.
We are truly small when compared to the greatness and might of the Lord.
Sometimes
people can be hard to love or even seem to not be as great as we think we
are. It is hard at times but we most view
them the way Christ does. We need to
love them and look out for them. That is
for all people the easy to love and the hard to love. Ask yourself, what a world would look like if
we each lived according to Phil. 2:2-3?
Thomas
Carter Feb. 1, 2017
Works Cited
Mirriam-Webster.com. n.d. 31 January 2017.
"NASB." New Amercan Standard Bible.
Lockman Foundation, La Habra, CA, 1995.
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