I’ve been
challenged by some of my brothers. The context has been how to respond to
homosexual believers, but the issue is bigger than that. This is about how
Christians relate to unbelievers, to people who have sin in their life.
They have
held that unconditional love does not equal unconditional acceptance: that
loving them does not mean that I accept them or their lifestyle.
I disagree.
Unconditional love absolutely DOES mean unconditional acceptance of the person
you're loving. The two cannot be separated. Conditional acceptance is
absolutely conditional love, which is to say, it’s not love at all. Maybe it’s
manipulation or something, but it is NOT love.
Someone
would probably point out that accepting the person is not the same as accepting
their lifestyle, and that's TBI: True But Irrelevant. Accepting their behavior
is never part of the issue of loving the person. Let me clarify:
I love
people whose political views offend me. I love people who believe lies and who
tell lies, about themselves, about others, and about God. I love people who
haven’t admitted that they struggle with gluttony, or with manipulation, or who
don’t know how to submit to anyone else. I love people who take advantage of
me. (Let's be honest: if I loved only perfect people, I would never love
anybody; I could never even love myself.)
In all of
this, I don't interview people before I decide to love them: “Are they good
enough for my love? Do they deserve my love? Is there something that they do
which disqualifies them from love? Would people on Facebook be offended if I
loved this person? Would it look bad on my resume?”
Bottom
line: the VAST majority of the time, their sexuality, their pridefulness, their
gluttony, or any other sin should not even be part of the conversation: that's
their business; that's pretty much between them and God. There are two
exceptions.
The first
is that if they are a danger to me or mine, whether great danger or small, I
suspect (I’m not actually convinced of this one – see Christ’s example) that I
have the right to separate myself from them. Because I love to be alive, I don’t
hang around mass murderers, and because God made me an introvert, I limit how
much time I spend in crowds. That’s fairly straightforward.
The second
exception is when we're in a covenant relationship together: when I have their
invitation to speak into their life. Then I can talk about their sexual
preferences and whether that's sin or not. But if we’re in covenant, then they
can also speak into my life about my egotistical preferences and whether that's
sin or not.
But under
NO circumstances do I ever have the right to stand apart and either judge or
reject another human being because of their actions, their preferences or their
choices. I can choose whether to love them or not (though the Bible does not
give me this choice, I can choose it nevertheless), I can choose whether to be
in a relationship or not, but I may not declare them unfit for love based on
their actions.
Seriously:
how would it be if God decided to love us based on whether we were good enough?
“Oh, this guy judges people, that woman has bad theology. I’m not going to love
them. I’m not going to bear their sin on the cross. Sorry. Sucks to be them.”
“A new
command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one
another.” – John 13:34
“But God
demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ
died for us.” – Romans 5:8.
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