The apostle Paul wrote: "We will work what is good for all, but especially for those who are related to us in the faith" (Galatians 6:10). We have a Christian obligation to love our family of spiritual brothers. But how much does it matter that we do it? The apostle John indicates it bluntly: "Everyone who hates his brother is a murderer [...]. If someone makes the statement: 'I love God', and yet he is hating his brother, he is a liar. For he who does not love his brother, whom he has seen, can not be loving God, whom he has not seen "(1 John 3:15, 4:20). These are very strong words, especially if we consider that Jesus Christ also called the Devil a "murderer" and a "liar" (John 8:44). May these terms never apply to us!
conclusion
In the first place Jesus, who has died for all, loving everyone, teaches us that true love must be addressed to all. Not like the love that many times we live, simply human, that has a reduced radius: family, friends, neighbors ... True love, the one that Jesus wants, does not admit of discrimination; he does not differentiate between nice and unfriendly people, for him there is no cute and ugly, big or small; for this love there is no such thing as my country or the foreign, my Church or that of the other, my religion or the other. This love loves everyone. And that is what we have to do: love everyone.
True love, moreover, takes the initiative, does not wait to be loved, as happens in general with human love: that we love those who love us. No, true love is ahead of the other, as the Father did when, while we were still sinners, and therefore not lovers, he sent his Son to save us.
who says amen?
source: https://wol.jw.org/es/wol/d/r4/lp-s/2006886
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