As our nation prepares to celebrate Independence Day this week, Foursquare Leader Weekly continues to look at how we can best love our neighbors and communities. Read a message from Pastor John Cabello, and see a video about a church in Raytown, Mo., that is spreading the love of Jesus in a simple way. Jesus used the parable of the Good Samaritan to answer a compelling question that speaks of the heart of God. We know the story from Luke 10:25-37 and the characters well. A man is compelled, for whatever reason, to travel a dangerous road, and is wounded and left for dead. As time passes, two travelers walk around the man, avoiding him in his painful condition. However, another traveler is compelled to rise above issues of race, gender, politics and religion. He stops to care for the wounded man, showing kindness and mercy. This story illustrates what the church is called to do: to reach the whole world for Christ. To love our neighbors as ourselves (v. 27). We are compelled by Jesus to accept people in whatever condition they’re in, without judgement or condemnation. Christ’s lesson about being a neighbor compels us to love people, even in the midst of their compulsions or transgressions. Neighbors and neighborhoods need Jesus, and we should seek to be a neighbor to everyone God puts in our path. As we see communities in turmoil, people hurting, many struggling to know what they can do to bring healing and reconciliation, let us all remember the greatest commandments we have been given: to love the Lord our God, and to love our neighbors as ourselves. By: John Cabello, senior pastor of New Hope Lihue Christian Fellowship (Lihue Foursquare Church) in Lihue, Hawaii Take a few moments to seek the Lord by reflecting and praying using these prayer points: 1. Pray and ask God, “Who is my neighbor?” Allow the Holy Spirit to process His answer through your life in your love for others. 2. Focus on being honest and vulnerable before God. Ask the Holy Spirit to reveal any biases or prejudices you may feel toward others. 3. Allow His kindness to lead you to repentance, and ask for the wisdom to be a neighbor to a world that needs Jesus. 4. As we observe Independence Day on July 4, pray for peace, mercy, kindness and justice to be abundant in our nation, and for wisdom for our leadership. In Raytown, a suburb of Kansas City, Mo., a Foursquare church teamed up with other local churches and organizations with the goal of loving their neighbors by simply feeding people affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. ADVERTISEMENT |
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