Dual dangers accompany the setting up of any list that describes specific do’s and don’t’s. Those dual dangers are pride and despair. If I am able to keep my resolutions, I feel smug and proud, with a tendency to look down on others. If I fail, I feel like a failure, defeated and worthless. This is why I must keep the cross at the forefront of my consciousness. Throughout the day, I’m required to pay attention to many people and tasks, but whenever my mind finds a few moments of leisure, I want to discipline it to fly back to the Lord. The cross leaves me no room for pride or despair. How can I be prideful when I remember my Lord died for me? How can I despair when I remember my Lord died for me ? “The Law is good, if one uses it lawfully,” wrote Paul (1 Timothy 1:8). There are several lawful uses of the Law. One is to provide the soil for love to grow. What? The soil for love to grow? That seems paradoxical at first. What does the Law have to do with love? You can’t command love...
Join with me in continuing the hard work of addressing the sins of my heart, but just as nature resists a vacuum, simply subtracting old habits and sins isn’t enough. I must replace old ways of speaking with new ways of speaking. Whereas the Old Testament said, “Thou shalt not steal” (Exodus 20:15), the New Testament goes further. It does not stop at, “He who steals must steal no longer…” but continues by saying, “…rather he must labor, performing with his own hands what is good, so that he will have something to share with the one who has need” (Ephesians 4:28). The New Testament is never content to merely demolish sin, but always eager to establish new works of love. The Law of Love not only keeps me from breaking the negative commands of the Law, the Law of Love does more, looking for and creating positive ways to do good to my neighbors. Positive commands are certainly found in the Old Testament, but the New Testament takes things to a new level....