Luke 6:27-36 · Love for Enemies
A GPS for Your Life
Luke 6:27-38
Sermon
by King Duncan
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If I were to ask you your philosophy of life, could you tell it to me? Most of us don’t think about our life philosophy, the operating set of beliefs that drives our worldview. Our philosophy of life comes out of us in subtle ways: the attitude we wake up with in the morning, how we treat other people, how we approach a new situation, the things we spend our time, energy and money on.

It’s worth taking a moment to examine our life philosophy because, in many ways, it creates our legacy. It’s like a GPS for our life. Most of you have had some experience with a GPS system in your automobile or, perhaps, your smart phone and know how it works. You program your destination into your GPS and it gives you the directions you need to get where you need to go. These technological wonders are a great gift to many of us, especially those who are “directionally challenged.”

Of course, it’s possible for a GPS to malfunction. I read recently of three women who escaped after the GPS system in their rented Mercedes SUV drove them into a lake. Talk about a living nightmare.

According to one of the women, the driver thought she was on a road, but instead the GPS directed them down a boat launch and into a shallow lake near Bellevue, Washington. It was dark and the women were trying to find their way to a conference they were attending when, without warning, the SUV crashed into the water at a local state park. One of the women immediately jumped to safety. The other two women tried to stay with the SUV as long as they could by standing on the side door frames, but they finally had to wade to safety when the vehicle kept drifting out farther into the lake. All three women made it out safely, but the SUV was completely under water. So, be careful out there. Even GPS systems, as wonderful as they are, can mislead you.

Of course, GPS systems have benefits besides generally being reliable guides through unfamiliar cities. For example, two burglars were convicted and were sentenced to jail for a total of seven years when the GPS system in their van recorded them at the scene of each of their crimes. One of the burglars used his work van to drop off his fellow miscreant outside each home they burgled. A check of the van's GPS gave a precise record of their movements. So if you decide to embark on a life of crime, be sure to disable your GPS.

Speaking of burglars, one tip I read is not to set your “Home” address on your GPS to your actual address. This is in case someone steals your car. They’ll know you’re out and can then proceed to ransack your property. Instead, you should set the “Home” address as that of your local police station. That’ll teach the would-be burglars a little lesson. (1)

Someone once quipped, “Somebody stole my GPS. My life now lacks direction.” Many people have lives that lack direction. That’s why we need a dependable philosophy, a GPS for our life, if you will. With a reliable philosophy of life we can program our life with a set of beliefs, values and priorities that will guide us to our destination. The best source of that philosophy, of course, is Jesus. He is the Word of God come down from heaven, says scripture. He is God’s revelation of the way our lives should be lived.

Jesus’ entire philosophy of life was based on love. This is the important truth you simply cannot miss. Author John Mason writes, “When you base your life on principle, 99% of your decisions are already made.” (2)

He’s right. But let’s change that quote just a little bit. In light of Jesus’ teachings let’s word it like this: “When you base your life on love, 99% of your decisions are already made.”

Do you see what Jesus is trying to do in today’s lesson? He is giving his listeners a new picture of what their lives should look like. Luke chapter 6, verse 17 notes that Jesus was surrounded by a huge crowd. This crowd included Jewish citizens and members of the Jewish ruling class, the Pharisees. It also included folks from Tyre and Sidon, pagan cities that practiced Baal worship, and Roman troops who exploited and oppressed the Jews. These folks were standing shoulder-to-shoulder with their enemies as Jesus spoke.

When Jesus said, “Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you . . .” he was introducing them to a whole new way of looking at life. This is how things work in the Kingdom of God, Jesus was saying to them. Jesus’ entire philosophy of life was rooted in love.

I am constantly amazed how many Christians miss that truth. There’s a reason for that, of course. Maybe we have never really listened to the teachings of Jesus. Notice how Jesus begins this teaching: “But to you who are listening love your enemies . . .” That’s interesting. “To you who are listening . . .” Not everybody is listening, are they?

We read earlier in Luke 6, verse 7 that the Pharisees, the Jewish religious leaders, were watching Jesus, looking for some reason to accuse him. They weren’t really listening to him. Then we read in verse 19 that lots of people in the crowd were reaching out to touch Jesus because they’d seen healing power flow from him, and they wanted to take some of that for themselves. Some of them weren’t really listening either. They just wanted him to fix their situation.

They’re not so different from many of us, are they? Some of us come here on Sunday morning and sit in the pew and turn off our minds. We’re tired, or distracted, or angry, or we’re not even sure why we’re here. Whatever the reason, we’re not ready to listen to the Gospel. Because listening means we’re open to learning something new. Listening means we’re open to change. Listening to God means being obedient to God. There’s a word we don’t like. Obedience. So Jesus knew that only a few people may really listen to his message. He knew most people aren’t ready to have their life philosophy turned upside-down. But to those who are listening, he offers a philosophy of life that provides not only hope, but salvation as well.

Pastor Lloyd John Ogilvie once told of a man who was working a crossword puzzle. He asked his friends, “What’s a four-letter word for a strong emotional reaction to difficulty?”

One man responded “Fear.”

The other friend answered, “Love.” (3)

If you think about it for a moment, those are the two words that generally define how we respond to life situations. We respond either with fear or love. Jesus’ philosophy is based on love.

Listen to today’s lesson in its entirety. He says, “But to you who are listening I say: Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you. If someone slaps you on one cheek, turn to them the other also. If someone takes your coat, do not withhold your shirt from them. Give to everyone who asks you, and if anyone takes what belongs to you, do not demand it back. Do to others as you would have them do to you.”

Then he asks a couple of powerful questions: “If you love those who love you, what credit is that to you? Even sinners love those who love them. And if you do good to those who are good to you, what credit is that to you? Even sinners do that. And if you lend to those from whom you expect repayment, what credit is that to you? Even sinners lend to sinners, expecting to be repaid in full. But love your enemies, do good to them, and lend to them without expecting to get anything back. Then your reward will be great, and you will be children of the Most High, because he is kind to the ungrateful and wicked. Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful.

“Do not judge, and you will not be judged. Do not condemn, and you will not be condemned. Forgive, and you will be forgiven. Give, and it will be given to you . . .”

What an amazing passage of scripture. In this passage Jesus gives us a beautiful picture of what a life based on love looks like.

Now I know what many of you are thinking. That’s impossible! We can’t live like that. It demands too much of us. Who can love their enemies, do good to those who hate them, pray for those who mistreat them? I mean, besides Jesus. He certainly did each of those things. But can we? Can we love like Jesus loved?

I believe we can. Maybe not perfectly--after all, we’re not Jesus. But we can do better than we’re doing. Let me give you an example of what love can do.

In 1991, Michael and Julie Weisser, a Jewish couple, received their first telephone call from Larry Trapp, the Grand Dragon of the Nebraska Ku Klux Klan. Trapp took great joy in harassing Jewish people, immigrants, people of color. He made threatening phone calls, sent out hate mail, and encouraged his followers to commit vandalism and acts of violence against non-white or Jewish people. But Trapp made a big mistake when he picked on the Weissers. They decided to fight his hatred with love.

Michael Weisser began leaving caring, friendly messages on Larry Trapp’s answering machine. When the Weissers learned that Trapp was a blind, wheelchair-bound diabetic, they offered to run errands for him. Finally, the Weisser’s continuous campaign of love paid off. Larry Trapp left the Ku Klux Klan and converted to Judaism. He gave the police and FBI valuable, insider information on local and national hate organizations. He also called every single person he’d ever harassed and apologized. But the Weissers went one step further. As Larry’s diabetes worsened, the Weissers took him in and cared for him until his death. (4)

I believe the Weissers were listening to Jesus’ message even though they are not Christians. Loving those who love you? As Jesus said, anybody can do that. That’s for unbelievers. Amateurs! Loving somebody like Larry Trapp takes grace--the awesome, undeserved gift of love and mercy that God has given us. If a Jewish couple can love like that, cannot we who say we are followers of Christ improve our witness of love?

We live in a fear-based world of anger and hate and vengeance. How do we find our way out? I know it sounds simplistic, but it is also true. Our only hope is the love of Jesus Christ. I John 3: 14 reads, “We know that we have passed from death to life, because we love each other. Anyone who does not love remains in death.”

Fear and hate and unforgiveness lead to retaliation, revenge, isolation, even war. They are all one-way streets that lead to spiritual and sometimes actual death. Choosing love over hate frees us from our ego and our fear and our pride. It frees us to be a force for life instead of death.

William Barclay, in his book And Jesus Said, tells the experience of Mabel Shaw, a famous missionary to Africa. Mabel relates how she was telling her little Bantu children in Africa about giving a cup of water in the name of the Chief, which is what they called Jesus. In such a hot country a cup of cold water was a precious gift.

Not long after teaching this lesson Mabel was sitting on a verandah. Up the street came a string of porters, obviously exhausted. From their clothes and from the way they wore their hair it was obvious these men were from another tribe, a tribe toward which the Bantu had great hostility.

Suddenly, out from the verandah there came a little line of primary-age children. Each had on her head a water pot. Even though they were obviously frightened, these children went out to the tired porters, knelt before them and held up their water pots. “We are the Chief’s children,” they said, “and we offer you a drink.”

The astonished porters knelt in return, took the water and drank. The children turned and ran to Mabel Shaw. They said, “We have given a thirsty man a drink in the name of the Chief.”

William Barclay notes, “In any ordinary village had these men asked for a drink they would have been told, ‘You are not of our village; get water for yourself.’” But by this simple act these Bantu children made the love of Christ real to these porters. (5)

You know the situation in the world today. Do you really see any other hope for the world than that the love of Jesus Christ will be revealed to all people?

Madeleine L’Engle wrote, “Love isn’t how you feel. It’s what you do.”

Loving our enemies, doing good to those who hate us, praying for those who speak evil of us, forgiving those who mistreat us frees us from the downward spiral of hate. Ephesians 4: 31-32 reads, “Get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice. Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you.”

“Get rid of all . . .” Not just some. Get rid of it all! Don’t hold on to a tiny crumb of bitterness or malice. It will grow into rage, anger, even separation and death. There is a better way. Show your friends, neighbors, co-workers, everyone you meet the love of Jesus and let that love change the world.

Joseph Aldrich tells of meeting a Christian man from India who had a powerful ministry bringing scores of Hindu and Moslem students to Christ. What accounts for his effectiveness in reaching members of these radically different cultural and religious traditions?

Each Sunday, he and his wife host thirty to fifty students for dinner.

“So you talk about Christ at these meals?” Aldrich asked.

“No,” he said. “It is impossible to talk openly of Jesus Christ.”

“So how are you able to bring so many of them to Christ?” Aldrich asked.

“I love them,” he replied, “until they ask me why.” (6)

That’s it. That’s the hope of the world. Jesus knew not everyone was going to listen to his teaching. The kind of love, generosity and mercy that he expected from his followers---it doesn’t make sense. It’s risky. It’s asking us to give up our rights and our pride and our comfort. And yet it’s the most powerful way possible for us to show the world that we belong to Christ. To love them until they ask us why.  

So, I hope you will leave this room today with your GPS programmed. Not the GPS in your car or your phone, but the GPS in your head and heart. I pray that you have programmed it with the love of Jesus Christ. That way you will reliably represent Christ and make a difference in the world.


1. https://www.oddee.com/item_98264.aspx.

2. The Bush Is Still Burning (Waco: Word Books, 1980), p. 47.

3. John Mason, Conquering an Enemy Called Average (Insight International, Inc., 1996).

4. Halberstam, Yitta and Judith Leventhal, Small Miracles II (Holbrook, MA.: Adams Media Corporation, 1998), pp. 244-255.

5. (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1970, p. 107).

6. Joseph Aldrich, Gentle Persuasion (Portland, OR: Multnomah Press, 1989). Cited in Max Anders, What You Need to Know About Salvation in 12 Lessons, (Thomas Nelson, Nashville, 1997.)

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching First Quarter 2019 Sermons, by King Duncan