Relationships are at the heart of every part of our lives. Whether those relationships are with your family, your congregation, or your community, you will be miserable in life and church if your relationships are not healthy.
God wants us to enjoy the people in our lives. In the book of Philippians, Paul models four principles to help us find joy in our relationships.
Paul focused on the good memories instead of the bad ones. And if you recall in Acts 16, you will remember the bad memories Paul could have focused on while he was in Philippi but did not. He was arrested, whipped, humiliated, and thrown in prison. While in prison, there was an earthquake. Then the Roman officials in the town asked him to leave. Paul had a rough time in Philippi, but he chose to focus on what he was grateful for.
To follow Paul’s example, we do not need to deny the hurts in our lives. Neither do we need to excuse the weaknesses of others. Instead, focus on the good and emphasize the strengths of other people.
Praying positively for people will change both your attitude and the other person’s. People may resist our advice, spurn our appeals, reject our suggestions, and not accept our help, but they are powerless against our prayers.
In Philippians 1:9-11, Paul models four specific ways we can pray positively for others.
Most of us are good at praying for people in crisis but let us commit to praying specifically and regularly for people who may struggle in these four areas. Doing so will transform our relationships with them.
Paul looked at people’s future, not just their past. He looked at their potential and was patient with their progress.
Mankind is a great starter but a bad finisher. Man leaves unfinished symphonies, unfinished buildings, unfinished books, and unfinished projects. Man does not always finish what he starts, but God always finishes what he starts.
We should model God’s patience with people’s progress. To enjoy people, we must give them room to grow and develop, just as God does with us.
Loving people begins with understanding why they act the way they do. You cannot love people you do not understand. If you care, you will be aware.
You get understanding by asking questions and then listening to the responses.
Understanding people helps you love them better, but it still does not get you to the love Paul described in Philippians 1:8. Paul said he loved the church of Philippi “with the tender compassion of Christ Jesus”. Only Jesus—working through you—can love people like that.
God’s love is not something you can force. It is a gift that you get as you let the Holy Spirit work through you. “God has poured out his love into our hearts by means of the Holy Spirit, who is God’s gift to us” (Romans 5:5).
Life is too short to not enjoy the people in your life. If you do not learn to enjoy those who God has placed in your life, you will be miserable. That is why you need to learn how to respond to them the way Jesus did.