3 tips for when you feel like saying 'God, I cannot love this person!'

 Pixabay

"A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another; as I have loved you, that you also love one another. By this all will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another." (John 13:34-35)

We can never deny the fact that there are some people we just can't see ourselves making peace with. One person might say "I love everybody," but when somebody hurts or disappoints that person, he might have to make an exception.

Yes, our love for others sometimes diminishes. Some of us don't even have love for others to begin with.

However, the Lord Jesus, in all His love and goodness, commanded all who follow Him to "love one another." Loving one another is what we Christians should be doing. After all, if we are following Him who loved us even if we are sinners, we should also learn to love those who He loved.

But how can I love the unlovable?

Some of us just can't find the strength and will to do what Jesus said. Some of us will say, "God, I cannot love that person!"

If you're like this but want to be able to love others for Jesus, I have some encouraging words for you. Here are some pointers to help you love people you find hard to love.

1. Receive His love for you

This is plain truth: You cannot give what you don't have. The best way for us to be able to love others is when we are loved. Jesus said that we should love one another as He has loved us. His love is the very model and source that we will rely on. Receive His love daily. Enjoy His loving kindness. It's the only way for us to gain the love with which we will love others, too.

2. Obey Jesus to show your love for Him

If we're true-blue Christ-followers, we should be giving our best shot at following what He said and modeled. If we don't obey what Jesus said, it's plain disobedience. If we obey what He said, we prove that we love Him. He said in John 14:15, "If you love Me, keep My commandments."

3. Recognise that love is what we were made for

We all need to realise that as Christians, we were made for love: to love God above all and to love our neighbors as ourselves (see Matthew 22:37-40). If we don't love God and the people that He loves (read John 3:16), then what are we living for? We were all made for love, and we should live it.

Newsletter Stay up to date with Christian Today
News
Sarah Mullally prays with Pope Leo XIV
Sarah Mullally prays with Pope Leo XIV

Sarah Mullally referred to previous ecumenical meetings between Anglican and Catholic heads.

Missionary behind milestone Paraguay Bible translation to retire after 44 years of service
Missionary behind milestone Paraguay Bible translation to retire after 44 years of service

A missionary whose work helped bring the Bible to indigenous communities in Paraguay’s remote Chaco region is retiring after 44 years of ministry and translation work.

Calls to EU to move beyond words as Syria’s Christians face escalating violence
Calls to EU to move beyond words as Syria’s Christians face escalating violence

Fresh criticism is being directed at European leaders over what campaigners describe as a failure to take meaningful action to protect Syria’s Christian communities amid renewed sectarian violence and reports of incessant persecution.

Documentary celebrates women in Church ministry
Documentary celebrates women in Church ministry

Living Loving Serving: Women Leaders in the Church is the debut documentary film from Keep the Faith, Britain’s leading magazine about the black Christian community.