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AUDIO SERMONS
Learning to Love

We often base the success of our marriages on the feelings of our relationship, but we need to rely more on God’s sacrificial love to make marriage work.

Speaker(s):Erwin Lutzer
Topics:Divorce, Love, Marriage
Filters:Discipleship
References:
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Text: Luke 6:3233

Topic: Why human love falls short in a marriage, and only divine love suffices.

Introduction

  • Learning to love applies to both the married and unmarried.

People experience misery in marriage for 4 reasons.

  • Unrealistic expectations: Some people think marriage will make them happy.
  • The myth of greener grass: Many are on the slippery slope of "What if . . . ?"

Illustration: Lutzer tells a joke about a visit to a mental institution where two different people are beating their heads against the padded walls—one in misery because he didn't win Linda's love, the other in misery because he did

  • A misunderstanding of the role of conflict: Incompatibility is precisely how we grow.
  • A failure to distinguish between human love and divine love.

Jesus gives three statements on love from the Sermon on the Mount.

Statement one: If you love those who love you, what credit is that to you? (Luke 6:32)

  • Human love depends on the person who is loved. We tend to love people who are beautiful and/or have great personality.

Illustration: A woman badly burned says her husband saw her in the hospital and said, "You're not the woman I married," and left to marry someone younger and more beautiful. Human love says, "If you change, my love for you changes."

  • It's important to marry the right person, but more important to be the right person.

Statement two: Love your enemies (Luke 6:27).

  • Divine love is based on the lover, so it can love even enemies.

Illustration: A couple asks a pastor to approve their divorce, because there's no feeling left. The pastor tells the husband to love his wife as Christ loved. He says, "I can't do that." The pastor says to love her as he'd love himself. He says he can't. The pastor says, "The Bible says love your enemies. Begin there."

Illustration: A wife tells a lawyer she wants a divorce, and wants to hurt her husband in the process. The lawyer suggests being kind and speaking well of her husband for three months, then drop the bomb, because that'll hurt even more. She follows the lawyer's advice . . . and the marriage is saved.

  • How should we pray for our enemies? By asking God to bless them.
  • Husbands need to communicate; spouses need to feel like they mean something.
  • Divine love: "I may not need this, but you do, and I put your needs above mine."

Statement three: Love your enemies you will be sons of the Most High (Luke 6:35).

  • When people are hard to love, it's an opportunity for us to grow in Christ.
  • Though not stated explicitly, forgiveness is implied in this text.

Illustration: A woman whose stepfather molested her as a child now finds it hard to be intimate with her husband. Not until she forgives her stepfather does she find physical intimacy in her marriage.

Conclusion
  • The Holy Spirit is a supernatural resource for loving the unlovable.


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Sunday, March 21, 2010
Fifth Sunday in Lent
Isaiah 43:16-21
Psalm 126 or Psalm 119:9-16
Philippians 3:4b-14
John 12:1-8





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