[it has no
expectations]
Do the unexpected by not
expecting anything “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.”
I work at a restaurant
and today I found myself counting my dollars between tables, trying to get out
as soon as possible while getting a good profit out of people. Most days are
like this.
Some days though, I
decide to forget about how much I make and instead try to serve the people who
come in because they matter. Instead of trying to get away with doing as little
side-work as possible, I see what help my co-workers need and do my best to
meet their needs. Instead of complaining when people do a less than adequate
job (and in a restaurant you are forced to depend on each-other), I look for
opportunities to speak words of encouragement to the people around me. I’ll let
you guess which days I feel better at the end of.
What is getting money from work, what is getting
“credit” and even knowledge from school, what is riding the bus, what is eating
dinner, what is any of that good for in the end? What does it all add up to? What
is life without love?
“The only thing that
counts is faith expressing itself through love.” Gal. 5:6
And what we are trying to do is make our lives and
ourselves matter without love. Maybe we have a love of pleasure and a love of
comfort, but no love of God and no love of people. So the things we do, even if
we think are for love, are often really because we expect something in return.
And
the unfortunate thing about people is that they rarely meet our expectations.
And when our expectations are not met, we are disappointed. And when we are filled
up with disappointment it empties us of gratitude and invites in bitterness.
It’s probably better to let go of the entitlement we feel to get something back
from loving people. If we cease to (even internally) demand returns from other
people, then the action loving in itself
becomes the reward and the appreciation and joy we feel toward other people
when they give love to us increases tenfold.
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