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Christianity 101, Part 2

Insight for Living / Chuck Swindoll
The Truth Network Radio
November 3, 2025 1:30 am

Christianity 101, Part 2

Insight for Living / Chuck Swindoll

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November 3, 2025 1:30 am

Chuck Swindahl explores God's blueprint for authentic Christian living in Romans chapter 12, highlighting seven virtues that shape a Christ-like legacy: love, affection, honor, enthusiasm, patience, generosity, and humility. He emphasizes the importance of humility and the dangers of pride and fear, encouraging listeners to apply these virtues in their daily lives and relationships.

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The legacy we leave for our families has little to do with our financial portfolio or possessions. Today, on Insight for Living, Chuck Swindahl confronts this sobering reality as our study in Romans chapter 12 continues. This passage contains God's blueprint for authentic Christian living. The blueprint features seven virtues: love, affection, honor, enthusiasm, patience, generosity, and sympathy. Prepare to be both convicted and acquipped as you discover how these virtues become your roadmap for leaving a Christ-like legacy.

From his verse-by-verse study through Paul's letter to the Romans, Chuck titled today's message, Christianity 101. First Corinthians thirteen is the greatest treatise. written on love. If I were asked to give one sentence, it would be this. Love is seeking the highest good of the other person.

It is seeking what's best for the other person.

Sometime, admittedly, love is tough. Firm, stern, strong hearted. Unwilling to look the other way. It's not making someone comfortable, it's not telling them what they want to hear. It is not treating them like they've treated us.

It is not looking the other way when we encounter wrong. This part of love is tough love. It's Relentless. There are other times when love must be tender.

Soft-hearted. Marked by compassion. Understanding tolerance. Grace and forgiveness. Both sides of the coin make this love authentic.

And you need both tough and tender. Best example who's ever lived. is of course Jesus of Nazareth.

Now why is it such a high priority? Why is seeking the highest good so valuable in life? It's because it shapes and colors all the other virtues that we admit. are important to life. All the virtues I'll mention today Are colored by our love, and so we'll return to the word over and over again.

When we put love on display, this is the way it looks. Look at verse 9 to start with. Love has two major qualities. Sincerity which is the opposite The opposite. of hypocrisy.

And second, Love has discernment. which is the opposite of gullibility. Let's take them in that order. Let love be without hypocrisy. Right out of the chute.

Paul is making it clear if it's love, it must be. Real love, it must be sincere love. It has nothing to do with hypocrisy. Love must also be discerning. Notice Abhor what is evil.

The word means to shrink back. to detest It shrinks back from the presence of evil. But when it finds what is good, oh, it embraces it. Let it be sincere. Let it be discerning.

Now there are several other components. That As we Analyze love emerge. I'll find seven of them in the verses that follow. First of all, verse 10. be devoted to one another.

in brotherly love. Paul reserves family words for the first part of verse 10, and I would use the words devoted affection. When love runs its course correctly, sincerely, Without hypocrisy, At the same time, Uh in a sense of uh discernment and strength. then it begins to reveal a familial Warmth. devoted Affection.

So starting there, the Apostle begins to unpack the concept. of that which we pass on to others to make their lives richer. Devoted affection. It's followed that the latter part of verse 10 with honor. The word means respect.

Showing gratitude. for one another. The third is one of my favorite traits in life, and it doesn't surprise you. enthusiasm and passion. Look at verse 11.

Not lagging behind in diligence, fervent in spirit, the Greek has in mind, boiling over, boiling up as if water were boiling in the pot. Boiling up in the spirit, serving the Lord. It's the whole idea of Of active optimism, energetic zeal, it's the opposite of lethargy and indifference. It's the thought of living one's life on tiptoe. And then there is the devotion to prayer.

which can never be displayed. The secret of any ministry is the prayers the saints. The secret of every meaningful life is the prayer of a partner. A group of friends. A group of college students went to hear Charles Haddon Spurgeon preach at the London Tabernacle.

The day was cold. They were waiting for the doors to open when they were warmly greeted by a man who asked if they would first like to see the heating plant of the church. They weren't particularly interested in the heating plant, but Wishing to get warm, they decided they wouldn't offend him and agreed to go. They were then led down a long stairway. and the door was slowly opened by their guide, who whispered, This is our heating plant.

As the group looked in the room, they saw 700 people on their knees. Asking God's blessing on the service that would happen on the floor above them, which they would not even attend. as they prayed through that service.

Softly closing the door, the guide smiled and introduced himself. It was Charles Haddon Spurgeon. This is the secret. of the ministry of the tabernacle. What a grand example of being devoted to prayer.

No one will know it. Except you and God. But how deeply you will feel it. if you ignore the command. Patience comes from hope.

and prayer. in the midst of tribulation. When you're putting things together to leave to the next generation. Remember love, which has to do with devoted affection and honor and respect, enthusiasm and passion, and certainly patience. And you would expect, verse 13, generosity.

contributing to the needs of the saints. practicing hospitality. There's generosity written all over it. And unless I miss my guess, many of you immediately think when I mention the word generosity, you think of your wallet. You think of money.

Money is it even mentioned? Though money is certainly included. There's generosity of time. generosity of interest. generosity of attention.

Encouragement. Reaching out to someone in a random act of kindness. Don't you love them? Don't you find yourself delighted when you come across a random act? of kindness from a stranger.

Cynthia and I were traveling to Orlando, and on the way back, I decided to dress very casually, and I put on a very comfortable Hawaiian shirt. pair of jeans and I went through the Checkpoint, and thankfully, nothing went off. And I came the other side, was standing waiting for my things to come through. The fellow in uniform who was greeting people all day long with, you forgot to take your belt off, is everything out of your pocket? Would you stand over here, please?

And listening to people, you should have taken your shoes off and gone. This guy was different. He looked at me and he said, Great shirt. I'm like, Hey, thanks. He said, Where are you going?

Hawaii? I said, No, Dallas. He said, That's a long ways from Hawaii. Never met the man in my life. I said, You do this all the time.

He said, All day long, people don't know what to think of me. They expect a frown and I just decided to give them a little kindness. When's the last time you expressed kindness? and a word of encouragement to someone you never met before. I mean genuine.

kindness. Not the kind where you look kind, like when the cop walks up by your car. And gives you the ticket, and you say, Thank you. Smile. When you're really thinking, may your day be filled with traffic accidents.

Contributing to the needs of the saints. Do you know what practicing hospitality really says? The Greek says pursuing a love of strangers. Practicing Pursuing. That means you initiate it.

You're not responding to the nice words, you're initiating them. You want to pass along something that will cause others to live a greater and better life than you've lived? Go with generosity. Be sure you put that in your bag when you're packing. We leave verse 14 for next time and we come to 15, which is a verse on sympathy.

I love the thought of this verse. Rejoice with those who rejoice. And weep with those who weep. Take a look at those words, will you? Just look at the 15th verse.

Love, true love. Never stands aloof. When love knows that a brother or a sister is rejoicing, then. There's a deep down excitement and applause in the celebration of the same joy. You say, well, I do that.

Really? Let's say that you got a neighbor that just won the lottery. Are you going, oh they? It's so Are you thinking they missed it by one door? Or, how about the guy at work that gets promoted, and you thought you deserved the promotion?

You go to his party to celebrate? Or do you keep watching him over the top of your glasses? Whispering to your friends how much better you'd have been at that job than he is. He's rejoicing. You want to be different in a world that's missing love?

Here's an example. Rejoice with those who rejoice. And don't forget to weep with those who are weeping. What an old Swedish motto that hung in my home. Shared joy is a double joy.

Shared sorrow is half a sorrow. You double the joy when you share it. You cut a tragedy or heartbreak in half when you share it. Both experiences helped bond us together. I found it's easier to do the latter than the former.

Work on both. I will too. Sympathy I put in this little verse. Love sings with those who sing. Love mourns with those who weep.

Love laughs with those who are happy. Love stays awake with those who can't sleep. All of this sets the stage for the seventh and perhaps the most exacting of the group. And that's verse 16, humility. Be of the same mind.

toward one another. Last time we were together, we analyzed verse 3 rather carefully. Remember, through the grace given to me, I say to everyone among you not to think more highly of himself than he ought to think. Remember the word Hyper-thinking. Super thinking.

Thinking above others, don't go there. Here he says the same words: be of the same mind. I've said for years that all the ground is level at the foot of the cross. There's no status, there's no rank. There's no salary.

There's no new or old house. There's no large or small place to live. There's no new or old car. It's all the same. all the same ground level.

That's the way we are to live our lives. There is no place, he admonishes us, against snobbery and status, against pride of birth, pride of training, pride of giftedness, pride of accomplishment, pride of honors. in other countries pride of caste and tribe, how foolish to be proud of that. You had nothing to do with that. You are where you are, and they are where they are, and the goal is to blend your life and associate with the lowly, not being wise in your own estimation.

You know what I've found that helps? Going back to our roots. Helps. Remember when you were a kid? Remember how big everything seemed?

Have you gone back to look at that little place lately? I mean, I went back not long ago, and it's a downright dump. And I thought it was a really, really nice place. We had asbestos shingles on the side of our house. I've been breathing it all my life.

Cynthia and I drove there several years ago to see our old haunts and places where we dated and her place and mine. And my first line was when we got to our neighborhood was be sure your doors locked and your windows are rolled up. Like time has passed it by. It really came home to me this past week when I finished a fine book. Titled My Grandfather's Son.

It's the memoir of Justice Clarence Thomas. You must read the book. We think of a Supreme Justice as a man who's a sort of silver spoon in his mouth. We think of him as the Yale Law School honors graduate, which he was. And the Holy Cross honors graduate, which he was, but what you don't know are the roots.

which made him the man he is. A few excerpts. I am descended from the West African slaves. who lived on the barrier islands. In Georgia, my people were called Geechees.

Mother was born out of wedlock. Her mother died in childbirth. And she saw little of her father throughout her childhood. I was delivered by Lula Kemp. A midwife who came from near the nearby community of Sandfly.

Then as now, pinpoint. Which is where he was raised south of Savannah. Pinpoint was too small to be properly called a town. No more than a hundred ever live there. Our lives We're a daily struggle for the barest of essentials.

He tells in his book that the floor of the shanty was made of several layers of old linoleum. sitting on dirt. The bathroom was outside, shared with three other families. He writes, The house in which I was born was a shanty. Kerosene lamps lit it.

Water came from nearby where we carried it through the woods in old lard buckets. They were small enough for us to fill up and tote home, where we poured the contents into the washtub. And larger kitchen buckets out of which we drank with a dipper. In the winter time, we plugged up the cracks in the shanty. the holes in the walls with old newspapers.

That was in the late 1940s and The 50s. Fast forward to the Fall of 1991. Following his being sworn in as a Supreme Court justice. Imagine. I walked into the awe-inspiring great hall of the court and through the imposing doorway.

glancing at the huge brass doors. We walked slowly down the gleaming marble white steps, later lit by the brightness of a beautiful sunny morning. And I thought back. to another sunny day. when my brother and I Went to live with our grandparents, all of our belongings.

stuffed into a pair of grocery bags. The prophet calls this remembering the pit. from which you have been dogged. Do that.

Next time you're tempted to feel a little stuffy. You know.

Sort of like as my dad used to say, sort of like your Something on a stick. Remember, you got to put your britches on one leg at a time. Talk about poor they couldn't even wear underwear in the summer. and to save it for the colder days. Remember from which you've come.

And thank him for his grace. And when you do, you'll understand. what it means to associate with the lowly. Keep talking to the taxi driver. Keep tipping him well.

Take care of those who carry your bags. The associates who make your life successful. Say thank you five, six, seven times a day. Forget your title. Carry someone else's belongings for a change.

Help them get their things to the car at the grocery store. Associate with the lowly. You live a life like we've just described, and I can assure you, you'll have no trouble telling them that. Jesus. is the master.

It can transform their lives too. Why is this kind of love held back? We hear about it today and we think, oh, Yeah. That's what I want to leave as a legacy. I'll tell you what holds it back.

Two things, neither will surprise you. First is pride. Pride, that most desperate of all enemies of ours. Pride. Too proud to stoop.

Too proud to reach out, too proud to notice. Too proud to learn the name. Too proud to be vulnerable. And the other is Fear. We fear the risk.

I mean, if you do this, you'll be taken advantage of maybe. Takeaway maybe, you will be. And it's that fear of knowing you'll be taken advantage of. That some may not respect you like they perhaps should. Give it up.

C.S. Lewis, in one of his best works, The Four Loves, writes this about it. To love it all is to be vulnerable. love anything and your heart will certainly be wrong and possibly be broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact, You must give your heart to no one.

Uh not even an animal. Wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries. Avoid all entanglements. Lock it up safe in the casket of your selfishness. And in that casket, safe, dark, motionless, airless.

It will change. It will not be broken. it will become unbreakable. Impenetrable. Irredeemable.

The only place outside heaven where you can be perfectly safe from all the dangers. Of love. Is hell. I'd like you to close your eyes and bow your heads, please. I warned you at the outset that this was convicting.

But conviction alone is only half the journey. Conviction must be followed by application. Have you heard something today that stings? It's called the work of the spirit. Convicting you.

of the lack of devoted affection. Honor and respect. Enthusiasm, passion, patience. Generosity, sympathy. Humility.

Your prayer upon hearing this message must certainly include. Oh God. Help me get rid of this pride. This damnable pride. Take away my fear of risk.

Give me the kind of love that Jesus modeled. When to his dying day he was praying, Father, forgive them. They don't even know what they're doing. As we'll all learn next time, we all have someone we could easily hate. There's a better way.

If you've never trusted in Jesus, perhaps that's the journey that will start you on your path toward this kind of love. If you've never come to the cross, you don't know Jesus. He's just a historical figure, lived a great life. founded this religion. Good man, no, it's none of the above.

He's the transforming master. Who's taken away your sins? and open the door to God. But you must receive him.

So our father, we leave Deeply touched. Your word has again done the journey. that many of us were afraid to take on our own. You have said what we needed to hear.

Now we ask you to help us. As we become doers of the word, and not hearers. May it make a difference in our relationship with strangers. and how we treat one another. and how we drive.

How we relate to our family members. Open our mouths to speak our words of gratitude rather than waiting until. that person we've loved so much and respected. has died. Change our hearts.

Oh God. And fill this church with people like that. That your name would be exalted. For Jesus' sake. We pray and everyone said, Amen.

These verses from Romans chapter 12 aren't ideals to admire, but a practical checklist for daily living. The question lingers, what will we leave the next generation? not possessions. the greatest gift to leave for the next generations are seven virtues affection, honor, passion, patience, generosity, sympathy, and humility. You're listening to Insight for Living.

Chuck Swindahl titled today's message Christianity 101. comes from our verse-by-verse study through Paul's letter to the Romans. You can view all of our companion resources for this study by going to insight.org/slash offer.

Well, November has arrived and we're beginning to turn our attention to the holidays. We're pleased to offer a brand new resource designed for your family, hoping the next few weeks will become rich with spiritual meaning. I'm referring to a book published exclusively by Insight for Living called Everlasting Light. A journey from promise to presence. Everlasting Light is a 25-day Advent devotional that invites you to step out of December's rush into a prayerful rhythm of waiting, reflection, and preparation.

It includes scripture to anchor your heart, a quote from Chuck Swindahl to shape your thinking, and pastoral reflections from our own Carlos Sasueta to carry into your day. This is a hardcover book, and a copy is ready right now, so you'll receive it in time for Advent. Ask for the book called Everlasting Light when you include a contribution to support the Ministry of Insight for Living. These are critical days in our nation and the world, and your gift to Insight for Living will bring the everlasting light of good news about Jesus to those who have never heard. You can do that right now by calling us at 800-772-8888.

or go to insight.org slash offer. If you'd like to send a donation in the mail, write to us at InsightForLiving. Post Office Box 5000. Frisco, Texas, 75034. And you can give online at insight.org slash donate.

Have you ever felt betrayed by a friend? I'm Bill Meyer. Join us when Chuck Swindahl talks about doing right when you've been done wrong. Tuesday on Insight for Living. The preceding message, Christianity 101, was copyrighted in 2007, 2010, and 2025, and the sound recording was copyrighted in 2025 by Charles R.

Swindahl, Inc. All rights are reserved worldwide. Duplication of copyrighted material for commercial use is strictly prohibited.

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