2 minute read
My inspiration: Compassion and miracles
from TT 163
by TIMES TODAY
Compassion and Miracles
By William King | Email: kingwilliam189@gmail.com | image courtesy: psychologicalscience.org
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Have you ever noticed the relationship between the compassion of Jesus and His miracles? All through the gospels we read that wherever Jesus went He was moved with compassion for people. When He saw the multitudes, He had this deep inward moving of love to heal the sick.
He had compassion on the widow who was weeping for her son and raised him from the dead (Luke 7:14). Two blind men heard that Jesus was passing by and cried out, “Have mercy on us, O Lord, Son of David!” (Matthew 20:30). Jesus stopped in His tracks, called them. They couldn’t see Him but I bet they could feel His compassion as He touched their eyes.
Compassion is powerful. It brings forth miracles. Jesus didn’t feel sorry for those in need. No, His compassion moved Him to action. In the same way, the apostle John says about us, “If anyone... sees his brother in need, yet closes his heart of compassion against him, how can the love of God live in him?” (1John 3:17).
We all have a heart of compassion that God wants to work through towards others and it can either be open or shut. If it is shut off, God’s love cannot flow out of it. If we’re going to live the abundant life that God has given us, we need to stir up our heartof compassion and say, “God, open my heart to see the people who need my love today.”
It is easy to get so busy with our own lives that we forget the people around us may need something from us. He wants to flow through us to other people and use us as an instrument of His love. We’re never going to be that until we begin to understand that we are directed to follow this love.
This compassion is from God and his miracle-working power in it. He wants you to release. We need to be aware of the people whom God puts on our heart. When you feel compassion moving in you towards someone, you never know the impact of what a phone call can do or the significance of your words when you say, “I’m thinking about you.”