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Matthew 22:37-38 meaning

Jesus answers the lawyer’s question about the great commandment. He tells Him it is this: “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.”

The parallel gospel account of Matthew 22:37-38 is found in Mark 12:29-30.

Jesus responded to the Pharisees' question: "Which is the great commandment in the Law?" (Matthew
22:35-36) by quoting a familiar passage from Moses's book of Deuteronomy.

He said to him, 'YOU SHALL LOVE THE
LORD YOUR GOD WITH ALL YOUR HEART, AND WITH ALL YOUR SOUL, AND WITH ALL YOUR MIND.
'

In answering this question about which is the great commandment Jesus quoted from Deuteronomy 6:5. This is
the foundation of all morality. It is the ethical pinnacle of human behavior. It serves as a divine constitution by
which every moral attitude and thought, expression and action are ultimately measured. It was the foundation of God's
covenant with Israel. Israel's welfare and well-being was completely dependent upon whether they followed
God's ways of loving others, or their own impulse to satisfy fleshly desires through exploiting others.

The central directive of this commandment is to love the LORD your God with the entirety of one's
life and being. It is a charge to be completely committed to God alone. It is a mandate to subject every
aspect of one's choices (internal and external) in such a way to serve God and His kingdom without any
allowance for competitors or rivals.

The great and foremost commandment (v 38) is divided into two parts.

The first part instructs what we are to do: You shall love the Lord your God (v 37).

The second part is divided into three ways that describes the manner and limitless extent to which we are to do it:
we are to love God, with all our heart, and with all our soul, and with
all
our mind (v 37).

You shall love the Lord your God

The opening phrase You shall love the LORD your God (v 37) is an all-encompassing command. It has a sweeping
range of implications: including to cherish; to delight in; to be devoted to; to serve; and to obey.

The Greek term translated as love in this passage is "Agapao." The noun form of "Agapao" is "Agapé." New
Testament writers, such as Matthew, generally avoided or seldom used the more widespread Greek terms for
love such as "Eros" (desire) and "Philos" (companionship) in their writings. Instead, they took the generic
and rarely used term for love—"Agapé" and infused it with their own meaning.

Unlike Erotic-love, which means seeking to fulfill an appetite—often sexual; or Philos-love, which refers to the
affection of a mutual friendship; Agapé-love through Biblical usage, applied to Christian-living, came to mean
sacrificial and unconditional devotion to a person, cause, or system. It is a choice to love, based on
values. Agapé-love can also be making a choice based on poor values, as in 1 John 2:15, which encourages believers
not to choose ("agapé") the lustful things of the world. The key to agapé-love is to love the right things.
That begins with choosing to love God and seek His ways first and foremost.

All three kinds of love orient and direct our lives. The objects we love are not only people,
things, or ideals we seek, find, and enjoy. They profoundly shape the kind of people we become. What and who we love
changes us. That is why love is such a powerful force.

Sometimes the things we love conflict with each other. When these conflicts occur, we must choose and
prioritize which things we love most. Ideally, we will do this based on a clear understanding of the
highest and best values, including the foremost commandment.

Ultimately, we can only have absolute agapé-love for one person, system, or thing (Matthew 6:24). And that is what
the great commandment is about. This is a commandment to agapé-love God the most in every
circumstance and aspect of our lives. We are to seek and serve Him with all of our being and with
the utmost fervor and devotion. We are to order all other loves under the pinnacle love of God,
choosing to believe that His ways are for our best (Deuteronomy 10:12-13).

This commandment, from the Law of Moses, was the essential directive for every Jew. It called for
Israel to display an undivided love and loyalty to the LORD because He alone is their God.
His laws were devised to create good for them, to free them from addictive desires, and build communities based on
love and service. It distinguished Israel from the exploitative polytheistic paganism of the surrounding
cultures and designated them for God's purposes alone. It grounded Jews in their identity as God's
chosen people.

Centuries later, in Jesus's day, choosing to love God was still regarded as the defining expression of what
it meant to be a faithful Jew. Jesus was the Jewish Messiah and He is the Lord God. His entire ministry was
an elaboration and fulfillment of the great and foremost commandment (v 38):

"Do not think that I came to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I did not come to abolish
but to fulfill."
(Matthew 5:17)

Jesus spoke to the principle of ordering the great commandment to love God as the foremost
of all love when He taught His disciples that "He who loves father or mother more than Me is not worthy of
Me; and he who loves son or daughter more than Me is not worthy of Me" (Matthew 10:37). If God comes first,
then nothing should come before Him—including family. This clearly indicates that this love is a choice,
based on faith. The faith is primarily that God knows what is best for us, and seeks our good. It is a
belief that if we follow God's ways, we will gain the best life can provide for us. The entire book of
Deuteronomy, from which Jesus quoted to answer this question about the great commandment, is
organized around the principle that God's ways are for our best, and will bring us the greatest possible
blessings.

Upon reflection, this ought to be intuitive. If a family or community cares for one another, seeks the best for one
another, loves and forgives one another, that community will thrive. This is God's way. Conversely, if a
community competes to see who can best exploit one another, they will tear each other apart.

As the first part of the great commandment bids its hearers to love God, the second part
depicts the limitless extent to which we are to love Him.

Matthew records Jesus as saying that we are to love God in three specific ways: with all our heart, and
with all our soul, and with all our mind
(v 37). That is to say, with all our being.

The First Way we are Commanded to Love God is with all our Heart.

The Greek term translated as heart is "kardia." It refers to the innermost part of a person. It is not only
the source of our desires; the heart is the seat of our will.

A person's life and their faithfulness is largely a projection of their heart:

"As in water a face reflects the face,
So the heart of a person reflects the
person."
(Proverbs 27:19)

Throughout the Bible, the heart is depicted as the fountainhead of a person's life (Proverbs 4:23). All of a
person's loves, fears, and whom they trust issue from their heart (Psalm 119:10, Proverbs 3:5; Proverbs 28:14,
Romans 10:10). The heart is where the choice is made. Perhaps that is why our heart is the first
thing we are told to love the LORD your God with, in the great commandment.

The heart predisposes a person to whether or not they can hear and receive a message. Its inclinations
greatly influence the mind and its thoughts and opinions. If the heart is closed to a message or
against someone from the outset it is very difficult for that person's mind to hear and consider the word
their opponent shares:

"To the pure, all things are pure; but to those who are defiled and unbelieving, nothing
is pure, but both their mind and their conscience are defiled."
(Titus 1:15)

That is why having a pure heart is so vital. A pure heart trusts God, fears God,
and loves God above all other things. It is purity of heart that enables people to see
God (Matthew 5:8).

There are three basic things any human can control: 1) who or what to trust or depend on 2) what perspective,
attitude, or mindset to adopt and 3) what actions to take. All three of these choices are made at the heart
level. All of our choices, all of our attitudes are expressions and reflections of our
heart (Proverbs 27:19, Matthew 12:34). There is nothing we do that does not come from our heart.
Everything we are flows from it.

When we are commanded to love God with all our hearts, we are commanded to love God with the very
wellspring of our choices. We are commanded to submit all of our desires and
choices to God alone. We are to strive to choose what is best as He would have us choose what is best. At
the very foundation of this agapé-love is a choice that God's ways are for our best.

Psalm 37 gives great insight into how we can begin the process of aligning our heart with God's
heart:

"Delight yourself in the Lord;
And He will give you the desires of your heart."
(Psalm
37:4)

As we delight in God, He gives us new desires that align with His good will for our lives. When we seek what
God seeks for us, we live in harmony with Him. When we live in harmony with Him, we discover fulfillment of
our deepest and strongest desires, desires that exceed mere appetites, such as a desire to fulfill the purpose for
which we were created.

Choosing to fully follow God from the heart, is loving God with all your heart (v 37).

The Second Way to Love the LORD your God: With all your Soul

The term used for soul in Greek is "psuché." It refers to a person's core identity, their true life. The
"psuché" is the essence of who a person is. It is their inner character. The "psuché" continues to exist after the
body returns to the earth as dust. The organs of the "psuché" are the heart, mind, and will. In
the book of Genesis, the Greek Septuagint (Greek translation of the Old Testament) says when God breathed
into man's body, that "man became a living psuché" (2:7). Man has a body; he has a spirit; but he fundamentally is a
soul ("psuché").

When God made us in His image He made us a unique "psuché." Our "psuché" is our "self." There is no other self
exactly like you. You are a fearfully and wonderfully made, one-of-a-kind-person (Psalm 139:14). No one in the
history of the cosmos has your particular giftings, talents, personality, or destiny. A person's soul
(psuché) is who that individual uniquely is. And it is the uniqueness of each soul that makes each
individual an individual.

"Psuché" occurs over a hundred times in the New Testament. Depending on the translation, it is rendered "life" about
half the time, and "soul" the other half. This also demonstrates that "psuché" indicates our "self," our life and
identity. It is the essence of who we are.

When we are commanded to love God with all our souls, we are commanded to love God with who we are.
But what does this mean? How do we love Him with all identity, our sense of self?

Our "psuche," our soul, our identity, our personhood, our self is God's first gift to us. But who
we choose to become is based on our response to God.

The choices we make influence, affect, and shape the person we become. Again, the three things we decide are: 1. who
we trust; 2. which perspective we will have; 3. our actions. These choices have positive or negative effects upon
our self ("psuche"). All of our choices will either bring us closer to our destiny of having a kingly
character like Jesus or they will take us further from it. Our destiny as believers is to be shaped into the kingly
character of Christ (Romans 8:28-29). It is clear from scripture that there are immense rewards associated with
choosing to view all trials and difficulties of life as opportunities to refine our faith, and win the crown of life
(James 1:2-3, 12; 1 Corinthians 9:24-27; 2 Timothy 2:11-19; Philippians 2:5-10; Revelation 3:21).

If we boldly embrace the person and identity God made us to be, we experience harmony with God and
we will realize the fullness of our divine destiny and achieve our greatest potential. Making courageous choices to
follow God with all our heart and soul is the path to becoming an "overcomer" (Revelation 3:21).

This is what it means to love the LORD your God with all your soul (v 37). It is to reject the worldly and
fleshly temptations to be someone less than He made, and to embrace the good identity He has given you. It is to
choose the life and everlasting destiny He has in store for you.

Jesus promises a reward of lasting satisfaction for anyone who overcomes and rejects the worldly demands and fleshly
desires that tempt us to become less than who God created us to be. The world and the flesh exert
tremendous pressure upon everyone to reject their divine self and choose a shabby, second-rate identity. Much of our
present age is consumed with identity. The present age loudly demands our right to be whoever, indeed whatever, we
fancy.

Like Esau who cast aside his great inheritance for a bowl of stew (Genesis 25:29-34; Hebrews 12:16-17), God respects
our right to choose to reject the incredible identity and unimaginably wonderful destiny He has in store for each of
us. In this sense we decide the person our soul will become. But God does not spare anyone, especially
believers, from the consequences of their choices (Matthew 16:27; Luke 12:2-3; 2 Corinthians 5:10; Hebrews 12:7-11; 1
Peter 4:17). Our acceptance by God is a gift, we are given spiritual birth into God's family, and
have God as an inheritance simply by receiving this gift through faith (John 3:14-16; Ephesians 2:8-9). But
just as with the gift of physical birth, who we become depends upon how we steward our choices.

There is great blessing and reward for those who overcome the world's demands and the desires of our flesh, and trust
and love God by following His good commands to accept and become the unique and magnificent person He
created us to be.

But even as we illustrate these truths, it is important to recall that one's eternity, whether with God or separated
from Him, is not determined by our ability to follow any commandment—including this great and foremost
commandment
(v 38).

Our eternal salvation and belonging in God's family is entirely based upon whether we ever believed in Jesus
as God's Son (John 3:14-16). Being justified in the sight of God has everything to do with
God's love for us, not our love for Him. God justifies humans based on faith
(Genesis 15:6; Romans 3:23-24; 4:3). Being justified in God's sight has everything to do with His Son's
completed work on the cross and His resurrection. It has nothing to do with our works—whether good or bad for Him.
Being justified in God's sight is God's gift to whosever believes in Jesus. It is a gift of pure
grace on the basis of simple faith.

Ephesians 2:8-9 affirms this wondrous—even scandalous—truth that it is by God's grace that we are saved
through simple faith in Jesus; and that this salvation from the penalty of sin has nothing whatsoever to do with our
ability to behave, either before or after we are justified in God's sight, and given the free gift of being
born into His forever family. Because of Jesus, there is nothing left for us to do or prove in regards to our
eternal belonging, other than to receive Him and His amazing gift by faith.

That understood, there are significant blessings in this life that can be enjoyed, and everlasting rewards in the
life to come to be earned for following Jesus daily, walking by faith, following the Spirit.

Some Present Blessings for obeying the Lord's commands include:

  1. Partnership with God in establishing His Kingdom (Matthew 9:37-38; 28:18-20)
  2. Friendship and Intimacy with Jesus (John 15:14-15; 17:3; Revelation 3:20)
  3. Contentment and Rest (Matthew 11:28-30)
  4. Everlasting Purpose and Significance (John 15:5)
  5. The Opportunity to have true Community with other Believers (1 John 1:7).

Some Future Rewards for obeying the Lord's commands include:

  1. Receiving Jesus's Approval (Matthew 10:32-33; 25:21, 23)
  2. Obtaining our Eternal Inheritance (Matthew 19:16-24; 1 Peter 1:4-9)
  3. Having Authority in Christ's Kingdom (Matthew 18:4; 1 Corinthians 6:3; 2 Timothy 2:12; Revelation 3:21)
  4. Receiving Glory and Eternal Crowns (authority) (Romans 8:17-18; James 1:12; Revelation 3:21; Hebrews 2:10; Philippians 2:5-10)

As believers who have been given eternal life through a new spiritual birth, if we do not love Jesus and
follow Him in this life in our daily choices, we cannot lose our place in God's family; God never
rejects His people as being His people. But we can, and we will, tragically miss the present blessings and future
reward if we do not love and follow Him.

If we reject Jesus's teachings and follow the world and our fleshly desires, the best we can receive are the fickle,
unfulfilling, and ever-fading rewards of men in this life (Matthew 6:2; 6:19; 23:6-7; Luke 16:15; John 12:43; 1 John
2:16-17), and a loss of future rewards and our inheritance in the new heaven and earth (Matthew 7:21-23; 10:33;
22:11-13; 25:28-30; 1 Corinthians 3:15; 2 Timothy 2:12). The primary reward of following the paths of
unrighteousness is to be given over to our lusts, which become addictions, to the point of losing our grip on
reality (Romans 1:24-28).

But whichever rewards a believer seeks and finds (the world's, or God's), no believer can lose their eternal
place in God's family. God's gifts are irrevocable, and cannot be lost (Romans 11:29; John
10:28-29; Romans 8:38-39; 2 Timothy 2:13). Our position in God's family as His child is granted on the
basis of our initial and simple faith in Jesus and was given to us on the basis of His grace, enough faith to look
upon Jesus as Israel looked upon the bronze snake, hoping to be delivered from the venomous poison of sin (John
3:14-16).

We follow Jesus in our daily lives by trusting and obeying Him. Jesus equates obedient faith with love.

"If you love Me, you will keep My commandments."
(John 14:15)

And we follow the first and foremost commandment of loving God by obeying Him. If we love the
Lord
our God with all our soul ("pusché") (v 37), we will take up our cross daily and lose
our soul ("pusché")for His sake so that we might find it (Matthew 16:24-25; Luke 9:23-24)

Once again, when we are commanded to love God with all our souls, we are commanded to deliberately love
God
with who we are and who we are becoming.

We become the person God created and destined us to be by putting aside all wickedness and receiving in
humility the Word (James 1:21). We become this person by first ignoring the luring temptations of the world and not
obeying our flesh's selfish cravings and lusts; and second by listening to and doing what the word of God
commands.

James tells us that the result of walking in obedience to Christ is literally the salvation (deliverance) of our
souls ("psuché") (James 1:21). In the context of James 1, when we replace our fleshly desires with the implanted
word of God, our souls ("psuché") are delivered from our own lusts (James 1:14). For the believer who
endures and overcomes the trials of this life by trusting Jesus, his soul, life, self, identity becomes the
glorious person God intended, and he experiences the fullness of his divine destiny through faithfulness in
this life, for which God promises great reward (1 Corinthians 2:9). The writer of Hebrews mentions the need
for endurance in continuing in faith in order to win the greatest prize of life:

"Therefore, do not throw away your confidence, which has a great reward. For you have
need of endurance, so that when you have done the will of God, you may receive what was promised…But we are not of
those who shrink back to destruction, but of those who have faith to the preserving of the soul (psuché
).
"
(Hebrews 10:35-36, 39)

When we walk in confidence (faith) that God's rewards are worth the cost (Hebrews 11:6), and continue in
that faith, we gain our full reward, which delivers our lives ("psuché") from wasting this immense opportunity.

The Third Way we are commanded to love God is with all our Mind.

Both Gospel writers (Matthew and Mark) who documented this interaction between Jesus and the Pharisees' lawyer,
record Jesus as including mind as part of the great commandment. This is intriguing is for a
couple of reasons.

The most obvious reason it is intriguing is because Moses's original expression of this commandment did not
explicitly use the word, mind.

"You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your
soul and with all your might."
(Deuteronomy 6:5)

Matthew's version of Jesus's statement was, "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart,
and with all your soul, and with all your mind."

Mark's version of Jesus's statement reads, "and you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart,
and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your
strength' (Mark 12:30).

The Mosaic commandment explicitly includes three ways we should love the LORD your Godwith all your
heart
, mind, and might (strength) (v 37). Matthew's gospel also quotes Jesus as saying three ways to
love God, but it includes mind instead of "might/strength." And finally, Mark's gospel account
quotes Jesus as naming four ways we should love God: the original three ways from Moses, plus mind.

What is the reason for these differences and how are we to understand them?

One possible reason why Jesus used the word mind when Deuteronomy did not was because Moses and his Jewish
audience were limited to the Hebrew language. And in Hebrew there is no separate word for mind. In Hebrew,
the term for heart, "Lebahb," includes the mind. In Jewish thought the heart and
mind are neither separate nor distinct. The Greeks (and therefore the Romans) do make this distinction. As
mentioned above, the Greeks see the heart—"kardia"—as the fountainhead of emotions, desires, and choices.
The mind, according to the Greeks, is the cockpit of the intellect and mental consciousness.

Apparently, Jesus in His articulation of the great commandment validated the distinction between
heart and mind. In doing so He demonstrated the important role the mind has in loving
God.

This gives an explanation for why Jesus incorporated mind into the foremost commandment.

But why did Matthew drop "strength" or "might," while Mark kept it? We aren't entirely sure of Matthew's reasoning
for this change.

It is likely that Jesus said we are to love God all four ways (heart, soul, mind,
and strength) because Mark recorded all four. Matthew may have opted to keep Deuteronomy's Hebraic rhythm and
pattern of the three ways you shall love the LORD your God. And he simply chose to emphasize the
mind rather than "strength." Matthew's primary audience is Jewish, and he may have based this decision to
include mind on the fact that the concept of mind is inferred in Hebraic construction, and without
it being stated explicitly in Greek, it would have been absent, making it more likely to be overlooked by His Jewish
audience, than the explicitly stated and much more familiar term of "might." Therefore, he chose to list
mind instead of might.

A less obvious, but no less intriguing factor of Jesus's inclusion of mind in His restating the great
commandment
is because Matthew and Mark both used different Greek words for mind to capture what He
said.

The term Matthew used for mind in Greek is "dianoia." "Dianoia" specifically refers to one's understanding,
thoughts, or imagination. It is a person's mentality or perspective.

Mark used a different Greek word for mind in his record of this conversation. The word Mark used was
"sunesis." In a broad sense, it too means understanding, but it is a pictorial definition rather than an abstract
one. It describes a "flow of thought," literally, "a running together" or mental convergence of ideas. The English
word "synthesis" is derived from "sunesis."

The fact that each used different Greek terms for the same concept (mind) suggests that Jesus said this
statement in Aramaic (which was likely the language in which He usually taught), so that Matthew and Mark translated
His words into Greek for their reading audience. For more insight into the different languages of Jesus's day were
utilized and impacted His ministry and the spread of the Gospel see the Tough Topics article: "The Four Languages of Jesus's
Judea
."

Matthew and Mark's terms for mind each highlight that a person's mind determines more than merely a
mechanism for thought. It also includes what that person is thinking. The mind and its thoughts are the
primary way a person sees the world. The mind is a person's perception of reality, and it is their main way
to consider their priorities. In this sense, the mind is one the three things a person has control over. In
particular we get to choose what our minds dwell upon (2 Corinthians 10:5). And the mind influences the
third thing we control—our actions. The mind, and its mental perception, drives a person's behavior. People
act based on what they think is real and important. The second greatest commandment infers humans will
always seek their best interest. In inviting us to follow the second greatest commandment, Jesus invites us
to choose a perspective that our best interest lies in doing for others what we would like to be done for ourselves.

Truth is like light to the mind. Truth does not change reality. It only enables us to see reality more
clearly. Falsehood is like darkness to the mind. It too does not alter reality. Falsehood only makes it
more difficult for the mind to see it. It creates an illusion that charades as reality.

If a person's perception of reality is true—if it aligns with God's perception of the way things are—then it
greatly enhances that person's capacity to avoid some difficulties altogether, and to deal with and overcome
difficulties encountered. But if their perception is false then it greatly enhances the likelihood that hardships,
difficulties, and misery will compound.

After a person's loves, a person's thoughts shape who they become. The outward projection of our actions reveals our
thoughts and self-perceptions. Proverbs 23:7 reads,

"For as he [a person] thinks within himself, so he is." Our behaviors and appearance are a reflection of our
self-perception. This is why it is critical to have an accurate mental picture of our true identity.

But every human is both finite and subject to the effects of sin and the Fall. This means our minds are limited in
their capacity to perceive reality. And it means that our minds are warped and prone to mistakes, and to believe
falsehoods and deceptions—even evil. This was pointed out by Solomon, who wrote Ecclesiastes to deal with the issue.
He concludes that if we attempt to grasp the reality of life through reason and experience, we will gain only folly,
madness and evil. On the other hand, if we approach life through faith, we can enjoy life, and also have a good
report before God at the judgment.

A mind can grow or shrivel in its capacity to see reality as God sees it. And every person is
responsible for whether they grow or neglect their mind. What a person does with their mind is one
of their most essential responsibilities. Being intentional about choosing a perspective that is true is one of our
most important stewardships (Sign up for Yellow Balloons
devotional, which is a daily reminder to choose a true perspective)
. It is so essential that Jesus went out
of His way to highlight its importance in His telling of the great and foremost commandment (v 38).

How do we love God with all our mind? (v 37).

While adopting a lifestyle of learning, whether through formal education or being self-taught, can play an important
part in loving God with all our mind, we must remember, that these are always a secondary
component to obeying this commandment.

Knowledge, while good in itself, can puff us up (1 Corinthians 1:8). Human education about reality and how things
work, however beneficial they maybe, are poor substitutes for God's perspective. Loving God with all your
mind
has little, if anything, to do with how much a person knows—just consider the Pharisees and Sadducees
who were the credentialed, religious experts of Jesus's day.

Accumulating knowledge and education without God tends to make a person arrogant by giving a false sense of
independence from Him. The abuse of knowledge and education makes a person reliant upon their own understanding
instead of trusting God (Proverbs 3:5-6). Such knowledge does not open or enlighten a person's
mind but encloses and darkens it. Knowledge and education alone cannot save us from our most desperate
needs. Only Jesus can.

The main way we love God with our mind is by aligning our thoughts, perspective, mentality, etc.
with His. We do this by listening to and considering what He says is true and good; and then trusting Him. In James
1, the sequence offered by James to escape our own lusts and follow Christ is:

  1. Learn to listen to others, and set aside the false view that we can control our environment using anger (James 1:21);
  2. Then listen to and receive God's word, such that it is implanted in our souls (James 21).
  3. The result will be that our souls/lives (psuché) are saved (delivered) from our inner lusts, and we are able to live out our faith as a living faith.

We love God with our mind when we accept His take on reality as authoritative and absolute. We set
aside our opinions and murky perspectives and adopt His understanding and values.

Obviously, our immediate understanding of things is hardly God's complete understanding of things.
God is all-knowing. We have a limited capacity to know things. His knowledge is perfect; ours is warped and
dim. His ways are higher than our ways.

"'For My thoughts are not your thoughts,
Nor are your ways My ways,' declares the
Lord"
(Isaiah 55:8)

Even so, the Bible teaches multiple ways that we can begin to acquire God's perspective. And striving to acquire God's
perspective about reality and His role for our lives in the world is loving God with all our mind.

Three ways the Bible says we can humbly begin to acquire God's perspective are through prayer; reading
scripture; and allowing Jesus to curate our daily thoughts.

1. Prayer

"But if any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all generously and
without reproach, and it will be given to him."
style="font-size: revert; color: initial;">(James 1:5)

In this particular passage, the prayer is for wisdom to be able to see all circumstances as opportunities to grow our
faith, and win the crown of life (James 1:2-3, 12).

"Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving
let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all comprehension, will guard your
hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus."
(Philippians 4:6-7)

2. Scripture

"The law of the Lord is perfect, restoring the soul;
The testimony of the Lord is
sure, making wise the simple."
(Psalm 19:7)

"Your word is a lamp to my feet
And a light to my path"
(Psalm 119:105)

"Therefore everyone who hears these words of Mine and acts on them, may be compared to a
wise man who built his house on the rock."
(Matthew 7:24)

"Therefore, putting aside all filthiness and all that remains of wickedness, in humility
receive the word implanted, which is able to save your souls. But prove yourselves doers of the word, and not merely
hearers who delude themselves."
(James 1:21-22)

3. Daily Thoughts

"…taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ."
(2 Corinthians 10:5)

"Finally, brethren, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is right, whatever
is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is of good repute, if there is any excellence and if anything worthy of
praise, dwell on these things."
(Philippians 4:8)

"Set your mind on the things above, not on the things that are on earth."
(Colossians
3:2)

When we pray for God's wisdom, seek His perspective through His word, and actively invite Jesus to curate our
thoughts throughout our day, we are loving God with our mind. And when we obey the commandment our
perspective changes and we are renewed and transformed.

"And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind,
so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect."
(Romans 12:2)

When we do this, we change from a mindset of selfishness, sin, and hostility—literally death, to a mindset of
serving, love, and harmony—literally life (Romans 8:6).

As believers we have access to the mind of Christ through God's Spirit living inside us (1
Corinthians 2:16). God has revealed His thoughts to us (1 Corinthians 2:10). We are not limited to seeing
things through the follies of the world point's of view. We can see the things in our lives as God sees
them. Through His Spirit, we as believers can see His estimation and appraisals of what really matters (1
Corinthians 1:14).

And when we view life through God's perspective—especially when we perceive ourselves as He see us—we see
the incredible kingdom opportunities that are before us every day. And everything we thought we knew about the world
changes. Ordinary fields become the place of hidden treasures (Matthew 13:44). Humility and serving others become
the path to everlasting greatness (Matthew 20:25-28). Showing mercy is far more advantageous than seeking
retribution (Matthew 18:21-35). And going the extra mile becomes a joy instead of burden (Matthew 5:41).

When we love God with all our minds, we too can have the attitude and mindset which was also in Christ
Jesus, "who for the joy set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of
the throne of God" (Hebrews 12:2).

The great and foremost commandment

After Jesus answered the Pharisee's question by citing Moses's law about loving God with all your heart,
soul, and mind (v 37), He underscored His answer.

He told the lawyer from the Pharisees: This is the great and foremost commandment (v 38). It was
Jesus's way of informing those listening to His response that this was His final answer to their question.

The great commandment was the source and fountainhead of Jewish ethics. The rest of God's commands
flowed downstream from this one. That is to say, the other commandments were ways to follow this great
commandment
in different and particular circumstances. That is what made it great and foremost.

It is still the great and foremost commandment today (v 38), if we follow this commandment as it is
given and love God with all our heart, all our soul, all our mind, and all our
strength we will be following all the other commandments. If we are not loving God with all our heart,
with all
our soul, with all our mind, and all our strength (v 37), then it is likely that
any obedience we have to the other commandments of God are empty and hollow.

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