GOLDEN RULE
This is a
golden rule indeed! It does not merely forbid all petty malice and revenge, all
cheating and over-reaching. It does much more. It settles a hundred difficult
points, which in a world like this are continually arising between man and man.
It prevents the necessity of laying down endless little rules for our conduct
in specific cases. It sweeps the whole debatable ground with one mighty principle.
It shows us a balance and measure, by which every one may see at once what is his duty. Is there a thing we would not like our
neighbor to do to us? Then let us always remember, that this is the thing we
ought not to do to him. Is there a thing we would like him to do to us? Then
this is the very thing we ought to do to him. How many intricate questions
would be decided at once, if this rule were honestly used!
J.C. Ryle
Commentary, Matthew 7.
Selfless love
does not serve in order to prevent its own harm or to insure its own welfare.
It serves for the sake of the one being served, and serves in the way it likes
being served – whether it ever receives such service or not. That level of love
is the divine level, and can be achieved only by divine help... Unregenerate
man can never come up to the standard of selfless love – the love that loves
others as oneself and that treats others in the same way that one wants to be
treated.
John MacArthur
Matthew 1-7, Moody, 1985, p. 447, 446.