"If anyone comes to Me and does not hate his
father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters, yes, and his own life also, he
cannot be My disciple." Luke 14:26
The Greek word for hate means "to love less by comparison." Jesus is calling us
to have a love for Him that is so all-inclusive, fervent and absolute that all our earthly
affections cannot come close. If we had that red-hot, all-consuming, intense and joyous
love for Christ, we would not need outlines, diagrams and instructions telling us how to
pray; we would pray because our hearts would be on fire with love for Him. We would not
grow bored trying to fill up an hour praying ambiguously for needs all over the world;
Christ would be the object of our prayers, and our prayer time would be precious. We would
spend hours behind closed doors, expressing the overflowing admiration and sweet love that
flood our hearts for Him. Reading His Word would never be a burden; we wouldn't need
formulas on how to finish the Bible in a year. If we loved Jesus passionately, we would be
drawn magnetically to His Word to learn more about Him. And we would not become bogged
down with endless genealogies and end-time speculations. We would want only to know Him
better-to see more of His beauty and glory so that we could become more like Him. Think
about it: Do we know what it is like to come into His sweet presence and ask nothing? To
reach out to Him only because we are grateful that He loves us so completely? We have
become selfish and self-centered in our prayers: "GIVE US, MEET US, HELP US, BLESS
US, USE US, PROTECT US" All this may be scriptural, but the focus remains on us. We
go to His Word for answers to our problems, for guidance and comfort, and this also is
right and commendable. But where is the love-motivated soul who searches the Scriptures
diligently, who wants only to discover more and more about his beloved Lord?
Reference Used: Hungry For More Of Jesus by David Wilkerson