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							A young mom tells the following story. . . . Because 
							of an ear infection, my young son, Casey, had to go to the pediatrician. I was impressed with the way 
							the doctor directed his comments and questions to my 
							son. When he asked Casey, "Is there anything you are 
							allergic to?" Casey nodded and whispered in his ear. 
							Smiling, the pediatrician wrote out a prescription 
							and handed it to me. Without looking at it, I tucked 
							it into my purse.
 
 Later, the pharmacist filled the order, remarking on 
							the unusual food drug interaction my son must have.
 “What are you talking about?” I asked. When the 
							pharmacist saw my puzzled expression, he showed me 
							the label on the bottle. As per the doctor's 
							instructions, it read: "Do not take with broccoli."
 
 As we have been studying from the Book of Luke we 
							have read that Jesus, the great physician, often 
							lays down a prescription for us too.
 
 Luke 6 is what we call the Sermon on the Plain. It 
							sounds an awful lot like Matthew’s Sermon on the 
							Mount but is worded a little differently. Throughout 
							the chapter, Jesus is giving us a prescription for 
							how to treat others and on his list are those we 
							often call enemies. People who persecute us. People 
							who are mean and cruel and unkind. And what is the 
							doctor’s prescription? Love them. Pray for them. Be 
							kind to them. Really?
 
 That’s hard enough with people we hardly know. But 
							have you discovered it’s just as difficult with 
							family members? I was caught up in an argument with 
							my grown son and at first I really tried to be like 
							Jesus but he said too much . . . he went too far . . 
							. and my inner lawyer showed up. I started bringing 
							charges against him presenting him with my 
							evidences: “Let me tell you how much I do for you, 
							kid, since you seem to have amnesia!”
 
 Then I started carelessly raising my voice when out 
							of the corner of my eye I see I see my
 wife—his mother! She had one of those looks like 
							“who invited the demon to the party?” It was then
 I realized it’s easy to be nice when people are nice 
							or who you don’t really know, but nearly impossible 
							to be kind when people are hostile in return. I’m 
							pretty confident that’s why I need Jesus so badly.
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							The doctor’s prescription is difficult. “But to you 
							who are listening I say: Love your enemies, do good 
							to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, 
							pray for those who mistreat you” (Luke 6:27–28).
 Most of the world works like this: ‘I will be nice 
							to people who are nice to me and I will retaliate 
							against people who hurt me or are mean to me.’ Jesus 
							is about systematically disassembling these 
							philosophies. This teaching right here is what 
							separates the major leagues from the minors. This is 
							what separates Christians from all other religions. 
							This text separates us from the entire world. Our 
							first reaction is usually to retaliate, but that’s 
							not what Jesus asks of His followers.
 
 It’s easy to be nice to people who are nice to you. 
							. . . Jesus said, “Big deal!” The challenge is can 
							you be kind to people who haven’t been kind to you?
 
 I don’t think this is about a war with my enemies, 
							nor a war with my persecutors, nor a war with people 
							who have been unkind. Jesus is identifying a war 
							waging inside of me. It’s about who I am. It’s about 
							me fighting me. Will I retaliate like my inner voice 
							wants me to or will I mimic Jesus? Will I retaliate 
							or will I pray for them, bless them, love them, and 
							turn the other cheek and forgive them? And that 
							ladies and gentlemen, can be a hard pill to swallow.
 
 [Ron Otto, preaching minister at Lincoln 
							Christian Church]
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