Everyone's got complicated people in our lives. Whether at work or in our
families or even here at church. But what if complicated people were not
obstacles to avoid, but actually opportunities to grow? Author Ryan Lea in
research for a book appropriately entitled How to Deal with Complicated People
did a national survey and found that 80% of people said they have to deal with
complicated people in their life. However, 74% of people said that they
themselves were not complicated. I don't know if you understand math, but that
does not math too well. 80% of people said they have to deal with complicated
people, but 74% said that they themselves were not complicated. Here's what I
know to be true is that life is filled with complicated people, and sometimes
the most complicated relationship is actually the one that you can't run away
from, and that's because it's with yourself. And so what does the Bible actually
say about relationships? Well, the Bible is actually filled with complicated
people. I mean, right out of the gate, right? Eve has everything available to
her, but then gives it all up after falling for the temptation in the garden. We
think about Noah. Builds an ark, saves humanity, saves all the little animals.
It's awesome, right? But did you know that a chapter or two later, he's found
passed out naked drunk on the floor? Abraham. OK, Father Abraham, we think about
like he, he obeyed God. He, he, Father of our nation, also fathered a child with
another woman. Moses led the people out of Egypt in captivity, killed a man.
David, a man after God's own heart. committed adultery. Elijah took on the
prophets of Baal only to a chapter later, be so depressed that he runs, hides in
a cave and ask God to take his own life. Think about the New Testament. You have
Peter. I love Peter. Peter's like, I'm gonna preach the word, but if you wrong
me, I'm gonna try to cut off your ear, right? Like, here he was, he starts the
church, but like, in the moment of need denies Jesus 3 times. I mean, it's all
over the map. I think about Martha, who was so wrapped up in her to do list that
she missed the fact that Jesus, the savior of the world, was in her home. The
Bible is filled with complicated people. But here's what's wild about that, is
that you can actually be close to God and still be complicated. That means you
can go to church. And still be complicated. You can sing praise and worship
songs and still be complicated. You can lead a Bible study or serve in a
ministry and still be complicated. But if God didn't use complicated people. He
couldn't use anybody in the Bible. So here's the good news for you and for me.
Is that complicated people don't block your calling. They build your character.
Complicated people don't block your calling. They build your character. What I
want to attempt to do this morning is from Romans chapter 12, show us that if we
reframe how we approach relationships. We don't have to run from the
complications. But rather we can see them as an opportunity to grow. At the end
of this morning's service, I'm gonna challenge you. To take a step of faith in a
complicated relationship in your life. And so what I'd like for you to do right
now is I want you to think. About what is one relationship? That is intention
right now. What is one relationship that maybe feels distant? That feels muddy
or messy? What is, what is one relationship or one area in your life in which
you feel at a loss? You feel stuck. Or you just feel like, God, here you go. And
that's the relationship I want us to see through the lens of Scripture today. If
you have your Bibles opened up to Romans chapter 12, we're gonna pick things up
in verse 14. We're gonna read through the whole passage and then we're gonna
walk back through it and see what God has to say to us today. Verse 14, bless
those who persecute you. OK, so he comes right out of the gate swinging. So you
have to understand that we're in week 4 here. And so in week 1, we talked about
growing in commitment, that in view of God's mercies, we're to offer our bodies
as a living sacrifice to him. Right? And then we talked about growing in our
calling, how everyone's been given a gift, been created on purpose for a
purpose, that mean you've been called to make a difference in the lives of
somebody else. And then in week 3, we talked about growing in our community, and
how love is not just a feeling we fake, but a life we actually live. And so now
we get to verse 14, and right out of the gate, Paul's gonna get very specific.
And say, here's what gospel love looks like in the life of a believer. Bless
those who persecute you. Bless and do not curse them. Rejoice with those who
rejoice. Weep with those who weep. Live in harmony with one another. Do not be
haughty, but associate with the lowly. Never be wise in your own sight. Repay no
one evil for evil, but give thought to what you to do what is honorable in the
sight of all. If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all.
Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God, for it is
written, Vengeance is mine. I will repay, says the Lord. To the contrary, if
your enemy is hungry, feed him. If he is thirsty, give him something to drink,
for by doing so you will heap burning coals on his head. Do not be overcome by
evil, but overcome evil with good. What we're gonna find in this passage today.
That's going to teach us how to handle and manage complicated relationships in
our lives. that there are 3 choices that growing Christians make on a daily
basis. Three choices that if we start implementing them into our lives, we're
gonna see our relationships change as well. The first choice we have to make as
Christians when it comes to complicated relationships is that we have to choose
blessing over bitterness. We have to choose blessing over bitterness. Verse 14
it says, bless those who persecute you. Bless and do not curse. That phrasing
really reflects and resembles Jesus's sermon on the Mount found in Matthew 5 to
7. And Paul is sharing with this Roman Church who's facing persecution from all
sides. They're being attacked by the Romans, they're being attacked by the
Jewish religious leaders who are losing power. And now there is fighting within
the church people themselves. And Paul uses this phrase bless, which the Greek
word is where we get our same root word for the word eulogy. To speak well of.
And so not only are we supposed to not persecute back, but we're supposed to
respond with blessing. Says rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who
weep. Which do you think is harder, to rejoice or to weep? I actually think it's
harder to rejoice with people. I say that because we have our own struggles and
we go through life and we have these battles. But there are times when somebody
else experiences something good, right? And intern, we're like, I'm so happy for
you. Meanwhile, we're like, God, why not me? They always get fill in the blank,
right? I was having a conversation recently with some friends who are also in
the ministry. And I was telling him, I said, man, I just got to be transparent
with you. Like, you guys open up, you got so many people, you had so many
decisions, so many baptisms, and I was excited and I was also jealous. He said,
that's funny. I said, why? He said, because I saw you get into a building and
have structure and systems and volunteers, and I was jealous of you. And it can
be difficult to rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep,
because again, we, we, we frame it in what we want versus what the other person
needs or what God is doing. Here's the interesting thing when it comes to
bitterness. Is that bitterness really changed you to the past. Right. You may
have heard the um axiom where bitterness is like drinking poison and expecting
the other person to die. What happens when we have a bitter heart is that we
cling to something that was done in the past, and it hardens us. But it changes
to the past and keeps us from moving forward. Imagine going on a hike, and you
got a backpack, maybe one of the cool ones with the little water thing that
comes out. But every time you get offended. You pause to pick up a large rock
and place it in the backpack. That's what happens when we get offended. If
somebody hurts us and then we hang on to that rock that hurt, and that person
moves on with their day. And we now carry this weight. And at first you have one
rock, it's like, OK. But then you get hurt again, and you got another and
another and another. And pretty soon, or You've been hiking long enough. Where
you got a lot of rocks in the bag or even that one rock feels so heavy that you
can't move forward. Choosing blessing over bitterness. Is is choosing to treat
someone in light of God's grace versus their guilt or your shame. Imagine trying
to write your story. OK, I'm holding a pen. And imagine you go to write your
story and right before you write your own story or journaling for the day. You
hand it to somebody else and say, here, no, you write it. When you hang on to
bitterness. You're asking somebody else bad behavior to write your story.
Bitterness will hold you back. Bitterness will filter how you view all future
interactions, right? You know, I, I've, I've heard different therapists and, and
Christian leaders and Christian counselors say that a lot of times we
catastrophize, like a lot of things. They're like, well, I've been hurt by
church. Church people will hurt you. And Is it OK, but let's dive down. OK,
where did that come from? And then you go back through and you realize, oh, OK,
it was 3 people that hurt me. But because the actions of three people, I now
view everybody in this category. This way, right? The church is my context,
context, but maybe for you, it's in dating relationships. Someone betrayed you.
And now you've got this rock that you've been carrying around for a long time,
and now you question every future relationship. Now, don't mistake, by the way,
blessing for boundaries. He's not saying, don't be bitter enable the bad
behavior. What he's saying is, I'm not gonna let somebody else's bad behavior
dictate my behavior. My actions are gonna come from God, not the person that
hurt me. And when you choose blessing, see, it goes further than acceptance,
right? Greek philosophers like Aristotle talked about justice and patience and
virtue. But to bless somebody, to speak well of, to serve or or pray for that
person is a whole another level. And look, the people of the Bible are
complicated. There are psalms that are called the impeccable Psalms. This is raw
and it is not G rated. Like they're praying to God, like we think our Father,
out in heaven, hallowed be Thy name, right? You read the Psalms, they're like,
may you cut off their parts and make them fatherless and orphans. May they cease
to exist on this earth. Like that's like, that's raw. But where they get to is
like, God, I don't know what to do with this. But I'm gonna place it in your
hands. To choose blessing over bitterness, to say, I'm gonna take the rocks out
of the back and say, I can't carry this anymore. And it might describe my past,
but it is not gonna determine my future. And so the end result of choosing
blessing over bitterness is that you get to experience something that we all
long for, and that is freedom. To walk outside and go. Maybe not right now cause
it's so hot to walk inside. Of air conditioning right now. Are you willing to
bless those who persecute? Are you willing to celebrate? And understand that
somebody's success does not diminish your success. Right That to identify and
connect and weep with those who weep. To celebrate with joy of those who are
celebrating. Can you choose blessing over bitterness? But the second choice we
have to make as Christians, is that we have to choose peace over pride. We have
to choose peace over pride. If bitterness changes to the past. Pride traps us in
the present. It's, it's this idea and we, and especially up in this area, where
we feel like we have to have it all together. Right, we all are like, how are
you doing? Fine. Great, good. You're like, you were falling apart like 30
seconds ago. That when we realize that all of us have complications and issues
and battles and struggles, we don't have to be trapped in the present by pride,
by keeping it all together. That we can actually experience peace that comes
through Christ. It says there in verse 16, it says, live in harmony with one
another. It's this idea of a unified expression of the body, not uniformity
where we all think the same, speak the same, look the same. But think of it more
like a picture of a symphony. Different notes, different instruments played
together in harmony that together we reflect the heart and life of Jesus. So do
not be haughty and but associate with the lowly. Never be wise in your own
sight. In other words, When pride starts to die in your life, peace starts to
grow in your life. Never get to the place in your life where you feel too good
for somebody else. Jesus himself. The night before he would be crucified. I
There, in a meal with his disciples. What does he do? He takes the lowest level
servant role and washes the feet of his disciples, including a guy who would
doubt him, a guy who would deny him, and a guy who would betray him. But what
Jesus tells us from his story. Is that Judas's betrayal does not stop his
calling or mission. That somebody else's mistakes and evil does not stop the
goodness and the calling and life and the peace that came through living out who
God called him to be and what God called him to do. If bitterness changed you in
the past, pride will trap you in the present. But you don't have to choose
pride. You can actually choose peace, and peace is possible. You might have
heard it said that peace is not the absence of conflict, it's the presence of
Christ. I'm gonna take it a step further and say that peace is not the absence
of enemies. That you can be surrounded by challenging situations and challenging
people and have secure peace. The problem is we keep giving away our peace. To
other people We, we keep expecting complicated, hurtful people. To bring us
calmness and not chaos. But what does Jesus say? Christmas story, he comes in,
what is he called? The Prince of Peace. Paul later in Ephesians says that Christ
himself is our peace, or in Philippians, he's saying, don't be anxious about
anything, but through everything, through prayer and supplication and
thanksgiving, bring your request before the Lord and the peace of God will guard
your heart. He says, you don't need peace from that other person because I will
give it to you. One of the most famous chapters in all the Bible, Psalm 23,
where the Lord is my shepherd. I shall not want, right? So many great powerful
verses, right? Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will
fear no evil. Why? Because you are with me. Such a great picture. But what did
he say right after that? He says, for you prepare. The table, uh, I miss my
enemies. He doesn't say apart from my enemies. He says, you are surrounded. But
I wanna have a meal with you. They might be all around your table, but you don't
have to give them a seat. How else do you explain that Jesus on the cross,
experiencing the weight of the world's sin, the wrath and justice of God, the
pain of the nails in his hand, the mocking from the people around him, the
betrayal from the people who's claimed Hosanna just seven days prior. And in
that setting, he can go, I will see you in heaven. John, please take care of my
mother. Lord, forgive them for they know not what they did. Because Jesus in
that moment was so secure in his identity, in his calling, that peace was not
coming from outside, but from inside of who he was and who God is and what God
called him to do. Peace is possible when you accept that it becomes my
responsibility, not the person that hurt me. That your bad behavior does not
dictate my obedience. But I love the realness of this passage too. He says, be
humble, but then he says, repaid no evil for evil. But give thought to do what
is right, right there. You know how much different we would live if we actually
gave thought to what we did before we did it? To do the right thing. When does
the right thing not become the right thing? Right? Does anyone else play this
justification game in your mind? Well, they said this, and they did that. And if
they'd only done this, and it only, it only multiplies in this day and age of
technology, right? Because now you got texts, you got media posts, you got
tweets, you got emails, and you can't read context or tone in any of them,
right? And so you ever read that text from that family member or that friend,
like, wait, what did they say? How did they say it? And then you craft the
response back, right? And then you delete it, you're like, OK, that's probably,
but then you get another one and then you're like, no, we like. Right? And we go
through and we think, oh well, they probably meant this, and then I'm gonna say
this, but just imagine for a moment. If in the conversation with the person, the
complicated person. That you tried to listen to understand, not simply to reply.
Instead of being focused on the, what you see of the iceberg, understand, I
wonder what's underneath that's causing this. I hurt people, hurt people. I
wonder what's hurting them, that's causing them to in turn hurt me. That when
you understand that peace is possible through Christ, that you don't, you don't
need that from the other person. And I love the realism here because verse 18,
he says, if possible. So far as it depends on you, live peaceably withal. This
tells us that just because you do the right thing doesn't mean that the
relationship's gonna be reconciled. Doesn't mean That the divorce doesn't go
through. Doesn't mean that the loss still happens or that the friendship is
renewed, or that they give you the job back. It, it doesn't always go that way.
But in your heart, in your life. Right? If you're in an argument and there's,
and there's 99% somebody else and it's 1% you, can you just acknowledge your 1%?
Right? Can you understand that in this relationship, there's greater things at
play? In choosing blessing over bitterness, it's, it's this idea of taking the
weight out of the backpack and setting it down so you can experience freedom.
The idea here of choosing peace over pride is like, imagine yourself in this
intense tug of war back and forth. They said this, you said that, they said
this, you said that, and you're back and forth, back and forth. What I'm
encouraging you to do is to say there's bigger things at play. Let go of the
rope. And so, you know what? I'm gonna let God pick up the tab. Here's what I
mean. You don't have to pay back what Jesus already paid for. You don't have to
pay for what was done or make that other person pay for what is done, because
Jesus paid for it on the cross. And if you can humble yourself to understand.
That God's justice and grace. His wrath, his mercy, all of that comes together
at the foot of the cross. You understand that I don't have to win this war
because Jesus already won. And I am surrounded by enemy. I'm surrounded by
challenging people. I'm surrounded by pain and hurt. Some of it I've caused,
some of the others have caused to me, but in all things, I'm gonna choose peace
through Jesus and Jesus Christ alone. Paul's not saying that you do the right
thing and everything goes back to normal. But what he's saying is that. Peace is
possible when you find it in Christ and not the relationships around you. And
now you can live and act and speak from a place of peace, not a place of
vengeance. Right, Christians, we love to quote when Jesus flipped tables, don't
we? Well, Jesus got angry. OK, Jesus got angry at religious hypocrites who were
blaspheming the name of God and the temple of God. Jesus flipping tables does
not justify you flipping something else when somebody cuts you off on the
freeway. Right? If you look at how he interacted with the people in his life
that. It was one of service and sacrifice and grace. The 3 choices we have to
make as Christians. Number 1, we have to choose blessing over bitterness,
because bitterness will chain you to your past, but when you choose blessing, it
can actually give you freedom. 2, we have to choose peace over pride. Because
pride will trap you in the present. Restrict you, box you in from all that God's
created you to be. You're gonna miss out on so many opportunities. But with the
peace of Christ, you can actually, when possible. Experience harmony I And 3rd
choice we have. Is that we have to choose goodness over grudge. We have to
choose goodness over grudge. Bitterness is gonna chain you to the past. Pride is
gonna trap you in the present. A grudge will rob you of your future. A grudge is
gonna rob you of your future because you're gonna view every future interaction
based on things that happened in the past. You know, when driving, it's
important to note just how much bigger the windshield is than the rearview
mirror. Why? Because it's so much more important to decide where you're going
today. You can't control what happened to you. You're not saying what happened
to you was OK. You're not saying what happened to you was right, but what you're
saying is that God's goodness is greater than the world's badness and evil. That
you cannot focus on retaliation, because when you focus on retaliation, evil
wins twice. That when you focus on the goodness, who God has called us to be
understanding that life is not good, but God is good. And you can cling to that
goodness and allow his goodness to shape things because that is what's gonna
allow you to experience ultimate victory in your life. Verse 19, beloved. Notice
the heartfelt behind it, beloved. He says, never avenge yourselves, but leave it
to the wrath of God. For it is written, vengeance is mine. I will repay, says
the Lord. He's quoting Deuteronomy 32:35. What you're also saying there is not
that you don't want justice. What you're saying is that God's justice is gonna
be better than anything that you could give. He said, you know what? Justice is
gonna be God's job. Hm Now, actually, the next chapter, Romans 13, really gets
into Institutions and organizations and structural and consequences and
leadership, right? So we're not saying that justice isn't required. What we're
saying is on the personal level, in your day to day interactions, are you
focused on making right, right? Make this right. Are you gonna focus on doing
right? Leaving justice to God and obedience to self. So verse 20, to the
contrary, if your enemy is hungry, feed him. If he's thirsty, give him something
to drink. For by doing so, you will heap burning coals on his head. That's a
direct quote from Proverbs chapter 25 verse 21-22. The idea here is that When
you do good in response to what is bad, you are actually shaming shame. You are
combating darkness with light. You know, the image of choosing blessing over
bitterness is, is unloading the backpack, letting go of the weight that you
can't carry. The image of choosing peace over pride is saying, you know what, I
don't need to be in this tug of war. In the image of this last one. It's simply
Lighting a candle. Light the spark. You might be surrounded by darkness. But the
last I read. Is that we do not represent the darkness of the world. We are
believers in Jesus Christ, the light of the world, that we too have in turn been
called to be light in the world, and that the response to darkness is light. And
that when you turn on the light switch, or when you light the candle, there is
not a battle between light and dark. But rather, darkness really is the absence
of light. And so when you think about how dark a room is, instead of complaining
about just how dark it is, understand that you have the ability to turn on the
light. You have the opportunity to doubt your doubt, to shame your shame, to put
guilt in the grave and say, you know what? Jesus wasn't overcome by evil. He
overcame evil with good. John 16:33, he tells the disciples right before he
leaves, he says, look, you're gonna face trials and tribulations in this world.
You are But take heart because I have overcome the world. And if Jesus overcame,
we can overcome. When you experience hurt. And you experience pain. And the
complicated people in your lives. It's not about minimizing what happened. Jesus
didn't, and he saw the pain and hurt and lives, and he went to the cross for it.
That's how serious he takes it. But understand. That Jesus defeated death
itself. And then for those who put their faith and trust in him saying, hey, you
are going to be persecuted, you are gonna be attacked, you are gonna experience
brokenness because we live in a broken world. But I'm gonna give you a taste of
heaven now. I'm gonna give you my spirit now. So the same spirit that conquered
death now lives inside of you. And that when you are surrounded by darkness, we
don't have to respond darkness with darkness, that we can actually respond with
light. And a light that comes from an eternal source, that you're right, on your
own, you won't be able to do it. But through Christ, you can forgive. Through
Christ, you can heal. Through Christ, you can grow and strengthen, and then you
might not get back to where you thought you should be. But God can take you
somewhere new, and you can bring hope and healing into the people around you.
And because it's not the pain that's writing your story, God is writing your
story. And because of that hope and healing is possible. Think about Martin
Luther King Junior and the civil rights movements, said these words. He said,
darkness cannot drive out darkness. Only light can do that. Hate cannot drive
out hate. Only love can do that. Here's the reality is that God will use the
rough edges of other people to smooth out the rough edges in your own life. And
then when you take that relationship, that betrayal, that hurt that someone
said, like, I have this strong sense of justice, like, like, I will, I will
admit I have no problem saying I'm sorry if I think I did something wrong,
right? But if somebody said something or did something that I didn't actually
say, that like, I didn't like, I, I wanna clarify or explain and go through
this. Here's the thing that I've learned over pastor in the last 20 years. I
have to trust God with my reputation. I have to trust God. what people say in
rooms outside that I'm not in. I will try to justify my own actions when in
reality, if I respond in anger, I respond in bitterness, or I respond with
pride, or I hold a grudge, that's on me. Do you know you are not responsible for
other people's choices? That God is holding you responsible for your response to
the situation, and he's given you the opportunity to experience blessing and
peace and goodness. You see, complicated people don't block your calling, they
build your character. And if you've been hurt deeply. I believe That means God's
Gonna use you to reach so far. You look at anybody who's made a difference for
eternity, and at some point they had a moment of brokenness. We can't expect
complicated people not to act in complicated ways. And it starts with ourselves.
So I want to end this morning by challenging three groups of people. Because I
know there's different groups of people in this room. First of all, for those
who are believers, for those who call themselves as as Christians, I want to
challenge you to practice gospel recall. Here's what I mean. Look at the life of
Jesus. And say that if I really believe this, I'm really just saying the words I
want to be more like Jesus. Am I willing To set aside my bitterness, to set
aside my pride. To let go of the grudge, to say, you know what? God's better at
justice than I am. And if anyone could be bitter, if anybody could have pride,
if anybody could hold a grudge, it would be Jesus, and he laid it all down for
my sake. And if he did it, I can do it. Lord help me. Second group of people in
the room, for those who are seekers. You kind of new to this whole Jesus stuff.
You're not quite sure if you even believe in Jesus yet. Let me just ask you a
very practical question. Do you want a life marked by bitterness, pride, and
grudge? Cause apart from Jesus, that's what you're gonna be left with. You
cannot turn on the television or scroll through your phone without seeing people
going at each other. But with Jesus, the power of the cross, the power of the
Holy Spirit in the life of a believer, you can choose blessing over bitterness.
You can choose peace over pride. And you can choose goodness over grudge. And
see how that not only transforms your life, but transforms the lives of the
people around you. And the last thing is For those who are skeptical in the
room, skeptics, I get it. You're not quite sure what to believe because maybe
the people that hurt you are the same people that claim faith. Church hurts is
very real. And so what I wanna ask you to do is to consider Jesus on the cross.
See, Jesus was cursed. And his response was blessing. Jesus was wronged. And he,
in turn, forgave. And ultimately, Jesus was crucified. But experience victory.
That It's still available for you and for me. So here's the challenge. That
relationship that you've been thinking about this whole time. The tension, the,
the distance, the, the, the exhaustion from wrestling of weeks or months or
years. Or maybe it's something even internally within yourself. What would it
look like if you took one step this week towards blessing, peace, or goodness?
What would it look like to Bless the person that hurt you. You might need to
have some boundaries, right? It's if it's possible, but you can at least pray
for that person. You can speak well or or look to help or to serve. What if you
decided to set your pride aside and say, you know what, my peace doesn't come
from that person, it comes from Christ. So now when I enter the room, I'm not
entering with a grudge, but I'm entering to give good. To make good To love well
and to love people the way that Jesus loved. If you allow the Holy Spirit to
change your life. He will transform you to be the light to the dark world that
desperately needs you. I know relationships are complicated. But that's why
Jesus came down. He says, I'm gonna show you a better way, and I'm gonna empower
you to do so. Let's pray. Dear Heavenly Father, whatever relationships people
are walking through right now, whatever tensions they feel, whatever walls are
up, God, I pray that you would break down and break through these walls. God, we
know that while things do seem impossible, we pray to you, a God of the
impossible. So empower us this week to take one step towards blessing someone,
to take one step towards experiencing and extending peace to others, to take one
step to showing and sharing your goodness to the world that desperately needs
it. God, may we think and treasure and respond to the fact that complicated
people do not block our calling, but rather they build our character. So help us
to become more like you this week. We love you, God, and your sons, and we pray.
Amen.