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“Love [of our enemies] doesn’t seem to suggest approval or a lack of accountability, but it does seem to mean we have to move out of frameworks of winners and losers and create the kinds of conditions that could be for our enemy’s good.”Taylor Straatmann continued our three-year trek through the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7) in a series we’re calling “Kingdom Manifesto.” This month we are looking at Matthew 5:43-48, and are wrestling with the implications of loving our enemies.
“Love [of our enemies] doesn’t seem to suggest approval or a lack of accountability, but it does seem to mean we have to move out of frameworks of winners and losers and create the kinds of conditions that could be for our enemy’s good.”Taylor Straatmann continued our three-year trek through the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7) in a series we’re calling “Kingdom Manifesto.” This month we are looking at Matthew 5:43-48, and are wrestling with the implications of loving our enemies.