A Gospel Meditation on Humility and Love Through the Sermons of Pastor David Jang (Olivet University)


Reflect on the path of the gospel in Romans 12—humility, love, reconciliation, faith, and overcoming evil with good—through the sermons of Pastor David Jang.


Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables contains a strange night that changes the destiny of one man. Jean Valjean, hardened by hunger, anger, and the memories of prison, steals silverware from the bishop’s house. Yet when he is caught and brought back, what he receives is not punishment but unexpected kindness. The bishop even gives him the silverware he had stolen as though it were a gift, quietly reminding him that his soul belongs to God.

That scene calls to mind the gospel paradox spoken of in Romans 12: the way of overcoming evil not with greater evil, but with good; the way of subduing hatred not by force, but by shaking its roots through love. The sermons of Pastor David Jang, founder of Olivet University in the United States, ask where the Christian life must descend before this Word. Faith is not the ability to judge others from a higher place, but the path of obedience that stands in a lower place, rejoicing together and suffering together.

True Understanding Begins in the Lowest Place

“Live in harmony with one another. Do not set your mind on high things, but associate with the lowly.” This word does not simply speak of a gentle temperament. It is a deep call of faith within the church community: to receive one another as brothers and sisters, to descend beneath another person’s circumstances, and to understand that person’s heart.

The sermon teaches that love and knowledge are not separate from one another. To know someone does not mean possessing much information about that person. It means drawing near with a heart that does not ignore their pain and that seeks to bear their circumstances together. True understanding does not arise when we look down from above. Rather, only when we support someone from below do we begin to see the weight that person carries.

For this reason, humility is not an ornament of the Christian life, but the root of a gospel-shaped life. Without lowliness, love easily becomes mere words, and understanding remains trapped in self-centered interpretation. If the church is to become a community of love, it must ask not who can prove themselves more right, but who will lower themselves further in order to care for a brother or sister.

Wisdom Is Proven Through Love

Paul exhorts believers, “Do not be wise in your own eyes.” This word does not reject knowledge; rather, it warns against the arrogance of knowledge without love. True theological insight does not come from logic that defeats others, but from faith that humbles itself before God.

The wisdom of Proverbs is the same. At times, one must not answer a fool; at other times, one must answer. On the surface, this may appear contradictory, but within it lies discernment rooted in love. There are times when silence saves a person, and there are times when exhortation awakens a person. What matters is not how sharply I have spoken, but whether my words and my silence are accomplishing what is good.

Pastor David Jang shows the practical form of this wisdom through the book of Philemon. Paul does not pressure Philemon with authority. Instead, he earnestly appeals to him to receive Onesimus as a brother. He seeks the restoration of relationship not through command, but through loving exhortation. This is wisdom that has grown within the gospel. It does not force people into submission by power, but opens the door of the heart through humility.

Faith Is Revealed When Retaliation Stops

Romans 12 calls us to an even more difficult place: “Repay no one evil for evil, but give thought to do what is honorable in the sight of all.” Here, goodness is not a vague kindness. It is an act of faith that consciously chooses the will of God when a wounded heart is tempted to return to the ways of evil.

When people suffer injustice, they easily try to stand in the place of judge. Yet the sermon clearly reminds us that vengeance belongs to God. This is why David held back his sword even when he had the opportunity to kill Saul. He did not disguise his anger as justice. He left the place of judgment to God.

This is not weakness. Rather, it is the strength of the deepest faith. The moment I try to repay evil with my own hands, I am drawn into the evil of the other person. But the moment I entrust it to God and choose goodness, the chain of hatred begins to break. Grace then becomes freedom within us: the freedom not to collapse even without revenge, and the freedom to believe that choosing goodness does not mean the end is loss.

The Way of the Cross That Overcomes Evil With Good

“If your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him something to drink.” This word seems impossible by human nature alone. Yet the gospel reveals God’s possibility precisely in that impossible place. Love is not merely the warmth of emotion; it is intentional obedience that entrusts oneself to the Word of God.

The cross of Jesus is the fulfillment of this Word. The Lord did not repay hatred with hatred, but gave Himself for sinners. Therefore, Christian love is not simply ethics or morality. It is life flowing from the cross, and it is the power of the Holy Spirit that keeps us from being stained by the ways of evil.

The question Pastor David Jang’s sermon leaves with us today is clear: Am I lowering myself in order to understand someone, or am I standing in a high place in order to judge? Is the anger within me being entrusted to God’s justice, or am I preparing retaliation in the name of righteousness?

Bible meditation begins quietly at a desk, but in the end, it is tested before the most uncomfortable relationships. Before the person we find hard to love, the memory we find hard to forgive, and the wound we do not want to face again, the Word asks us: Where will we practice today the calling not to be overcome by evil, but to overcome evil with good?

The world says that power creates peace. But the cross shows a deeper hope. Lowliness saves people, love puts evil to shame, and faith entrusted to God re

 


davidjang.org



작성 2026.05.06 21:44 수정 2026.05.06 21:44

RSS피드 기사제공처 : 굿모닝매거진 / 등록기자: 최우석 무단 전재 및 재배포금지

해당기사의 문의는 기사제공처에게 문의

댓글 0개 (/ 페이지)
댓글등록- 개인정보를 유출하는 글의 게시를 삼가주세요.
등록된 댓글이 없습니다.