
The transforming power of patience and kindness.
By Jill Briscoe
Paul writes, “Love is patient
and kind” (1 Cor. 13:4). Most
of us find that we can love
those who are easy to love,
but what about those who are
hard to love or those who
drive us up the wall?
We have been told to love,
for love is not an option. We
have been given by the Spirit the ability to love
with agape love. Patience is another name for love,
for Paul explained that “love is patient.” Therefore,
as we work through our difficult relationships, we
will need to be patient. The meaning of the word
patience (in Greek, macrothumea) is “longsuffering”
or “slow to anger.” Love suffers because
it is the nature of love to suffer. Remember what
C.S. Lewis said: “Love anything, and your heart
will certainly be wrung and possibly broken!” But
there is no alternative. We are not only called to
love, we are also commanded to love.
Such love means loving not only when your
heart is whole, but loving when your heart is
broken. It means loving when the person you are
trying to love is continuously hurting you afresh.
Long-suffering means that love suffers well. Being
inordinately fond of myself, I don’t “do” pain very
well. In fact, I don’t do pain at all if I can help it!
Do you? Who’s for pain? The whole ethos of our
society, as C.S. Lewis said, is to “embrace pleasure
and eschew pain.” It takes a radical act of God in
our lives to so change our hearts that we are
willing to embrace pain and eschew pleasure – to
suffer for the sake of love! Yet, if that’s what it
takes to love someone, it must be done.
God is very good at loving people who hurt Him
and are very hard to love. When Jesus was
frustrated with the disciples one time, He said to
them, “How long must I suffer you?” (Matt.
17:17). He then went on “suffering” them for a
considerable time because He knew that this was
God’s will for Him and He willed to do God’s will.
Long-suffering means being patient with an
insufferable situation or person – even when you
are hurting badly yourself – because it is the will of
God. It hurts terribly to love at times like that, but
that is what agape love does.
How long does your patience last? Does it last
120 years, 120 minutes, or 120 seconds? To have
the patience God wants us to have, we need Jesus.
Patience loves on to give time for God’s
redemptive power to do its work. Love gives us the
power to suffer long when we desperately want
things to change.
Kindness Is Patience In Action
Paul says that not only is love patient, it is also kind. Kindness is the
active part of patience. Patience is being good, while kindness is doing
good. Kindness is goodness showing. Love is kind to those who would
do it harm. Jesus said that we are to love even our enemies. To do that,
we definitely need Him!
Being Kind To Those Who Hurt Us
I think of an incredible example of such kindness in the life
experience of Tania Rich, a young mother serving the Lord with her
husband in the jungle. Read her story:
January 31, 1993, was “just a regular day in the village.”…Suddenly,
Tania heard loud noises, gunshots, and shouting. Guerillas had
surrounded the village and had entered each of the three missionaries’
homes. A gunman came into the bedroom where Tania was with her
sleeping children. She came out with him, and saw that Mark (her
husband) was with two other guerillas who had him face down, his
hands tied behind his back. Mark shouted in Spanish for the gunman
to leave Tania alone and not harm her. The gunman approached Tania
and demanded money, and she complied. Then he asked for coffee and
sugar. In recalling the incident, Tania laughed, “When the gunman
fumbled with the money and the packages of food, I found myself
asking, ‘Would you like a bag for that?’ He just stared at me
incredulously!”
Now there you have it! A practical act of love! Love does good to
those who would do it harm. Tania found that what was inside of her –
the love of Jesus – came out in a terrible time of crisis. She offered
something to her husband’s persecutors. (There were three missionary
families living in the village, and the guerillas took the three men.
Sadly, the men were never found but were declared dead in 2001.)
Tania loved the people she and Mark had gone to help find the Lord.
When the big test came, she reacted out of that love in an astonishing
act of kindness. Love does good to those who do it harm.
Think of Jesus. He healed His enemies (the servant of the high priest
whose ear Peter severed in the Garden of Gethsemane) and prayed for
the soldiers who were crucifying Him: “Father, forgive these people,
because they don’t know what they are doing” (Lk. 23:34).
Being Kind To Those Who Don’t Deserve It
Let’s bring this closer to home. Not too many of us are asked for
such displays of endurance and courage. But many of us have
teenagers. Those of us who have teenagers or have raised them know
what a difficult stage this is.
Our daughter and I got into difficulties when she would not pick up
her room. Try as I might to bully, threaten, or cajole, she would not
clean it. The issue became a flash point. One day I was asking advice
from a wise woman at church. “Just try being kind to her,” she
suggested.
“She doesn’t deserve it!” I replied.
She smiled understandingly. “That’s what kindness is for. Anyway,
you have tried everything else, why not pick up her room for her and
see if that will work?”
I had nothing to lose, so I did. Four days later there was no response,
and I was just about to give up. Then my daughter burst into tears and
said she was sorry. “What made you say you’re sorry?” I asked.
“You’ve been so kind to me, Mom,” she replied.
It might not work for you, but in the face of such resistance to
persuasion, being patiently kind when someone doesn’t deserve it may
actually get you somewhere. After all, “God’s kindness led you toward
repentance” (Rom. 2:4). So the kindness of God through you may lead
others to repentance, too!
The Gift Of Frustration
It is important to recognize that any frustrating situation that requires
patience is God’s gift to you. A gift that, if received with the right
attitude, will present the opportunity to spend some time in God’s
waiting room practicing patience. Frustration is often God’s way of
driving us to Him.
You win half the battle already when you recognize the problem is a
gift. It is a gift because these types of situations enable you to
experience the love of God in a special way. People are receptive when
they are struggling with frustration. If they are expecting others to act
with frustration, they cave in if you exhibit kindness. If you can go
beyond sounding kind to being kind and doing an outrageous act of
kindness, this speaks louder than a thousand words. It can open people
up to hear about the Lord. Think of Mother Teresa and how her
practical acts of love on the streets of Calcutta spoke about the love of
Christ to the dying and destitute.
Kindness is the active part of patience. Patience is being good and
kindness is doing good. The helpful thing about doing good is that you
don’t have to wait till you feel like doing good to do it. Try doing it
when you don’t feel like it.
Is your love patient and kind? Remember, the Holy Spirit dwells in
your hearts to be all the things you are not. Draw on this resource.
Love that works, works at love. There is no other way.
resources
Dealing With Difficult People

Are you struggling with a difficult
person in your life? Is constant
criticism invading your church or
ministry? Just Between Us is offering
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Presented by Jill Briscoe, it offers
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offering experiential insight into:
- Handling criticism within the church,
- Setting healthy boundaries in draining relationships,
- Forgiving in the midst of controversy,
- Teaching your children how to cope with conflict, and
- Understanding those with personality disorders.
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Dealing with Difficult People is also offered as part of a 10
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Jill Briscoe is executive editor of Just Between Us. Additionally, she
serves on the board of directors for World Relief and Christianity
Today, Inc. and is a popular speaker around the world. Jill and her
husband, Stuart, have three grown children and 13 grandchildren.
Excerpt from Love That Lasts by Jill Briscoe. Used with permission of
Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois ©2002.
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