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Love's Limitations Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 17, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: All of life is a competitive battle between the love of the eternal and the love of the temporal. One or the other must win, for one excludes the other. You cannot have your cake and eat it too.
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"Atlanta's Race" is the title of Sir E. J. Poynter's most successful paintings. The story
behind the painting is from Ovid's Metamorphoses. Atlanta was the daughter of Schoenus
of Boeotia, and she was famous for her matchless beauty. She was also so swift of foot that
none could outrun her. To everyone who asked for her hand in marriage she gave the same
answer. She would be the prize of him who could vanquish her in the race. Defeat, however,
would carry the penalty of death. Many lost their lives in trying to outrun her. After a lull
there appeared a youth by the name of Hippomenes who challenged Atlanta once more to
race. He knew he could not conquer her by fleetness of foot, so he carried with him three
golden apples, for he had received this advice from Venus:
When first she heads the from the starting place
Cast down the first one for her eyes to see,
And when she turns aside make on apace.
And if again she heads thee in the race
Spare not the other two to cast aside,
If she not long enough behind will bide.
The race began, and he followed these instructions. As Atlanta was about to pass him he
dropped the first apple. She looked down, but ran on. He dropped the second apple and she
seemed to stoop, and when he dropped the third she did stoop to pick it up. It was only a few
seconds lost, but it was enough, for Hippomenes had touched the maple goal, and Atlanta
had at last been defeated. Poynter's painting pictures Atlanta at that decisive moment when
she turned her eyes from the goal and stretched her arm toward the golden temptation
which brought her to defeat.
The painting is an illustration of the danger that faces every believer in the race toward
the goal of Christlikeness. We must be looking always unto Jesus the author and finisher of
our faith, but along side of us runs the world competing for our love, and John says it also
has three golden apples to cast in our path: The lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the
pride of life. The world casts these down before us hoping we will take our eyes off Christ
and stoop to gain these earthly prizes and forget the goal.
All of life is a competitive battle between the love of the eternal and the love of the
temporal. One or the other must win, for one excludes the other. You cannot have your
cake and eat it too. Atlanta must either win the race by keeping her eyes on the goal, or she
must sacrifice the race to gain the golden apple. A choice must be made, an John says the
Christian must make this choice as well. He cannot love God and the world, for love must be
limited to one or the other. John knows that Christians will be tempted to stoop and pick up
the golden apples of the world, and that is why he warns them and commands them to love
not the world.
He had just written about love being the very essence of the Christian life, and that to be
without it is to be in darkness. Now, however, he makes it clear that love must have its
limitations, for it cannot be indiscriminate. The object of one's love must be God, and if this
be so there are some things that cannot then be loved, and they are called in one word-world.
Fortunately John goes on to tell us just what he means by the world. He names the three
golden apples of the world's appeal, and he thereby defines the worldliness that we are to
avoid. It is important that we see this clearly lest we misunderstand and pervert the
statement, "Love not the world." Many have done so.
St. Bernard would spend days by the shore of Lake Constance and keep his eyes glued to
his book lest he raised them and see the beauty, and be seduced away from God. John did
not mean the creation when he said we are to not love the world. Jesus loved the world in
that sense, and He said, "Behold the lilies of the field and the birds of the air." The heavens
declare the glory of God and all of nature shows forth His handiwork. The earth is the
Lord's and the fullness thereof. It is not the work of the devil. It is legitimate for us to love
the world in the sense of delighting in God's creation. It can be excessive to the point of
worshipping the creation rather than the Creator, and this of course is folly. But to love and