Excerpt
You know what’s wild? People go to church every Sunday, lift their hands, and shout “I love God!” — but the same folks will turn around and mistreat their neighbor like it’s nothing. The truth is, when you hurt somebody else, when you gossip about them, lie on them, steal their peace, or just look down on them — you’re actually hurting God Himself. Because His Word says all the law hangs on one thing: love. Love God. Love your neighbor. That’s it. Everything else falls apart when love disappears.


Let’s be real — this world is full of people walking around angry, jealous, or bitter toward someone who did them wrong. But the Bible is clear: you can’t say you love God and hate your brother (1 John 4:20). That’s not just a contradiction; it’s a spiritual lie. You can’t walk in light and carry hate at the same time — those two things don’t mix.
When Jesus said, “On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets” (Matthew 22:40), He meant everything God ever said depends on love — love for Him and love for others. So when you break that commandment, you break all of them. You could pray, fast, quote Scripture, and post your favorite Bible verse online, but if you’re mistreating people, God ain’t impressed.
The sad part is, some people think being “holy” means judging or cutting others down. But holiness without kindness is just hypocrisy in fancy clothes. Real holiness looks like forgiveness. Real holiness looks like mercy. Real holiness means you don’t talk about your neighbor behind their back, you pray for them. You don’t get jealous when they’re blessed — you celebrate with them.
And here’s the truth: when you mistreat your neighbor, that same negative energy circles back to you. Call it karma, call it spiritual law — the Bible calls it reaping what you sow (Galatians 6:7). The same hurt you put out comes back around. But when you start showing love, even to people who don’t deserve it, you open the door for blessings that you don’t deserve either. That’s how God works.
Let’s stop pretending that hurting people is normal. Let’s stop walking around bitter and prideful, thinking we can talk to God while ignoring the people He created. You can’t love God with your mouth and hate His children with your actions.
So the next time you’re tempted to talk down on somebody, or make fun of them, or hold a grudge — remember this: you’re not just hurting them. You’re hurting yourself, and more importantly, you’re hurting the heart of God. 💔
Because the greatest commandment is simple — Love.
And if love is missing, everything else is just noise.







Wow… this really hit me. 💛 It’s so easy to get caught up in thinking our faith is just about words or rituals, but this reminds me that real love has to show up in how we treat people.
I love how you pointed out that mistreating others isn’t just hurting them it affects our relationship with God too. It’s a good reminder to check my own heart, practice forgiveness, and actually celebrate others instead of comparing or judging. Thank you for sharing this it’s simple, but it’s a lesson I needed to hear today. 🙏