Showing posts with label Love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Love. Show all posts

Thursday, April 18, 2019

Coming to the Well: Learning to see in Pain and Cynicism


"He answered, 'Whether he is a sinner I do not know. One thing I do know, that though I was blind, now I see.'" -John 9:25


I mentioned in an earlier post that I left blogging to write on social media more. As I look back on what God has done in my life and the Story that He is writing, I want to share some pieces I wrote elsewhere because they are still true and I hope they will encourage you.

On March 24, 2016, I wrote the following (I have only changed the spacing and a few minor word choices):


I grew up in the emotional wreckage of a church split. One year, the pews were bursting; the next, I wondered where many of my friends had gone.

Try explaining that one to an eight-year-old.

I'm almost twenty-five now, and while I will never completely understand the pain of both parties, I understand a lot better why so many people left. For awhile, I only heard the reasons. Now I understand some of the reasons for myself.

Oh yes. I have wrestled with doubts about my church and experienced cynicism when I see a seemingly legalistic mentality or the glorification of a leader or church. An organization is only as perfect as the people who run it.

However, I have learned to plunge into the well of God's love, and when I do, my eyes are washed so I can see people as God sees them.

I don't see cross drill sergeants; I see passionate men who make mistakes, but whose hearts are aflame for God.

I don't see bitter people sputtering hurtful things about my great-great-grandfather and Family; I see beloved brothers and sisters who heard the same damaging lies that I heard about performance and church glorification, lies that left me bruised and exhausted.

If God had let me go far away to college, I might have experienced deliverance and then left my church, never to return again.

But He didn't. He told me to stay.

And when I really listened to the heart of God and the hearts of the men and women around me, I realized something.

None of those lies were coming from God or the people around me.

They were coming from the Enemy of our souls. This is the Enemy who seeks to divide the Body of Christ because he sees what a force it can be and fears it.

Like the guy in John 9, I was a person born spiritually blind. Jesus healed me with mud and spit. But it wasn't fun getting dirty or having people disregard who I am in lieu of whose child I was or whose last name I bore. I am of age. Ask me!

I don't know what I think about my ancestors, but I know this: I was blind, and now I can see!

I see a great and loving God.

I see men strong and fearless, no matter how many insecurities they may have.

I see women tall and beautiful, no matter how many worries they may have.

This past year, I have stared spiritual blindness in the face and have been overcome by grief again and again. I'm tempted to hate the blind face, but when I see with God's eyes, I can only feel compassion. I was blind too and am probably still blind in many areas.

So, like Katniss Everdeen, I have been repeating these words to myself:

"Remember who the real Enemy is."

I know that sometimes churches must split and people must move on. God uses these things. But before you make that decision to cut yourself off, please remember that, occasionally, that's exactly what the Enemy wants.

And never forget that, while you are the one leaving, the Body behind you might still be bleeding. An arm or an eye might be dispensable, but that still leaves the Body without an arm or an eye. Every joint supplies something valuable. This is because every person is infinitely valuable.

Jesus Christ proved it by dying for each of us.

The central message of Christ's life was the Kingdom of God--a thing so mysterious to most of us.

Put simply, Christ's Kingdom is a kingdom of hearts where Jesus is King, followers are in community, and everyone is in tune with the King because each one has an intimate relationship with Him that is fueled by His Spirit.

As followers of Jesus cultivate this relationship with Jesus and make Him the center of their lives, absolute and harmonious unity among followers should be the result, no matter their nationality or individual doctrine.

Where does resentment in the wake of church splits align with Christ's Kingdom unity?

It doesn't.

And so, I confess my own cynicism--of my church and of others. But I refuse to listen to the Enemy's divisive lies. Instead, I choose to plunge into the Well that never runs dry.

Only by throwing ourselves onto the grace of God can we be saved.

Only by allowing the messy Love of God to touch us can we see and be utterly transformed.

Only by seeing each other with these healed eyes can we be one, even as Jesus and His Father are one.

I love you all madly.

Monday, January 04, 2016

Inescapable Love: what do I do when I don't feel Love?

Sometimes, life just sucks the life out of us. We may be bursting with feelings of Love and Adventure one day and scattered in pieces on the floor the next day, like the fragments of a shriveled balloon. Yet while our feelings may change, the truth doesn’t:

Love endures.

The start of a new year is often bursting with hope and optimism. Mine was no exception. But as the final strains of “Auld Lang Syne” die out, we’re left with a New Year’s hangover that has nothing to do with the amount of alcohol we did or didn’t consume.
  • Taxes must be paid
  • Insurance must be renewed
  • Laundry awaits
  • School break draws to a close
  • The needs of the people you care about tower around you like the Himalayas
And while all the unknowns may have seemed exciting one day, they start suffocating us the next:

·       What will I do after school?
·       What jobs or colleges should I apply to?
·       What should I do this summer?
·       Where shall I move?
·       Who should I marry?
·       How can I afford X?

Oh, and if you’re a parent, the questions get even more complicated and exciting. It seems as though the more people we care about, the more opportunities we have to worry.

As it happens, I also have a lot of unknowns coming into this year. I love my college, my job, and my hometown, but I’m graduating this summer and the neon words “What next?” have been flashing over my forehead for a few months now. And I’m ready for a change. Maybe even a drastic change.

But when the questions of the unknown pound all around us and we only focus on everything we don’t know, all we can hear is noise, noise, noise, noise, NOISE!

No wonder the Grinch hated Christmas if noise was all he could hear.

That’s where I was yesterday. Oh yes, happy new year to me—a year with a ton of unknowns that are all clamoring for instant decisions.

But then, a still, small voice whispers. . .

“He will quiet you by his love.”

What was that?

I flip through my Bible. Weren’t those words in Habakkuk? Haggai? Nope, Zephaniah. I like how the New Living Translation puts it:

“With his love, he will calm all your fears.” (Zephaniah 3:17)

With his love, he will calm all your fears.

His Love. Hmm. I take a deep breath, and the voices in my head gradually quiet down.

Love is a funny thing. Some days we feel it and some days we don’t, but it’s more than a feeling.

It’s a fact.

God spoke these words through a guy named Paul:

“Can anything ever separate us from Christ’s love? Does it mean he no longer loves us if we have trouble or calamity, or are persecuted, or hungry, or destitute, or in danger, or threatened with death? . . . No, despite all these things, overwhelming victory is ours through Christ, who loved us.

‘And I am convinced that nothing can ever separate us from God’s love. Neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither our fears for today nor our worries about tomorrow—not even the powers of hell can separate us from God’s love.

‘No power in the sky above or in the earth below—indeed, nothing in all creation will ever be able to separate us from the love of God that is revealed in Christ Jesus our Lord.” (Romans 8:35-39, NLT; bold mine)

After bringing this passage to my attention yesterday, the speaker at my church added, “God’s love is like air. You can’t get away from it.”

Oh.

A few weeks ago, I was visiting my brother and his family. As I was journalling on my bed one Saturday evening, my two-year-old niece decided that she wanted to join me. Seeing me with an open book, she heaved my green and yellow Life Recovery Bible onto her lap. Holding it upside-down, she started flipping through the pages and "reading" the Bible me:

"God will give me some presents," she read.

She turned a page.

"God. God. God--loves me."

She turned another page.

"God loves me."

She turned another page.

"A prayer. More: God loves me." 

We may not feel the Love, but every day, every breath, and every page of Scripture points to this inescapable truth: God loves me.

It took a two-year-old to teach me that.

I had been listening to the noise of the unknowns and starting to wonder where the Love went.

Love goes nowhere. We don’t have to feel it for it to exist. It is a thing that surrounds us and helps us to draw each breath because it is the very air we breathe.

So when the unknowns scream for attention and make the future look like Mt. Doom, our job is to focus on what we know.

We know that God knows the future.

We know that God has good plans for us. (Jer. 29:11)

We know that nothing can separate us from Love.

With our feet firmly fixed on Love, we can hang up on the noise before cheerfully saying, like Walter Mitty, “I can’t really talk right now. I’m on my way to a volcano!”

Then we pedal forward and do the next thing.

Even Mt. Doom can be an Adventure when we remember the truth that Love will always surround us. This is the Life that Love offers.




Here's a clip from one of my all-time favorite movies, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty:


Thursday, December 31, 2015

Looking back and forward: how has Love shaped our Adventures?

“In friendship...we think we have chosen our peers. In reality a few years' difference in the dates of our births, a few more miles between certain houses, the choice of one university instead of another...the accident of a topic being raised or not raised at a first meeting--any of these chances might have kept us apart. But, for a Christian, there are, strictly speaking no chances. A secret master of ceremonies has been at work. Christ, who said to the disciples, "Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you," can truly say to every group of Christian friends, "Ye have not chosen one another but I have chosen you for one another." –C.S. Lewis, The Four Loves


As the new year approaches, this is a great time to look back over the old. What happened in your world? What lessons did you learn? How have you experienced Love, Life, or Adventure?

Music on the streets of Chicago
This year, I explored Chicago, Abu Dhabi, Zurich, Washington D.C., and Shenandoah River State Park. I finally scaled Mt. Washington, and I forged some new, life-changing friendships while strengthening old ones.

But the fact is that we don’t pick our friends or our adventures. God does.

He had 2015 all planned out from the beginning, and he knew that he was going to convict me of jealousy, fear, and a judgmental spirit before it all began.

He also knew that he was going to blast me with his Love and start transforming each area in ways I couldn’t have imagined.

Love has shaped my life this year. How has Love shaped your Adventure?

Just think about what the Giver of Love has in store for next year!

The best is yet to come…

At the Art Institute of Chicago in March 

Abu Dhabi with my sister in June 

Zurich, Switzerland in July

Swimming in a waterfall in Shenandoah River State Park 
with my brother in August
Mt. Washington with friends in September

Other songs of love, life, and adventure

Change-up time! If themes of Love, Life, and Adventure resonate with you, then maybe you'd like to look up some music artists who are on a similar quest! 

And if you like my blog, then there's a pretty good chance that you'll like artists like JJ Heller and Andrew Peterson. I love their deep and meaningful lyrics that wrestle with real-life issues and come through with gold. Brandon Heath is another artist whose music encouraged me over the summer. 

I was astonished when listening to one of JJ Heller's most recent songs because it had lyrics that sounded like I could have written them! 

As my blog subtitle suggests, music is a super important way to connect with truth.

I hope you'll be edified by these songs as I have:







What music helps you to connect with truth?

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

This thing: a song

Nearly three years had passed, and I hadn't been able to write a single song. I guess I just didn't have it in me. But no more. If you don't want to waste your precious time reading the gargantuan posts that cover the past three years of my life, you can read the words to this song I scribbled down, and you'll catch the gist of my main message.

This thing
       Aches with the broken
       Listens to frozen hearts
This thing
       Bleeds on the inside
       Throbs with the scars people don’t know they have.

We want to give it
But we can’t
We want to feel it
But we can’t
The lock is double-bolted and we’ve forgotten the key.

Yet this thing
       Keeps right on giving
       Knocks at the door of our hearts
This thing
       Keeps speaking and speaking
Stronger than death
Unquenchable
Real.

We want to give it
But we can’t
We want to feel it
But we can’t
The lock is double-bolted and we’ve forgotten the key.

Then this thing
Breaks us, it burns us
It cuts us right open
And shows us our hearts

And somehow, I know
That this thing which has torn me apart
       aches with my brokenness
       hears all my silent screams
       throbs with my scars and pumps blood to every bare organ.

Because
It wears my scars on its heart
Every stripe is a line
With a song to impart
Its blood now runs in my veins
And I know what this thing is called

Its name is Love
Its name is Love

It breaks and it heals
It breathes out hope
       And it aches with my brokenness
       Hears all my silent screams
       Throbs with my scars and pumps blood
It gives, gives, and gives without return

Its name is Love
Its name is Love.

And I couldn’t give what I didn’t have
And I couldn’t feel what I didn’t let in
But now the door is open wide
Now the door is open wide.


Show me this Love
It will hurt
But I want to breathe it
I want to breathe it.

Letting Love shape our lives: how can Love transform us?

When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes,
I all alone beweep my outcast state,
And trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries,
And look upon myself, and curse my fate,
Wishing me like to one more rich in hope,
Featur'd like him, like him with friends possess'd,
Desiring this man's art and that man's scope,
With what I most enjoy contented least;
Yet in these thoughts myself almost despising,
Haply I think on thee, and then my state,
Like to the lark at break of day arising
From sullen earth, sings hymns at heaven's gate;
          For thy sweet love remember'd such wealth brings
          That then I scorn to change my state with kings.
 
             –William Shakespeare, Sonnet 29

We all have our struggles. A person fighting a life-long addiction to drugs and alcohol is no worse than a person fighting a life-long addiction to jealousy and criticism. One takes over the body while the other takes over the spirit. But how many of these issues could be resolved if we released the floodgate of God’s Love in our lives?

Perhaps, like the The Two Towers movie in Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings, all of the filth and straggling orcs of Isengard could be washed away with one dam break.

My dam started breaking about eight months ago.

The words that changed me


Well over a year had passed since my old identity had shattered and I’d gradually learned to live from my new one. I had learned to slow down, to listen to truth, and to just be.

Then I attended a special celebration of the Holy Spirit: the Feast of Pentecost. At this celebration, I heard a sermon where the Holy Spirit spoke these words through a Mr. Brown:

“How differently would we live our lives if we truly believed that God deeply loved us?

‘We would live our whole lives like we had already been given an ‘A.’

‘And we would treat everyone else like they had already been given an ‘A’ as well.”

I listened to those words, pondered them in my heart, and soon forgot about them.

Preparing for another adventure

I didn’t need to think too much about God’s love. I mean, I already knew He loved me, right? I was busy—busy with finals, putting on an end-of-the-year party for my Bible school students, and believing God to provide the money I still needed for my exciting summer plans.

I was going back to the Middle East.

Ever since I went in 2013, I had been dying to go back, but God didn’t give me permission to return until April 2015 when I bought my ticket to leave on May 27. I was thrilled. I already knew I loved the Middle East and teaching English, and I couldn’t wait to get out of my little world and stretch toward new horizons and new people—new people who weren’t narrow-minded and didn’t irritate me like some people in my little world.

Oh yes, I was going to be so good at loving people on the other side of the world.

The orcs still in Isengard


And I was pretty good, right? I still felt great waves of brokenness sometimes, but I was much more self-aware and this time I knew who I was and could live out of my identity.

But first, God spun me around and looked me in the eye:

“You have a problem with jealousy. A big problem.”

I squirmed. This was not new information. I had been battling this besetting sin most of my life and had made very little headway.

But it doesn’t matter too much, right? Jealousy only hurts me, not anybody else, right?

“Wrong. So wrong. Your jealousy is tearing up your friend.”

I looked around and saw it was true. One of my friends couldn’t take pleasure in certain things because she was afraid of how I would feel. She was afraid that I wouldn’t be happy for her.

And I realized that she was right.

Sin is ugly. It’s ugly because it eats you from the inside and turns you into a blind and ravenous monster, but it also turns on the people you care the most about and devours them too.

No sin is a victimless crime. Jealousy is no exception.

Thus confronted with my own ugliness, I looked at my life, both in the present and past. And I gave up on my battle against jealousy. I realized that there was absolutely nothing I could do to change myself, so I told God he was going to have to do it.

I also realized that I had only been asking God to neutralize my jealousy; I hadn’t actually given him faith to take me the extra mile and make me happy for a person. So I asked him to do that too. I cried, asked my friend and God to forgive me, and temporarily forgot the whole thing.

I boarded the plane for the Middle East fifteen days later.


Love shakes us up

Arriving back was like returning to a familiar honeymoon destination. Here I was. . .
  • long flowing abayas brushed the ground
  • calls to prayer sang hauntingly from well-lit minarets
  • fresh chicken shwarma and biryani set my mouth watering
  • rice clumped at my fingertips where it was normal to eat with my hands again
  • searing hot wind tried to pry apart my hijab and prod me into a sweat in thirty seconds flat.
I had arrived in my second home.

But within twenty-four hours of landing, I got very sick. I still don’t know if it was dehydration or food poisoning, but I had a migraine and nausea and could barely get out of bed for three days; I couldn’t even keep water down for awhile. My sister threatened to take me to the hospital for an IV.

Yet, in the middle of tossing my achy body in the middle of the night, a wordless thought pressed all around me like a cloud. When I struggled to put it into words later, all I could come up with was, “Love,” and “Mr. Brown’s meeting.”

“How differently would we live our lives if we truly believed that God deeply loved us?”

Getting sick was not my idea of love. Yet somehow, I started wondering if being sick was the most loving thing that God could do for me.

Illness also triggered another emotion I never felt the last time I ventured to the Middle East: homesickness. But I didn’t just miss my home; I missed deep friendships that I had left on the other side of the ocean. As I got better and other American English teachers started to arrive, I asked God to give me another friend. Then I waited and almost forgot about it.

But God didn’t.

Searching for purpose

My adult English students
The summer activities started to pick up, and I began teaching and meeting new people, both American and Arab. Everything was just as I had remembered it, yet something was distinctly different about this trip. For one thing, I was less busy. I still loved teaching, but I taught only one class with four students for four days a week. This contrasted with my class of seventeen rowdy teenagers from two years ago.

I had to fight to keep my classes from getting boring.

With a more laid-back schedule, my purpose for being there also eluded me. Sure, I taught my little classes and visited many local people, but I felt like I was missing something.

Also, the dynamics among summer teachers were just plain different than they were two years before. This time, I didn’t get to see other girls too often because I taught at a center with mostly guys and rode to work with the same four guys every morning.

And yet, even these four guys were a gift. I could probably write a whole post about those five-minute early morning car rides to work. I would stuff myself into the back seat, clutching my briefcase and backpack. A cheery “good morning” always escaped my lips, despite my best efforts to stifle it. Usually I got a grunt or two for a reply. Then we were off, perhaps making a wrong turn or running a red light depending on the driver, and just as I settled in to respect the manly silence, one of them politely tried to make conversation.

“What did you do last night?”

And so I told them, raising my voice above the music, which ranged from Shania Twain (who they were scandalized I had never heard of) to Aladdin (who I had heard of). Then we arrived, and like stiff, out-of-tune accordions, we’d unfold ourselves from the car and stumble to the school where I would make copies and the guys would make coffee and turn into more respectable human beings.
God gave me the friends 
that I needed

Eventually, these guys became my friends. 
  • One of them started calling me “Cookie Monster” when he couldn’t remember my real name. 
  • One of them wished me an awesome day on a nauseating morning when I needed encouragement.  
  • One of them lent me his guitar for a whole night.

However it happened, they were the friends I needed. Due to a pile of fear in my life, I had never made friends with guys very easily. Yet over the summer, God convicted me of not loving my brothers in Christ like fellow humans.

It was a summer of convictions.


Learning to trust and love

It was also a summer of trust. I faced regular headaches and physical issues that were highly unusual for me. I couldn’t keep my breakfasts down, so I started giving up on them and leaning on God completely to get me through the teaching mornings. Once, I taught for nearly half an hour feeling like I was about to throw up any minute.

Meanwhile, I struggled to love some of the Americans around me. It was easy to love local people because they didn’t have Jesus inside of them, but what excuse did these people have?

I started writing people off:
  • someone was too cool
  • someone laughed disrespectfully at local people
  •  someone was a flirt
  • someone seemed lukewarm toward God

And yet, these words kept coming back to me:

How differently would we live our lives if we truly believed that God deeply loved us?

We would live our whole lives like we had already been given an “A.”

And we would treat everyone else like they had already been given an “A” as well.

I shifted uncomfortably in my pride. Was I a judgmental person? No, of course not. I just had high standards. There’s nothing more annoying than people assuming that you’re judging them when you’re not.

Judged and found guilty

But God did things that would start to change everything.

First, he started showing me how wrong I was about people. He showed me that . . .

  • the “cool” person was funny and down-to-earth
  • the “disrespectful” person was extremely caring
  • the “flirt” was genuinely kind to everybody
  • the “lukewarm” could challenge my faith
Before the summer finished, God hit me right between the eyes with James 2:1:

 “My dear brothers and sisters, how can you claim to have faith in our glorious Lord Jesus Christ if you favor some people over others?” (NLT)

How can we claim that we believe in Jesus as long as we are judging or playing favorites, even with personality types? If we truly believe in the gospel, if we truly believe that Jesus died to save every person, how can we prefer some people over others?

“How differently would we live our lives if we truly believed that God deeply loved us?

We would show that same extravagant love to everyone equally.

I finally recognized that I was a judgmental person who desperately needed God’s help.

Dam break

Like I said, it was a summer of convictions. But it was also a summer of dam breaks.

Through every conviction, I sensed God’s hope and love. This wasn’t the voice of the Enemy that I had been attuned to for so long. The old voice was faint, while this voice spoke love, love, love, as it had all along.

“Those whom I love I rebuke and discipline.” (Rev. 3:19)

And in the midst of all the correction, God did something that he didn’t have to do: he answered my prayer for a friend. She dropped into my world like a bomb ablaze and ready to explode. Redheaded, frank, discerning, and unafraid to say what she thought about anything and anybody—yet careful never to say anything unkind about people behind their backs.

She intimidated me. Probably I was afraid that if she got wind of all my faults, she would start telling me about them.

I avoided her.

But I lived in an apartment with her, so she was difficult to escape, and another girl who lived with us went back to the U.S. for a month so it was my sister and me alone with J.

Somehow, we became great friends.
  • Maybe it happened when we both pressed on up a wadi to find a waterfall when other people were content to stop and go swimming.
  • Maybe it happened when she snapped at me about something and then later apologized.
  • Maybe it happened when she figured out things about me before I or my sister did.
However it happened, it happened. I started opening up to her about things that I had never felt comfortable talking about with anyone else, and she accepted me just the way I was.

Still, she didn’t stop being forthright and truthful. As we got closer, I waited for J’s hammer of truth to fall on my head and point out all the weaknesses I knew I had.

One night, the hammer fell.

She didn’t point out my weaknesses. She pointed out other things—good things I can’t repeat here. But I will never forget the tears in her eyes as she added, “I don’t think you realize it yet, but I hope one day God helps you to understand just how special you are.”

You are loved.

I am terrible at receiving compliments. I tend to brush them off and pretend that they don’t really mean anything, but something stopped me from doing that this time.

Take it. This is a gift from Me.

And so I opened my heart a little wider and let the Love flood in.

How differently would we live our lives if we truly believed that God deeply loved us?

Love gives us new eyes


Things didn’t change overnight. I still battled against the same old self then and still do now, but Love started taking over my thinking more and more so that I didn’t view the world the same way. 

I read about the generosity of God and saw that generous Love everywhere:
  • in each majestic wave that rolled in on the beach in endless procession
  • in the gift of new and old friendships
  • in the adventure of an eleven hour layover in Zurich
I had been wanting to visit Switzerland since I was nine years old! God didn't have to send me that gift, but he did.

“Let your love, God, shape my life. . .” (Psalm 119:41, The Message)

I started seeing each event, good or bad, as the most loving thing that God could have done for me. Because, really, that’s the truth. If we truly believe that God loves us deeply, then even painful things are meant to draw us closer to his heart.

Love changes everything.
  • Jealousy loses its hold because no matter what happens, we have Love and everything that the Giver of Love sees that we need.
  • Fear melts because perfect Love casts out fear. Every time.
  • Carnal judgment folds because Love sees everyone as a child of God who is irrevocably loved.
  • Stress diminishes because Love is there and will carry us through. Always.
When we truly believe that God loves us deeply, we see the world through fresh eyes. 
  • Every piece of nature is a love letter
  • Every trial is a song 
  • Every stranger is an opportunity


Love calls us out of prison

I started opening my gate
I also realized why I had struggled with being judgmental. I was my own worst critic, and I had held myself to such a high standard for so long that I was doing the same thing to everyone else.

That’s what happens when our hearts are buried behind fortresses and lava moats. We lock our hearts away, demand perfection of ourselves, and expect perfection from everyone else. Anyone who fails to meet this standard is a failure—including ourselves.

But Jesus has crossed every chasm and forded every moat. He is knocking on the gate and calling us out of our self-made prisons so that we can know him.
Love is a powerful flood

He is calling us out to love and be loved.

As I opened the gate of my fortress, the dam of Isengard cracked. Love burst outward, flooding the plain, extinguishing every lava moat, and sweeping me closer to the Source of this Love.

Receiving Love

We cannot give Love if we haven’t received it fully for ourselves. It’s like trying to exhale without inhaling first.

We cannot really know God until we know his Love, because God is Love. Trying to have one without the other is like trying to skin God alive. Love is the skin that God wears at all times. We cannot fully recognize God until we see his skin; they are inseparable.

People can only separate Love and God when they kill God first, which is what many people are trying to do today. The problem is that skin is only alive when it’s still attached to the body. Murder God and pilfer his love, and we’re left with flaky dead cells.

But God doesn’t offer us dead cells. The Love he offers is a living thing. It’s a part of himself. He will clothe us in this Love every day, if we’ll let him.

If we truly embrace this Love for ourselves and others, I guarantee it will shape us. It’s started shaping me. Yes, some days I feel burned out and I want to bite someone’s head off and crawl into a hole to keep my heart dry and safe. But when I unearth it, I remember the Love, and I let my heart saturate in it as I stretch out to offer the world the little that I have to offer.

This Love fortifies me and has left no area of my life untouched. 
  • I can relax as I play my violin before a crowd because I am playing from a position of Love, not striving to please God or people.
  • I can swallow my fear of heights and scale Mt. Washington because Love propels me onward.
  • I can look at college finals and ESL teaching schedules with a smile because Love makes a way every time and provides plenty of opportunities to trust.
  • I can offer hugs and encouragement to my hurting girls because the Source of Love provides an endless supply.
  • I can walk down the street and see beautiful men and women everywhere—people that God has created and loves deeply. And I’m not quite so terrified to talk to them.

I went to the Middle East to escape my little world and the people in it. Ironically, God sent me to the other side of the world so that I could learn to love my neighbors back home more effectively. 

As I returned to the United States and resumed my position on staff at my Bible school, an unprecedented Love filled my heart for my students and fellow staff members. I no longer saw people who irritated me. I saw faithful followers whom God had already given an “A.”

But before we can experience transformation, we must receive that Love. If we close our eyes to the beauty around us, fill the vacuum of our lives with constant activity, or brush off the people who show us love every day, we block off the portals God is pouring his Love through.

We must listen and receive Love with our arms wide open. It is flowing constantly around us. It is up to us to remember it and let it in. Only then can Love shape our lives.