Wednesday, June 22, 2011

LOVE

If I had to define one of the biggest things the Lord has been teaching me in the past eight months, it would be love. What does it mean to love God? Here are some of my thoughts and the things the Lord has been revealing and challenging me on love.

     Something I think many of us Christians do is that we want to honor and glorify God; to love Him with all of our heart soul, mind and strength. We often do this by living a "moral" lifestyle, or by going around the world evangelizing, or fighting for those that are weak. Now don't misunderstand me, those things are important and great, but what we often don't realize is that the biggest way we can glorify God and love Him, is by loving people. If we aren't truly loving people, than all those "moral" and "good" things or acts of service we do, don't really matter. I Corinthians 13 says that you can be the wisest and most "servant hearted" Christian, but if you don't have love, than you are just a noisy gong or clanging symbol. It doesn't count or last if there is not love. Jesus says the greatest and most important commandment of the Bible is this:
       
      Mark 12:29-31 "Jesus answered, "The most important is this, 'Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. And you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength. The second is this: 'You shall love your neighbor as yourself.' There is no other commandment greater than these."

     Sorry this is kind of random, but basically I'm going to focus on the way of loving people. What that looks like. Hod Jesus loved and spoke truth at the same time and how we're suppose to imitate that. It's a bit long, but I hope and pray that you would take a few minutes to read it and ask the Holy Spirit to convict you where conviction is needed, and that you'd be so set free and changed by the love of Christ that it changes your perspective of loving people. And please know, I am not saying I got this down. I never will perfectly here on this earth and I fail at truly loving people every single day. But if I desire to love Jesus with all my being, this is where I must start...

   Have you ever notice that the most predominant love in scripture is between a father and son? In all the ways love can be expressed; love between a man and woman, between brothers, between a friend, between a neighbor, etc. As scripture shows us God's love, the most predominant is a father to son (parents to child). Because parent to child, father to son, that kind of love is most clearly and instinctively unconditionally, complete self-giving, looking without anything in return.

The Lord really got me thinking about love back in October. One of my pastors asked me, "Camille...do you think you are a lover of people?" I said I didn't know but wanted to be. He said to me, "One of the ways you can measure whether you're a lover of people or not is by asking yourself this question: 'how am I at loving the people that are hard to love?'" Wow, that hit me hard. I began to be humbled by the fact that I don't love people well. I've been studying the Gospels all the ways that Jesus loves people and how He does it. He is ALWAYS risking Himself. He is often spending so much time with the unlovable. The "worst" of sinners. Lets look at some of the ways that Jesus chose to show love to people:

      The woman at the well: Jesus' love is unconditional, self-giving, looking for nothing in return. In her day, she was known as a whore; she had 5 husbands and was living with a man that wasn't her husband. And what does Jesus do? He goes to her at a time of day when a man and woman shouldn't even be speaking to each other at the well,. So His reputation is all on the line. And what does he than do? He connects with her. Loves her unconditionally and  basically says, "I know your empty, I know you thirst... that's what all that relational carnage in your life is all about. Enter into a love relationship with me and you'll never thirst again." It's an unconditional love and He puts Himself at risk by even speaking to her.

How about another time: When He disrobed to wash His disciple's feet? He's not getting anything in return to become the servant who washed their feet. It's unconditional, self-giving.

  The woman caught in adultery. He just saves her life. Jesus was the only one there who could have thrown the stone, but He says; "Neither do I condemn you. Leave your life of sin." -unconditional love. Notice that is TRUTH AND LOVE. He first loves her by saving her and not condemning her, yet, He still speaks truth to her saying that she needs to leave her life of sin.

But that's not how we operate as the church theses days. Our message is more like this: "We condemn you and your sin. When you leave it, I (we) may take the risk to love you." But Jesus says, "I don't condemn you, leave your life of sin."....wow, I don't get that and most of the time I don't do that...that's unconditional, self-giving love.

How about the widow of Naim: She lost her complete lively hood when her son died. Jesus isn't doing a magic show. He's restoring to her, her lively hood- the life that had been taken away.

    Or how He loved Peter when Peter denied Him three times in the gravest hour of all history of the world. The question is never "Peter, do I love you?" but, "Peter, you know I love you? In my love will You love me? Will you love me back?"

    Then the ultimate way we see this deep, unconditional love is in the cross: Jesus loves you so much that He wants to so have you as His child that He's willing to give up Himself. That the Son is willing to be orphaned from the Father that we might be called the children of God. And for three hours what does God do? He turns off the lights of the universe, because the Son/Father relationship, that perfect picture of love, was disrupted. Christ was orphaned that you might be a son/daughter of God. It means that if I put my faith in Jesus Christ that what God says, feels, thinks about the Son, He says, feels and thinks about me....On my best day and worst day. It never changes. What does the Father say? "This is my son, whom I love, with whom I am well pleased." Do I dare believe that? Not because of me, but because of Christ?
     
1 John says, "How great is the love the Father has lavished upon us..."

We need to be honest. We can begin to love people that way. We need to stop playing with all the rules. We need to measure our walk by love. If we're not loving other people maybe we don't truly love Jesus. Maybe we don't know Him the way we think we know Him. All the laws, rules, everything in our lives is fulfilled in love and if it's not, we need to pull back. We need to either say, "Jesus I don't know You the way I think I know You." Or fall on our knees saying "Jesus, I need more of You. I need more of You!"

   If we wrestle with what it looks like to love people we will begin to look like Jesus. Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, self-control... these are the marks of love. That's how you'll know. We'll begin to bear the family image. :) That's what it's all about. Jesus was the perfect image of God and we get to bare that family image in our own lives. That's so awesome because we see Jesus, who was born to us, died for us, and then began to be born IN us.

    Lastly I want to end this post with what Elizabeth Elliot said in her book 'Passion and Purity'.
"Love interprets things in favor of the one loved....Paul's description: 'love is patient...never selfish, not quick to take offence. Love keeps no score of wrongs...there is nothing love cannot face; there is no limit to its faith, its hope, and its endurance.' The trouble, or course, is that we must learn to love people. People are sinners. Love must be patient when it is tempted (by the delays of other people) to be impatient. Love must not be selfish, even if other people are. Love does not take offence, though people are offensive sometimes. There are wrongs, but love won't keep score. There are things to be faced, but nothing love can't face, things to try love's faith, discourage its hope, and call for its endurance. But it keeps right on trusting, hoping and enduring. Love never ends."










     

Monday, June 20, 2011

Waiting on God: Patiently

This is an excerpt from the devotional book by Andrew Murray, "Waiting on God"


"'Rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for Him. Those that wait upon the Lord, they shall inherit the land." Ps. 37:7, 9


'In patience possess your souls.' 'Ye have need of patience.' 'Let patience have its perfect work, that you may be perfect and entire.' Such words of the Holy Spirit show us what an important element in the Christian life and character patience is. And nowhere is there a better place for cultivating or displaying it than in waiting on God. There we discover how impatient we are, and what our impatience means. We confess t times that w are impatient with men, and circumstances that hinder us, or with ourselves and our slow progress in the Christian life. If we truly set ourselves to wait upon God, we shall find that it is with Him we are impatient, because HE does not at once, or as soon as we could wish, do our bidding. It is in waiting upon God that our eyes are opened to believe in His wise and sovereign will, and to see that the sooner and the more completely we yield absolutely to it, the more surely His blessing can come to us.


'It is not of him that wills, nor of him that runs, but of God that shows mercy.' Romans 9:16. We have as little power to increase or strengthen our spiritual life, as we had to originate it. We 'were born not of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of the will of God.' Even so, our willing and running, our desire and effort, avail nought; all is 'of God that shows mercy.'


All the exercises of the spiritual life, our reading and praying, our willing and doing, have their very great value. But they can go no farther than this, that they point the way and prepare us in humility to look to and to depend alone upon God Himself, and in patience to wait on His good time and mercy. The waiting is to teach us our absolute dependence upon God's mighty working, and to make us in perfect patience place ourselves at His disposal. They that wait on the Lord shall inherit the land; the promised land and its blessing. The heirs must wait; they can afford to wait.


'Rest in the Lord and wait patiently for Him.' The margin gives for 'Rest in the Lord,' 'Be silent to the Lord,' or 'Be still before the Lord.' It is resting in the Lord, in His will, His promise, His faithfulness, and His love, that makes patience easy. And the resting in Him is nothing but being silent unto Him, still before Him. Having our thoughts and wishes, our fears and hopes, hushed into calm and quiet in that great peace of God which surpass all understanding. That peace keeps the heart and mind when we are anxious for anything, because we have made our request known to Him. The rest, the silence, the stillness, and the patient waiting, all find their strength and joy in God Himself.


The need for patience, and the reasonableness, and the blessedness of patience will be opened up to the waiting soul. Our patience will be seen to be the counterpart of God's patience. He longs far more to bless us fully than we can desire it. But, as the husbandman has long patience till the fruit be ripe, so God bows Himself to our slowness and bears long with us. Let us remember this, and wait patiently; of each promise and every answer to prayer the word is true: 'I the Lord will hasten it in its time.' Is. 60:22.


'Rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for Him.' Yes, for HIM. Seek not only the help, the gift, thou needs to seek: HIMSELF; wait for HIM. Give God His glory by resting in Him, by trusting Him fully, by waiting patiently for HIM. This patience honors Him greatly. It leaves Him, as God on the throne, to do His work; it yields self wholly into His hands. It lets God be God. If thy waiting be for some special request, wait patiently. If thy waiting be more the exercise of the spiritual life seeking to know and have more of God, wait patiently. 'they that wait on the Lord shall inherit the land.' 


'MY SOUL, WAIT THOU ONLY UPON GOD!'"