3 things that broken heartedness teaches about God’s love

Everyone above the age of ten understands what it means to be broken hearted. From loosing a friend because you have to go to different schools. To the pain that comes from being hurt the by words and actions of others. The pain of romantic rejection and being cheated on. Or being hated by people we loved because they could not forgive us for what we had done. But as undesirable as all these are, there are three things we learn about God’s love from the inner pangs of the heart.

To get some perspective on this, a birds eye view from the book of Hosea will help. Because Hosea was a guy God used to make his love more clear through some tough lessons. He showed him how divine love works by taking him through a painful relationship with a woman who would betray her marital vows.

1. God’s love can be rejected.

Hosea 1:2-3 NKJV
When the Lord began to speak by Hosea, the Lord said to Hosea: “Go, take yourself a wife of harlotry And children of harlotry, For the land has committed great harlotry By  departing from the Lord .” So he went and took Gomer the daughter of Diblaim, and she conceived and bore him a son.

Yes, even God knows what it means to be chucked. It is completely possible to look at the cross, see Christ crucified and still keep your heart to yourself. So yes, we hurt because we feel rejection and betrayal. That is what God’s love is like. The choice and free will that make choosing love possible also make rejection an option.

2. God’s love is always faithful.

Hosea 3:2-3 NKJV
So I bought her for myself for fifteen shekels of silver, and one and one-half homers of barley. And I said to her, “You shall stay with me many days; you shall not play the harlot, nor shall you have a man—so, too, will I be toward you.”

In the midst of Hosea’s pain, God asks him to buy back his adulterous wife. Like purchasing a prostitute from a brothel. That is so very representative of how God loves. Paul reminds us constantly in his writings that God gave us his son to pay for our sins while we were sinners. It breaks my heart to imagine God giving up his son as payment for my sin. Getting the coins ready while I prostituted myself in the brothel of evil.

3. God’s love will accept and embrace you back.

Hosea 6:1-3 NKJV
Come, and let us return to the Lord ; For He has torn, but He will heal us; He has stricken, but He will bind us up. After two days He will revive us; On the third day He will raise us up, That we may live in His sight. Let us know, Let us pursue the knowledge of the Lord . His going forth is established as the morning; He will come to us like the rain, Like the latter and former rain to the earth.

God’s love always wins out in the end. The best illustration I know of why God always wins when people choose his love over the lostness of the world was given by a man called Ravi Zachariah.

“When you love someone and they don’t love you back, you hurt because you have lost something. Nut when God loves you and you don’t love him back, God hurts. But he hurts not because he has lost something, but because you have lost something.” – Ravi Zachariah

So maybe today, regardless of your hurt and my hurt, we could see God clearer. We could understand that he already took the first step in reaching out to us. That he wants us to accept his love so much that he literally made it free.

Have you received his love? Are you abiding in it?  Am I?

Let’s pray;

Dear God,

Thank you for the gift of free will and choice.
Help us be a blessing to the people you have put in our lives.
Show me the persons  I have hurt and need to apologize to.
Help me cope with rejection, being left out and being betrayed.
Help me be a loving child, a caring parent and a Christ led spouse.
In surrender,my fragile heart to you.
Thank you for showing me you more of how you love me.

Amen

Where unforgiveness takes the heart and why Jesus asks us to forgive

One of the most painful things that sin brings about in our hearts is unforgiveness.  Unforgiveness is basically the decision to hold someone to a debt after they have hurt you. What has spurred me to write about it is the sudden realisation that Jesus Christ had a very serious and real point about unforgiveness in a little parable that he told. But a quick illustration before taking a look at the parable.

Recently, I was watching an American series called ‘The Good Wife’. It follows a married couple whose lives spin out of control after the husbands infidelity with a woman goes public. So after two years of ups and downs, they eventually start to  rebuild their marriage.

Then at the end of season two, she finds out that there was another woman he cheated with in the years past. So she kicks him out of the house. And the venom in between the couple rapidly builds. The man wants to reconcile, but the wife’s heart has hardened after all the pain she had gone through.

Right after this, her two teenage kids are feeling really confused. So her only daughter visits her at work. They enter the family car and have a really touching exchange. We jump into the conversation after her daughter asks why they can’t get back together.

Mom : “I am hurting”
Daughter : “Can’t Dad help you with that?”
Mom : “No”
Daughter : “But Dad is hurting too!”

This scene kind of sumed up the unfortunateness of the whole situtation. Two hurting people divided by unforgiveness that stands between them. Now, that was just an acted scene. But in real life, this is the kind of stuff that happens. People that loved each other suddenly turn into the most bitter of enemies. And they become completely blinded to each others feelings and the pain of those caught in their brawl.

Friends, workmates and even people who serve in church are not spared from this kind of pain and suffering. So is there a solution? Escpecially for those called to live for Christ. But first we have to clarify what unforgiveness does to us. And I think Christ captured it wonderfuly in a parable commonly known as the patable of the unforgiving servant.

Matthew 18:21-29, 31-35 NKJV
Then Peter came to Him and said, “Lord, how often shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? Up to seven times?” Jesus said to him, “I do not say to you, up to seven times, but up to seventy times seven.  Therefore the kingdom of heaven is like a certain king who wanted to settle accounts with his servants.  And when he had begun to settle accounts, one was brought to him who owed him ten thousand talents.  But as he was not able to pay, his master commanded that he be sold, with his wife and children and all that he had, and that payment be made.  The servant therefore fell down before him, saying, ‘Master, have patience with me, and I will pay you all.’  Then the master of that servant was moved with compassion, released him, and forgave him the debt. “But that servant went out and found one of his fellow servants who owed him a hundred denarii; and he laid hands on him and took him by the throat, saying, ‘Pay me what you owe!’  So his fellow servant fell down at his feet and begged him, saying, ‘Have patience with me, and I will pay you all.’  So when his fellow servants saw what had been done, they were very grieved, and came and told their master all that had been done.  Then his master, after he had called him, said to him, ‘You wicked servant! I forgave you all that debt because you begged me.  Should you not also have had compassion on your fellow servant, just as I had pity on you?’  And his master was angry, and delivered him to the torturers until he should pay all that was due to him. “So My heavenly Father also will do to you if each of you, from his heart, does not forgive his brother his trespasses.”

After reading this, I get the picture the unforgiveness does two things. Firstly, it turns us into what we hate. And then it blocks us off from God’s forgiveness. Generally speaking, when you make the choice to not forgive someone, your heart hardens and you end up releasing that pain and hatred to those around you.

Then it cuts us off from God’s forgiveness simply because by refusing to forgive, we attempt to cling to God’s mercy while being unmerciful to others. And closing off our hearts the forgiveness only God can give causes us to fall further from God’s illuminating light.

Now all that fancy talk aside, can we forgive people after they have hurt us? Because that is what it comes down to. All the sweet words from the Bible would mean nothing if we could never live them out.

Now, I don’t know if I am qualified to speak over anyones life. But someone who died for the sins of the world is. And if he says that we should forgive. Then I know God has placed in us the potential to cancel the debts we are owed.

Jesus doesn’t say that you should just drop it. The weight of the debt owed us when we are sinned against is acknowledged. But only that we let God pay out of his riches instead of demanding our pound of flesh.

I don’t know what you are going through. But whatever it is, please choose first to forgive.

Let’s pray;
Dear God, this is a hard thing for our stubborn hearts. Please help us forgive as you have forgiven us.
Amen

In The Face Of My Own Mortality

Uganda has these little insects called mosquitoes in plenty. They make a rather annoying sound when they pass close to your ear that can wake you up from even the sweetest slumber. And they suck blood. Nothing like a friendly neighbourhood spider.

One of the little creatures fell upon me one night and decided to get their nourishment from my bloodstream. In the porcess, it gave me a disease commomly known as malaria. It kills in 24 hours by destroying your red blood cells and burning you out with fever.

So as I lay down in bed feeling weak and feverish, the thought of how fragile my life is came very clearly into my mind. The life we are blessed with withouth asking for it and that is taken from us when we least expect it.  And according to some people, behind the veil of death lies the great nothing. Because when you ask the dead, they say nothing.

Fear is the feeling that best fit with the situtation I was in. Yet I felt something different. For the first time in my life, I was sick with Christ at my bedside. Trusting him like a child who leans on her father’s strong shoulders. Having faith that it would hold her up.

God had been present in the fullness of reality too much for me to miss the obvious. That while so many people do not know what is behind the Great Wall of the grave, he knows. And as someone who accepted his son, my perspective had to be stretched to the eternal.

Heaven is the word we use. It brings about imagery of gold paved streets and angels playing harps. But I think there is something more about heaven that perhaps had not occured to me before. The constant sense of peace with God and our fellow man. Where relationships find their completeness.

When my time comes, I will let go of this life. Maybe it will be quick, sudden, violent. Maybe people will say I died too young. Or it will be slow and all the right ‘goodbyes’ will be said in time. And at my funeral one person I love will comment on how I have lived a ‘full’ life. But among the crowd, believers and disbelievers alike will get a sneaking suspision that haunts us all our lives on earth. The silent voice that reminds us death is not the end of life. But a coma in an eternal story.

God bless you. I am off to take my medication. : )

Let’s pray;

Dear God,
Help us see you for how you love us and desire for us to choose you.
In your hands is life in all its fullness.
Amen

John 14:19-20 NKJV
“A little while longer and the world will see Me no more, but you will see Me. Because I live, you will live also.  At that day you will know that I am in My Father, and you in Me, and I in you.

Putting motive before motion

A kid decides he is done being at the tail end of his class in academia. A girl decides she wants to finally get serious about learning to play the piano. A person gives their life to Christ. Red hot decisions that have a lot of force behind them.

So why is it that the kid who is at the tail end tends to remain there. Pianos are often covered in dust, dreams are forgotten and many people give up on the business of following Christ and remain in the zone of belief alone. As a person who has lived more than 10 years knows, making a big declaration does not mean following through with it to the end.

When you try to kick a bad habit, create a good one and change the direction of your life, you notice a resitance after a while. And if you don’t make progress as expected, it is easy to throw in the towel, throw out the bath water and remember the long lost babies of opportunity with nostalgia and ‘What ifs?’. And that is just basic habits.

Now the difference between a life lived for the name of Jesus and one lived selfishly without Jesus is a big chasm. Now, not everyone wants to live for Christ, but for the person who understands what Christ did, this is a big deal. And if we are going to be salt and light, then we need to get this right.

My honest prayer for you is that you would be able to succeed and live a life of blessing to those around you. Because all the excitment about starting something eventually wanes. God made the excitment to punctuate the story of your life. Not make entire sentences.

Keeping motives central is essential. When you first accept Jesus, all the energy and motivation comes easy. Then the stress and strain of life chips away at it.  But to live by the spirit is not a matter of mood. It is a matter of motive. Keeping the Holy Spirit central keeps you in step with what God wants to do in your heart.

Ok, so here it is. This is how to keep focused on Christ. Simply read your Bible, pray everyday and love people. Nothing fancy, nothing exceedingly ‘Spiritual’ but a big part of what you need to do.

The good news is, that as you work on your responsibility, God works through his sovereignty to bring you to be more and more Christlike as time goes on. To lean on God even when situations are tough and remain humble in Christ through success is the key characteristic of the Jesus follower.

John 15:7-12 NKJV
If you abide in Me, and My words abide in you, you will ask what you desire, and it shall be done for you.  By this My Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit; so you will be My disciples. “As the Father loved Me, I also have loved you; abide in My love.  If you keep My commandments, you will abide in My love, just as I have kept My Father’s commandments and abide in His love. “These things I have spoken to you, that My joy may remain in you, and that your joy may be full.  This is My commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you.

Let us pray;

Dear God,
Help us abide in your commands and your law. Teach us to read our Bibles and pray everyday.
Amen