Be Love

Touched by Your Own Light

“Love is to “reveal the beauty of another person to themselves,” wrote Jean Vanier. Peter Scazzero, Emotionally Healthy Spirituality

This quote of a quote is very telling when it comes to the depth of love that should be revealed in our relationships. It expresses the value we place upon those we love when we are truly wanting them to see the best in themselves. This perspective is indeed a selfless attitude and stance which comes from an emotionally mature person. Once we get here, I can imagine how freeing and fulfilling this stance would be spiritually as well.

This kind of love, however, is increasingly rare in a culture that prioritizes self-love above all else. There is nothing wrong with having the drive to be sure we are certainly loving ourselves through the lens of God. That is truly the win. The problem comes in when we are striving to love ourselves outside the realm of Agape. When that becomes the ultimate goal, we set ourselves up to possibly fall into an ego driven personality. 

Healthy relationships are built on a continuous yet delicate balance of demonstrating self-love while practicing the ability to intimately “see” others. This selfless vision becomes especially important when a loved one is struggling with behaviors that challenge our emotional memory. These moments often trigger past wounds, making it harder to respond with grace. Once again, this balance can only be achieved by emotionally healthy individuals. So, when we find ourselves in this potential battle, we must take the courage and be accountable for our lack of development in this area. It does not diminish our love for the other person but it speaks to the need to say “There is still a sore spot that needs attention in my heart. Let me take some time to do some heart work so we each benefit from this relationship.”

Just imagine how many relationships could be salvaged/saved if we understood that we are all a continuous work in progress. When we fully take accountability for our own healing, we position ourselves to show up in community ready to genuinely love others. The goal especially as believers should be, as Jesus expressed, to walk with the heart to be sure when everyone leaves our presence, they felt better about themselves. We should leave a deposit confirming their uniqueness is worth celebrating not shying away from.

My new added prayer is that as we each continue the temporary journey on earth, striving to be our best self, we show up having done the emotional and mental self-work. This inner work will cause us to walk into rooms ready to hit the “go” button on revealing to others their rich, God-given gifts and talents. As a result, they will walk confidently and boldly in life, loving what God sees in them and creating a domino effect of loving others into their destined place.

What if we all committed to this kind of inner work? How many lives could be transformed simply by showing up whole, ready to affirm the beauty in others?

Mz. Liz

Vanier, J. (2001). Seeing beyond depression. Paulist Press.

Scazzero, P. (2006). Emotionally healthy spirituality: Unleash a revolution in your life in Christ. Thomas Nelson.
(Referenced Vanier’s concept of love as revealing the beauty of another person to themselves.)

Be Love

Let your only motivation to love be “to love”!

Love is not only an action word but it is a foundational choice in a relationship between a husband and a wife.  Because it is a choice that should be made very early in the relationship, it should be attached to an unconditional state of mind.  In other words it should have no limits according to 1 Corinthians 13:7. Bearing all things, believing all things, always hopeful and enduring all things.  If these rules are followed then it would make sense that our motive to love should come from a pure place.  We choose to love because we simply want to love.  This love choice does not avail itself to manipulation.

So if you are in the relationship attempting to fix your partner by way of manipulative love it begs to question whether you are really loving at all.  This action is purely selfish.  Hopefully before you enter the union you would be honest with yourself and ask if you can truly love this person just the way they are or are you looking to love their potential.  This can become a very frustrating way to live.  You can not be settled in the relationship if you are always maneuvering your spouse to become your perfect product of love.

If you are married or deeply involved in a relationship in which you believe your love will “fix” your partner please check your mirror.  If you are being true to yourself and taking an honest assessment of the cracks that may be in your heart you will see you may not be operating in love at all.  It”s never to late to repent and genuinely seek God for answers concerning heart.  We often think we are doing what is right but many times it is right for you but not for your spouse.  Jeremiah 17:9 states “The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?

MzLiz

 

Be Love

“Being” Love!

I had the awesome opportunity this week to experience the up close and personal affects of choosing to be love in a personal, daily challenging situation.  As a Christian “lifer” at times it has been my experience to promote encouragement and change within my community.  I love to see how immature Christians develop from the emotional state of salvation to the sober state of relationship by finding God in a personal, intimate way. That has been most fulfilling but in recent years God has broadened my perspective of the journey.  I will always continue to help struggling Christians towards fulfilling the “expected end” God desires for their life but what about those who don’t have a clue.  I am speaking of those who don’t know Jesus is love, the Bible is our life’s manual, who Jeremiah is or what Jerimiah 29:11 even means.  I am looking to touch those lives and simply introduce them to the love of Jesus. So over the last few months God put me to the challenge.

I had the awesome opportunity to minister by actions not by words to a wonderfully challenged coworker.  She has a beautiful spirit but like most of us it comes easier to demonstrate the pain versus the joy of living.  I decided to accept the challenge.  Some days I lost, choosing to react to her pain but in the end we both won when I decided to respond to her pain.  I started praying for her and even fasting so the chains would be broken in me and her.  You see, the sick may not always make it to the hospital but we as spiritual physicians have the awesome ability to effect change wherever we are.  So I made the decision to only respond when Holy Spirit directed me to and not take advantage of my sometimes valid carnal reactions.  I can not tell you how excited I am for this young lady.  To “be” light requires no “deep” interactions.  Jesus walked among the common so much so they had to pay Judas to point him out. Let us strive to be the Jesus by our everyday interactions in love, by love for love.

God change our hears so that we will desire to touch lives that know nothing about your love but will experience your love by our actions at work, the grocery story, the classroom, the courthouse, the mall, etc.  Help us to not only disciple our Christian family members to effect change in our communities but help us a leaders to effect change wherever we are!!