CLICK HERE FOR BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND MYSPACE LAYOUTS »

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Like Completing Love

Love is action and if it is not in action, it is not love. This is a pretty basic statement about love that most would have no problem with. The more difficult statement to swallow is that true love leads to “like” and “like” completes love.

You have probably heard someone say they love someone but they just don’t like them. I would tell you they don’t really love the person, or at the very least, their love is incomplete. Some would even say that God expects us to love, but doesn’t tell us we have to like certain people. I would tell you that is the easy way out. Granted, this is not a clearly stated idea from scripture like the nature and divinity of Jesus or other creedal beliefs, but can you imagine Jesus walking up to any of his twelve disciples, even Judas, and saying, “I love you, but I just don’t like you.” Can you imagine Jesus walking up to even the filthiest of sinners and telling them he loves them but doesn’t like them?

To like someone is sometimes harder than to “love” and Jesus always calls us to the hard(er) thing. In 1 John you see the author reminding us of something Jesus taught him, saying “This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. And we ought to lay down our lives for our brothers...let us not love with words or tongue but with actions and in truth.”

Laying down life is more than a physical thing. I would say it is at least 1000% more complicated and difficult than giving up your physical life, because dying once is much easier than dying to self every day. Yes Jesus laid down his physical self, but Paul tells us he did much more than that in lowering himself, willfully abandoning his place in heaven and then submitting himself to death on the cross.

Jesus laid down everything else before he laid down his heartbeat. Jesus did the hard(er) thing and calls us to the hard(er) thing.

This is why I believe love is incomplete without “like”.

In 2 Corinthians Paul says because of what Jesus did on the cross, we no longer look at people through our own eyes or a worldly view, “for Christ died for all.” What eyes do we look through then? The eyes of God? And at the end of that same chapter, chapter 5, Paul tells us that “God made him who had no sin to be sin for us.”

Not only does scripture tell us not to evaluate men from our flesh’s perspective or the worldly view, but then Paul really hits us with it and tells us why. Jesus didn’t just take our sins from us, but became our sins. He became the very things we don’t like about people. We read Romans 5:8 describing how Jesus died for us even “while” we were still sinners and forget that he “became” the “while”. Jesus didn’t just remove but embodied. Jesus didn’t just cleanse, but became.

Do I think we have to like everything about everyone? No, that isn’t what I’m saying, what I am saying is I think the things we don’t like about a person become our reasons to not like the person. In our flesh we have a very hard time separating these things. We easily slip from not liking something to not liking someone and lying to ourselves that at least we love them.

This is why Jesus can Like and Love: he can separate the “things” from the person. Jesus created the person in his own image and became our every fault on the cross.

Now think about not “liking” someone. You look at them and there is something that rubs you the wrong way and so you choose to love them and settle or even choose to not like them, but what you choose to not like is the very thing Jesus became. Pride. Arrogance. Filth and Lust. Self-loathing. Hypocrisy. Hate. Etc…Etc…or even worse, a character flaw! These things, these sins are Jesus. And this is why Jesus can both Love and Like, because he doesn’t have our perspective, he has “their” perspective. He knows exactly where they are and why they are the way they are, because he became what they are.

Most of our inability to like comes from our unwillingness to seek first to understand and then to be understood.

Loving is a command, it is a very clearly worded statement from the mouth of our God. And so we blindly love. We lump all peoples into this love but we segment a few and a fold into the “love without like” category and convince ourselves it is not sin because we are fulfilling the command to love. But love is not general; it is specific.

If love is a command than “like” is a choice, and Jesus is calling to the hard(er) thing. To like is to complete love. Remember, Jesus has no reason to like you, for you are filthy and dirt stained rags. Except, he became and embodied your very worst. So when he looks at you, don’t be surprised to hear him say, “I like you” even before he confesses his undoubted love for you.

Ask yourself if it is easier to love a certain person than it is to like them. If you have put them into the “love not like” category, you can be sure Jesus is calling you to the harder thing…to like them. And if it isn't Jesus saying its okay to love and not like, who is the one whispering this in our ears?

One last thought. We all know someone that just seems to like everyone, and for some reason, everyone wants to be like that person.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

3 of the most important things i ever learned...

1. know you're role. sometimes you're opinion really doesn't matter. no really, it doesn't. this is a mantra in my head...i constantly say to myself. but it also applies to you. so much disfunction in families and the church is a result of people stepping outside of their role. hebrews talks about being a support to your pastor so you don't make their work a "BURDEN" but a joy.

2. couch yourself as a learner. in other words, assume you are the dumbest person in the room and every person there has something to teach you. you don't have to talk all the time! shut up! yet another thing i say to myself in my head, but also applies to you. the proverbs says even a wise man will learn something from a fool, but a fool is unwilling to learn. which one are you?

3. the kingdom of God is not a kingdom of fairness. oh wow, that hurts. that almost sounds wrong, but think about it. YOU are not the singular priority in this equation, the KINGDOM IS! God will do whatever he must do to advance His kingdom and your gift is a very small part of that. too many people worry and complain about what they do or don't get to do...SHUT UP! it isn't about YOU and it isn't about your feelings. it IS about the kingdom and it is about Jesus. at all times we should take advantage of the opportunities we have, not complain about the ones we didn't get.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

1 out of 10

i received one comment total on my last 10 posts.

that's gotta be a new record.
amazing.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

the little guy

i love little music stores, particularly when run by personable people with colorful personalities... what i don't like is that they never have what i'm looking for.


i love the idea of supporting the local music store and helping out the little guy, but when you go in two different times over the course of six weeks and they still don't have your guitar strings because they just paid their taxes and don't have any capital to buy merchandise, it naturally forces me to go to the big store.

today i went to the little store and they didn't have the adapter i was looking for. they had a place for it on the rack... they just didn't have any in stock.

but its a cycle... when a big store comes into town, you run the risk of losing some business and therefore, some capital. then you can't or don't stock as much stuff, and when the faithful come in they might not find what they're looking for then turn around and go to the big store, and cause the cycle to continue.

for those expecting a spiritual/church related twist at this point... i don't have one. i could conjure one, and you can probably come up with some parallel if you like... i really just wanted to vent... it would actually be cool to hear your comments on how you could apply this... haha

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

'the' or 'a'

when i was talking to a friend last night about fasting i had a thought i am sure is not original, but thought it was worth sharing.


if you start with 'the' reason, you should move forward, even if 'a' reason clouds your decision. okay, so that sounds somewhat cryptic, so let me explain.

our conversation had to do with fasting and how he had decided many times to fast for a while to get closer to God, but then after making up his mind, he would think something like, "hey, i'll probably lose some weight too." so after he had this thought, he decided not to fast so he wouldn't be fasting with the wrong motives.

'a' reason to fast was to lose weight, but 'the' reason to fast was to get closer to God and to hear His voice more clearly. he started with the right reason, but let 'a' reason that got added on like an amendment to a bill change his mind.

how often to do we start with 'the' reason to do something and let 'a' reason keep us from following through? admittedly, following through with most things is difficult, and sometimes it is the exception to the rule that we actually start with the right motivation for many decisions we make, but when you do miraculously begin on the right footing, with 'the' reason, don't let any other singular reasons keep you from going for it. whether it is fasting or jogging.

i think it is safe to say that the more often you start with 'the' reason and actually follow through, the easier it will be to discern when 'a' reason is just trying to distract you.