Let us love one another, for love is from God;
and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God. –I John 4:7
The Love Dare starts with a
secret. And though it’s been an unspoken
element throughout each day, you’ve likely grown more and more suspicious of it
all the time. Now that you’re this far,
it’s a secret you’re discovering for yourself, even if you haven’t exactly
known how to put it into words.
The secret is this: you cannot manufacture unconditional love (or
agape love) out of your own
heart. It’s impossible. It’s beyond your capabilities. It’s beyond all our capabilities.
You may have demonstrated kindness
and unselfishness in some form, and you may have learned to be more thoughtful
and considerate. But sincerely loving
someone unselfishly and unconditionally is another matter altogether.
So how can you do it? Like it or not, agape love isn’t something you can
do. It’s something only God can do. But because of His great love for you—and His
love for your spouse—He chooses to express His love through you.
Still, you may not believe
that. You may be convinced that with
enough hard work and commitment, you can muster up unconditional, long-term,
sacrificial love from your own heart.
You want to believe it’s in you.
It’s this failure that exposes
mankind’s sinful condition. We’ve all
fallen short of God’s commands (Romans 3:23).
We’ve all demonstrated selfishness, hatred, and pride. And unless something is done to cleanse us of
these ungodly attributes, we will stand before God guilty as charged (Romans
6:23). That’s why if you’re not right
with God, you can’t truly love your spouse because He is the Source of that
love.
You can’t give what you don’t
have. You can’t call up inner reserves
and resources that aren’t there to be summoned.
In the same way that you can’t give away a million dollars if you don’t
have it to start with, you cannot pay out love in greater measure than you
own. You can try, but you will fail.
So the hard news is this: love that is able to withstand every pressure
is out of your reach, as long as you’re only looking within yourself to find
it. You need someone who can give you
that kind of love.
“Love is from God” (I John
4:7). And only those who have allowed
Him into their heart through faith in His Son, Jesus—only those who have
received the Spirit of Christ through belief in His death and resurrection—are
able to tap into love’s real power.
“Apart from me,” Jesus said, “you can do nothing” (John 15:5).
When you surrender yourself to
Christ, His power can work through you.
Even at your very best, you are not able to live up to God’s
standards. But He “is able to do far
more abundantly beyond all that we ask or think, according to the power that
works within us” (Ephesians 3:20). That’s how you love your spouse.
So, this unsettling secret—as
defeating as it may feel—has a happy ending for those who will stop resisting
and will receive the love God has for them.
This means that the love He has “poured out within our hearts through
the Holy Spirit who was given to us” (Romans 5:5) is always available, every
time we choose to submit to it.
You simply won’t be able to do it
without Him.
I would say for me that this chapter was a good reminder and eye opener of yet again reasons I am allowing myself to turn things over to God.
My hubby and I have made some amazing changes in our relationship and have renewed feelings that we share with each other. Of course the love for me never stopped with him but I am seeing him in a new light and with a new understanding of unconditional love.
My friend A use to tell me all the time that I had to let go. She would ask "When are you going to get out of God's way and let him do what HE needs to do?" This was very hard for me since I have always been a fixer. I have always been the one to try and make peace first and I am always the one to try and please everyone.
I can honestly say when I really turned everything over to God and understood that HE would do things in his own time that is when I began to feel more peace and love in my marriage. God has given me the ability to not only forgive but to love unconditionally.
~Mellie
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