Blog
Dear Trailhead family,
Here’s a question for you:
What if God loves us?
I know, I know. The question doesn’t even make us think.
Most of us are so familiar with the concept that we don’t even have to consider it.
Maybe you, like me, grew up in Sunday School singing the lines,
“Jesus loves me this I know,
for the Bible tells me so.”
Which is true. Jesus does love me and the Bible does tell me so.
And yet.
I’ve been married for almost 17 years (yes, our marriage will be old enough to vote next year!), and 17 years ago, Cassie and I wrote our wedding vows. In those vows, we both declared our love for each other.
“Cassie loves me this I know,
for her wedding vow tells me so.”
Which is true. Cassie does love me and her wedding vow does tell me so.
And yet.
And yet, Cassie is a living, breathing person living in close proximity to me. If I only knew of her love through a message she wrote 17 years ago, you could imagine that our love might feel a little stale.
And God is a living, breathing Being who desires to live in close proximity to us. If we only knew of His love through a message written many centuries ago, we might experience His love as a little stale.
So what if God’s love isn’t only revealed through the Bible but what if He is earnestly loving us today?
What if God is actively loving us right now?
What if the sun peaking over the mountains this morning was His way of smiling down on us? Of saying, “Good morning my love?”
What if the birds singing today was His special way of saying “I love you and I see you?”
What if the wind moving against our skin was His loving caress?
What if that unexpected joy, the simple pleasures of life is His version of a surprise bouquet of flowers left at your door?
What if God is relentlessly pursuing you right now? Pursuing just to whisper once again, “I love you?”
What if most of us just haven't learned to hear Him say it?
Ronald Rolheiser writes in Sacred Fire about the importance of hearing God say I love you. And not "I love you" from the Bible, but spoken directly to you. He writes, “These words, addressed to you by God, are the most important words you will ever hear, because before you hear them, nothing is ever completely right with you, but after you hear them, something will be right in your life at a very deep level."
But this is true only if you understand His love to not be transactional. If God’s love is based on performance or not messing up, then I earn His love and I’m likely to lose His love.
Sadly, God’s love has also been used as a carrot on a stick by some as we become afraid that if a person experiences too much of God’s love before they are “cleaned up,” then there will be no motivation for them to stop sinning, to get their life straightened out. (Somewhere there must have been a memo saying the Spirit was on holiday and we are now responsible for people’s sanctification. Don’t get me wrong, we have a role to play, but the Spirit is always working, always moving, and He occasionally invites us into what he has been doing and will continue to do. Hopefully, this removes some of the stress we feel to clean others up and allows us to enjoy people who, like you and me, are very much works in progress).
When our understanding of God’s love is that He bestows it on those who are above-average holy, then we feel it necessary to do the same. And when we do, we have the upside-down kingdom all backward.
Rolheiser addresses this mindset when he writes, “If God loves us equally when we are bad and when we are good, then why be good? This is an interesting question, though not a deep one. Love, understood properly, is never a reward for being good. Goodness, rather, is always a consequence of having been loved. We are not loved because we are good, but hopefully we become good as we experience love.”
Love is the starting point of our faith.
God. Loves. Us.
That is the gospel truth.
That is the Good News.
That is worth sharing.
Grace and peace be upon you,
Grant