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God's
love for You
2.
He's out looking for You!
A
series that considers some of the basic things that the Bible
says about God's love for us.
Introduction
This is the second of a series of pages
on how much God loves you. We hope you'll read them through thoughtfully
and carefully and come to see the wonder of God's love for YOU.
In the first page we noted that one of God's main characteristics is
love.
Everything
He does is generated by love, therefore everything He feels about you
comes from His love for you.
We
also considered the cost to the Father and Son of being parted to bring
about the possibility of your forgiveness for Sin.
Finally
we considered that because of these things, and because the Bible tells
us, we know that God is FOR us, completely for us!
The
Two Parts of the Equation
Consider the following:
God's
activity + your activity = your Christian life
In the first page we considered something of God's
activity in the form of Jesus coming and dying on the Cross for us.
The
second part is our activity:
-
-
of responding to the prompting of His Holy Spirit,
-
coming to a place of repentance,
-
asking for forgiveness,
-
surrendering to Him and
-
asking Him to come into our lives to lead them.
Yet
that is all past history if you are a Christian, and we now want to
focus on the future.
The
future also involves both God and us.
From
God's side we find He wants to continually protect, provide and guide,
because He's for us (and we'll see more of that in the third page).
A
Story Jesus Told
The only thing that is conditional in
the equation is whether we receive that
love.
To
help us consider this more fully, let's consider a story Jesus told,
that we call the "Parable of the Prodigal Son" (Luke
15:11). [Click on the reference and it will take you to the
story on another site - then use the "Return" button to come
back here] 
In
it he portrayed a son who abused his father, wished him dead, took his
property, and left him.
Such,
in a sense, is a picture of the human race that, frequently, wishes
that God was dead, takes the world for its own use and turns its back
on God.
Although
that may be a picture of the human race, the response of the son has
to then become the response of each individual.
Individually
we must come to the realisation of our state, repent and seek God the
Father.
While
away from the father, the son could not enjoy the fruits of sonship,
could not enjoy the father's love.
For
yes, Jesus shows us in the story something of the father's love in its
various forms.
Expressions
of the Father's Love
First he
is willing to let the son go away, knowing what will probably
befall him.
There
is an aspect of love called 'respect' that allows people to be the sovereign
individual that they are, even with their folly!
God
respects you and allows you the choice to decide how you will live,
what you will do.
Second, we
see the father watching out for the son, spotting him even when
he's still a long way off.
We
see his heart reach out to his returning son. It's not full
of blame but of compassion.
He
knows the son is stupid, he knows what he's been through, he knows he
must have run out of resources, he knows all these things, and his heart
is filled with compassion.
If
you're not sure what 'compassion' means, it means "pity aroused
by the distress of others, with the desire to help them"; it is
a response of love. The love of this father had never diminished, even
when the son was away from him.
Finally this
father expressed his love in very practical ways. He knew
that the son was racked with guilt, covered in shame and much aware
of his failure, but does he refer to all that? No! Instead
he dresses him in clothes fit for his son, and sets up a banquet to
celebrate the son's arrival.
He
is not concerned to blame the son, not concerned to correct his thinking,
not concerned to make sure he won't do it again, he's just concerned
to bless him!
Yes,
please note this carefully - He is more concerned to reinstate the son
than he is to condemn him for his past folly!
This father, who Jesus obviously means us to understand is his Father
in heaven (God), is a man of love.
His
love doesn't come and go, it is there the whole time.
Yes,
it is expressed in different ways (allowing the son to go, waiting for
the son to work through his folly, watching for his return, encouraging
his return, celebrating his return and reassuring him on his return)
but it is still the same unchanging love.
Who
does God Love?
Yet
the expression of His love will be to respect the stupid decision they
have made to stay away and pass on to Hades, but He won't be happy about
it.
If Jesus loved and wept over Jerusalem, how much more must the Father
love and weep over the world that rejects His overtures of love.
But what about the Sin? Doesn't God hate Sin?
Yes, the Father is angry about Sin and hates the expressions of it (e.g.
Deut
12:31, 16:22,
Prov
6:16-19) but He is still love.
A
Personal Example
Imagine you have a young son (it could
be a daughter, but for simplicity here we'll just consider a boy).
He
is a wonderful young son, and he grows up to be the apple of your eye.
He is intelligent and good to have around. Your heart is strong for
him.
Then
supposing he falls into bad company, supposing he starts taking drugs
and becomes addicted. What will you feel?
There
may be some of us who are more concerned about what others think and
we might be thinking, "What ought I to be feeling, what
would others think about this?"
If
we belong to a legalistic, hard-hearted, critical community, we'll know
who they will blame.
But on the other hand we may not be that self-centred, and we may be
able to be honest with ourselves.
I suspect we would avidly HATE what he's doing, HATE the lifestyle he's
living, and everything about it would be an anathema to us.
Yet underlying that, there would be a deep anguish within us for him,
for we love him.
He's
MY son, my flesh. I've got years of history with him; I remember the
childhood years with such joy that it hurts now, in the face of what
is happening at the moment. I had such hopes for him,
for I saw the potential that is there.
Indeed
now, if there was anything I could do to get him out of this slavery
I would do it, for my heart is a heart of love for him, my heart is
full of anguish and compassion for him.
Father
Hates Sin but Loves You
Do you see it? Hate and love can
exist side by side.
The
Father's heart is a heart of love for you, whatever you've done, however
you've failed.
What
have we been saying throughout? Even though you may not understand
the circumstances, even though you may not understand why God doesn't
seem to be turning up with the things you think you need, He still loves
you, He's still all out for you.
But
I Feel So Guilty!
That is the cry of so many of us when
we've blown it, when we've failed.
We
feel so ashamed that we've made such a mess of life. All we can
think of is how we've got it wrong.
That
is very natural and God wants us to learn from these feelings so that
we can try and avoid it happening again.
But
what we want to major on here, is how God feels about you.
If
you feel, like the prodigal son part way through the story, that you're
out in the wilderness "feeding pigs", you need to know the
Father is out looking for signs of your return.
And
if you've come to the point of acceptance that you've blown it, yet
can't quite believe that God could love you, then hear the story again
- and remember Jesus was making a point - and remember the Father's
heart just longs for your return and He's more concerned to bless you
than to chide you.
The
Power of this Story
Because we're part of a sinful human
race, we ALL get it wrong in different ways.
Your
human father probably got it wrong, perhaps very badly, and perhaps
you feel you don't know what real father-love is.
Well look at the story again, see the different expressions of the father's
love in the story, and remember Jesus was picturing the love of His
Heavenly Father, God.
That
is how God the Father is. That's why this story is so powerful because
it portrays the wonder of God's love, perhaps more than any other story
that Jesus told, and that's what God feels about YOU.
That's
real father-love, even if you've never experienced it in your relationship
with your own earthly father.
Response
to the Story
All it needs is for you to believe it,
you to accept and receive it.
It
describes God's love, it describes how God wants to act towards you,
but it needs you to believe it and receive it. You need to believe
who you are and what He really feels about you.
That
is the starting point of a new day.
Summary
The possibility of a new relationship
with God, comes about partly by God 's activity through Jesus
on the Cross and partly through our response of repentance.
Our
future Christian life comes as God pours out His love to us and we receive
it.
He's
waiting to bless and bless you again, but He can't do that if you refuse
Him, if you refuse to believe the truth of His love for you.
Can
we help?
Perhaps
you would like to talk further about these things and have someone pray
with you. If that is so then the leaders of Rochford Community Church
are available to help you.
Remember,
if you want to e-mail Tony, it's tony.thomas@rochfordcc.co.uk
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