I
have chosen love. Love doesn't always feel good to the ego.
Sometimes our sense of human justice doesn't appreciate love.
Sometimes the pain of love feels like hate. It's interesting that
the Bible doesn't say “perfect love casts out pain.”
“Choose
love, not war” was a slogan I grew up with. We had no clue back in
the late 60s and 70s. There was this idyllic feeling that love would
fix everything. Love meant living stress free. If we could all love
we would live perfectly. Then we had to grow up-really grow up.
Love
is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is
not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it
is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not
delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects,
always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. Love never fails.
Most of us have read this “definition” at some point. It's how
we all want to be treated and how some aspire to treat others, but this doesn't address the pain of loving.
There
are many things about loving that bring pain, but rejection and loss
are perhaps the greatest. When you purposefully choose love, you
choose to live through rejection and loss. From the first time a
denied toddler defiantly says “I hate you” to the denied teen
shouting the same words, mothers feel the sting of a rejection they
must accept for the good of the child and perhaps the home. Some
will reply wittily, while other may get angry and reply out of sorts,
but in the end, love will stay -along with a small wound caused by the
words.
Rejection
takes many forms. Sometimes rejection is imagined in a glance or a
tone which ties to a deep inner need or a point of
self-consciousness. Sometimes it is tied to harsh words or denial from others. What parent hasn't felt the sting of a superior look
or a sharp reprimand from grown children who have no clue that our
ways were as sure and new as their own and that we managed to raise
them to that elevated superior state without killing them
intentionally or otherwise?
Sometimes
friends who have moved up a strata in social or financial status will
begin curbing their interaction with those who they feel are not as
desirable or upward mobile. The eventual end is loss, but it begins
with a time of growing rejection that brings pain. We feel
anger, then we feel devalued. It is first at this point of rejection
that we must examine our choice to love. In social media I see so
many statements about leaving behind anyone who makes you feel less
wonderful than you want to feel, anyone who slows you down or lets
you down. I am slowly learning to see rejection as a part of the
process of loving unconditionally. It is risky. It is painful. But
it is the way God has chosen for himself and for us.
That
said, I will interject a disclaimer. Love does not mean that I become
a punching bag, a cursing wall or a target for disrespectful
treatment. Sometimes love walks out of the room, disconnects the
conversation, calls the authorities. Sometimes it feels the gnawing
pain in the other and endures, for a time, the onslaught of venomous
words. Wisdom is also a gift from the God who gives supernatural
love. But love is never really about how it makes me feel.
Some
will be tempted to rescind and perhaps there are times when we should
consider whether the issue is supportable before stubbornness sets
in. But early on in the process of friendship or parenting or mentoring or
managing, there will be resistance to good and right principles. It
is there that love takes a stand for integrity, honesty and personal
belief while continuing to love aggressively. It is there we learn
that a person cannot be argued into submission to our values,
standards or belief, but we may yet love. If this moment, if this
day, if this life is all I have, I can show extravagant,
unconditional, ridiculous love from the heart. In this I become
most like my spiritual Father who gave beyond human extravagance
because of love. And that creates hope where otherwise there would be
no hope.
Another
pain in loving that cannot be avoided is the pain of loss. What
mother hasn't looked at her child traipsing off for Kindergarten and
ached for the small dependent baby she held close to her side.
Sometimes loss is gradual, sometimes it is catastrophic, sometimes it
is intentional. It is always painful because of love. The more love,
the more pain must be endured in the loss.
There was a time when I
built secure emotional walls against loss. Some loss I never
expected and I agonized for days or months building bitter sores on
the inside while creating distance on the outside. I have asked
myself “How do I love when the curtain of death has split my heart?”
“How do I love when those I love most have walked out and moved
on?” But then the 'more excellent way' crowded in and the Father
spoke “love.”
But
how? I cannot say that answers come easily. You can't trick
yourself into a “happy place.” I know that what has worked for
others didn't really work for my life. I have shown 'love' stingily,
assuming I would get no return. I have given 'love' lavishly,
expecting it to change how other people see and interact with me. In
the end, the principle of giving applies as much to love as anything
else: I give because I should -period. Once a gift goes out, it is no
longer mine to control or assume upon. That moment of loving without
limits has to be enough.
To truly
love ridiculously is to love without regard to the cost or the
effect. If I love to get love, I can never go beyond the power of
the other person. Others will determine the value, the success, the
future of my loving. But when I can lay the result at the feet of my
God and accept the challenge to love as he gives me opportunity and
power, then the reward comes from the one who commanded me to love.
Once the expectation is laid aside, the exhilaration of loving is
enough. Sometimes I do have to remind myself that true love is never
unrequited -even if the return is not from the one you have shown love.
And
so I choose Love – love with all its sappy, funny, painful,
emotion. I choose extravagant, crazy love that does not envy, does
not boast, is not arrogant. I choose love that does not dishonor
others, is not self-seeking, is not easily angered, keeps no
scoreboard. I choose love that does not delight in evil but
celebrates the truth. This love looks away from myself to always
protect, always trust, always hope, always persevere. The human in
me may fail, but the Spirit of God in me will show that love first so
that I can see the way.
And
perhaps when I look back from the path which love has created, I will
see others who followed. That is hope. But regardless, I choose
love.
It sort of came into my mind that the enemy would first have to redefine the word love ... I remember one day realizing I had been lied to ... love was NOT something that just happens too you.
ReplyDeleteGood writing!