Look at the marriage of Jesus... the one with the
Bride who sleeps around, never listens, disowns, scorns, dishonors, runs
away, intentionally proves to be more interested in anything but her
husband, is selfish and bears the children of every affair and the scent of
every escapade. It was a marriage that killed Jesus. And it was the Gospel
that brought Him back to life to love once more. - Dan Haseltine
Did you ever stop to think about what a bad deal Jesus got when He chose us
to be His bride? No one would blame Him if He gave up on us. Good thing He
doesn't think like we do or He would have left this marriage a long time
ago.
Listening to our culture, one might get the impression that a good
relationship is something for which we all have an inalienable right. This
conclusion comes from observing how quickly we look for the back door on
any difficult relationship, and how that exit is usually justified on the
basis that the current relationship is just too hard - the assumption
being, there's someone out there with whom a good relationship is a much
easier proposition. That's a far cry from realizing all relationships are
going to have their challenges, and even the best will be severely tried.
Does God have a right to a better relationship? I suppose so, since He's
God. But does He take it? No. And thank goodness He doesn't, or we would
all be out on the street for sure.
We could stand to think a little more like Jesus when it comes to our
relationships. He never allows Himself an out. He is in this for the long
haul including whatever suffering is involved. He is able to do this
because He isn't thinking about Himself or His own rights. He is thinking
about us. He even sees us as holy and blameless, yes, as even beautiful. He
makes it so.
We become beautiful in that He sees us that way, even now, when we know
darn well we are not. He sees the finished product that He paid for and
washed clean through the blood of His forgiveness on the cross. And if He
can see us that way, we should be able to see each other that way as well,
at least enough to be more patient with the process. This is love over the
long haul, and there's just no way any of us can be in fallible human relationships
without this.
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment