Showing posts with label love of God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label love of God. Show all posts

Friday, 20 July 2012

A tribute to Michelle

I tell you the truth, unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds.  John 12: 24

Today I had the privilege of going to a celebration of the life of Michelle. She was a young lady I taught 10 years ago who had been killed in a car accident in Ireland aged just 21. She was a remarkable young lady who, despite her short life, had greatly impacted many people as was evidenced by the hundreds who attended the celebration. They were of all ages from babies to old people, from many countries and reflected family, friends, school mates, university friends, teachers and church family.

The celebration was unlike anything I had been to before and took the form of an opportunity for anyone to share a thought, poem, letter, e mail, song, dance and even a magic trick. The one thing that came through over and over again was Michelle’s love for the Lord and her love for life. She lived life to the full, was a wonderful friend and great fun. She loved to sing, dance, worship, play practical jokes, laugh and just hang out with anyone. She was a huge source of encouragement to many people and as people read out things she had written it was obvious that she was funny but also had a wisdom way beyond her years. She infected everyone with whom she came into contact with an enthusiasm essential in a generation of cynical young people.

She was not one of those people who sail through life with no difficulties – she had had quite a share of troubles but she refused to blame God for anything. She was convinced that God loved her and everyone else and was the true source of every good and perfect gift. Even at the end she was in Ireland to visit someone who had just become a Christian to strengthen and encourage them.

Her great heart was for people to know Jesus and to know him to the full. Life was a gift and one to be lived to the fullest one could.  She was as source of great joy to all who knew her. So why did she, who had everything to live for, die at such a young age. I really do not know. All I know is that of the many seeds she generously planted around the world, they will each bear a harvest of righteousness that will far outlive her short life. I am convinced that people who never knew her will be impacted by her life as the seeds she sowed bear fruit.

My prayer and desire is to have the same ‘live life to the fullest’ approach to my life as Michelle did and to try to be a source of encouragement to all I come into contact with. God bless you Michelle. Enjoy heaven! I’ll see you again one day.

Thursday, 19 January 2012

Love that is lavished on us

I John 3:1 says, ‘How great is the love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God!   And that is what we are!’  God’s love for us is lavish, extravagant, unrestrained.  It is not just unconditional and never ending; it is excessive and over the top.  That is God’s love for us. 

However John continues in his letter to exalt God’s love but at the same time he keeps slipping in that because of this great love, we must love our brothers. In 1 John 3:11 he says, ‘We should love one another.’  Then in 1 John 4: 11 – 12, ‘Dear friends, since God so loved us, we also ought to love one another.  No one has ever seen God, but if we love one another, God lives in us and his love is made complete in us.’  

It is easy to love God because he loves us so extravagantly.  He is always there, never gives up on us, never leaves us or gets frustrated with us or our weaknesses.  He is forgiving, merciful, kind.  Loving our brother or our neighbour as both the Old Testament and Jesus exhorted us to is much more difficult.  It requires that we show some of the same attributes that God shows to us; grace, mercy, kindness, forgiveness, love and perseverance.  The difficulty is that we may have to show these qualities in the face of hostility, anger, unkindness, unforgiveness and sometimes unfairness and misunderstanding.  This is much harder.

The punch line to showing brotherly love was Jesus saying, ‘A new command I give you, Love one another. By this all men will know you are my disciples if you love one another. John 13:34’ That is the hallmark of children of God; not that God loves them and they love God but that out of the love of God, they love one another.  What a testimony to the world.  Christians loving one another!  People will truly see that as we love one another, we are God's disciples.

Today let us seek to love one another even when we are not loved back. Let the love that God has lavished extravagantly on us overflow to those around us.