"As a father is kind to his children, so
the Lord is kind to those who honor Him. He knows what we are made of; He
remembers that we are dust." (Psalm 103:13-14 GN)
God
understands you completely. He's fully aware of your humanity. He knows your
faults, fears, failures, and frustrations. He doesn't expect you to be Superman
or Superwoman.
If you’re
a parent, do you love your children at every stage of their development, or are
you waiting until they're mature to love them?
The point
is, God loves you at every stage of your development, so you don't have to have
unresolved guilt and unrealistic expectations. Listen:
·
There is nothing you will ever do that will
make God love you more than he does right now.
·
There is nothing you will ever do that will
make God love you less than he does right now.
God’s
love is unconditional. It's not based on what you do or don't do.
I like to
think of it like this: I have three kids. All of them had to learn to walk, and
all three of them went through the same process: They'd take a step; they'd
stumble. They’d get up, take two steps, and then stumble. They’d get up and
take a couple steps and fall again.
As their
father, what was my reaction? Did I scold them? "What are you doing
stumbling? You're a Warren. Warrens don't stumble! You can do better than
that." Of course not! How silly! But a lot of us think that's how God
treats us. We think that every time we stumble, God says, “Get up! What are you
doing, you dummy?”
The Bible
teaches us that, “There is no condemnation now for those who live in union with
Christ Jesus” (Romans 8:1 TEV). What does that mean? Let's say I take a card
and write every single thing I've ever done wrong on it — all my sins, faults,
mistakes, all the skeletons in my closet, all the shameful acts and thoughts
and memories and temptations. Then I put the card in a book and close it. You
can’t see the card anymore; you can only see the book. That’s the way God sees
us when Jesus is in our lives. He no longer sees our sin; he sees Jesus at work
in our lives.
When you
come to Christ and say, “God, here’s my life. Everything I’ve ever done wrong,
every time I've ever made a mistake, all those stupid things I've done. I want
to put my life in Jesus Christ,” Jesus wraps you with his love. God looks at
Jesus and sees that Jesus is perfect; he doesn't see your sin. That's what it
means to relax in God's grace.
This devotional ©2012 by Rick Warren. All rights reserved.
Used by permission.
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