“Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.
The second is this: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no commandment greater than these.” Mark 12:30-31
(NIV)
Yesterday we talked about the first of five factors
that influence your identity. We have all been made wonderfully complex
and
full of flaws, but until we embrace who we are — including our flaws —
we cannot make the changes in our lives that will bring about true
transformation.
The second factor that influences your identity is
your connections. Your connections give your life purpose, meaning, and
identity. If you grew up with dysfunctional relationships, then you
question your purpose and struggle with identity.
Jesus said that the most important thing we should do
is love God and love other people (Mark 12:30-31). Life is not about
your
accomplishments or acquisitions, your popularity or prestige. It’s about
how well you love.
There are three problems that keep us from loving fully as God intended:
- We’re all imperfect. There are no perfect relationships because there are no perfect people.
- Sin disconnects us. Adam and Eve had the first broken relationship and disconnected themselves from God and from each other. We’ve been excusing ourselves and accusing the people we love ever since.
- The more disconnected we are, the more fearful we become. We crave intimacy, but we fear vulnerability. We crave acceptance, but we fear rejection.
You may not have had a say in the hand you were dealt
in life. But God sent his son as your Savior to transform your cards
into a
winning hand. No matter what connections you’ve made in life, you will
be held responsible for what you do with your connections today.
Will you let God affect your connections? Will you
trust him for your future in spite of a difficult past? Will you
nurture,
protect, and build relationships so that God is more fully glorified in
your life?
Resolve today to build healthy and not hurtful relationships with God’s help.
Talk It Over
- In what relationships do you need to invest more time or more of Christ’s love?
- How are you doing with “loving your neighbor as yourself”? How about with your difficult relatives, co-workers, or in a broken relationship?
Author:
Rick Warren
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