I really do love summer, so much.
Even when it feels boring and like I am doing the same thing everyday, time
away to process and reflect is much needed. Since being home, I made a decision
to cut down on social medial use and take an introspective look at my life and
my relationship with God. I have taken a break from Pinterest, Tumblr, and
other sites for 30 days, of which I am a little over half way through. God has
really met me in this time of commitment to reflecting on him. What I have been
learning about is, loving his people more. One of the ways that this lesson was
enforced was through the book, Crazy Love,
by Francis Chan. I realized that I want to like in a heaven-minded way and to
love others I encounter as if they are Jesus, himself.
To live in
a heaven-minded way, is to become more conscience of the dimension of God and
his intimate involvement in the lives of his people. It is easy to push God far
away, only letting him into life in the form of the ritual dinner time prayer
or a quick word before you fall asleep, and forget that he hears all of our
thoughts, knows the desires of our heart, and, more importantly, is walking
this journey of life right along side of us. In becoming heaven-minded, we are
also becoming God conscience and are then able to reflect and build a relationship
with, the person of God, as we move throughout our day. Therefore, opening us
to a deeper and more fulfilled relationship with our Creator.
Secondly,
loving others as if they were Jesus is a difficult task and will only come from
someone who is heaven-minded. Jesus was the one who noticed the least, the
mundane, and the socially unacceptable. This can be exemplified in many ways,
but at the core is not being to busy in our daily lives that we seam roll past
the people that are a constant part of life. It is doing the dishes that are
left behind and forgotten about, even when you will not gain recognition. It is
offering a hand to the lady outside of Bed, Bath, and Beyond who is holding her
screaming child over one shoulder, her return item in the other, trying to get
the attention of her wandering four year-old, and trying to close the trunk of
her car. Or, swallowing the urge to take back something that you don’t feel
someone truly needs to borrow, and giving it willingly, because you know, in
the scope of eternity, it truly doesn’t matter if it is in your possession.
Becoming conscience of people and treating them as Jesus, takes much more
effort than living out the image/reputation based culture that we live in. Our
culture is constantly concerned with how we look and how much we possess. What
sets those who love Jesus apart from the world is that second glance and show
of grace that we give to the people we encounter.
Jesus noticed
everyone: the short man in the tree, the bleeding woman who touched the fringe
of his coat in a crowd, the leper who was entirely covered in diseased, oozing
wounds. Jesus proclaims that whatever we do for the least of these is what we
are doing directly for him. Tell me, how could we change this world if everyone
took a moment to recognize and show grace to the people we encounter in life
everyday, weather we feel they are deserving of it or not. It will not always
be easy, but love them like Jesus.
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