There are only so many times I will ask someone to love me. There comes a point when it hurts too much to put my request out there again. It’s easier to do without than to be repeatedly refused.
This is also true when I share a struggle with someone close by and it’s handled badly. The person may be distant, distracted, even cruel or judgmental. It’s easier to do without so I hide my pain. But all of this assessing is not conscious on my part when I’m a child.
I am made in God’s image, I have a knowledge of what it’s like to be loved perfectly. That’s the reason it hurts so much when I’m not loved like He loves. God created me for the garden, not for fallen earth. When I cry alone in my room as a little child and no one comes to comfort me, my heart knows that something is terribly wrong. Pain tells me that! My longing for someone’s arms to comfort me is so strong and the problem comes with what I conclude about myself when I continually cry alone. I believe something must be wrong with me, not them. I reason that if I were not flawed, I’d be lovable. I also might conclude that it will always end badly if I choose to be vulnerable. I will also assume that God won’t be available emotionally. either I will feel that I have to hide my pain from Him. Prayer will be uncomfortable. Developing a better prayer life will not be anywhere near the top of my priority list. And why would it if I feel I can’t be honest with God and count on a loving response?
Knowing that God is loving and believing that God will love me when I’m hurting can elicit two different responses. I can know the first but deny the second. This is why the father of a son suffering from a demonic spirit told Jesus, “I believe You can deliver him but help my unbelief.” Knowing and feeling the same thing can be far apart.
Have you repeatedly held out your arms to someone – expecting to be received – but weren’t? You decided to put down your arms and play it safe. You swore you’d never need them again but God is not like any father, mother, or friend. Rejection can be healed, and only be healed, in the welcoming embrace of Abba Father.
If you are one who hides their pain, start researching scriptures that talk about God listening, comforting, receiving. Live in these scriptures and be sure to engage the 2nd birth agent….the Holy Spirit. As you read the verses and meditate on them, ask the Spirit to breathe over you so that His Words can penetrate your heart. Ask Him to write those scriptures on the doorposts of your new foundation. It is possible to not only know the truth that God receives you, but feel it.
Lord, I choose to believe David’s words in Psalm 116: I love the LORD, for he heard my voice; he heard my cry for mercy. Because he turned his ear to me, I will call on him as long as I live.” Psalm 116:1-2. My heart yearns to know this. Amen
After reviewing this beautiful parable, my intense desire is stirred up again for fertile soil. Yet, I know I can’t make it happen without God’s help. I must admit my inability to grow righteousness through self-effort. The sins of my flesh, resulting in bad soil, are never overcome without the Spirit. With hardened soil, my flesh bends toward unbelief. With stony soil, my flesh emotionally reacts passionately to the Gospel but can’t sustain it long enough to engage in the Spirit-driven lifestyle. With weeds in my soil, my flesh worries and then take matters into my own hands.
This parable has spoken to me so powerfully for the past several years that the truth of the soil types is on my mind constantly. I’ve almost become obsessed by the fourth soil type and I’ve grown to covet its germinating environment. Let’s take our time with each part of the story.
If the best one to reach someone in pain is another who has survived the same pain, that should give me direction in knowing how to reach out to people I love with whom I can’t relate. If I have not experienced what they are enduring, there is someone not too far away who has. My role would be to network them. Introduce them. Plan a lunch or an afternoon just to hang out. The survivor will quickly discern the needs of the one who is currently in the fire.
What is it you can plan for someone who is declining, one who is losing hope? Maybe it’s to keep a single mother’s child for a day or a weekend. Maybe it’s to take someone who is housebound on a long drive through the country. Maybe it’s to take a music lover to a symphony. Maybe it’s to treat someone to a nice lunch at their favorite restaurant. Maybe it’s to take someone suffering from Alzheimers on a walk outdoors. We take for granted the freedom to get out of the house, get some fresh air and feel energized. The goal is to offer something that will help someone in decline, physically or emotionally, rally for a time because they have something to look forward to.