“You are loved / and so are they.”
(From Old Turtle and the Broken Truth, by Douglas Wood)
This is what we so often forget, even if we don’t consciously realize it. This is what we need to remember and rekindle. This is the kind of life to which we are called, one in which we walk and talk and act and plan as if the other is as loved by God as we are.
But we forget. Sitting in the comfort of our homes (here I am on an early Saturday morning with a laptop on my lap, a cup of coffee in my hand and a fire in the hearth), we can feel safe, warm and content. If we are people of faith, we can feel loved by the God we think of as Creator and Lord. If we are Christians, we can feel loved by the grace and peace of Jesus. All’s good, we say. I’m loved, we think. I have everything I need right here, we feel deep inside.
And that’s a good thing, to be so secure in this love that God has for us. This is as it should be.
But we need to be careful. For sometimes, in our assurance of our own belovedness, we begin to think that we (our group, our tribe, our church, our denomination, our country, our race) has a monopoly on God’s love and we begin to create in our minds “the other.”
The other lives far away, or maybe just in another part of the city. The other looks different than we do. The other prays and worships differently, or maybe they don’t pray or worship at all. The other speaks a different language or with inflections and accents strange to our ears. The other is darker or lighter than us. The other sometimes laughs and cries at different things than we do. The other is too loud or much too quiet. And we begin to fear the other because the safety of our own sense of belovedness begins to falter and crack.
If we’re so loved by God, we say to ourselves, how can the other, who is so different, be loved too? So we build fences and walls and otherwise put distance between ourselves and the other. We build up armies to protect ourselves from the armies of the other and, indeed, these are often necessary. For the other fears us as much as we fear them.
The thing is, we’ve got this all wrong. We don’t get to choose who God loves.
Ask yourself in silence: Who is my other?
Jim Davis says
Thanks for expressing those thoughts Steve. I feel the same way but don’t have the gift to put them in words the same way that you do. I just hope that everyone who reads this will pass it on to all their friends and tell them that “the other” matters too.
Jan Baer says
You should submit this where all can see. Very good, my friend.
Dianne Willard says
So timely I think this should be out where everyone should see and share this message. Think of posting on FB so everyone can share to a wider audience, this message needs to be seen and thought about!
admin says
Thanks, Di. I did post it on FB, so feel free to share…
admin says
Thank you, Jan. I miss seeing you!
admin says
Thanks, Jim.
Jim Davis says
Steve – Our message at The Crossing today was all about how we need “the other” and others. It seems as if we all have “the other” on our minds currently. I took the liberty of passing this on t our lead Pastor, Greg Holder. I can almost bet that in the next few weeks he will make reference to it.
Mary says
Thank you Steve. You have such a gift for words. What a beautiful reminder your message is. I am praying for a peaceful end to the tension in Ferguson. With a son at SLU, my eyes and ears are open to the verdict. Lifting everyone in that area of the country up in prayer!