God Wants, Loves, and Accepts You

Dear Silent Friend,
If we could speak, I would tell you that God wants, loves, and accepts you just the way you are. I know it’s true. I hope this helps.
God loves you,
Norma

Everyone wants (and needs) to be wanted

A universal need in all people is the need to be wanted. Performance often masquerades as acceptance when the outcome is equated with an underlying perception of being wanted. Human relationships often fail to deliver. What’s up with that?

The desire to be wanted for who you are is something most humans crave and expect. And why not? Everyone should be wanted and deserves to be wanted. What is your self-perception?

A conflicted message from others will cause people to ask a telling question of themselves, when their sense of ‘being wanted’ is in doubt. “Does that other person ‘want,’ ‘like’ or ‘love’ me for who I am? Or do they ‘want,’ ‘like,’ or ‘love’ me for what I do, look like, provide, or financially support?”

Bottom line, people want to be wanted for who they are; period. But sometimes acceptance is withheld. Damaged emotions occur. People internalize the message that they’re not good enough. This causes more negatives. To be wanted and liked by others is something they chase after. But there is no end to it.

Relational structures as in family, professional, or intimate, which withhold acceptance until it is earned, that insinuate acceptance is conditional, which portray that a person’s value is arbitrary, granted more to some and less to others, create an unhealthy tension within its perceived lesser-valued, and lesser-wanted members.

Thoughtless, unkind words or actions that attack a person’s vulnerable, inward sense of self can deftly destroy the recipient’s self-image as these negatives, comment by comment, erode fragile personhood and imply ‘you’re not-good-enough’ conceptual beliefs about self.

To meet this very deep need within the self, to know they are wanted, loved, and valued, can cause the emotionally injured to go to extreme lengths to find it. Even then, it may not deliver. People devoid of nurturing love or bereft of positive human bonding–with their realization of having been denied the basic components of meaning, value, and self-worth–squirm under a self-imposed deficit outlook, that is, until they are able to see it for what it is.

Then they are able to work at undoing the damage by repairing their leaky love tank, addressing their self-perceptions, and rewiring their negative self-talk. Progress is made when these individuals are able to accept, receive, and sustain love without doubt, suspicion, or fear. Emotional traumas heal slowly, but they do heal.

But first, one must want it. This inner renewal cycle has happened to me and to many others.  Rejection marks people, but it need not keep them trapped in its pain. Fortunately, every person can find help, and they can ask God to help them.

A healthy ‘self’ is one aspect to the spiritual side of the human condition. God is in the restoration business. He helps, in a highly personal way, those who are willing to do the hard work necessary to achieve this healthy state. God’s children are wanted, and not only wanted, they are loved with pure, holy, unconditional love. God never forsakes, and he always loves the object of his affection.

Safe and secure in God’s loving acceptance  produces inner peace and fullness of joy. The soul-need, their being loved, valued, and wanted, is met and satisfied. Wholeness brings richness to the inner self. Healthy spiritual life is actualized through the transforming love of God. God doesn’t withhold affection from the poor performers or the ones struggling with life. Instead, he assists them as he welcomes them on the spiritual journey of life.

With the innocent trust of a child, every person, with child-like faith, is welcomed into Father God’s warm embrace, much like that of a kind, loving, doting parent. For those yet to experience what it is to be loved without strings, they are in for a treat. This kind of love is found in Christ Jesus. Yes, people mess up, we all do, but that is not cause for them to be discarded or unwanted by God. “For God so loved the world.” God’s love is unconditional.

All are wanted, all are loved, and all are accepted. They are not accepted because of their merit, goodness or stellar performance. For God so loved the world. They are wanted, loved, and accepted because God wants, loves, and accepts them. “Jesus said, ‘Let the little children come to me and do not hinder them, for to such belongs the kingdom of heaven.’” Matthew 19:14 ESV

That’s you and that’s me.

Give your heart to Jesus and you will know you are wanted, loved, and accepted.

♥♥♥

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How has God ministered to your inner need?

“In Christ” You Can Overcome Obstacles

When You’re Living in the Desert Dark

Overwhelm crashed like sheets of rain in a storm. I scolded myself for being such a chicken about life. Others had been through what I was going through, and they’d made it just fine. Why was I feeling like I was losing myself? The burden bore down hard, but I didn’t want it to. My blood pressure was up, I could feel it; and my heart pounded; and the tension headache. Too much. The sadness of depression nipped at my heels as it tried to push me to surrender to its despair, but I could not let it win.

I don’t like it when I am like that, but it happens. Know what I mean? We get worn down by the troubles and our worries. Circumstances claim us and rob our joy especially if we aren’t refilling our God-tank. Like a car running on empty, we are not getting the fuel we need, the time of silence to pray and unite with God to regain the ‘charge’ we need. Prayer, reading the word, praise and thanksgiving; and then our spirit begins to lift.

In Christ, help me get through this, help me manage this, help me know what I am supposed to do,” the thought appeared out of nowhere. I was praying my heart, speaking words of despair, when “in Christ” entered my thoughts. “‘In Christ’ show me what to do,” I pleaded. The old familiar phrase was one I once upon a time prayed day after day, month after month. It relaxed me, gave me a smile, helped me lighten up, and boosted my trust.

“In Christ,” spoken a couple of days ago, ministered to me much as it had in the past; giving me hope, giving me strength, giving me courage to face my mental fog and inability to think clearly. Yes, in Christ I can make it and will make it. Fear lessened. Thoughts cleared. Emotions stabilized, and my mind corrected itself. Christ can do that for us.

Long ago when my world was rocked with sorrow and sadness around the time of my divorce, I often said “In Christ” as a way to face each obstacle head-on, and there were many: emotional, physical, spiritual, financial, familial. . .  My family was dependent on me and life didn’t wait for me to recover. I was unable to grieve my loss. In my desert dark I learned that “in Christ” I could get through each day without crashing. That phrase, in Christ, helped me manage many a crisis.

Resting “in Christ” is wonderful comfort. In our own strength we crash and burn and all feels helpless and hopeless. I prayed “in Christ” because of overwhelm. I am a sensitive person and the complications of several things were weighing me down. One fairly broke my heart as I prayed for a minister and his family, who are going through it, during another sleepless night; and prayers for a loved one and serious decisions ahead; and the constant concern for my elderly parents and the very real issues they’re facing; and my own self-doubt, wondering if I have what it takes as I walk along side them.

And then there was this. Separation in now distant friendships and now former places of ministering had taken a strange toll and caused a negative outcome in me, one that I had not anticipated. This bred a lack of confidence in my ability to minister, to share the message of life. This grew feelings of loneliness and uselessness, like I was becoming a shadow of my former self. I was despairing, afraid, running low on spiritual vitality with little to cheer me up, with little to look forward to: Butting against barricades rather than opening gateways. I’d become silent, too silent, lost in thought. I was retreating, disappearing, losing my grip. Friends had begun to take notice.

I was thinking about the future, “I don’t know if I can do this” when “In Christ” came out in a prayerful sentence.  Upon praying those two words, my inner being strengthened immediately. One cannot remain at the bottom of the trenches when you claim Christ to help you deal with a situation. Two days before, I had asked God to show me how to live above the caregiving without it pulling me down, without feeling vulnerable and inadequate. I imagined myself above it, returning to a life with joy and happiness. I’d been spending lots of time in prayer about all these things, but the despair (and grieving) continued to deplete my spiritual energy.

I was accustomed to experiencing the joy of dailyness with God. But now, the difficulties robbed me of joy. I wanted to be alive and joyful as I used to be even during times of struggle. I missed the light of Jesus that enlivens in the inner self. It had been months of this plodding on but without the vigor and energy that breathes liveliness in the soul. “In Christ,” my will to do His will is reclaimed. We live for Him, for Christ. Our identity is in Christ.

“In Christ” is a phrase to remember for those times of despair, when we don’t know what to do or how to proceed. In Christ, is applicable to almost any situation. It provides confidence in Christ’s ability to help and sustain us no matter the situation. Some of my joy is back. Praises to God.

-In Christ, you can face the giant.

-In Christ, you can hold your head high.

-In Christ, you will be strengthened.

-In Christ, you will get through this, move forward, and build again.

-In Christ, you will overcome and find your hope.

-In Christ, you will be sustained.

-In Christ, the victory will come.

I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.” Philippians 4:13 NKJV

“Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus.” Philippians 2:5 KJV

In Christ we gain hope and can live above the circumstance. It is not up to us, nor is it something we can do in our flesh or by human willpower. We receive strength and clarity by placing our trust in Jesus Christ to face the difficulty, and then we surrender the outcome to him.

Are you in your own desert dark? Does despair visit you daily, weekly, more often than not? It’s pretty normal for this day and age. Life is hard, troubles abound . . . but God is good and He is kind. “In Christ” you will find your rest, direction, and hope. The light of the world is Jesus. He is your light, help, and strength.

God bless you, my friend.

***

I welcome your comment:

What helps you face the dark times?

What verses give you hope?