Sunday, March 20, 2011

Learning to Love People, Part 2

March 20, 2011
Led by Bob Jamison, President and CEO of Family Guidance, Inc.

Love is God’s essential nature.

It’s easier to love someone when they reciprocate.  Notice that God’s love for us does not depend on our reciprocation.

Loving another person can be difficult.  What are some ‘love busters’?

Love Busters
1.  Our natural self-first instinct. 
Our tendency to think “but what about me!?” blocks our ability to love the other.

2.  People who are hard to love
Sometimes what makes this happen is that you are not satisfied with their response to you (back to #1).  Or perhaps you do not have any relationship with that person.  Try to get to know the other and look for some aspect of the image of God.  But your instinct is to run away from that person. 

We also tend to think that we will begin acting in a loving way as soon as we start having loving feelings toward the other.  In fact it is the other way around!  C.S. Lewis said, “Act as if you love your neighbor.”

3. When you take others for granted

4.  When someone needs to be confronted
“Speak the truth in love.”  Steps to take when you think you need to confront someone:
a.  Examine you own motives before confronting.  Make sure it is not really a case of #1 above (your self-first instinct).
b. Plan your presentation ahead of time.
c.  Say what you need to say with humility and gentleness.
d. Make sure that your motive is clear to the other person.
e. Know that it is risky – the other might reject you.

Class members offered these thoughts:
Another love buster is complacency – it’s often only in a crisis that we learn that we can love each other.  But why wait for a crisis?!

When you find yourself gossiping it’s a sign that you ought to be speaking directly to the person you are gossiping about.

Book – A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier.  By Ishmael Beah.  The story of one of many children who were brainwashed so that they would be able to shoot to kill, and were used as soldiers. The book is the story of the self-sacrificial love that it took to rehabilitate this child.

Learning to Love People, part 1


March 13, 2011 Learning to Love People
Led by Bob Jamison, President and CEO of Family Guidance, Inc.

To begin, we took a pop quiz.
1.  Which is the greatest commandment in the Old Testament?

2.  Jesus added one commandment of his own.  What was it?

3.  Which of the following are virtues, or which of the following are actions or qualities that God would commend?
a. Speaking in tongues by the gift of the Holy Spirit.
b. Delivering a passionate, Biblically sound sermon.
c. Deriving great knowledge of God’s truth.
d. Having enough faith to, as Jesus put it, move mountains.
e. Giving alms to the poor, as encouraged by the Old Testament.
f. Refusing to recant my faith, even to the point of death.

Look in the first comment for the answers. 

What is love?
The class said:
- meeting the needs of others, putting the well being of others ahead of your own
- commitment and caring for others
- listening to others
- accepting others the way they are
- sharing with others

Bob offered us this definition of love:
Love is a commitment to another’s well-being, expressed in action.

We looked at this scripture passage.
This is how God showed his love among us: He sent his one and only Son into the world that we might live through him.  This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins.
1 John 4:9-10

What does this passage tell us about love?

Bob’s thoughts on the nature of  love
1.  Love will cost you.  It could cost or require of you time, energy, money, life, biting your tongue, patience.

2. Love demands a commitment to a relationship.
The opposite of love is indifference.

3. Love is other-focussed. 
Self-centeredness is the biggest love-buster. 

Security
But people who are not secure in themselves find it difficult to love others.  Where do we get that security?  From being raised by others who love us.  The more we realize about how God loves us, the greater capacity we have to love others.

How do we find that security? The class said:
- look to Jesus’ sacrifice.
- voice our insecurity to God and some trusted other people who will not laugh at you
- if somebody is looking for a fight, duck and let it go to the cross.

Assignment:
1.  Seek God’s guidance on a particular person to love this week.  Love that person intentionally and report back about the experience.
2. Be open to God bringing someone across your path whom God wants you to show love to.  Tell about it.