Sunday, June 28, 2015

Has Love Won?



Jesus loved to make His point by telling stories.  He used one very short story to describe the “kingdom of heaven”:  “The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field.  When a man found it, he hid it again, and then in his joy went and sold all he had and bought that field.” (Matthew 13:44).

What if the man had decided instead that he could not part with what he already had, and was therefore unable to raise the money to purchase the field?  He would have forfeited the treasure because of his unwillingness to let go of what he already had.  

If the God’s kingdom is like a great treasure, wouldn’t we be foolish to exchange it for anything else?

They say that “Love Won” in the Supreme Court ruling on Friday.   I disagree.  True Love is still standing beside us, waiting for us to release our grip on what seems “good” to us so that He can replace it with something far better.

As parents, we view life from a better vantage point than do our children.  The child sees the bag of cookies.  The parent sees the nutritious dinner just ahead.  The child sees the drudgery of homework.  The parent sees the rewarding career in the future.  The child sees the cute doggie.  The parent sees the nervous dog ready to protect itself from harm.

Would it be love for a parent to allow their child to eat the cookies and miss the nutritious dinner?  Would it be love for a parent to excuse their child from schoolwork and thus never learn the value of hard work?  Would it be love for a parent to allow their child to walk into danger unaware?

From the child’s viewpoint, he thinks he knows what will make him happy.  The loving parent knows that there are better things available and restricts these “good” things in order to ensure the best for their child.

In much the same way, there is a Heavenly Father that has a better vantage point than we do.   Some of us have disowned Him, and refuse to even acknowledge Him.  Others of us know we are His children, but we get too caught up in what we see as “good” and don’t allow Him to replace it with what He knows is best.   We do this in a myriad of ways, and it is nothing new.    Just as our children sometimes ignore our instructions and our advice, so we ignore the guidance of our Heavenly Father. 

Just as I would not celebrate watching a child choose to “learn the hard way”, so I cannot celebrate watching those around me setting themselves up for less than God’s best.   The overwhelming emotion I have felt since Friday’s announcement can best be described as sadness.   One side fights for their “rights” at the expense of an even greater treasure.  The other side fights for righteousness at the expense of grace.  The result is dissension and division.


I firmly stand by the definition of marriage as laid out in Genesis.  I will not celebrate something that goes against God’s standard of holiness.  However, heaven forbid that I should sit in smug superiority because I understand something others don’t, or because I am pursuing something of greater value than they.  Instead, I pray that I will find a way to reach out and grab them all by the hand and carry them with me.  Only then does Love win.