There’s a place inside my soul where I can desperately want to change the things I do, but I get so stuck spinning circles with myself.
Where I know the things I do create problems, but it’s hard to find a way around it. Where I know what I would like to do different, but every time I try to change my behavior itself, I find myself up against something that I don’t even know how to understand. Do you ever feel that place? It feels like beating your head up against a wall, an immovable force inside your soul that just won’t go away.
Where it feels like something inside is sick, infected.
Like something inside me is not right.
Our life springs out of our longings and fears. The wellspring of life flows from our hearts. And while our longings are trying to find the place where they belong, we all fall down on the journey while we are finding our way forward. (Prov. 4:23, Prov. 24:16)
Why is it so hard for me to remember? That the work I have the truest need for is the work inside my own heart.
In John chapter six, Jesus told the crowd that they were working for the fill of the loaves, for the food that perishes, rather than for the food that endures to eternal life. When they asked him what they needed to do to be doing the works of God, He told them, “This is the work of God, that you believe in him whom he has sent.” (John 6:22-29)
And sometimes, that can just leave me confounded.
Why do you give the most simple answers, Jesus? What do you mean? What does that look like?
But, Jesus knows what we need. He knew what they needed, even while they were desperately seeking Him out in ways that concerned Him.
He was inviting them to see, the problem was not in what they were doing. He invited them to look, rather, at what they were believing.
Jesus didn’t want them to be so concerned over the things they were doing. He invited them to look instead inside their own hearts, to believe. Believing gives us rest.
It was true that they were, in fact, seeking Jesus out. They were seeking Him desperately. They fully intended and wanted to do the works of God. They were all about working for it. But the work that Jesus wanted them to focus on was that of believing.
Jesus offers Himself to fill our hunger. “I am the bread of life; whoever comes to me shall not hunger, and whoever believes in me shall never thirst.” (John 6:35)
Sometimes, it can feel too overly simple to think that the work I need to do is believe in Jesus.
But truthfully, when I look at what I really do believe, I can find places inside me where I really struggle to believe in Jesus. I can feel terrified of this thing I tend to believe about myself. I can tend towards living out of this idea that I am an unlovable, toxic, difficult person. When I believe that about myself, I am not believing Jesus. When I believe that about myself, I am disrespecting Jesus’ own death.
I can tend to find a million reasons to excuse those beliefs. A million reasons why it’s okay for me to believe those things and a million reasons to ignore the fact that I am believing those things. And all the while, try to work for Jesus, in effort to fill the hunger they leave me with.
I can work to try to fix my wrongs. I can work to put safeguards around me acting the way I do. I can try to pursue things that are healthier for me. And from that place, I can strive to work for Jesus from my heart. But even in all of this, I am trying to treat my symptoms.
When Jesus asks me to believe. Belief deals with my heart.
I have no power to live my life perfectly. I have no power to master my behavior. I am powerless over this sin in me. But, it’s what Jesus gives me power to do... that is what is beautiful.
What I have power to do in Jesus, is to recognize when I am not believing what Jesus’ life, death and resurrection says about me.
What I have power to do is to turn. Every time I recognize that I am believing what is false, I have the power to repent and to turn from those false beliefs to what is true. I am given every ability to do it over again and again.
What Jesus asks is that I believe. To renew my mind with the truth. (Romans 12:2)
Found in Jesus, I have access to every spiritual blessing in Jesus. (Eph. 1:3)
Found in Jesus, I am Loved, forgiven, chosen, adopted, redeemed. (Eph. 1:4-10)
Found in Jesus, I am not unlovable. I am not a toxic, difficult person.
Yet, when I am believing those things about myself and acting like they’re true, I’m rejecting everything that Jesus gave His life to say.
When I’m believing those things about anyone else and acting like they’re true, I’m rejecting everything that Jesus gave His life to say.
Jesus sets me free from what I’m afraid of in me.
When I’m not afraid of what’s in me, I don’t have to be afraid of what’s out there.
If Jesus’ death means anything to me, this is what I have to stake my life on… His Love is there for any of us. Each of us are equally capable of receiving it and all we have to do to live in the new life He gives, is just believe.
There are no toxic people. There are lots of sinners who do lots of toxic things. There are moments and days when all of us are difficult. But we are all made from the same dust. We are all given life from the same breath of God. And we are all created with equal capacity for Love.
Each time I turn from my false beliefs, every time I repent of the negative things I’m believing about myself or any other human soul, I’m renewing my mind in the Truth of Love.
It’s Love that changes us and it’s Love that helps us grow.
Love is compassionate and Love is also not a pushover. Jesus was never a pushover.
When sinners were being disrespected, Jesus boldly spoke up. It was Love.
When His Father’s house was being disrespected, Jesus got aggressive. It was Love.
When Jesus was concerned about what He saw in people’s hearts, He did not excuse it.
The Bible teaches that "Love covers a multitude of sins." (1 Peter 4:8) And the God of the Bible has also never excused anybody's sin. Sin that is covered with Love, is a very different thing than sin that is excused. God could never excuse our sin because that would not be Love.
Jesus never excused people’s behavior. Instead, He Loved them where they were.
Jesus’ life shows us what Love looks like.
At first glance, it seems like Love and hate are always opposites, and they are in terms of people. But when we look closer at the person who is Love, I believe it's true that we always find it: Love hates anything that opposes Love. While Jesus always Loved people, Jesus hated when anything that was of value to God was not respected with that value.
The reason Jesus did something in all of these situations was because He saw the value in each human soul. Jesus would not have gotten aggressive and bold with people in the specific ways that He did, if He did not value them as capable people.
He wouldn’t have invited some of the people He healed to go on without Him, if He didn’t believe that they had everything they needed to go on without His physical presence there with them.
In all of these actions, Jesus was showing Love. In letting some people feel hurt, in inviting others to go be brave, Jesus was Loving people.
I fail at Loving like Jesus. These are aspects of Jesus' Love that I need to let change my heart, as imperfect as it can be. The Love I have to give is imperfect.
We all fail at Loving like Jesus. We fail at seeing the same value in the human soul that Jesus saw. We fail at seeing the same value in God’s temple as Jesus saw. But, we are people of Love because that is what Jesus died to say is true of us, despite anything we have done.
All we have to do is believe.
God never excuses my sin. He never excuses our sin. What He does do is invite us to come home to Him, where He covers our sin in His Love. He weaves our worst mistakes into the beauty of His good story.
That beauty is a mystery worth considering.
We do not have the power to Love with the pure and spotless Love of Jesus. But we are given the power in Jesus, to constantly let His life show us where we misunderstand Love. We have the power to recognize it and turn every time we are getting it wrong. We have the power to turn our hearts time and time again to what Jesus’ life, death and resurrection has proclaimed about the worth of every human soul.
So in turbulent cultural times, in imperfect families, in the false beliefs we have to face inside our own hearts, let us step on in faith.
Jesus simply invites us to what He knows we can do.
“This is the work of God, that you believe in Him who He has sent.” (John 6:29.)
Step on, and believe. And lift up your head because it’s true: He believes in you.