Posted in Uncategorized

Love, Listen, and Have Hope

“Goodness is stronger than evil. Love is stronger than hate. Light is stronger that darkness. Life is stronger than death. Victory is ours through Him who loved us.”

– Desmond Tutu

I recently flew to meet my husband in New York City for an impromptu 48 hours away together.  It gave us a chance to reconnect in between two very long business trips.  NYC is where we met and fell in love over 25 years ago.  It’s a special city for us, as it is for so many that visit or call it home.  Living on the opposite coast, we don’t get many opportunities to return to where our story began, so we attempted to fit in as many things as we possibly could during our stay.  

It was early December.  We walked the streets hand in hand, braving the cold and rain, taking in all the lights and sights of Christmas. We recreated our first date, dining at Ruth’s Chris steakhouse.  The massive Christmas tree in Rockefeller Center was in all its glory and did not disappoint. 

One of the highlights of our trip had to be our late-night carriage ride through Central Park.  A bonus to doing so was impressing our twenty something’s back home with photo proof of not just the famous “Friends” fountain, but also the bridge where the infamous snowball fight scene from “Elf” took place.  Because if there’s no photo, it didn’t happen . . . right??!

Not a bad itinerary for a Jersey girl, who grew up just 90 miles from NYC, and had never experienced any of those things!  But perhaps our most significant stop was in front of the building where we first met. We were both working for the same shoe company in the fashion industry at the time.  The company no longer exists, and the building that once housed our offices and showroom was surrounded by scaffolding, preparing itself for its next tenant.  

You can always breathe new purpose into an old space, but you can never erase its history.  There will always be something so significant about the vessel that once housed our beginning.  Each time we are able to make it back, we make sure to get our photo in front of the Crown Building.  Rumor has it, 22 luxury apartments are being prepared for some lucky (and wealthy) folks to reside in during the next season of the building’s continuing legacy.

But as for me . . . 730 Fifth Avenue will always represent a real-life Cinderella story, shoes and all, where this girl found the love of her life.

There was, however, one thing we noticed missing during our sightseeing adventures. The iconic “LOVE” sculpture.  Until it disappeared , so many people were visiting the landmark on a daily basis that it made it challenging for the locals to get past the crowds.  Getting a commemorative photo at the sculpture has been a fan favorite since its creation in 1970 by artist Robert Indiana.  So much so that he went on to create 50 variations of “LOVE” all over the world.  

But that’s what love does. It multiplies and draws people unto itself.

So, naturally when “LOVE” went missing, it’s not surprising that everyone noticed.  It didn’t matter if you were a life-long New Yorker or just in for the weekend like we were.  We were expecting to see it.  We had come to count on its presence.  

But “LOVE” was nowhere to be found.

The “LOVE” sculpture was inspired by Robert Indiana’s childhood faith.  Before it was ever a sculpture, however, his original vision was part of a series of paintings.  From that collection he created his first “LOVE” in the form of a personal Christmas card in 1964. Just a year later, he was commissioned to create a similar Christmas card for the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). The rest is history.  

We came to find out, after a quick search online, that the sculpture was not gone forever.  It was simply on hiatus for some much-needed cleaning and minor repairs.  I couldn’t help but think about how the missing sculpture symbolically represents what seems to be missing in our country today. 

Many of us have been left wondering where love has gone.

It’s a legitimate question, considering the way we’ve been treating one another these days.  We have picked up some really bad habits, and like any addiction, one of the biggest barriers to healing is denying we even have a problem. We find it much easier to blame others for everything that is wrong in the world.  Like the sculpture, our nation is in need of repair. We, too, could use some cleaning up.  

Many of us entered into 2020 with a lot of fear and trepidation.  We are one nation that is currently divided on so many important issues.  Adding to our angst is the fact that we are in an election year.  A lot of us are standing around, shell-shocked and surveying the damage that we have already inflicted on one another.  It can be paralyzing to think that it’s only January, which potentially gives us a solid 10 months to continue berating one another before election day.

Or we can do something different. We can choose to love.

Just as the artist of the “LOVE” sculpture created a structure inspired by his faith, God created the human race. He did so with two purposes in mind for us.  To love Him and love other people.  1 John 4 tells us that God Himself is the very definition of love and that all love comes from Him.  

God also used words to share His vision with us of what real love can look like when we love like He does. That vision in defined in 1 Corinthians 13, otherwise known as the “love” chapter. It has been incorporated into countless weddings throughout the years, including my own.

Being God, He knew long before we were born that we weren’t going to be able to love well without Him.  Even those who deny His existence benefit from the moral code He has placed in the heart of each of us. A lot of us try and fill that void with things that just leave us broken.

There is simply no substitute for the kind of love only He can give.

He wants nothing more than to be in relationship with us. He promised in Jeremiah 29:13 that, “If you look for me wholeheartedly, you will find me.” But the choice is always ours. 

While the “LOVE” sculpture is by far Indiana’s most famous piece, John 3:16 is easily the most “famous” verse in the Bible.  “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only Begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.”

That verse is the culmination of God’s love for us.  He knew that there wasn’t any way for us to reconcile our relationship with Him.  We were without hope and unable to save ourselves. He couldn’t imagine being without us and knew we needed rescuing.  So, He sent us his Son, God in the flesh.  He sent us Jesus.

He wanted us to know that hope was on the way.

I find it thoughtful, and simultaneously ironic, that what was chosen to stand in as a temporary replacement for “LOVE” is a statue titled, “Listen“.  A local artist, Jim Rennert, created the sculpture in the hopes that people passing by would pause and reflect. The sculpture is of a man, looming life size, holding his index finger to his lips. This is the universal symbol to be quiet and I find it humorous that the bronze man is essentially “shushing” us. The artist was encouraging reflection not censorship. If we refuse to navigate our differences with civility, however, then it seems as if silence would be a pretty good posture until we’re willing to do so.

Pastor Andy Stanley has an amazing 3 part series out right now title, “Talking Points: The Perfect Blend of Politics & Religion”. It is geared toward those of us who call ourselves Christians, but is an incredible blueprint for anyone interested in loving people well regardless of their politics. One of my favorite quotes from the series is as follows:

“When we choose to carry someone’s burden . . . we listen, we learn, and we lean in.  When we choose to carry someone’s burden, what divides us diminishes, and what unites us surfaces.  We fear less, and we understand more.” – Pastor Andy Stanley

Imagine what would happen if we did less talking and more listening. If we used our time and energy to really get to know people that we assume are so different from us. Loving others like God does honors the humanity in each and every person without conditions. We are created in His image, and it is He who give each of us our value.

It always starts with a relationship, laying a gradual foundation of mutual respect and trust over time. It is in those relationships that we feel safe and heard . . . even when we don’t see eye to eye.

What if we learned to ask really good questions? What if we leaned in to the idea of working to understand who people are, learning firsthand how they have come to feel the way they do about important issues?

Doing so may not change our minds, but it for sure will change our hearts.

No word on when “LOVE” will be back on the corner of 55th and 6th. But unlike the missing sculpture, real love is alive and well, and can always be found by anyone truly seeking to find it. Love is so much more than a feeling. It’s always a choice we make. If we want to see things turn around in this country, we are going to have to want it. Even over wanting to be right.

Beautiful things happen when we align our will with the purposes of God.  When we open ourselves up to our Creator’s way of doing things, we fulfill the unique purposes for which we were put on this earth.  To see that happen, we are going to have to let Him change our hearts. We do that by saying “yes” to God and respond to His loving us by loving Him back.  We don’t have to change our opinions, our beliefs, or our political parties to love others well. 

But we do have to choose to love people like God does.

The same God that reconciled our relationship to Him wants to heal our relationships with one another as well. As much as we might like to blame others for the nationwide fail at agreeing to disagree, we all have to own our behavior.  We cannot control others in word or deed, but we always have the option of controlling our reactions.  We always have a choice in how we respond.  Nothing someone else does or says will ever justify bad behavior on our part.

We need to own what we put out into the world.

The truth is our words are going to outlive us.  Thanks to social media, we get and give information so quickly that the rate of words flying out of our mouths has exceeded the filter in our brains.  At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter how right we think we are if our behavior is wrong.  We need to open our eyes to the hypocrisy of calling things out in others that we ourselves are currently doing. We have Fundamental Attribution Error to thank for that.

An article out of the University of Texas explains it well. “Because of the fundamental attribution error, we tend to believe that others do bad things because they are bad people. We’re inclined to ignore situational factors that might have played a role.”

“So, the fundamental attribution error explains why we often judge others harshly while letting ourselves off the hook at the same time by rationalizing our own unethical behavior.” (See more on FAE below.)

The culmination of all that we were able to see and do during our time in NYC ended up being right outside our hotel.  The “HOPE” sculpture, another work by the same artist, is on display just three blocks away from where “LOVE” had once been.  Hope, by definition, is “the feeling that what is wanted can be had or that events will turn out for the best.” We need to make sure that what we say we want correlates with what we do. 

Feelings come and go, but love is a choice.

Robert Indiana passed away in 2018, but will always be remembered for the legacy of “LOVE” and “HOPE” he left behind.  The words he chose to create as art are a testament to what he wanted to put out into the world.  What will we be remembered for? What will we leave behind? What are we putting out into the world?  

I hope it’s love.

Learn more about the Fundamental Attribution Error in this short video from the University of Texas:

Photo by Daniel ODonnell on Unsplash

You can view Jim Rennert’s amazing work on his website: https://www.jimrennert.com/

Posted in Uncategorized

LOVE determines your “NET” worth

Do you know what you’re worth? If so, who or what gave you your value?

In my previous post I shared what I thought was the most important thing I know walking into 2020. The idea that it doesn’t matter what else we do well, if we are not loving people well.

That can be really hard to do sometimes, especially if we are depending solely our own strength to do it.  I’m thinking generally, but also specifically about how we can “love people well” on social media.  Love is a strong word you say. So it is. But it’s what we are going to need if we are to change the way we relate to one another online, and in real life. 

We are going to need a lot more than to simply “like” one another.

I love the idea of social media.  I love learning about people and relationships, and I am all in for anything that provides healthy connection.  But in many ways, social media has become an outlet for every form of abuse you can think of.  We seem to have lost all sense of decorum, along with every good thing we have been taught about how to treat others.  

We humans like to appear socially appropriate, so we try as hard as we can to live life inside what we think those parameters are.  Our ability to do just that on social media, however, seems to go right out the window the second people disagree. 

Because we also really like to be right.  

The sad thing is, our capacity for both empathy and understanding is so limited when we choose to see life solely from our own perspective.  There is no listening or learning going on inside our own personal echo chambers.  But imagine what would happen if we could see ourselves and others through God’s eyes? What do you think He sees when He looks at us?  When He looks at you? What value do you think He places on each of our lives?

We don’t have to try and imagine.

No matter where you stand today on issues of faith, almost everyone knows and believes we are all born with a moral compass.  An innate understanding that there is good and bad, right and wrong in this world.  I believe that God has created us with that compass so that ultimately, we can find Him. 

When I find myself searching for answers in this life, my faith persuades me to look to what God has to say about things.  When it comes to our value, who knows better than the Creator Himself, the worth and purpose of His creation?   

Most of us have no idea how much God values and loves us.

I feel so compelled to share what God has to say about us.  To speak especially to those who are made to feel like they don’t measure up.  Those whose voices are shushed and discounted as irrelevant.  To those who are made to feel less than in an way.

It may be something you’ve heard a million times or never even once before.  But I can’t think of a more important time in history to reiterate a more important message. To repeat what God has literally been saying since the beginning of time.  There are so many voices, so much noise, in our world today.  It’s so critical to cut through it all and decipher what is real and good and true.  

So here goes . . .

God doesn’t play favorites.  He “likes” and loves each of us the same, no matter what.  He also knew that we would all need rescuing from ourselves and our sin.  Sin isn’t used a lot in mainstream conversation today, so it can seem like a really weird word to use.  But sin is simply anything and everything we do that causes us to fall short of God’s perfect moral law.  Every bad thing you can think of.  Everything listed in the 10 Commandments and then some.  It includes all the ways we mistreat one another, in both the real and virtual worlds.  

Even if we think we only fall “short”, and that we are overall a “good” person in our own minds, the list of ways we sin on a daily basis is long. Humanity continues to come up with new ways to rebel against God and hurt one another.  But all of it can be traced back to the original sin.  

Not believing the truth about who God says he is.

Adam and Eve were guilty of it and so is every one of us that has been born since.  They didn’t want to be told there was that one thing they couldn’t have, even when they were given access to everything else.  They didn’t want to believe anything should be off-limits.  They didn’t believe God when He said there would be consequences.  

Ultimately, they didn’t like being told no.

And neither do we.  We’re all born with the idea that if we want something, we should get it.  If you don’t believe that, spend some time with a toddler.  They don’t understand that as parents, when we say no, it’s not because we are trying to keep something good from them.  It’s because we are trying to protect them and keep them from something that could harm them in some way.  

It might be an object, a behavior, an unsafe environment or even unsafe people.  But they don’t want to believe us.  They want what they want, and they want it now.  If they don’t get it, they pitch a fit.

And so do we.

We don’t want to believe God.  We don’t want to believe that we need Him or anyone else for that matter. We think we know best.  We choose to believe that we should be able to do whatever we want, without consequence.  That there shouldn’t be any boundaries placed on us or on our behavior. 

But of course, God knew what the results of our insisting on our own way would be.  What the cost would be of allowing us to have freedom of choice.  He knew that even on a good day, our best behavior wouldn’t be enough to earn our way back to Him.  He knew that there was nothing we could do to help ourselves.  That’s what sin does.  

It hurts us and separates us from those we love.

He knew we needed a plan.  He communicated that plan to us in love letter form, using the Bible.  He wanted to try and convey to generation after generation just how much He cares for us.  He wanted us to know that He would never abandon us or leave us in a helpless state, just as He had promised all of His children who came before us.  

No parent would choose separation from their children.  As our Father in Heaven, He couldn’t imagine living a day without us, let alone an eternity.  He knew that unless He intervened, sin would keep us from Him forever.  So that’s just what God did.  He intervened.  

Romans 5:8 tells us, “. . . that God demonstrates his own love for us in this:  While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”  He doesn’t wait for us to try and clean ourselves up.  He loves us just as we are, right where we are.

That’s what love does.

One of the most well-known passages of the Bible is 1 Corinthians 13. It’s called the love chapter for good reason, as it defines what love is from God’s point of view.  It’s been read and recited during countless wedding ceremonies, and is a reminder to all of us all what real love should look like.  If you aren’t familiar with the passage, here is what it has to say:

13 If I could speak all the languages of earth and of angels, but didn’t love others, I would only be a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. If I had the gift of prophecy, and if I understood all of God’s secret plans and possessed all knowledge, and if I had such faith that I could move mountains, but didn’t love others, I would be nothing. If I gave everything I have to the poor and even sacrificed my body, I could boast about it;[a] but if I didn’t love others, I would have gained nothing.

Love is patient and kind. Love is not jealous or boastful or proud or rude. It does not demand its own way. It is not irritable, and it keeps no record of being wronged. It does not rejoice about injustice but rejoices whenever the truth wins out. Love never gives up, never loses faith, is always hopeful, and endures through every circumstance.

Prophecy and speaking in unknown languages[b] and special knowledge will become useless. But love will last forever! Now our knowledge is partial and incomplete, and even the gift of prophecy reveals only part of the whole picture! 10 But when the time of perfection comes, these partial things will become useless.

11 When I was a child, I spoke and thought and reasoned as a child. But when I grew up, I put away childish things. 12 Now we see things imperfectly, like puzzling reflections in a mirror, but then we will see everything with perfect clarity.[c] All that I know now is partial and incomplete, but then I will know everything completely, just as God now knows me completely.

13 Three things will last forever—faith, hope, and love—and the greatest of these is love.

There are some things listed in that first paragraph that are incredibly impressive by anyone’s standards.  Speaking all the languages on earth?  Having the kind of faith that can move mountains?  Knowing all God’s secrets?  It’s easy to dismiss those as impossible.  

Giving all of our things away to the poor is something we could aspire to if we really wanted.  I think God added that example in there to drive the point home.  He wanted us to know that even if there something on that list we thought was attainable, we could go ahead and do it.  We could even take credit for it.  But even so, if we didn’t do it out of a love for others, none of it would count for much in His eyes.

God, the creator of every language, spoke creation into being and communicates with us in ways we can understand.  He can literally move mountains.  He really does know everything.  And yet what He wanted us to understand, out of everything there is to know, is that love is what matters most.  

He knew that if we could get this one thing right, everything else would find its place.  

That message is summed up best in the very last verse of the chapter. Verse 13 says, “Three things will last forever – faith, hope, and love – and the greatest of these is love.”  

God made clear the value he places on love, and the value he places on us, in both word and deed.  May we have the kind of faith that makes us want to love others like He does, passing on the kind of hope that never disappoints. 

Romans 5:5 “And this hope will not lead to disappointment.  For we know how dearly God loves us.”

What would happen if we all saw one another through God’s eyes? What does our culture tell us about love that differs from God’s definition?  How does the way we are loving others around us compare with 1 Corinthians 13?

Next time, we’re going to walk through the ways loving people well could change the entire trajectory of communication on social media. Let’s be part of the solution.

Photo by Emmanuel Phaeton on Unsplash

https://www.biblegateway.com