Ash Wednesday services at all Resurrection locations will be held on schedule today.
Scheduled programming has resumed for Thursday, February 13 at all Resurrection locations.
16 We have known and have believed the love that God has for us.
God is love, and those who remain in love remain in God and God remains in them. 17 This is how love has been perfected in us, so that we can have confidence on the Judgment Day, because we are exactly the same as God is in this world. 18 There is no fear in love, but perfect love drives out fear, because fear expects punishment. The person who is afraid has not been made perfect in love. 19 We love because God first loved us. 20 Those who say, “I love God” and hate their brothers or sisters are liars. After all, those who don’t love their brothers or sisters whom they have seen can hardly love God whom they have not seen! 21 This commandment we have from him: Those who claim to love God ought to love their brother and sister also.
Some people think “righteous” people are unkind, that serving Jesus makes you critical and unloving. The apostle John (and John Wesley) disagreed. Real love for God, they knew, shows in our love for people. In a sermon on April 21, 1777, Wesley quoted 1 John 4 and invited all Christ-followers, “Let us provoke all men, not to enmity and contention, but to love and good works; always remembering those deep words… ‘God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him!’” *
Lord Jesus, you embodied God’s love for me. Now you call me to embody your love as I deal with other people, even people I may not like, may even fear. Grow your love in my heart. Amen.
Janelle Gregory, who serves as Resurrection's Human Resources Lead Director, wrote today's Insights. Janelle finds that her heart is constantly wrestling with the truth that she needs a Savior, and the times when she's at her very best are when she's just too tired to put up a fight.
I grew up in southwest Kansas, where the wind never seems to stop blowing. But even that didn’t prepare me for the gusts I experienced when my family vacationed in Kauai, Hawaii. I was 18, my little brother was just 9, and one day we visited the island’s breathtaking canyon. The view was stunning, but the wind was something else entirely. As we made our way to the overlook, we struggled just to stay on our feet. At one point, a powerful gust snatched the hat right off my dad’s head and sent it sailing into the canyon below. My mom, worried the same wind might shove my little brother too close to the edge, gripped his hand tight and pulled him in front of her, holding him tightly.
I’ve found that fear often feels like that wind. It’s relentless, overwhelming, and strong enough to push us off balance, maybe even close to a cliff. We fear the wind of failure or rejection or judgment. Left on our own, those gusts can make us feel unsteady, even unsafe.
But God’s love is like the steadying grip of my mom’s arms around my brother. Her love for him meant she wasn’t going to let go, no matter how hard the wind blew. It’s stronger than whatever fear tries to shove us around. His love secures us, keeps us from toppling over the edge, and gives us the courage to stand.
But this love that comes from God is never meant to stop with us. It’s meant to flow through us. So, I’d encourage us all to think–who around us needs a steady hand in the wind? Who is being shoved around by fear? How might we hold onto them with encouragement, compassion, or even just our presence? God’s love holds us steady, and we get to be an extension of that love in a world that is often battling the gusts of fear.
* From Wesley’s sermon “On Laying The Foundation Of The New Chapel, Near The City-Road, London” at http://www.godrules.net/library/wsermons/wsermons132.htm.
** Jaime Clark-Soles note on 1 John 4:16-20 in The CEB Women’s Bible. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2016, p. 1562.