I replay the words over and over in my mind. “You wait, and ask God how to love them,” she said, “and you mourn.”
A
friend came over for lunch today. My mom, brother and I all sat around
the table with her and talked. We talked as we have not in a very long
time. We talked about dancing, about God’s will and planning our lives,
about asking questions and about faith.
Somewhere
in the middle of it all, as we were jumping from subject to subject, I
asked a question. “How do we love God? How do we accept His love
through people without becoming too attached to the people themselves?”
These are questions I have asked with tears at many points in my life.
They have many names attached to them. The answers seem just as
illusive as ever. How attached am I supposed to be to people? Why is it
that I love people so much but they don’t seem to want to be around me?
How can it be that a close friendship so quickly dissipates and
suddenly we find nothing to talk about? Why do I still care so much?
Why does it hurt so much? Little by little I
have learned to not be so devastated by these losses, but I still ask
the questions, and yes, I ask in tears.
Today
I was confronted by puzzled looks and cocked heads. “What is wrong,” I
was asked, “with becoming attached to people? God shows us His love
through them, and we show our love for Him through them as well.” I
paused in confusion. Long ago God shattered the belief that I wasn’t
supposed to depend on people because I only needed Him. He showed me
that He uses people to give Himself to me. Still, was I not supposed to
detach myself from the channel, and only cling to the One who was
pouring Himself through them? Today I was given a different picture. I
was told that we are to love the people God places in our lifes, and that love is never without attachment. Hmm.
Then
we moved on, talking about what we should question and the right and
wrong ways to question. We finally cleaned up lunch and my friend went
home. But my mind was still back on the subject of loving people. “Mom,
did you mean that it is impossible to become too attached to people?”
She paused, “Well, I lean heavily toward that. Of course, it is wrong
to smother them, or to be so wrapped up in them that you exclude the
other people in your life. But I do not believe we can love people too
much.” The tears gathered in my eyes as I asked, “Then what are we
supposed to do when the people we love push us away or do not have time
for us, or no longer seem to need or want us?”
“You wait, and ask God how to love them, and you mourn.”
As
I turned away to hide the tears flowing down my face I pondered that
thought. Was it ok after all that I cared so deeply? Was it truly right
for me to delight in the friends God has given me and to desire for
them to delight in me as well? Was this not an expression of attachment
to the “things of the world” as I had feared, but rather an expression
of loving and being loved by God?
It is good to love. And it is ok to mourn! It is good
to mourn. This rings true in my spirit, but my heart still aches and
wishes for an easier answer. And so it often is. Yet, what freedom!
“No one has ever seen God; but if we love one another, God lives in us and his love is made complete in us.” 1 John 4:12
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