Ephesians 3:17-19
“And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the Lord’s holy people, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God.”
On this day, my husband and I are celebrating our 55th Wedding Anniversary. It is appropriate to share this devotion once again on this day.
Have you ever wondered how many times the word “love” appears in the Bible? In the King James Version we can find it over 300 times. That’s a lot of instruction on how to love! After 54 years of marriage and, Lord willing, many more to come, I have a whole lot of love for my husband—much more than on the day we exchanged vows—and have expressed it in many ways, besides words, over these many decades.
In recent years the marriage vow, “to love in sickness and in health” has come to have deeper implications for me, especially after hip replacement surgery when at times everything I did was dependent on his help. The experience reminded me of the title of a sermon I heard many years ago, “Dependence Breeds Love.“ The teaching was in the context of having a dependent heart that trusts and follows after God. But those words had a profound impact on my views and actions in our marriage. Being married to a man who spent years away from the home, deployed with the Navy and on travel for his employer, I learned to become a very independent person, managing the home, raising the children and eventually running a business. With surgery that left me unable to care for myself, I reluctantly became dependent on my husband. During the months of recovery, my love for him began to grow from that dependence on him, as did my trust in him for my care.
It’s the same in our relationship with the Lord. The more dependent we are the more we will love Him and trust in His care for us, the more we will want to spend time with Him, asking for His guidance, inclining our ear to hear His voice. Independence from Him diminishes that love.
Peter Marshall, the Scottish theologian who pastored the US Senate said this, “Have you ever given thought that God, the lover of our souls, Who is love, Who graciously gives love to hungry hearts—that God Himself is the “Great unloved?”
How could we not love the God Who gave His own Son that we might live, but is reviled and ridiculed by many? May we understand anew that our dependence on Him breeds a love inexpressible, a love incomparable, a love beyond all measure.
Heavenly Father, thank you for Your beautiful expression of love— sending Jesus to die and to be raised from the grave so we may know how wide, long, high and deep is Christ’s love for us. Remind us daily that dependence on You produces more love for You and increases our capacity to love others as well. Bring to our hearts and minds how to love one another, to put the welfare of others ahead of our own. May we be a reflection of Your perfect love today. We pray in Your name. Amen.
Thank you for this beautiful devotional. It is so timely and appropriate for me right now. It encourages me immensely.
Am so heartened to read this, Brenda, and pray that you sense His presence and that He will encourage your heart. Blessings to you!