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I love Jesus.
Love. A small and seemingly simple word. But it holds more power than we realize.
I’m not an expert on the subject of love.
Instead, I held misconceptions about love as a child and young woman. And hang-ups about love formed from emotionally expensive experiences.
You see, my father abandoned me for a time, and I never remember the phrase “I love you!” by either of my parents until later in life.
I was grown with my own children the first time my father uttered the words I love you. The conversation’s forever etched in my memory.
Still, as much as I wanted to hear my dad tell me he loved me, I needed to believe it. And I longed for the reassurance he meant it.
You know what? The same holds true today. My husband can never tell me or show me he loves me too many times.
Because a continual and intentional assurance of love takes any relationship to a higher and deeper level. Pure and whole-hearted love, in the most powerful form, is a show-and-tell affection.
I Love Jesus
Likewise, the words I love You, Jesus! rise in my heart and roll off my tongue more often these days. Why?
Maybe I’m tired of surface substitutes for real love. Perhaps I’ve grown weary of this: what God made true about love, people made fake. And I believe Christ is teaching me about an authentic and lasting love.
2012 marked a spiritual milestone in my life, written in my journal. I decided to fall head over heels in love with Jesus, loving Him more than anyone or anything.
Can we fall in love with Christ and stay in love with Him—pure and whole-hearted affection? Not only is this kind of love relationship possible, but it’s what the Lord intended all along.
How to experience this love relationship is found in the answers to these two questions.
I Love Jesus With All
(1.) What’s the greatest commandment?
This question posed to Christ: “And he said to him, ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’” Matthew 22:37-39, ESV, emphasis mine)
Dictionary.com defines heart as “The center of total personality, especially with reference to intuition, feeling, or emotion.”
Merriam-webster explains soul as “A person’s moral or emotional nature or sense of identity. The spiritual part of a human being.”
Google tells us the mind is “The element of a person that enables them to be aware of the world and their experiences, to think, and to feel; the faculty of consciousness and thought. A person’s mental processes, intellect.”
Therefore, every part of me—my whole being—loves Jesus. I love Him with my heart and emotions, through my spiritual identity, and in my mind and experiences. That’s the greatest commandment and the greatest love.
I Love Jesus Because He Loves Me
(2.) Where did love originate?
1 John 4:19 says, “We love because he first loved us.” (ESV)
God created love and demonstrated love on Calvary’s cross through His Son—a show-and-tell affection.
Jesus loved us so much, He died for us. Yet our motivation for falling in love with Jesus is not out of a sense of guilt as though we owe it to Him. Or even loving Christ for what He can do for us now.
But since Jesus loves us, we reciprocate. Because His love is unconditional, it draws our hearts in and strengthens our affections toward Him. This higher and deeper love surpasses love from people—even those who love us well.
Staying in Love With Jesus
To fall in love with Jesus and stay in love with Him means giving all of myself to Him alone, not to the idols or shiny gods of this world. It means I love Christ more than anyone or anything.
Falling in love with Christ and staying in love with Him isn’t radical Christianity or even a Jesus freak. It’s the heart of a true disciple.
Also see, He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not.
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I’ve found that love for God isn’t something I can work up in myself, but when I gaze at Him and see the love He shows to me, love for Him comes bubbling up in my heart.
Very well said, Barbara. We can’t muster it up on our own.
This is just beautiful, Karen. As I look back on all the Lord has done for me, my love for Him deepens. Praying we continually guard our hearts and always remain true and faithful disciples, ever in love with Jesus.
Thank you, Joanne. Glad this spoke to you. Yes, when we look back, know the hope we have today and in the future, we can’t help but love the Lord more and more in deeper ways. And His love is past, present and future tense.
I was interested to read about your decision to love Jesus. That volitional love is so foreign to the cultural concept of love–almost a hit and run, it’s out of control kind of experience.
It really is a foreign love to the world and culture. Help us Jesus, love you more than anyone or anything,
Karen, I like how you said, ” I decided to fall head over heels in love with Jesus, loving Him more than anyone or anything.” Our Bridegroom draws us, and we can return His love. He tells us to. Thanks for this encouragement.
Thank you, Debbie. Yes, the love between us and the Bridegroom is extravagant.
I love this, Karen! (Pun intended!)
🙂 Falling in love with Christ and staying in love with Him isn’t radical Christianity or even a Jesus freak. It’s the heart of a true disciple.