Sometimes it’s easy to feel God’s love.
For whatever reason, every worship song you hear and Bible verse you read floods you with absolute confidence in the Lord’s personal affection for you. You walk around with a smile on your face, knowing, like the psalmist, that His love really is better than life, and you have the warm tingly feeling in your soul to prove it (Psalm 63:3).
Other times, not so much.
No amount of Chris Tomlin lyrics or scripture perusing resonates. You feel empty as a tin can and can’t figure out why the Lord doesn’t seem to satisfy you. Your attempts to draw near to Him fall flat. And you feel guilty.
After all, He’s supposed to be all we need… He wants to be our heart’s main desire, everything and everyone else paling in comparison.
And we want that to be the case… but sometimes it just isn’t. We don’t feel His love all the time, and when the feeling escapes us, we often grow dissatisfied with Him.
Does it have to be that way?
What if we could learn to be satisfied with God even when we don’t feel warm, lovey feelings for or from Him?
I’m just throwing out the question because, as the valedictorian of basing beliefs on feelings instead of facts, my personal opinion is this tall order feels dang near impossible. (There I go again, letting my feelings tell me what’s true/possible…)
In Romans 5 Paul talks about how we have peace with God through faith in Jesus, and that brings us hope (Romans 5:1-2).
Verse 5 reads, “And hope does not disappoint us, because God has poured out his love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom he has given us,” (Romans 5:5).
In other words, believers have God’s love in their hearts… all the time… whether they feel it or not. It’s a permanent condition of our souls, to be inhabited by the love of God. It’s a fact.
So even when we don’t feel love for or loved by God, we can choose to believe the truth that we are loved by Him, and we have His love within us (and Romans 5:5) to prove it.
God’s love is in our hearts – the feeling component of ourselves. If we aren’t feeling it, something is askew. We need to ask Him to help us feel His love again.
In the meantime, perhaps we can choose to be satisfied with the knowledge that His love has not left us and that He will help us feel it again, sooner or later.
Funny, I was just reading about this last night in the book You and Me Forever by Francis and Lisa Chan. He writes that sometimes people tell him that they don’t feel Jesus with them or the Holy Spirit, and he will ask them “Are you busy making disciples?” He goes on to quote Acts 1:8 and then writes, “There is a special way that He shows up when we are on His battlefield” making disciples. It has had me thinking all day…
Interesting. Yes, there seems to be a difference in scripture between having the Holy Spirit and being filled with the Holy Spirit. I haven’t studied it enough to make any statements on it, but I wonder if Acts 1:8 could be alluding to the latter…