Posts Tagged: lived out cliches

“To Be Where You Feel Like You Belong”

Nothing feels much worse than feeling like you don’t belong.  I’ve been feeling that way a lot here of late.

On the other hand, to be where you feel like you do belong is one of the most wonderful feelings in the world.

I am visiting some of my wife’s family who live in southern Kentucky.  They know all my failings.  Perhaps not every detail of my failings, but they know all the broad contours and many of the details.  And they love me.  I feel like I belong.  That’s because I do.

I don’t belong because I’m good.  I’m not all that good, though I’m probably considerably better (and safer) than I used to be.  I belong because they take seriously God’s grace to them and to me.  They have taken the platitude “The ground is level at the cross of Christ,” and turned it into a profound truth by actually living it out.  They make the love of God more real to me than it has been of late.

Right after we arrived here, I prayed a desperate prayer: “Oh God, please forgive, and cleanse, and heal.”

And immediately, God said, “I have, I am, and I will.”

I don’t very often feel that God speaks to me directly.  That may well be because I’m not listening, of course.

Sometimes, people who embody the love and forgiveness of God help me to hear a fresh and refreshing Word from God.  It is so today. 

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