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‘Bearing with one another…’ Colossians 3:13 NAS

Have you ever been in a discount store where merchandise is labelled ‘seconds’ or ‘purchase as is’? They don’t tell you where the flaw is. And once you buy it you can’t return it. Well, in case you haven’t noticed, we all live in the ‘as is’ department. Stop and think about the people in your life. They’re a mixed bag of strengths and weaknesses, virtues and vices, right? If you’re looking for perfection, you’re in the wrong store. What’s the point? It’s this: The only way to have a successful relationship with someone is to love and accept them ‘as is’. Don’t buy into the myth that most people are ‘normal’ except the ones in your life. Based on that idea, relationships are an endless quest to fix others, control them, or pretend they are something they’re not. Thomas Merton said, ‘Love is the will to let those we love be perfectly themselves, the resolution not to twist them to fit our own image. Otherwise we love only the reflection of ourselves we see in them.’ A hallmark of spiritual maturity is acknowledging that nobody is perfect, and committing to love them in spite of it. Paul writes: ‘Be gentle and forbearing with one another and, if one has a difference (a grievance or complaint) against another, readily pardoning each other; even as the Lord has [freely] forgiven you, so you must also [forgive].’ (Colossians 3:13 AMP) To love someone ‘as is’ means to focus on their areas of strength and support them in their areas of struggle. ‘What about their flaws?’ you say. ‘…Love covers a multitude of sins.’ (1 Peter 4:8 NLT)

SoulFood: Is 40:1-31, John 9:1-39

The Word for Today is authored by Bob and Debby Gass and published under licence from UCB International Copyright 2012

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