Reflection: THE FULLNESS OF GOD IN YOU

Have you ever wondered if you are a “whole person”? We all have struggles in life that could make us feel incomplete, but the apostle Paul says we can be “filled up to all the fullness of God” (Ephesians 3:19). What does that look like?

A “whole person” is generally satisfied with life. He feels loved and is able to love others in return. Difficulties and hardships don’t devastate him, because he is able to go through them with confidence in God. He isn’t a complainer or someone who is quick to blame others. A positive attitude guards his mind since he knows that the Lord will work everything out for good (Romans 8:28).

Being a Christian doesn’t automatically make us feel complete. Fullness comes only when we experience God’s love for us. For many years, I knew theologically that the Lord loved me. I even preached about it, but I didn’t really feel it. Only after I took a deep look at my life and started dealing with events that had fractured my soul in childhood did I begin to experience His love in an intimate way. Once I felt the security of His love for me, I discovered great joy in walking in obedience to His will. The reason was that I knew I could trust Him to meet all my needs in His time and way.

Do you feel God’s love, or is it just a biblical fact to you? If you long for wholeness, the key is to experience an intimate relationship with Jesus Christ. This is possible only when you’re willing to open up and let the Lord search your heart. He’ll reveal what’s holding you back from accepting His love.

(DR CHARLES STANLEY)

 

And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the saints to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled with the measure of all the fullness of God. (Ephesians 3:17b-19)

Be strengthened by the Spirit and rooted in love, Christ’s love. Paul doesn’t just say Christ’s got love for us. No, no, that’s too small. Paul describes Christ’s love: Wide. Long. High. Deep.

Last summer, one of my husband’s close friends visited, and we tossed the Colorado native in the car and drove to the ocean. It was the first time our landlocked friend witnessed the Atlantic. Instantly, he realized photographs and TV can’t capture the magnitude of the sea, the watery beast extended to the edge of the horizon and filled the world with blue. Overwhelmed, our friend stood silenced by the great waters. Words failed when he tried to describe the water so massive, strong, and seemingly unending.

Plus, what about the life teeming under the surface? Our friend, a science guy, picked up shells and studied tiny pieces which whispered parts of an underwater story. Even with all the technology accessible to us, even with dives and oceanographers and underwater explorations, much of the ocean goes undiscovered.

The ocean, like God’s love, is wide and long and deep and high.

Paul wanted the Ephesians to catch a glimpse at the paralyzing magnitude of God’s love, and so he prayed God would strengthen them with the power of His Spirit. Paul longed for the Ephesians to feel about God’s love as our friend felt about the ocean: speechless and stunned at the miracle before them.

(AMY L. SULLIVAN)

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