Do
you like yourself? After years of trying to help people emotionally, mentally,
spiritually and socially, it was a major breakthrough when I discovered that
most people really don’t like themselves. Some of them know it, while others
don’t even have a clue that this is probably the root of so many other problems
in their lives.
God
wants us to have great relationships, but self-rejection and even self-hatred
are the roots of many relationship problems. In fact, I’ve found the Bible to
be a book about relationships, providing valuable advice about my relationship
with God, other people and even myself.
How
are the relationships with other people in your life? What about your
relationship with God…and even with yourself?
Did
it ever occur to you that you have a relationship with yourself? While I’ve
never given it much thought, I spend more time with myself than with anyone,
and it’s vital to get along well with me. Remember, you are the one person you
never get away from.
We
all know how agonizing it is to work day after day with someone we don’t get
along with, but at least that person doesn’t come home with us at night. We
can’t get away from ourselves, not even for one second, so it’s of the utmost
importance that we have peace with ourselves.
Many
of us fall prey to self-rejection because we feel that nobody really loves us
or accepts us. We figure that if nobody else loves us, then why should we love
ourselves? Because we think others don’t love us, we feel that we must not be
worth loving. But that’s a LIE we’ve believed for way too long!
We
should love ourselves—not in a selfish, self-centered way that produces a
lifestyle of self-indulgence, but in a balanced, godly way that affirms God’s
creation as essentially good and right. We may be flawed by unfortunate
experiences we’ve gone through, but that doesn’t mean we’re worthless and
good-for-nothing.
We
must have the kind of love for ourselves that says, “I know God loves me, so I
can love what God chooses to love. I don’t love everything I do, but I accept
myself because God accepts me.” We must develop the kind of mature love that
says, “I know I need to change, and I want to change. In fact, I believe God is
changing me daily, but during this process, I will not reject what God accepts.
I’ll accept myself as I am right now, knowing that I will not always remain
this way.”
Many
times people who reject themselves do so because they can’t see themselves as
good, proper, or right. They fail to see themselves the way God sees them—as
precious children He dearly loves.
As
you begin to see yourself through God’s eyes—someone who’s loved and
cherished—your view of yourself will begin to change. You’ll begin to see
yourself not as rejected, but as loved and accepted…unique and beautiful in His
sight.
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