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Fearfully Made, Deeply Loved: Embracing Your God-Given Worth Series
Contributed by Rev. Matthew Parker on Aug 1, 2025 (message contributor)
Summary: This is the 7th talk in an 8-week class called "Trauma and Transformation, Level 1." This discusses practicing self-compassion by treating ourselves with the same love God shows us. Love is action, not just feeling—and how we treat ourselves reflects what we believe about our worth.
Session 7 Self-compassion
This is the 7th talk in an 8-week class called "Trauma and Transformation, Level 1". The course takes a bio-psycho-socio-spiritual approach to healing. Both Christians and non-Christians are welcome. This is a reflection time of about 10 minutes that occurs in the class, before the remaining time which is spent in trauma education - helping people understand the impact of trauma on the mind and on all of life.
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A wife turns to her husband and says, “How come you never tell me you love me?” The husband says, “Well, I told you when we got married didn’t I? I’ll let you know if anything changes...” Not a great approach to a lasting relationship.
Love. What does it really mean to love? To love another person, to love ourselves?
The best wisdom literature out there, including the Bible, indicates that love is a verb, an action or a series of actions done for the blessing of, the benefit of another.
Love is action, motivated by affection, by genuine caring. We sometimes think that the affection we feel for someone is the real love.
But I think that affection is affection. Love activates that affection and does something; it produces something good.
Even loving God is action-based, not word-based. One of the critiques that God gives in the OT about those who were his chosen people points out the problem between words and actions.
“These people come near to me with their mouth and honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me. Isaiah 29:13
My wife doesn’t necessarily know consciously that I love her when I’m sitting on a couch just thinking loving thoughts about her.
She knows I love her when I do the dishes, when I make dinner, when she chooses the movie we’re going to watch, when I give her the choice between the bowls of ice cream I’ve just prepared; when I plan special occasions.
When I kiss her a dozen times a day in passing. I mean she knows I love her at all times, I would hope. She sees it in action, tangibly expressed, when I do nice stuff for her.
Loving others has its challenges. Who hasn’t experienced unrequited love, or felt love for another who didn’t seem to care at all?
This is the story of many people’s teenage years, and maybe right up to today. It can be incredibly confusing.
Our loving actions may not be appreciated, we may be taken for granted. Loving others has its pains and bitter challenges, for sure.
Loving ourselves? That might even have MORE challenges than loving others. But since all love is about action more than words, how do we actually treat ourselves?
The same way I can evaluate my love for those dearest to me by the quality of my actions and loving care toward them, I can gain some insight into how I love myself by considering how I treat myself.
Let’s quickly look at a verse of Scripture that connects with what we’re talking about.
Again, the reason I talk about Scripture is that it contains some of the most powerful, tested and relevant thoughts of any book I’ve ever read.
Jesus is asked what’s the most important thing in life, “Of all the commandments, which is the most important?”
29 “The most important one,” answered Jesus, “is this: ‘Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’ Mark 12:29-30
This balancing of heart, soul, mind and strength is a great way to live a better life. Jesus describes this as the way to love God.
That picture of heart, soul, mind and strength represents a healthy wholeness.
The second part of that verse, which we didn’t look at last week, speaks about loving ourselves.
The second part of Jesus answer is this: The second is this: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no commandment greater than these.” Mark 12:30-31
So if you think about it, Jesus is saying love God, love yourself, and then love your neighbour as yourself. That order is embedded in the thought. So how do you love yourself? Think about how you act toward yourself.
And since actions flow from thoughts, how do you think about yourself?
Someone said: “Growing up with not enough acceptance and too much shame, we may cling to our shortcomings, past failures, and poor decisions. We minimize the good things about ourselves and our positive qualities”.
Are you self-critical? Do you judge yourself harshly when you make a mistake? The path to learning is always through trial and error.
A mistake is a path to learning, so how do you treat yourself as you are learning and growing? Are you kind to you?