Created for Love: Discovering What Love is, What Love Isn't, and What Love Does
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While I realize that there are countless books about love and relationships and the aspects of what relationship love looks like, I am addressing love from a different angle - an angle that is not often seen. There is a diabolical force that blocks the ability to feel and express love. This force is truly the "dark side' since it is underlying o
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Created for Love - Jr. Robert B. Shaw
Created for Love
Copyright © 2022 by Robert B. Shaw, Jr.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other non-commercial uses permitted by copyright law.
ISBN
978-1-956529-48-7 (Paperback)
978-1-956529-47-0 (eBook)
All Biblical references are from the New American Standard Bible (NASB), unless otherwise noted.
All names of individuals have been changed to protect confidentiality.
Table of Contents
Foreword
Introduction
Part 1 What Love Is
Chapter 1 What’s in a Word
Chapter 2 Love Begins — A Love Relationship with God
Chapter 3 The Greatest of These is Love
Part 2: What Love is Not
Chapter 4 Anger
Chapter 5 Addictions
Chapter 6 Affairs
Part 3: What Love Does
Chapter 7 Love Pursues
Chapter 8 Love Restores
Chapter 9 Love Transforms
Chapter 10 Epilogue
References
Foreword
As a world-wide community of believers, we Christians must prepare agile thinkers and adherents to the principles found in the good news of the Bible. By this we will produce disciples who can create connections across varied disciplinary sectors of the faith as is needed to demonstrate our Christlikeness. Also, we will position the next generation of hope dealers for the age to come. The hallowed words of the angel foretelling of Christ’s impending birth and divine purpose are ringing loudly in the silence of the chamber of my heart even as I write. This announcement was not solely about His birth but also of His mission, as declared in Luke 1:17: And he shall go before him in the spirit and power of Elias, to turn the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the disobedient to the wisdom of the just; to make ready a people prepared for the Lord.
– a manifestation of ultimate love. This is the mission of our church and as previously stated, it should be the mission of the world-wide community of Christian believers. The apostle Paul was keen on this idea of readiness or preparation, proven by the word as referenced in Acts 20:27 – I did not shrink back from sharing with you the whole counsel of God
– as he interacted with those entrusted to his tutelage.
The angel’s message directive represents well the heart’s cry and the aim of the author, Dr. Robert Shaw Jr., in his work known as the Created For series. Furthermore, I find this specific work, Created for Love, to be an exceptional work on the highly controversial topic of love. It is controversial for the reasons pointed out by Dr. Shaw: different people groups and languages do not share the exact methods of communicating the topic of love. Consequently, Dr. Shaw invests significant time in setting the foundational understanding of love as a multi-layered element of life. He used the pen as an artist uses the brush, to paint the word pictures of truth, and did so with vivid clarity. After completing this book, no one should be confused or disjointed about the importance our heavenly Father places on love.
Although this subject has been tackled by scores of other clinicians and authors, from many differing points of view, it is with great courage and godly compassion that Dr. Shaw travels this oft traveled road called love. The insights are fresh and insightfully assembled in his conversational style of writing. As it was the mission of Christ to prepare a people, I offer that it too is Dr. Shaw’s mission to not leave anyone to find themselves in the Christian life or to roam the earth in search of their purpose without the preparedness that comes from this book. May it teach you, challenge you, prune you, equip you and strengthen you in our core longing for love.
Bishop Adrian F. Starks
Senior Pastor
World Victory International Christian Church
wvicc.org
Greensboro, NC
Introduction
When I was in high school, I had a foreign language teacher who claimed to be a witch. She would preside over an after-school foreign language club, and from time to time, discuss her views and philosophies of life with the students. Essentially, she was what was once referred to as a hippie and her spirituality revolved around what is now called white magic. She would claim to cast curses on other individuals, mostly other faculty members. Rumors were rampant about strange occurrences regarding several other teachers, and the connection of these occurrences to uttered curses originating from this young foreign language teacher. I never was able to substantiate any of these claims but found myself intrigued by the possibility of these curses. Added to the mystery was the fact that this teacher was fired at the end of the school year.
While I fully believe in the supernatural and the existence of occultic practices and manifestations, curses as referred to in the above example, are not the ones that most people need to be concerned about. Curses that I will be addressing are directly related to another spiritual dynamic –- that of sin. Now, before you discard this book and decide that you have heard all you want to hear about sin, I believe that as you read further, you may gain some new insight into the hindrances in life with which we all struggle. The ability to love and to receive love are powerfully affected by the curse of sin.
While I realize that there are countless books about love and relationships, and the aspects of what relationship love looks like, I am addressing love from a different angle –- an angle that is not often seen. There is a diabolical force that blocks the ability to feel and express love. This force is truly the dark side since it is underlying our every attempt to give and obtain the most important and powerful force in the universe. Love can overcome anything, as long as we know the origin of and the Giver of love. It all starts with understanding the intricacies of love and the forces that would hinder and even attempt to destroy love. Most of us have asked ourselves during seasons of our lives, why we do what we do, and why the world around us is so hostile, resistant, and self-centered.
The curse of sin is the ultimate culprit. I believe the opposite of love is curse, not hate. The curse of sin brings hate, abuse, destruction, harm, and countless other calamities. When a person is under the curse, all manner of unrighteousness, wrongdoings, and self-centeredness occurs. The curse needs to be broken, and we all need to be restored. Ultimately, the antidote is love, which originates from God as revealed through Jesus Christ. When sincerely expressed between people, it has the power to overcome, restore, and heal. The famous beloved Christmas carol, Joy to the World,
written by Isaac Watts in 1790, has third and fourth verses that sing:
No more let sins and sorrows grow,
Nor thorns infest the ground.
He comes to make his blessings flow
Far as the curse is found.
He rules the world with truth and grace,
And makes the nations prove
The glories of His righteousness,
And wonders of His love. (italics mine).
God’s love and blessings will forever flow as far as the curse of sin is found. His love and pursuit of us is never-ending. He will always overrun, overpower, and overrule any effects of the curse. All we have to do is surrender to His love and grace for us.
Also, I believe that we can experience true deliverance and liberty, once we learn the antidote to these curses and the victory that Jesus Christ provides through His love, power, and blessings. Sin separates. Love brings together. Sin breaks relationships. Love builds relationships. Essentially, sin hinders and destroys love. Broken relationships alter our outlook on life. Brokenness influences a person’s spirit, which is created to know love and to express love. Instead, we have experienced many other types of spirits as a result of brokenness. Proverbs 18:14 says, The spirit of a man can endure his sickness, but as for a broken spirit, who can bear?
The Bible records many types of spirits that are a result of sin and broken love. Sin is what occurs when we step away from God’s love and design. Redemption and renewal are necessary to transform and restore a person. Sin can also happen to us in various forms, such as abuse, neglect, assault, character assassination, and molestation, just to name a few. In these cases, the curse of sin is forced upon us and, as a result, deeply effects the victim’s outlook on his- or herself, the world around that person, and God. The effect of this perpetrated sin needs to be broken and eradicated from a person’s spirit. Below are several:
•spirit of jealousy (Num. 5:14)
•oppressed spirit (1 Sam. 1:15)
•sullen spirit (1 Kings 21:5)
•angry spirit (Ezek. 3:14)
•anxious spirit (Dan. 2:3)
•distressed spirit (Dan. 7:15)
•deceitful spirit (1 Tim. 4:1)
•spirit of destroyer (Jer. 51:1)
•spirit of slavery (Rom. 8:15)
•perversion spirit (Prov. 15:4)
•spirit of timidity or fear (1 Tim. 1:7)
•spirit of error (1 John 4:6)
•spirit of our mind (Eph. 4:23)
The curse of sin can be eradicated from our lives through the love of God. The love of God is manifested through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. God is love (1 John 4:8) and He always puts love into action. In order to experience love in a true sense, we need to understand the love of God the Father toward us. Once we know we are loved, inner healing of our broken spirit can occur. Once we know we are loved, we can more readily love others. Essentially, we can only give that which we have!
All curses originate from the curse proclaimed in Genesis chapter 3. The fact that man was created in the image of God is truly what is at stake in the spiritual realm and in the daily living out of our lives. We will learn the essential aspects of the curse, the provision that God made through Jesus Christ to break the curse, and how the transforming power of the cross and the resurrection can place us back again on the road of walking in the image of God. Everything that God has done for humankind to provide salvation and transformation of our broken spirit is centered on and motivated by His eternal love.
As a licensed Christian mental health counselor, pastor, and Bible teacher I have seen the effects of the curse in people’s lives. I have seen the hindrances that are experienced in people’s lives as a result of the curse. The curse of sin has had the most profound effect on love –- the love between God and humanity, and then the love that should exist between one another. I have also seen the glorious deliverance from the curse and love’s freeing effects upon the lives of broken people.
There is a subtle but profound difference between iniquity, transgression and sin.
Exodus 34:6-7 states:
The Lord God, compassionate and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in Loving kindness and truth; who keeps loving kindness for thousands, who forgives iniquity, transgression, and sin; yet He will by no means leave the guilty unpunished, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children and on the grandchildren to the third and fourth generations (italics mine).
God has made provision for transgression and sin, but nothing less than outright and complete deliverance will eradicate iniquity from our lives. Iniquity is the essence of the curse. Transgression and sin are action words, or the outward manifestation of iniquity, which is the human fallen nature. Iniquity is the state of being in which all humankind exists because of the Fall in the garden of Eden. But because God pursues us, out of His love for us, He has made provision for all sin, transgression, and iniquity. More will be discussed about this in chapter 7.
Because as human beings in a fallen world, we all experience brokenness to varying degrees, my sincere hope is to provide at least an environment and inspiration for the wounded and broken person to experience the restoration of their spirit and a new life. That hope is also expressed in this book, as well as the other books in this series –- namely, that God will begin to do His work in the readers’ lives as the truths of His Word unfold for them. I pray that God will open the hearts of the readers so that the powerful, compassionate, gracious, and resurrected Savior, Jesus Christ, can bring forth understanding and healing into your life!
Love is the power behind creation, relationships, redemption, restoration, and what it takes to ultimately overcome that which holds us back –-- the curse of sin. I will be addressing love from several different angles that will help us understand the source of love, the characteristics of love, what love is not, and what love does. I want to acknowledge and thank Dr. Terry Wardle and Dr. Anne Halley for their inspiration regarding human core longings and on inner healing prayer. This is the sixth, and final, book in the series of six, dealing with core longings. As the last book in the Created for
series, love is also the foundation to all core longings that have been included in this series. While love may be the ultimate core longing, the longings of a sense of significance, the feeling of safety or covering, the finding of our purpose, the desire and ability to take the time to understand one another, and the essence of feeling a sense of belonging, all are effected by the absence or the presence of love. My prayer is that God will make Himself real to you, and will fulfill your longings, which in reality can be ultimately and perfectly met by relationship with God the Father, through Jesus Christ.
Blessings to all who enter this book.
Dr. Robert B. Shaw, Jr.
Part One
What Love Is
Chapter
1
What’s in a Word
One word frees us of all the weight and pain of life: That word is love.
— Sophocles
By this all men will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.
— John 13:35
When my children were younger and I would coach their athletic teams, one of our traditions was to take them out after games, win or lose, for dinner at a fast-food restaurant or at least for ice cream. If we chose to do the latter, despite the many choices available, they almost always chose one specific ice cream place. Whenever I would ask them why, they would say something like this, Because I love their chocolate ice cream
or Because I love their shakes.
I also preferred this specific restaurant, because I loved their vanilla ice cream. We made it clear by our preferences and expression of love for our favorite ice cream place and flavor. Fortunately, when I tell my children that I love them, they know it carries more meaning than saying I love vanilla ice cream. Therein lies an example of one of the many uses of the one English word, and the potential limitations or misconstrued use of such a meaningful and powerful word – love.
In the English language there are many synonyms, different words with similar meaning, exceptions to rules of grammar, and words that are spelled differently, but have the same sound. Such aspects, and many others, have rendered the English language one of the most difficult languages to learn. There are other languages that offer a more detailed and expressive way to communicate certain concepts and feelings. French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and Romanian are some of the languages that are more expressive – so much so that they are called the Romanic or Romance languages, all of which are derived from Latin. Greek is a language that also is complex and expressive.
Four primary and unique forms of love are found in the Greek language. The New Testament of the Bible was originally written in the Greek language, and three of these four words for love are used throughout the twenty-seven New Testament books. They are: phileo, storge, and agape. The word eros is not used in the New Testament texts. How they are translated is essential in understanding the teachings of Jesus, Paul, and the other apostles.
The Greek word phileo is translated and understood as love between good friends and one’s fellow human being. It is from this root word we derive the name of the city of Philadelphia –- city of brotherly love. The word phileo means to have a special interest in someone or something, frequently with focus on close association, to have affection for, like, or consider someone a close friend.
Honestly, it would probably be helpful if phileo was not translated love
in the New Testament, because it refers to a strong liking or a strong friendship. Of course, we see how phileo gets translated to love,
because in modern culture we say we love
things that we strongly like, such as, I love my car,
I love the way your hair looks,
and You are my best friend. I love you.
The word phileo implies a strong emotional connection, and as a result, the word love,
is used to describe a deep bonding friendship between people.
An example that stands out to me is the bond among military comrades. I have done many funerals in my career as a pastor, and I have especially been honored to conduct funerals of veterans. I have heard several times men expressing their condolences to their fellow veteran, saying, I love that man,
or as they walk past the casket, saying, I love you, buddy.
This is deep phileo love –- love that emerges between people who usually share life experiences with meaningful ties.
Another word for love in the Greek language is the word storge. This Greek word describes the love that exists among family members, that naturally occurs between parents and children, between siblings, and is a part of the love that is experienced between husbands and wives in a good marriage.