My Take:
The Wisdom of Tenderness
Between this book and Abba’s Child, I think the good news of God’s profound acceptance found its way into my heart. Thank you so much Brennan Manning, for being honest about your struggles and willing to confront the core drivers of your needs and write them down to share with others. I highly recommend this book!
The crux of this book can be stated as such, “Do I wholeheartedly trust God’s likes me?” When we encounter the heart of God’s tenderness, we are able to find and make peace in our lives in ways we been previously unable.
From the Book: The gift of reconciling to His tenderness and mercy
The gentle growing into oneness, the reconciliation with the painful parts of our past, allows us to feel the accepting embrace of Christ. When we accept His tenderness, we are freed being tyrannical critics to ourselves, and freed from the enslaving barriers of our fears. We become less defensive, more simple, more direct, more able to commit, more aware but less afraid of the forces that drive home our insignificance.
It is in the crucible of pain that we become more tender. Not all pain, or all the world would be tender, since no one escapes pain and suffering. Anyone who helps in the healing process must have experiential knowledge of pain. Perhaps our particular brand of pain equips us to pray more passionately for others who are similarly afflicted.
“It is now quite clear in my mind that nothing REALLY happens in a person’s life until he has experienced and accepted the tenderness of God. Only then can be tender with God’s children.”
Experiencing His Tenderness for Others
“As Christians living in the Spirit, we are called to pass on the tenderness of God. The borders of our compassion extend beyond those who opt for our same lifestyle, favor our existence or make us feel good.”
Christianity is all about loving. We either take it or leave it. When we are narrow, cold, haughty, unforgiving, and judgmental, we push Jesus off his seat and take our place there to pronounce judgment on others, though we’ve neither the knowledge nor the authority to judge. None of us has ever seen a motive. Therefore, we don’t know, we can’t do anything more than suspect what inspires the action of another. For this reason, we are told not to judge. We just aren’t equipped to judge. And most of the time, we’re wrong in our judgments of others. Our attention centers on what people are NOT, rather than on what they ARE and what they might become.
Unrepented sin obscures OUR openness with others. Sin locks us up in the prison of our own egos. When we are closed and incommunicative with others, our own personality becomes impoverished. We trade tenderness for callousness and insensitivity becomes a lifestyle.
Ask yourself tough questions:
· Have I failed to take initiative in alleviating fear, anxiety, and heartache in my home or community?
· Have I had contempt for others: the less educated, different ethnic groups, economics, or religious, or those separated by faction from me?
· Have a dismissed others and tried not to make them feel their worth and dignity?
· Have I sought to be respected without respecting others?
· Have I often kept others waiting?
· Have I responded only to those friendships which might prove profitable to me?
· Have I blackened the character of another with harmful remarks, true or not?
· Have I concentrated on what’s in it for me, rather than what’s in me for it?
· Having a dismal response to these questions, can I still be gentle with myself as Christ is with me, and humbly acknowledge His Word hasn’t fully taken over my being, and tenderly smile at my own frailty as I accept my need for further conversion?
Disciples of Jesus often try to badger, bully, and bludgeon themselves into earning God’s mercy. The haunting memories of love not spoken, support not offered, compassion not extended, and abysmal indifference to human need suddenly resurface, sometimes decades past. These unwanted recollections paralyze faith and overwhelm the message of Jesus, and often lead to drug induced states of consciousness, providing the temporary escape from shame and blame.
Pouring Out His Tenderness Onto Others
We can only receive mercy if we are prepared to accept the company that Mercy places us in. It is no good wanting to be shown mercy and then reserving the right to look on disapprovingly at all the other fellows. Since receiving mercy is inseparable from showing mercy, unceasing prayer must include the cry to turn my heart of stone into a heart of flesh. Showing mercy isn’t easy when it comes to lavishing benevolence on ingrates who have no intention of reform. Yet that’s what Abba does. He himself is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked. We can no longer come at God with our unwarranted professionalism or our obnoxious familiarity, and we know it.
We may begin to presume life owes us the best- and nothing less- but when we do, reality rarely lives up to our expectations. We begin to take everything for granted that comes our way.
The more we realize everything is a gift, the more the tenor of our life becomes one of humble, joyful, thanksgiving.
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