How to Love Unconditionally
We all have an inner desire to be
loved and to love one another. When we talk about unconditional love, we
sometimes mention how dogs love their owners. It doesn’t matter the mistakes we
make raising a dog, the dog still comes back and still wants our attention.
This usually ends the talk on
unconditional love, which has always bothered me. This may be because I am not
a dog and nor do I want to love like a dog. It also doesn’t teach anyone how to
love unconditionally. I think a better way to talk about unconditional love and
how to love unconditionally is to be
honest and open up and tell you how I learned the
lesson.
“When I wake up in the morning I choose to love
you.”
I meet my girlfriend in college and
we had a lot of conversations about love and our views on it. Mine was very
simple: “When I wake up in the morning I choose to love you.” I must have said
this over and over to her. It didn’t matter how I felt about her or about me.
If I just chose to love her every morning, then in my mind our marriage would
last. If you look at society today, everyone gets married or starts a
relationship because they fell in love.
Divorce or relationships end when the
feeling subsides and neither person works on the relationship. This is how people fall out of love, so in my mind if I choose to love someone then
this removes the emotion from it. Understand, I still fell in love with my
girlfriend and soon she became my wife, all with the understanding that every
day I wake up and chose to love her; that I chose to be devoted to her alone.
If together we woke up every morning and chose to love one another, I figured
we would have a marriage that would last, that would be affair-proof and one
that we could both be proud of.
When Dreams Shatter
I never thought that she would wake
up and choose not to love me, which, unfortunately, for a year of our marriage,
she did. After 10 years of marriage, my wife confessed to me that she had an
affair which lasted for a year, 3 years into our marriage. I was devastated
and, honestly, I still am recovering from it. I couldn’t understand that if she
loved me then why she would hurt me so much. I did a ton of research of why
women had affairs, and all I could come up with is that I was not meeting her
needs. I didn’t understand why she just didn’t tell me at the time why she
chose to wake up and decide not to love me.
My self-confidence and everything that I knew was
shattered. On top of that I had to make a decision to stay with her, to
continue to love her.
I never knew pain like this, and I didn’t know how I was going to survive it.
I didn’t know how I could continue to love someone that wrecked me. Every now
and then a phrase popped into my head and became my mantra, “forgive us our
sins, as we forgive those who have sinned against us” (Matthew 6:12). I
have said and heard the Lord’s Prayer my entire life, but just that one
sentence gave me the will to move on. It now has a very special place in my
heart.
Finding a Solution
After a few months, I was reminded of
another thing I have always heard: “Love keeps no record of being wronged”.
This was hard because even after I chose to stay with her and still woke up
every morning deciding to love her, I held it over her head. I felt justified
in punishing her. I was still broken; still slowly recovering my self-confidence
back to who I once was.
“I felt justified in punishing her.”
But I kept a record of the way that
she wronged me and deep down looked for ways to hurt her as much as she hurt
me. This was not love, it wasn’t unconditional, it was just pure vengeance.
Looking back on how I treated my wife
for two years after I found out about the affair, I am ashamed. I didn’t love
her the way she needed to be loved. I hurt her in ways so that I could feel
justified. I hated myself and everything about me since I never wanted to have
a marriage where the one person that I put all my trust and faith in, ripped
out my heart and threw it on the ground. I forgot how to love and how to be loved.
Living in Forgiveness
“The issue of an extra-marital affair is a good
example of how God has dealt with our sins.”
In looking back, we both loved each
other unconditionally. I forgave her for having an affair and she forgave me
for the way I treated her in those two years after her confession. I have come
to realize that you cannot have unconditional
love without forgiveness. You simply
cannot have love without forgiveness and real love. True love keeps no record
of wrongs. Love isn’t only something that you feel, it is a choice and it isn’t
about you. If love is what you can get out of another person, then it isn’t
love, it is want. The answer to the question of: How to love unconditionally is
loving unselfishly, forgiving the unforgivable and keeping no record of it. I think the issue of
an extra-marital affair is a good example of how God has dealt with our sins.
We don’t deserve anything, but He
loves us unconditionally. The wrongs that we have done are bought by the death
of Jesus on the cross so that instead of harbouring our wrongs, instead of
holding them above our head, Jesus gave us freedom from them. The best example
of unconditional love is what God did through Jesus on the cross. Instead of
doing what I did, keeping a record of an affair or having vengeance on us
because of the affair, God did something different; He forgave, and he
unselfishly died for it so that there would not be a record of it.
If you want to love unconditionally,
Then please pray this prayer with me:
Lord, teach me how to love like you,
how to forgive; how to keep no records of wrongs. Teach me how to love
unconditionally, unselfishly and how to forgive the wrongs that have been done
to me. You took my wrongs and you died for them. I thank you for that. I invite
you into my life to show me how to love those around me. Please show me your
unconditional love. Amen.
If you prayed that prayer, please click the button
that says: “Yes, I prayed the prayer.”
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