Today's meditation was written by Cathy Self, Senior Vice President for the Baptist Healing Trust.
"Love never fails…" 1 Corinthians 13:8a
Today's market has people like even me looking at return on investments (ROI). What have I gained from the investments I have made? Sadly, in recent days, my return has quickly been diminished. Our world suggests that only when our ROI is positive should we continue to make investments. The harder truth is that we seem to have let that principle guide us even in those aspects of our lives that cannot be so easily measured.
A healer working with patients living with chronic pain once suggested that Love asks us to invest even when a positive ROI seems unlikely. In response to a patient's desperate desire for peace of mind, this healer said "you will find peace of mind when you are able to love with all the love you have to give, without judgment or evaluation and without expecting anything in return" (Jampolsky: Teach only Love). Her words still startle me, especially as I reflect on relationships in my life. How many times have I extended words of appreciation, hoping secretly to hear them returned to me as affirmations of my own worth or goodness? When the carefully chosen and beautifully wrapped gift is finally unveiled, does my heart burst with Love or does it crave recognition and admiration for my efforts? If I am honest, the answer is that sometimes that is true in me.
But sometimes, Love emerges pure and clean, no strings attached. The moment I held my grandson only minutes after he arrived into our world was a moment bathed in pure and deep Love. That same Love found its way into being through my hands time and time again at the bedside, especially with those who could not respond and had nothing to give in return. The darkest corners of my memories, however, are those moments when I gave less than my all, whether from fatigue or distraction or judgment. To give less than our all is depleting, but to give all is to receive all.
The gift of Love that is ours to give rests in the quiet content of our mind and heart. The dissatisfaction or discontent we may experience in giving come when we hold back part of our love or acceptance at the moment of our giving. The real treasure is the truth that unfolds in the giving – the more we give, the more we have to give. Love asks not for partial commitment but for total commitment, no holding back, without expectation of reward, response, or return. The moment I attach any of that to my gift of Love, the gift is diminished and in the end so am I.
Love never fails when it is freely and fully given. It restores, replenishes, renews, and invites to give again and again. That seems like a pretty good ROI to me.
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