Flow God’s Love Through You To Others

Introduction

God never intended His love to stop with us.

One of the great dangers of the Christian life is becoming focused exclusively on our own growth, healing, blessings, knowledge, or spiritual experiences. While these things are important, they are not the final destination. They are preparation for something greater.

God’s love is designed to flow.

It flows from God to us as we hear His voice and receive His love. It transforms us from the inside out as He renews our hearts and minds. Then it flows through us to others as we participate in His work and help advance His Kingdom.

This outward flow is one of God’s primary methods for drawing people toward Himself. Truth reveals the path, but love motivates people to walk it. As people encounter God’s love expressed through His followers, they gain a glimpse of His character, His goodness, and His desire for relationship with them.

Jesus modeled this perfectly throughout His earthly ministry. He saw people through His Father’s eyes. He served them with compassion and sacrifice. He faithfully represented His Father’s character, truth, and purposes. He then called His followers to do the same.

Flowing God’s love can be understood through three simple actions:

See Others As God Sees Them → Serve Others In Love → Represent Christ To The World

These three actions build upon one another.

When we begin to see people through God’s eyes, compassion grows in our hearts. Compassion motivates us to serve. As we serve, people experience God’s love in practical ways. Through our words, actions, character, and testimony, we then have opportunities to represent Christ and help others follow Him.

This article provides an overview of these three aspects of flowing God’s love. Each section introduces key principles, common barriers, and biblical truths that help restore God’s intended flow. Additional articles and Bible studies explore each topic in greater depth.

My prayer is that God will help you see people as He sees them, love them as He loves them, serve them as Jesus served, and represent Christ well so that others may experience His love and be drawn closer to Him.

What?

Flowing God’s love is the outward expression of God’s work within us.

As we hear God’s voice, receive His love, and allow Him to transform us, His love naturally begins to flow through us to others.

Jesus demonstrated this throughout His ministry and calls us to do the same.

In this article, we explore three practical ways God’s love flows through us:

Love Others

Learn to see others as God sees them so that compassion can grow in your heart.

Serve Others

Use the gifts, abilities, experiences, resources, opportunities, and testimony God has given you to meet practical and spiritual needs.

Represent Christ

Help others find and follow Jesus through your words, actions, character, testimony, and example.

Together, these three aspects create a practical framework for participating in God’s work, helping people experience His love, and encouraging them to follow Christ.

Why?

God’s purpose has always been bigger than our personal growth.

He desires to work through His people to demonstrate His love, reveal His truth, make disciples, and advance His Kingdom.

When God’s love flows through us:

* Compassion replaces indifference.
* Service replaces self-focus.
* Christ becomes visible through our words and actions.
* People encounter God’s love through His people.
* Lives are changed.
* Disciples are made.
* God receives glory.

“By this all will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.” — John 13:35

The goal is not simply to become a better person. The goal is to participate in God’s larger mission of helping people follow Jesus.

How:

Flowing God’s love begins by allowing God to change how we see people, how we respond to people, and how we influence people.

This process can be understood through three complementary expressions of God’s love:

1. Love Others

Learn to see others as God sees them.

Godly love begins with godly vision. As we learn to look beyond appearances, behavior, failures, and first impressions, we begin to see people as individuals created by God, loved by God, and possessing eternal value. This perspective develops compassion and prepares our hearts to respond in love.

2. Serve Others

Put love into action.

God has given each of us gifts, abilities, experiences, resources, opportunities, and testimony that can be used to benefit others. Service is love made visible. It addresses practical needs, emotional needs, and spiritual needs while demonstrating God’s care in tangible ways.

3. Represent Christ

Help others find and follow Jesus.

As we love and serve people, opportunities arise to demonstrate God’s character, share His truth, tell our story, encourage faith, and point others toward Christ. Our goal is not to draw attention to ourselves but to help people encounter Jesus and become His disciples.

Together, these three expressions of God’s love help restore God’s intended flow from Him, through us, and to the people around us.

Removing Barriers To The Flow Of God’s Love

God’s design is for His love to flow freely from Him, through us, and to others. Unfortunately, the fallen world introduces barriers that interrupt that flow.

These barriers are often rooted in ungodly desires and the lies that support them. Over time, they influence how we see people, how we respond to people, and how willing we are to represent Christ.

The barriers affecting our ability to love others are often related to pride, judgment, bitterness, fear, prejudice, or indifference. These attitudes prevent us from seeing people through God’s eyes and developing genuine compassion for them.

The barriers affecting our ability to serve others are often related to ownership, materialism, self-protection, comfort, busyness, or self-focus. These attitudes make it difficult to love sacrificially and use our time, gifts, resources, and opportunities for the benefit of others.

The barriers affecting our ability to represent Christ are often related to fear of man, fear of rejection, insecurity, compromise, doubt, or concern about what others may think. These attitudes prevent us from confidently sharing our faith, our testimony, and the hope we have found in Christ.

While these barriers are common, the specific barriers affecting each person are unique.

Our opportunity is to invite God into the process. The Holy Spirit faithfully helps us identify the specific barriers limiting the flow of His love in our lives. As He reveals those barriers, He also reveals the truth needed to remove them.

When we embrace God’s truth in faith and make room for His grace to work, transformation occurs. Old patterns begin to lose their influence, new ways of thinking emerge, and God’s love begins to flow more freely through us.

This process of identifying barriers, revealing truth, embracing truth, and being transformed by grace is one of God’s primary methods for restoring us to His intended design.

AM I Doing?  A Diagnostic Self Test

Consider the following questions prayerfully.

1 – Love Others

    • Do I genuinely see people as God sees them?
    • Am I growing in compassion for others?
    • Is it becoming easier to forgive?
    • Do I value people regardless of their status, beliefs, behavior, or background?
    • Do I see opportunities to love people that I previously overlooked

2 – Serve Others

    • Am I regularly using my gifts and resources to help others?
    • Do I make time to meet practical and spiritual needs?
    • Am I willing to sacrifice comfort for God’s purposes?
    • Do I see service as a burden or a privilege?
    • Is God’s love becoming visible through my actions?

3 – Represent Christ

    • Do people see Christ reflected in my attitudes and actions?
    • Am I willing to share my faith when opportunities arise?
    • Do my words and behavior align with my profession of faith?
    • Would others recognize me as a disciple of Christ?
    • Am I helping people move closer to Jesus?

Where To Learn More

See Others As God Sees Them

Serve God’s Children In Love

You Are An Ambassador For Christ

Testimony – Be A Witness To Others Of God’s Work In You

Evangelism – Share The Good News With Others

Follow Jesus And Become The Person He Intended

How Do I Flow Gods Love To Others – Improving Your Behaviors

Love Others As God Loves You – Improve Your Relationships

Walk In The Light

Pride: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

Pride is a really, really, really big deal.  It is one of the most important things to get right in this life. How you manage pride will not only affect your life here on earth, but it may well determine how and where you spend eternity.

Definition:  Pride is a feeling of deep pleasure or satisfaction derived from

  1. One’s own achievements,
  2. The achievements of those you are closely associated, or
  3. From personal qualities or possessions that are widely admired.

Examples:

  1. “He is proud of his degree from a prestigious university”
  2. “He is proud of his daughter’s performance in the school play”
  3. “He takes great pride in his appearance”

Pride is an important and necessary foundation for healthy mental function. However, misguided pride is at the root of most evils.

The critical differences between healthy and unhealthy pride is the “Why” behind it.  Pride is healthy when it is focused on producing usefulness for others. Pride is unhealthy when it only serves yourself.

Healthy pride (The Good)

  1. He was proud of placing high in his class at a well-recognized university because it will open doors, enable him to get a good job, and allow him to make a real difference in peoples lives.
  2. He was proud of his daughter’s performance in the play because she worked hard in preparation and she is clearly growing as a competant individual.
  3. He takes pride in his physical fitness because it will enable him to live a long and productive life

Unhealthy pride (The Bad)

  • He was proud of being accepted at 15 schools because it was 5 more than any of his friends and proves he is better than them.
  • He always worked extra hours, even when there wasn’t much to do,  just so people would notice him and comment on his dedication, it made him feel useful.
  • We was proud of owning the biggest house on the block, it made him feel important.
  • He got a brand new fancy sports car every year and parked it prominently outside because he knew the neighbors would see it every time they went by and they would think more highly of him, and maybe even become jealous.

You can start to get the picture:  When it is all about ME it can become an issue.

I found it helpful to connect the dots with a few of the things I was proud of.  I came to appreciate that the fancy ski boat I was very proud of was really just a vehicle to connect with people and build a social network around healthy outdoor sports activities.  Recognizing that purpose shifted my thoughts more towards “how can I create an even better waterskiing experience for this group of people”, and away from “how can I make my boat look more beautiful”. 

Exercise: Think about the various things you are proud of in your life (Physical self, Talents/Skills, Education, Accomplishments, Family, Job, Wealth, Possessions, etc). Ask yourself a couple questions: 1)  Can you connect each of them to providing usefulness for others? 2)  Have you been more focused on the “it” or on its usefulness?  Reflect and adjust as needed.

A little bit on how Pride works;

Pride is a relative thing, it requires two parts: Your own mental self-image, and something to compare to.  Both can be a challenge to get right, and both can be a source of issues if you get them wrong..

Your Self image:

  • How do you view yourself – mental and physical capabilities, competency, integrity, ambition, spiritual position with God?
  • There is a lot of literature on how to maintain a healthy self-image.
  • Jordan Peterson is one of the best. Recommend his 12 rules book and videos. <Link here>

The comparison image:

  • Who are you positioning against, and how do you view them
  • You make important comparisons in two directions:
    • Horizontally: You vs other People
    • Vertically: You vs God
  • With other people you are evaluating their mental or physical capabilities, social status, reputation, education, wealth, spiritual worthiness, etc.  
  • With God you are characterizing His role in your life. It is a direct function of your understanding and beliefs. Do you acknowledge His existence, His role in creating and sustaining the universe, and His role in creating and sustaining your life.  Who is really doing all the doing? Do you take all the credit?  Do you acknowledge Him in your head? Do you give Him credit publicly?

So given that framework, here are some of the Ugly(s):

  • Self-Centeredness – Selfishness – It is all about “Me”
    • This is the root of most undesirable situations
      • “Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves” (Philippians 2:3)
  • Pride – pleasure or satisfaction derived from one’s own achievements, the achievements of those with whom one is closely associated, or from personal qualities or possessions that are widely admired. – It is healthy when it is focused on creating useful function for others. It is unhealthy when focused only on yourself.
  • Pride is considered the deadlies sin because it can get in the way of positive inflow from the lord. And with out positive inflow you will die spiritually and spend a long etenrity without the Joy of His love filling you.
    • “Pride goes before destruction,
      And a haughty spirit before a fall.”(Proverbs 16:18)
    • For where envy and self-seeking exist, confusion and every evil thing are there.(James 3:16)
    • For all that is in the world—the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life—is not of the Father but is of the world.(1 John 2:16)
  • Arrogance: Thinking you are above the need for input from others
    • If you do not recognize God is the source of everything you are and everything you do, it is a form of arrogance – and it violates the great commandment – Love God with all your heart.
    • Arrogance also manifests as not being willing to listen or not being coach-able.
      • “To fear the LORD is to hate evil; I hate pride and arrogance, evil behavior and perverse speech.” (Proverbs 8:13)
      • “Where there is strife, there is pride, but wisdom is found in those who take advice.” (Proverbs 13:10)
  • Judgement – positioning yourself above anyone else – seeing them as beneath you – less capable in some way, less moral, less fortunate, poor, homeless, injured. You are all children of God and equal in his eyes.
  • Vanity – Striving to increase your own reputation
    • Doing things for your own physical appearance in excess of practical function
    • Doing extra activities just so that people will notice – workaholic
    • Seeking “credit” for doing charitable things – charity should be done anonymously – God will give you credit
      • “Take heed that you do not do your charitable deeds before men, to be seen by them. Otherwise you have no reward from your Father in heaven. (Matthew 6:1)
  • Boasting:
    • This is what the LORD says: “Let not the wise boast of their wisdom or the strong boast of their strength or the rich boast of their riches (Jeremiah 9:23)
  • Jealousy – Feeling you are missing out on something and you covet or desire what they have.
    • “Each one should test their own actions. Then they can take pride in themselves alone, without comparing themselves to someone else”. (Galatians 6:4)
  • Murder – Take action to bring someone else down – Physically kill or verbally speak against them. To do this you do not see them as equal in Gods eyes.
  • Lust – Wanting something for yourself without a proper and useful purpose for it.  
  • Adultery – Taking something precious from someone else for yourself.

Exercise 2: How do you look at other people? Do you ever compare yourself to them? Is that constructive or just self serving? Do you see each and every individual person in this world as a child of God… worthy of His love?

Exercise 3:  Who is responsible for all you have accomplished? Do you take all the credit?  Who created you?  Who gave you natural skills and capabilities?  Who presents opportunities to use them? Who allows you to breath every second of every day?   Do you acknowledge Him in your head? Do you give Him credit publicly? Do you really love Him with all your heart?

Pride can be a huge barrier for an effective relationship with God.  You need to get over yourself and acknowledge Him and His role just to get started.  Once you do that, you can work your way out of the self-centered mindset you were born into and are continually conditioned by during life in this world.  Once you see yourself as a vessel of God’s love and recognize your purpose here is to be useful to God’s other children, you will be well on your way to an effective relationship with Him. 

Hope this helps.  Leave a comment. Happy to discuss.