How deep
the Father's love for us,
How vast
beyond all measure
That He should give
His only Son
To make a wretch His
treasure
How great the pain of
searing loss,
The Father turns His
face away
As wounds which mar
the chosen One,
Bring many sons to
glory.
This past week I got an up close and personal view
of the compelling love a father. A love that consumes and drives. A love that
is desperate. A small boy, four years old was missing in San Benito Poite, the
remote village where we go to teach Bible study. I was not in the village at
the time, but my co-worker, Clifford, was, as well as my other co-worker’s
husband, Rick. The whole village joined the search, combing the bushes around
the village, searching each home, running up jungle paths. Even young people
dove into the river which runs along the village, searching the depths. A year
or so ago, two children from another village disappeared and have not been seen
since. This family knew this. They were desperate to find that boy. I received
a call, telling me of the situation. The boy had already been missing five
hours. I shuddered at the thought of what could have happened. The jungle is so
close, the river… right there. I prayed and cried out to God. I spread the word
and others joined in prayer.
A police report had to be made by the father, which
required leaving the village and travelling more than two hours to the police
station in town. I can’t imagine the pain he felt when he tore himself away
from the search and left to make the report. Why did he go? Because he felt it
was best for his son. Maybe it would help him be found. He was desperate. Even
though he would have rather kept searching, he went. My pickup was used to take
him. After he went to town, they arrived briefly at my house. I saw an
anguished father. Only one thought filled his mind as he twisted his ball cap
in his hands: his son. I got in the pickup to join the trip back to the
village, crying out to God for this man’s son as darkness closed in around the
land. It gets darker sooner in the jungle.
Before we had traveled far, we received a call: the
boy had been found! I watched the waves of emotion rush through that man, that
father. I watched as his shoulders shook. The look of anguish gave way, but it
was not sheer joy that filled his face, instead it was desperation… a desperate
wish that he was there with his child right then, he wanted to see him, touch
him, know that he was okay. He wanted to keep him safe; hold him tight and
never let him face such fear again. We finally arrived in the village and went
inside to see the boy sleeping in the arms of his mother. Relief and joy swept
across the father’s face then. We stayed only long enough to make sure all was
well, then slipped away to let the family rejoice together.
We were fairly quiet as we traveled back, each
absorbed in the thoughts and emotions of the situation. It wasn’t until the
next day that Clifford voiced what had been tugging the edges of my thoughts:
that father’s desperate love showed us a little glimpse of our heavenly Father’s
desperate love for His children, and the anguish He must feel when one goes
astray. Oh, He never has to wonder where they are, and He knows the outcome,
but that desperate willingness to do anything to bring His children back is the
same. After all, His love drove Him to give His Son to bring us back to Him.
What amazing love!
Which brings me to 2 Corinthians 5:14: “For the love
of Christ controls us…” Depending on the version you read, you will find that the
love of Christ constrains, compels, and controls us. It is to be the driving
force of our life, that thing that constrains us from doing certain things, but
compels us to do others. Controlled by the love of Christ. I thought of this as
I sat in the home of a pastor. He was speaking of the difficulties another
church was facing, and said he wished he could help, but he had tried before
and it seemed they didn’t want help. “I think,” he said, “it is better I just
stay to myself and let them see what they will do.” My heart cringed inside. I
could feel where he was coming from, I could understand the feeling of trying
to help and having that help rejected… but God… Oh, how God loves us. He never
gives up because we rejected His help. He woos us when we refuse to be wooed.
He loves us when we are unlovely. And it is His love that is to control us. How
then, Lord, am I to love those that don’t seem to want it? Teach me Your love.
Friday as we traveled along the highway, we came
across a man passed out on the road, clearly very drunk and beyond ability to
move around. Knowing how vehicles fly along that highway, we realized he could
be run over there on the road, we have heard of it happening. We stopped and as
I watched Clifford help the man off the road, dirty, smelly, and stuff coming
out of his mouth, I thought of people who are in a condition like that
spiritually. It is hard to love them. Maybe they are clean and nice on the
outside, but spiritually they are as repulsive to us as that man was on the
outside. Whether through their judgmental pride, their rejection of us, or
hurtful things they have said, they have become hard for us to love. How Lord?
How can I love them? I want to be controlled by Your love, fill me. Help me.