Mon. Dec 23rd, 2024

3 Radical Reasons God Wants You to Love the Broken

As I write this, Steve and I are in Bradford, England. Bradford is a multiethnic urban area alive with many ministry opportunities. As you walk to Starbucks in the town square, you see many women in full burkas, and you hear many different languages spoken. Our Reach Beyond office here in England hosts the Millside Center, where refugees from all over the world find help, healing and hope.

As I’ve been walking the streets here, I’ve been thinking about how often the bruised and broken don’t feel that they have earned the right to have a seat at the table. Their situation reminded me of the story of David in 2 Samuel 9. King David, finally on the throne, asks if there is anyone left in Saul’s family to whom he can show kindness. How amazing, right? Saul was David’s archenemy in many ways, and yet David asks if there is anyone left that he can treat well.

As the story unfolds, we discover that there is one family member left, Jonathan’s son Mephibosheth. Jonathan was King Saul’s son and David’s good friend, and Mephibosheth was lame in both feet. Crippled not only physically but by the stigma attached to people who had special needs, Mephibosheth was considered a person of low worth. Yet David invites Mephibosheth to eat at his table.

I love the story of Mephibosheth for so many reasons! Here are just three reasons why I feel this story is so important for today and our time in history:

Jesus consistently demonstrated a heart for broken people. He came for the broken, to give them a seat at His Father’s table (Mark 2:17). I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but sometimes we can be a bit judgmental. We wonder, “Why doesn’t that homeless person simply get a job?” Or we cower in fear when a woman peers at us from behind her burka, wondering, “Is she a terrorist?” The truth is that woman may have been through tragedies and heartbreaks that you or I have never experienced. Perhaps we view those with special needs as “less than,” yet God places intrinsic value on these people. Jesus loves the broken, the bruised and the bloodied. He came for the messy and the misfit. If Jesus had a heart for broken people, how can we who claim to be His followers not?

God’s heart is for everyone to have a seat at His table. It’s easy at times to become numb to the suffering in the world. We get wrapped up in life and forget that God’s heart is for all to come to His table and receive His love (2 Pet. 3:9). He has commissioned us with sharing the good news of His love with all people (Matt. 28:16-20). It’s good to be reminded that this calling is not for a select few. It’s for all of us who claim to follow Jesus. We all have the responsibility to share God’s Good News with all people. If God’s heart is for everyone to have a seat at His table, whom are you inviting?

God has given you a seat at the table, and in return, He asks that you open your heart to others around the table. I never want to lose the wonder that God has given me a seat at His table. He’s taken my shame. He’s clothed me in His righteousness. He’s given me His name. How can I then not open my heart to others and invite them to His table?

Friend, this week, would you ask God to open your heart to those who still need a seat at the table? Perhaps take a few moments and study the worldwide refugee crisis and consider how God might want to use you. Or explore how you might get involved in prison ministry. There are plenty of broken people, including you. So what if we decided to ask God every day to give us someone to love who was broken? Or what if we asked God to give us the courage to share the love of Jesus with just one person per week? How might we see the guests around the table grow?

Lord Jesus, open my heart to see people as You see them. Help me to love as You love and to offer grace as You offer grace. Bring my heart into perfect union with Yours so that those around me see and feel Your love today!

Becky Harling, an author, certified speaker, leadership coach and trainer with the John Maxwell Team, is an energetic and motivational international speaker inspiring audiences to overcome their greatest life challenges and reach their full God-given potential. Her most recent book is How to Listen So People Will Talk. Her husband, Steve Harling, is the president of Reach Beyond, a nonprofit organization seeking to be the voice and hands of Jesus around the world.

This article originally appeared at beckyharling.com.

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