In the sheltered simplicity of the first days after a
baby is born, one sees again the magical closed circle, the miraculous sense of
two people existing only for each other. -Anne Morrow Lindbergh
I thought I understood love–it’s complexity, depth, and vulnerability. Then I had children and all of my preconceived notions about love were shattered. Blossoming in their place like a seedling receiving its first drops of water, a pure, true love sprang up. Tender. Unselfish. Sacrificial.
It was a love strong enough to urge a sleep-deprived mother out of bed during the black hours of the night to comfort a colicky infant; a love tender enough to encourage a mother to stay for endless hours in the NICU singing softly to the baby struggling to for every breath; and a love dedicated enough to stretch and exercise her son’s twisted feet despite his cries of pain.
I thought I understood love–then I had a Savior. Tender. Unselfish. Sacrificial.
His was a love merciful enough to offer forgiveness to a lost and lonely child; a love tender enough to be a Father when she was without hers; and a love sacrificial enough to give his life in her stead.
Parenting is the closest I’ve come to experiencing the sort of love He has for us. Real love.