Day 3

Love is not selfish

Be devoted to one another in brotherly love; give preference to one another in honor. —Romans 12:10

Selfishness and love are in constant opposition to one another. While love asks us to deny ourselves for the sake of someone else, selfishness compels us to focus on ourselves at their expense. Selfishness is like a disease that suffocates our capacity to love. When we choose self-centeredness, we become higher maintenance—more needy, overly sensitive, demanding. And then when we don’t get our way, we judge others harshly while being blind to our own faults.

Sadly, we live in a world that is enamored with “self.” The culture around us teaches us to focus on our personal appearance, feelings, and desires as the top priority. We despise this trait in other people but justify it in ourselves. “I deserve . . .” and “I expect . . .” and “I want . . .” are appetizers we use to feed selfishness.

Regrettably, these selfish tendencies are engrained into every person from birth. You can see it in the way young children act, and often in the way adults use and mistreat one another. Almost every sinful action can be traced back to a selfish motive. And its dangers become painfully apparent once inside a marriage relationship.

Marriage exposes our selfishness in living color. When a husband puts his interests, desires, and priorities ahead of his wife, he is flying a flag of his own selfishness. When a wife constantly complains about the time and energy she spends meeting the needs of her husband, she’s revealing her selfishness. Moodiness and complaining are selfishness in disguise. Laziness and irresponsibility are other masks it wears. Boasting and bragging. Being easily angered. Talking too much. Never listening. The list goes on and on. Even generous actions can be selfish if the motive is to gain bragging rights or receive a reward.

In reading this, did you focus just now on your partner’s tendency to do some of these things but ignore your own? Why do we have such low standards for ourselves and yet such high expectations for our mate? The answer is a painful pill to swallow. We all struggle with selfishness.

The bottom line is this: you either make decisions out of love for others or love for yourself.

But love “does not seek its own” (1 Corinthians 13:5). It beautifully finds its satisfaction in the welfare of others. Loving couples in loving marriages are bent on humbling themselves and taking good care of the other flawed human with whom they have chosen to share their lives. They understand that by getting married, they are giving themselves away and releasing the right to live the rest of their lives for themselves. It’s putting the happiness of their partner before their own.

Choosing to love your mate will cause you to say “no” to what you want so you can say “yes” to what they need. It doesn’t mean you cannot enjoy any personal fulfillment, but you don’t negate the happiness of your spouse to enjoy it yourself.

Love also leads to inner freedom. It helps liberate you from the anxiety of unrealistic expectations and unmet demands. By prioritizing the well-being of your mate, you experience a fulfillment that cannot be duplicated by selfish actions.

Unselfish people are a perpetual delight. They make amazing friends and spouses. They are willing to set their own jealousy and demands aside and lose themselves in the joy of loving, serving, and giving to another. Often this is practiced by simply allowing your mate a few seconds to go first, speak first, or be served before you are. The more you learn to resist your own selfishness daily, the stronger, more lovable, and happier you will become.

Nobody knows you as well as your spouse. And that means no one will be quicker to recognize a change when you deliberately start sacrificing your wants and wishes to make sure his or her needs are met. They may welcome it with warmth or be silently suspicious, but they will likely notice it.

If you find this day’s challenge hard to swallow and are frustrated with the idea of sacrificing your own desires to benefit your spouse, then you may have a deeper problem with selfishness than you want to admit.

Ask yourself these questions:

Remember, your partner also has the challenge of learning to love a selfish person. But don’t wait on them to earn your love. Determine to be the first to demonstrate real love to them, with your eyes wide open. Show them what it looks like by your unexpected example. And when all is said and done, you’ll both be more fulfilled.

“Do nothing from selfishness or empty conceit, but with humility of mind regard one another as more important than yourselves” (Philippians 2:3).

TODAY'S DARE

Whatever you put your time, energy, and money into will become more important to you. It’s hard to care for something you are not investing in. Along with refraining from any negative comments, buy your spouse something that says, “I was thinking of you today.”

____ Check here when you’ve completed today’s dare.

What did you choose as the gift for your spouse? What happened when you gave it to them? What was their response?

______________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________

leaf-top