Tag Archives: See others through God’s eyes

Seeing others through God’s eyes

How do you view the world around you? How often do you think about and pray about matters outside your own life and family? God counsels us to see our lives and the world around us through His eyes. He commands us to regard the needs of others as more important than our own, to bring relief to the poor, the oppressed, the fatherless, and widows. In other words, as we think about our ambitions and life goals, we find God’s best for us when others are at the center of those ambitions. We are, after all, blessed to bless others.

You may say, “But my life is so busy already, how can I find time to think about the needs of others?” Or perhaps you find yourself so overwhelmed by the immensity of world concerns that you find yourself feeling paralyzed and do nothing. I’ve known the feeling.

Have you ever asked God to see others through His eyes? Instead of viewing others as a distraction, an interruption, a nuisance, or a mere way of getting more for yourself, ask God to show you how much He loves them. Seeing others through the eyes of Jesus transforms the way we interact with those around us and the way we think about and view those around the world. A war-torn country, a tragic ferry disaster, and persecuted and martyred Christians in the middle east are transformed from remote situations into personal awareness; personal awareness leads to more passionate prayer concerns. And your prayers, if they include listening to God’s response, lead to greater personal response.

If you sponsor a child through Compassion or World Vision or some other similar organization, you are opening your eyes to see others as God sees them. Your $1/day provides for vital needs and provides opportunity for children to find God’s love and purpose for their lives. Your fervent and daily prayers for that child seek God’s divine intervention in their life. But what if you pray also for the child’s family and maybe send them a gift once a year, not only to provide for them but to remind them that you care and are praying for them? What if you start praying also for their community, that others around them would find God’s love? And what if you started praying for that child’s country and tune your mind to learn more about their conditions and learning how God is at work there?

Asking God to see others through His eyes transforms us from self-focus to seeing others.

Love the Lord your God with all your heart…and love OTHERS as He loves you.

Seeing others differently (and med update)

I recently saw this quote on the Compassion International website:

“Treat a child as though he is already the person he is capable of being.” ~ Haim Ginott

Actually, isn’t that good advice for all our interactions? Especially those who are paralyzed by fear or worry, addictions and hangups… those who have yet to discover the fullness of God’s best for them. Maybe even ourselves when we fall prey to the battle for our minds!

Believing in the potential of others is a way to see others with the loving eyes through which God sees them. In his book, Revolution In World Missions, YP Yohannon describes a young missionary in India who was severely beaten and tossed outside the city because he told others about Jesus. He turned his eyes to heaven and asked God to increase his love for the people of this town so that he could return to share God’s love with them. He said, “It was as if God removed my eyes from their sockets and gave me instead the eyes of Jesus so I could see others through HIS eyes.”

I recall the story of the Christian woman who worked in a pool of secretaries. One of the other secretaries was always emailing off-color jokes and gossiping. Several times, the Christian felt like giving the other woman a piece of her mind and telling her to stop emailing her. But a quiet inner voice told her to remain quiet and “only speak love”. Some time later, the offensive woman approached the woman and asked if she could confide in her about a problem. She said all the others were so judgmental but she felt she could trust “the quiet Christian.”

What would happen if we intentionally applied this principle in our interactions with those who regularly rub us the wrong way, those who are always complaining, those to whom we are not naturally attracted? What if we asked God to help us see others (and ourselves) differently and believed in God’s power to speak through caring words and actions that quietly encourage others to seek God’s best for them? I believe it makes more of a difference than we might ever imagine!

I wonder who is in your path today that needs someone to see them through God’s loving eyes?

“Accept one another just as Christ accepted you.” Romans 15:7
PS- Medical update: Today marks 6 months post stem cell transplant! Recent tests confirms cancer remains in remission (Since January). Appetite returned with steroid treatment and I am OFF the Failure To Thrive diagnosis. I REALLY am enjoying getting out to enjoy God’s creation! God is good ALL the time. – BT