Four reasons why God favors no one over you
1. God’s Son
shed his last drop of blood for you. God loves you with his
whole heart. He loves you with every speck of his enormous love. That
means no matter how much he loves others, he couldn’t possibly love
anyone else more than he loves you.
A woman wrote about the above paragraph:
I had wanted to say, “God loves me with his whole heart? Come off
it! It’s a wonder he loves me at all! Grantley, you exaggerate too
much!” But the Lord silenced me with John 17:23:
I in them and you in me. May they be brought to complete
unity to let the world know that you sent me and have loved
them even as you have loved me.
I can’t get round it; I can’t burrow under it or climb over it. So
the only thing I can do is go through it, absorbing it as I go.
Christ is in me – and God loves me as much as he loves Christ. And
no way can God’s love for Christ be half-hearted. I went to sleep
snuggling into that verse last night.
Scripture makes no promise that you will always feel loved,
nor that circumstances will always make it obvious that you are
loved. God simply promises that you are loved. No suffering or
tragedy will ever separate you from God’s love (Romans 8:35-39). A
snap-shot in time proves nothing. Only eternity’s movies can
adequately portray the infinitude of God’s love for you.
The more you love someone the more important that person is to you.
So the fact that God loves you with his whole heart means you are more
important to God than you could ever imagine.
2. Before God
forgave us we were all spiritually dead. Scripture affirms
that every person on this planet was dead in their sin. You can’t get
any deader than dead. God couldn’t say, I prefer her because she’s a
little less dead than him.
But through Christ we can be forgiven. When God looks at a forgiven
person, he can’t find one sin. When you are forgiven, God can’t find a
person on the entire planet, more forgiven than you.
So without Christ we were all equally dead in our sin and in Christ
we are all equally forgiven.
3. God is
all-powerful. That means he doesn’t need some people more than others.
If God could only use young people, or strong people, or rich
people, or famous people, or educated people, then God must be so weak
that he needs human strength; so poor that he needs us to give him a
few dollars; so foolish that he needs human education.
4. The Lord
loves using small and seemingly unimportant things. 1
Corinthians 1:26 says, ‘Look at what you were before God called you.
Not many of you were wise by human standards. Not many of you had
great influence. Not many of you came from important families. But God
chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise, and he chose
the weak things of the world to shame the strong. He chose what this
world thinks is unimportant and what this world looks down on and
thinks is nothing in order to bring to nothing what the world thinks
is important. God did this,’ the Bible continues, ‘so that no one
could boast in his presence.’
In the Bible, the book of Jonah seems small and insignificant. It’s
only 2-3 pages long. I often feel like that: small and insignificant.
I have often felt so useless that I would have committed suicide if I
wasn’t worried about having to face God afterwards. But the Bible
would be very much poorer without this tiny book. And the Kingdom of
God would be much poorer without you. In this tiny book we see God
using a storm, a whale, a heartless, rebellious, moody man, a plant,
and a grub. Are you less gifted than a grub? Then God can do mighty
things through you. If God could use a storm and a plant and a grub,
God is smart enough to use you. God is so powerful he can use anything
to do his work. No Christian is too old, too poor, too uneducated, too
stupid, too sick to be gloriously used of God.
Do you believe there is nothing God cannot do? Do you believe God
could bring a dead person back to life? Do you believe God could bring
a dead person back to life through your prayers? Those words ‘through
your prayers’ don’t suddenly make God weak. Do you believe God can
save thousands of souls? Then you must also believe God can save
thousands of souls through you.
Either God can do the impossible through you, or he isn’t God.
Keep telling yourself, ‘There is nothing God cannot do through
me.’
Heaven stands on tip toe waiting to see the astounding things you
will achieve for the glory of God.

No one is more important to God than you are: Bible proofs
In the book of Galatians 2:6-9, Paul speaks of Peter, James and
John. If anyone could claim to be have a special place in God’s heart
it was these men. When Jesus walked this planet they seemed his
closest friends. Later they were called the pillars of the church.
Without pillars the whole building collapses. Yet Paul wrote of these
men, ‘whatever they were, it makes no difference to me; God shows
personal favoritism to no one.’ Paul was speaking about Peter, the man
honored by millions as the first pope. Even his shadow healed people.
Paul was speaking about the leaders of the church, the greatest
saints, when divinely inspired to write, ‘whatever they were, it makes
no difference to me; God shows personal favoritism to no one.’ Tell
yourself, ‘The Bible says I am as important to God as Peter, James
and John.’
One day the disciples told Jesus that his mother wanted to speak
with him. Jesus replied, ‘Who is my mother? Anyone who does God’s will
is my mother’ (Luke 8:20-21).
So anyone who obeys God has as much right to speak with Jesus, as
Mary has. Anyone who does God’s will has the same place in Jesus’
heart as his own mother.
Another time when Jesus was preaching, a woman shouted, ‘Blessed is
the woman who gave you birth.’ Yet instead of agreeing with her, Jesus
said Blessed rather is the person who obeys God (Luke 11:27-28).
Jesus was born only once. So only one woman could have the
privilege of giving birth to the Messiah. That was Mary’s unique
blessing. But spiritually, we are all equally blessed. In Ephesians
1:3 the Bible says each of us have been lavished every spiritual
blessing. How could it be otherwise? If Christ died (ie gave his all)
for sinners, what would he possibly withhold from them now that
they are cleansed and made God’s precious children? As Scripture
points out, since you are so dear to God that he gave his only Son for
you – the most costly gift in the universe – there can be nothing he
won’t give you (Romans 8:32, see also 1 Corinthians 3:21-22).
Tell yourself, ‘I am as spiritually blessed as anyone.’

You have a special place in God’s heart
From the age of four, I loved helping my grandpa lay cement paths.
Almost anyone could do a better job than a little child, but that was
irrelevant. I was irreplaceable. I had a special place in grandpa’s
heart.
And you have a special place in God’s heart. To him you are
irreplaceable. The Almighty needs the help of no one. Yet the Father’s
joy could never be complete without your contribution.
My grandpa wanted me to share in his work. Not because he needed
me, but because I was special to him. And God wants you to share in
his work. Think about that for a minute – God’s work is the most
important work in the universe. God has something of divine
importance; something of eternal significance that he wants you to
help him with. Wow! You are important!
To God, you are special. I used to think yeah, yeah God loves me,
but he loves everyone. To him I’m just one of millions of Christians.
God has his favorites and I’m not one of them. I thought I was being
humble thinking this way. But what I was really doing was accusing God
of imperfect love. In fact, I was calling God a liar. God says he
loves you. So to believe that you are unimportant to God is to believe
that God is a liar. There is nothing humble about calling the holy
Lord a liar! It’s sin.
God is the most important person in the universe. So if you are
important to him, you are important! There is nothing humble about
telling the all-wise God that he’s wrong. This is serious.
How dare I go up to the glorious Lord who shed his life’s blood for
me and tell him, ‘I’m not special to you.’ Dare I go to the cross
where I deserved to hang, look into my Savior’s bleeding face, and
accuse him of loving others more? He died for me! What more dare I
demand he do before I accept the fact that I’m special to him! I need
to feel as bad about that sin as if I were guilty of murder.
It’s said that a pirate killed a man. He was so horrified by what
he had done that he couldn’t sleep properly for weeks. But he kept
killing. He got to the point where he could kill a man, use the corpse
as a pillow and sleep soundly all night. We are like that. We have
committed the sin of wrong thinking so often that our consciences have
become as hard as concrete. For other sins our consciences have might
still be soft but to the sin of doubt and small thinking, we are
hardened.
Lepers lose fingers, toes, sometimes noses. It was always thought
the disease did this. But a brilliant medical missionary began to
question this. Dr Paul Brand noticed that lepers would go to bed whole
and wake up without a finger. No one could ever find a trace of the
missing finger. He eventually discovered that the fingers were being
chewed off and carried away by rats! However could this happen? It’s
because lepers lose feeling. And that’s our problem. We have lost
feeling in part of our conscience. And then the devil – that fat rat –
begins to chew us and instead of shooing him away, we don’t even
realize what he’s doing. We desperately need God to make our
consciences sensitive.

The crunch
We now come to the most crucial part of this message. This message
could give you a boost for a few days, then fade and ultimately
achieve nothing. Or it could be the turning point in your life, making
you the powerful force in the kingdom of God that you were created to
be.
It’s frightening to consider how much this world misses out when
any Christian thinks he or she is not special to God. There’s no
Christian who cannot be used of God to win thousands of souls, should
the Lord so chose. There’s no Christian who can’t be used to change
the course of human history. But while we hold on to the sin of small
thinking, it won’t happen. This is serious – more serious than any of
us can imagine. To rid ourselves of this sin will probably cost us
enormously, but for us to be freed from sin cost Christ far more.
For us to give up the sin of small thinking is as hard as it is for
an alcoholic to permanently give up drink. We need a gigantic miracle
in our personal lives. It begins by admitting that we are addicted to
the serious sin of not seeing ourselves and our possibilities as God
sees them. We must hate this sin. We must admit that we are such a
slave to this sin that the only way we can be freed is by a divine
miracle.
I suggest the following prayer. Pray any part of it that you feel
you can agree with.
Lord in your mercy begin to open my mind and my conscience to
the seriousness of my sin. I have sinned in thinking you have
favorites. I have sinned by thinking I’m not important to you. I
have sinned by thinking you don’t want to use me to do amazing
things of eternal significance for your glory. My addiction to small
thinking has hurt you and done enormous damage. Through Jesus’ shed
blood, I beg your forgiveness. I ask for total deliverance from my
addiction.
I now declare that you want to do mighty things through me. I
refuse to tolerate any lesser thought. And I look to you for divine
strength to forever defeat such sinful thinking. Lord, don’t let me
ever again commit this sin without feeling your strong displeasure.
No matter what it costs me, be glorified in my life.

Maintaining the victory
For very many years I have been constantly tempted to feel useless.
I wrote a book giving all the reasons why every one of us can achieve
great things for God and I had to keep reading that book every day,
week after week, year after year. Whenever I stopped reading it for a
few days I would slip back into depression again.
So I make no apologies for expecting that you will need to hold on
to the truths in this message and read it over and over for maximum
benefit. They are important truths that the devil tries with all his
power to make us forget. We must hold on to them as if our very life
depended upon it. In fact, it can be more important than life itself.
Other people’s eternal destinies could depend upon whether we grasp
these truths and live them. The Lord wants to make you a powerful
force in the kingdom of God.
Your need, however, is too chronic for any self-help technique to
deliver you from your addiction. You must daily ask the Lord to
re-sensitize your conscience. The Lord’s prayer – ‘give us this day
our daily bread . . . lead us not into temptation’ - proves our need
to daily bring to God our need for divine help in conquering
temptation. Without this we will be drawn into a false and dangerous
delusion that our dependence upon God is less than absolute. ‘Let
anyone who thinks he stands,’ warns Scripture, ‘take heed lest he
fall’ (1 Corinthians 10:12). However, your divine Helper, the Holy
Spirit, dwells inside you, wherever you go, 24 hours a day. It’s
tragically easy to slip back into old habits and hardly notice it.
Daily look to him to set off the alarm bells whenever you begin to
slip back. You then have divine protection.
Negative thoughts will still come but, once exposed, you can repel
them with the same disgust as you would a blood-sucking leech. These
filthy invaders from the sewers of hell are not part of you. We can’t
think of nothing, nor can we think of two things at once, so the best
way to eject wrong thoughts is to seize the opposite thought, ideally,
a statement you know to be true because it’s in the Word of God. Cling
to it like a non-swimmer holding a life rope in swirling waters.
Thrash the devil by using every approach of an invader as a cue to
throw a praise party in your mind, exalting in the fact that the truth
(reality) is the exact opposite of the lie trying to invade you. This
shines a floodlight on low life that can survive only in darkness.
Resist the devil and he will flee (James 4:7). He’ll try to sneak back
later, but as you daily look to the Lord you will live in victory.

Appendix: why the sin of unbelief is so addictive
This section details some of the reasons why I became addicted to
wrong thinking. The cause of your own addiction will not necessarily
be the same, but it is still helpful to be alerted to the dangers.
I used to sometimes put myself down in the hope that whoever I was
speaking to would take pity on me and give me an ego boost. I was
oblivious to how pathetic such behavior is until one day I met someone
who refused to play my game. Instead of boosting me, all she would do
was rebuke me and accuse me of sin for being negative about myself. I
was most annoyed until I began to see myself more accurately. By
making myself dependent upon ego boosts from other people I had made
myself frighteningly vulnerable. I was expecting others to do
something that was my responsibility. Moreover, my actions proved that
human praise meant more to me than the divine approval I already had.
And every time I got the flattery I was seeking, I was being rewarded
for my put downs, thus increasing my addiction.
If the success of achieving a goal is sweet, to be significantly
more successful than I had dared dream is exceedingly delicious. The
simplest way of ensuring a repeat of this highly addictive thrill is
to convince myself I will do poorly. The exhilaration I get when I
exceed my low expectations is rich reward for having a low view of my
God-given potential. I was grieving God, defaming his name and
committing the sin of unbelief – deliberately lowering my faith – in
the (sometimes unconscious) hope of experiencing a high.
And although I knew faith pleases God, I also knew that taking a
faith step is scary. It’s easier to take the lazy, cowardly way out.
Making wise-cracks at my own expense was another trap. Every time
someone laughed, I got my reward, but every such wise-crack chiseled
negative attitudes a little deeper into my mind. I was baiting my own
trap.
Addictions have their momentary pleasures. In the end, however,
they are a curse keeping us from the full and exciting and
God-glorifying life we were created for. As we daily look to Jesus,
however, the curse will be broken.
Not to be sold. © Copyright, 1997,
Grantley Morris. Not to be copied in whole or in part without citing
this entire paragraph. Many more compassionate, inspiring, sometimes
hilarious writings by Grantley Morris available free at the following
internet site www.net-burst.net Freely you have received, freely give.