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Tag: GodsLove

211. Embracing God’s Love 

We’re kicking off the Scrupulosity Series by starting at the foundation, God’s love. 

In this episode, Carrie explores how shame, church hurt, and feelings of unworthiness can cloud our view of Him, and how Scripture invites us to receive the steady, unchanging love of Christ that nothing can take away.

Episode Highlights:

  • How scrupulosity distorts your view of God’s character and keeps you stuck in fear
  • Why embracing God’s love is foundational to healing from religious OCD
  • Common reasons we reject God’s love, including church hurt and shame
  • The difference between accepting God’s forgiveness and compulsively seeking reassurance
  • Practical ways to notice evidence of God’s love in everyday life
  • How speaking Scripture daily can help renew your mind and strengthen your identity in Christ

Episode Summary:

Why Does God’s Love Feel So Hard to Receive When You Have Scrupulosity?

If you struggle with scrupulosity, you probably already know the “right” answer.

God loves me.

You have heard it your whole life. You may have even said it to someone else. But deep down, it feels just slightly out of reach. Like it is true for everyone else, but not fully true for you.

As we begin this new scrupulosity series, we are starting at the foundation. Not with more rules. Not with more checking. But with something deeper. We are talking about what it really means to embrace God’s love when OCD has tangled it up with fear.

Because scrupulosity quietly shifts how we see God. And when our view of Him shifts, everything else does too.

Why does God’s love feel real for everyone else but not for me?

So many of you have asked this.

You can believe Jesus died for sinners. You can believe in grace. But when it comes to your intrusive thoughts, your doubts, or your past mistakes, something feels different.

In this episode, we gently explore why that gap exists and why it makes sense that your heart feels guarded.

Did church hurt affect how I see God?

If you have ever been rejected, criticized, or overlooked in Christian spaces, that pain does not just disappear.

Sometimes without realizing it, we begin to assume God will treat us the way people did.

But God is not like man. He is not withdrawing from you because you struggled this week. Scripture paints a very different picture of His heart, and we take time to look at that together.

Why do I still not feel forgiven?

Scrupulosity loves to replay things.

Did I confess correctly? Was I sincere enough? Do I need to go back and make sure?

There is a difference between chasing the feeling of forgiveness and accepting what God has already said is true. That distinction can bring tremendous relief, and we begin unpacking it in this conversation.

How can I actually begin to notice God’s love?

Sometimes the issue is not that God is absent. It is that your brain has been trained to scan for danger instead of grace.

I share a simple exercise in this episode that shows how powerful our focus really is and how shifting what you look for can begin to change what you see in your everyday life.

It may sound small, but it is not insignificant.

Scriptures Mentioned in This Episode

  • 1 John 4:16
  • Romans 8:38 to 39
  • Jeremiah 31:3
  • Psalm 103:12
  • John 15:13
  • Romans 5:8
  • Psalm 139
  • Psalm 36:7
  • Psalm 18:19
  • Zephaniah 3:17
  • Ephesians 3:18 to 19

Tune into this week’s episode of Christian Faith and OCD, and let’s begin rebuilding your view of God together. And if someone you love is quietly battling scrupulosity, share this with them today.

Transcript

Hello, OCD Warriors, and welcome back to the podcast. I am excited today because we are kicking off a scrupulosity series. This series was really birthed from you guys, from surveying the audience and looking at what topics you were interested in. I know we have a lot of people who listen because they’re Christian and they’re really struggling with scrupulosity.

Hello and welcome to Christian Faith and OCD with Kerry Bach. I’m a Christ follower, wife, and mother, licensed professional counselor who helps Christians struggling with OCD get to a deeper level of healing. When I couldn’t find resources for my clients with OCD, God called me to bring this podcast to you with practical tools for developing greater peace.

We’re here to bust through the shame and stigma surrounding struggling with OCD as a Christian, sharing hopeful stories of healing and helping you replace uncertainty with faith. I’m here to help you let go of the past and future to walk in the present abundant life God has for you. So let’s dive right into today’s episode.

That’s something we’ve talked about on the show in the past, and you can certainly search for that topic via our website. On the podcast breakdown page, you can type in any topic that you’re interested in, whether that’s prayer or Bible, and it’ll pop up those episodes for you. Today, I am talking about embracing God’s love.

I thought that would be an appropriate topic since we just passed Valentine’s Day. I also really believe that one of the keys to working through scrupulosity is changing your theology. And when I say changing your theology, what I’m meaning is lining it up more with an accurate biblical theology of what we actually see of God.

And if you believe that God genuinely loves you, deep down in your core, for me, that just has changed everything in my life. And so I definitely want that for every person who’s listening here. And I know from talking with people who deal with scrupulosity that God’s love often feels like it’s out of reach.

It feels like some type of concept that’s available for others, but not necessarily available for you. It’s theoretical. It’s kind of out there, but it doesn’t feel tangible. It doesn’t feel like something that’s close to your heart that you can really, deep down, know. Not just at a surface level, like, oh yeah, yeah, God loves me, but how can we really embrace it?

Before we get into embracing it, if we want to move from one place to another and feel stuck in our current situation, we first have to reflect on how in the world did I get here in the first place. I don’t know if you’ve ever had that happen in your life where you’re sitting there going, wait a minute, I’m in a pickle. How did I even get in this pickle in the first place? I need to understand this so that this doesn’t happen again.

So what are some of the reasons that we reject the love of God in our life? I would say the number one is that we’ve been hurt by people, sometimes by people who don’t claim to love God, but many times by people who do claim to love God. I know that I have been deeply rejected and wounded by other Christians. That has had a profound impact on my life.

I mean, people that I used to be close to, used to eat with, used to talk to on the phone on a regular basis, and now we don’t speak at all. That’s hard. Maybe you had a church hurt situation where people rejected you because you didn’t live up to their particular expectations. Maybe it hasn’t been an overt rejection, but maybe you’ve experienced just being outside the inner circle, maybe just a lack of acceptance from other people in church where you felt alone or isolated.

I know that has happened to me at various points in my life where I felt like I’ve tried to get close to certain people, but it’s just been met with challenges.

Another reason I think we reject the love of God is because we feel this sense of being unworthy, like we have personal defects, and how could God love me if I am dealing with this particular sin in my life or I don’t know. I’m the awkward person. Does God really love me? I’m not the person that’s going to be picked for homecoming queen, or I’m not the guy that’s going to be picked to be the quarterback of the football team.

One thing I know is that if you don’t have any sense of self-love, it’s really hard to receive, to open yourself up to receive love from others, including God. And what I mean by self-love is not this selfishness or overinflated sense of pride. I’m talking about recognizing your worth and value as being created in God’s image and being loved as His child.

That is what I refer to as self-love. I realize people may use that differently in different ways, and sometimes it has a bad connotation. But Jesus said that we should love our neighbor as we love ourselves. And so if we don’t love ourselves at all, if we don’t see any value in who we are as human beings created in God’s image, then how are we supposed to see that value in someone else who has also been created in God’s image and who is also deeply loved by Him?

My sense of self-esteem was pretty low when I was growing up. I looked around me and really felt this sense that other people were more talented than I was. This person was good at music, or that person was good at art, or this person had dance, and I didn’t really understand that my skills and abilities just may have looked different from other people’s.

I was certainly involved in extracurricular activities, but I never really felt like I found my thing, whereas I saw that in some of my other friends. They found that thing that made them come alive. Being a highly sensitive introvert going into even high school and college, that wasn’t seen as an asset.

If you have a hard time talking to people because you’re so shy, because no one has ever taught you how to make small talk or how to make conversation, I would think with my parents being in ministry that somehow I would have absorbed some of that. But for whatever reason, I didn’t. I think I needed some type of social skills training or something because I was pretty much afraid to talk to people and had to learn over time how to do it.

You combine that with the fact that I have the most serious look when I’m straight-faced ever. Then I also had to learn that I needed to smile a little bit more so that people didn’t think that I was staring them down or that somehow I was subtly angry at them.

The point is that I think at one point or another, we all feel unlovable. For some reason, we feel like there is no way that someone could love me. We reject God’s love because we just don’t get it. It doesn’t make sense to us. We can’t comprehend it from a human standpoint.

So if you’re a deep thinker and you analyze everything, which I know many of you do, it can be really hard to sit back and say, okay, God loves me unconditionally. Because we don’t have a template for that in our society. We’re all humans, so we’re all imperfect. We’re not going to love other people perfectly. Other people aren’t going to love us perfectly.

It’s really hard to understand unconditional love when we say, I just wouldn’t have patience for this person or what they’re doing, or I don’t think I could love someone who does that. Fill in the blank, whatever that is.

We reject God’s love if we haven’t embraced and accepted God’s forgiveness. I’ve said it before, but I’ll say it again. Forgiving yourself is not in the Bible. Accepting God’s free gift of forgiveness is believing in faith that if I have confessed my sin, as 1 John 1:9 says, that He has forgiven it.

I believe that God has removed my sin as far as the east is from the west, as Psalm 103:12 says. When that sin comes back up into your mind, however it comes back up, you say that sin was covered by the blood of Jesus on the cross. I do not need to go back there. That is what it means to accept God’s forgiveness, and sometimes it is a day-by-day, moment-by-moment situation.

You’re imperfect, and you’re going to sin again, and you’re going to ask for forgiveness again, and that is just part of the process. Until we get to heaven, we’ve got to get comfortable with that.

And the last big reason that I’m going to talk about that we don’t embrace God’s love and we reject His love is because opening ourselves up to love can feel really vulnerable. Not only are we opening ourselves up to feel love, we are opening ourselves up to being potentially rejected. Even though God is not going to reject us, we know what that feeling of rejection is like. That is burned into our nervous system, into our emotional muscle memory, so to speak.

So how do we accept God’s love that is there for us? Number one, embrace that God is not the same as man.

I never got to meet my paternal grandfather because he died before I was born, but my dad always talked about how he knew that his dad loved him. I guess his dad was not very verbal or expressive about saying the words, I love you. And my dad made a commitment and decision that he was going to verbalize those words to his kids, and he was going to say, I love you.

I don’t have a chance to ask my dad now because he’s in heaven, but I wonder how that affected his view of God and if he ever struggled with God loving him or not. I do think we take things from our parents oftentimes, and it could be parents, but it also could be other authority figures, whether it’s teachers or coaches, other people that spoke influence into your life.

Maybe it was a grandparent or an aunt or uncle who had an instrumental part in raising you. But we take how those people acted towards us and we often overlay that onto God.

Well, this person maybe was particularly harsh or strict, or maybe they were withdrawn. Maybe they were disinterested. Maybe your parent got mad at you and they just withdrew and went to their room, and you didn’t hear from them the rest of the night. Maybe it was something in the way that you saw your parents interact that you’ve laid onto God. Maybe your parent didn’t do that towards you, but your dad might have gotten mad at your mom and not talked to her for three days.

God is not like our parents, our coaches, aunts, uncles, or grandparents. God is love. That’s what the Scripture says. 1 John 4:16 says, So we have come to know and to believe the love that God has for us. God is love, and whoever abides in love abides in God, and God abides in him.

And even though you may have been rejected by a lot of people, as I have, God’s love is not removed from us. It’s not based on our behavior. Romans 8:38-39 says, For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Amen. We could stop the podcast right here. Nothing can separate you from the love of God.

One of my favorite verses that I have embraced, Jeremiah 31:3 says, I have loved you with an everlasting love; therefore I have continued my faithfulness to you. God’s love is everlasting. That means it’s not ending. It’s not going anywhere.

That’s incredible. Such a beautiful gift that He gives to us. God is not the same as man.

And two, I want you to look for God’s love in your life. If you’ve been around the podcast for a while, we talk about ICBT. That’s inference-based cognitive behavioral therapy. It’s an evidence-based treatment for OCD, and we talk a lot about sense data. And I really do believe that we have spiritual sense data as believers. After all, we have the Holy Spirit inside of us.

So how can we look for that in our life? How can we look for God’s love? I want to do a little exercise with you right now, and it may seem a little silly. I don’t want you to do this if you’re driving because part of it involves closing your eyes, okay? So don’t close your eyes if you’re listening to the podcast on the way to work. It would not be wise. But if you’re just around the house and you have the opportunity, first I want you to look for all of the red things in your environment around you.

Where I’m at, up in my home office, I see some books and they have a red spine or maybe burgundy, I guess that’s in the red family. I have some folders over here, like a binder that I see that’s red. A light that’s red, not on, that’s red in here, maybe a little bit on a pencil. And as you look at those objects in your room, hey, I’m drinking some tea, and that kind of has some reddish hue to it.

Now take a moment and close your eyes, and I want you to tell me what you saw in your environment that was blue.

Now you might be laughing a little bit like, well, that’s funny, Carrie. I don’t know what’s blue in my environment because I wasn’t really looking for that. I was looking for all the red stuff that you told me to look for.

This exercise shows us that when we’re looking for things, we’re going to find them. But if we’re not looking for things, a lot of times things will go unnoticed.

For example, I’m sure this has happened to you when you’ve bought a car, and all of a sudden you start to see that car everywhere. I feel like our car has a unique paint job. It’s not quite blue, and it’s not quite gray. I don’t even really know. I don’t remember what the color was. You know how they name these colors of paint jobs, and it was like that when we bought it. We didn’t have it painted or anything, but I thought, this is kind of a unique color. I really like it. There is something kind of peaceful about it.

All of a sudden, I started to see that color everywhere on different people’s cars. I was like, oh, well they have that same color too. Well, that’s nice. Oh, wait a minute, that’s the same model of car that I have. The same make and model. Oh, look at that car over there.

Of course, because now it was in my environment. It was right in front of my face. And so when we put something in front of our face or in our minds, sometimes we can’t help it.

We think about that friend that hurt us. We think about that church that really didn’t minister to us well and hurt our feelings. We felt like they dropped the ball. That’s happened. We bring those things up in our mind, and then we’re not looking for what are the good things that are going on around me. Where is God’s love displayed in my life right now?

And it could be something as simple as a flower blooming. There was a time where I went out to my mailbox, and it was just a hard season. I started to notice that my flowers were coming back from the winter where they go dormant. What do you call that? Perennials. You have bulbs, and they go dormant. They look like they’re dead and they’re toast after the winter. But then over time, as spring starts to come, as the ground starts to warm up, as they get that spring rain, the flowers start to come back out.

And so just even noticing that in itself is a gift.

When we have food on our table, when we have the ability to pay bills that have come up. Sometimes unexpected bills happen, and then you think, how am I going to pay for this? Or how am I going to be able to get the help that I need? And then God miraculously provides in some way. We weren’t expecting it, but finances work out or come through somehow.

It sounds really ridiculously silly, but I was going through a really hard season trying to recover from my divorce in 2015. I was talking to some friends just about the lack of physical contact in my life, the lack of touch, and I said I was thinking about just buying this gigantic pillow so I could kind of have this artificial hug.

Now I think they have these sleep pod things that are supposed to feel like a hug. Anyway, I don’t know anything about that, just seeing commercials. I probably would have bought one, though. I would have been in the market for something like that ten years ago. And they were just trying to encourage me and minister to me, and they were like, do what you need to do in this season in your life.

Feeling just really down and discouraged about not having anyone, I went to the store and there were pomegranates there. I love pomegranate. Such a side note, but it felt like, oh, this is like a silver lining in my day. It sounds really silly now, but it meant a lot to me at that moment. Like, okay, thank you, God, for this pomegranate. I’m so glad they’re back in season now because they have such a short season in the winter.

It’s like, oh, this is so great. I can go home and enjoy this part of my day after it’s been so dreary and just so sad and kind of depressed about being lonely and not having anyone. To me, that was God’s, in a very small tangible way, expression of love for me.

What happens when you read the story of the prodigal son? If you’re struggling with God’s forgiveness, what happens when you read that story and you put yourself as the prodigal son and God is running? I’m pretty sure in that culture that was kind of an embarrassing thing because just the way they would have had to pull up their clothes and all of that, it wasn’t something that would have been seen as honorable. But he ran to his son, welcomed him back into the household.

Not just that, but it’s like, hey, you’re back. I’m so glad to see you. Let’s throw a party. Not like, oh hey, I’m mad at you because you basically asked for your inheritance before I died. I mean, that’s what he did. Like, give me my share of the inheritance. His dad wasn’t even dead yet.

Some of us look at that and we’re like, yeah, I’m not letting him back in my house, much less throwing a party. But that just shows God’s longing to be in relationship with us and the deep love that He has for us.

And while I’m asking you to look for the day-to-day examples of God’s love in your life, I also want you to remember the greatest act of love that God could ever give you has already been given in His Son, Jesus. John 15:13 says, Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends.

Unfortunately, as Christians, we hear this so much, Jesus died on the cross for you, that we’ve become desensitized to it. And I don’t want you to be desensitized to that.

I want you to take a moment of reflection and say, if I were to ask you, hey, would you give your child over for a murderer, for somebody that is abusive, for someone that has no care, no repentance, no concern for making the world a better place, your child over to that person? I would not. But God saw us in our mess of sin, and He chose to give His Son for us.

I just don’t think that we can ever really grasp that fully, that level of love. I think it’s worth contemplating and worth allowing deep down into your heart and mind and soul that this is the ultimate demonstration that God loves you. And that’s what Romans 5:8 says. But God shows His love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.

I think this is just a human flaw that we all have, to look at the deficits instead of looking at the good things. And we have to fight against that. As believers, we have to say, let me not find all the things that are wrong with today, but let me praise God that He is good. Let me focus on the things that I am so incredibly grateful for.

I so take it for granted that my house has electricity and I wake up in the morning and I turn a light switch on and bam, there’s a light. I don’t have to light a candle. I don’t have to get a lantern. I don’t have to figure out how I’m going to see to be able to work today.

My house is heated right now in the winter. As I’m recording this, we’re in this Middle Tennessee winter ice storm deal, and a lot of people are without power. And I don’t think I have ever been so thankful for my electricity lately because we were very fortunate and blessed not to lose power and had some plans and contingencies if we did lose power of what we were going to do. But I’m just so grateful even to have that opportunity.

Right on to number three, recognize God’s love in other believers.

Steve did something super sweet for me when we were dating, probably only a few months that we were together. I don’t know if you remember that toilet paper shortage of 2020, but it was a thing. The toilet paper companies had not caught up with the fact that they needed to produce less commercial toilet paper because people weren’t at the office and they weren’t at school and they weren’t in government buildings. So therefore, they needed to up their manufacturing of at-home personal rolls of toilet paper. So there were empty shelves when it came to toilet paper. And then of course, when there’s a shortage, people buy extra and it just perpetuates the problem.

Anyway, Steve shows up at my house one Saturday morning and he hands me a twelve-pack of Quilted Northern. I’m like, this is a good man right here. He anticipated a need in my life and he filled it, and that was just super sweet of him to do that.

Of course, there have been many, many ways that Steve loves me, large and small, over the years since we’ve been dating and married for five years now. But really a few months prior to Steve and I dating, my pastor’s wife at the time said to me, I think God wants to prove His kindness to you.

Steve was really an answer to many, many prayers of myself and other people in my life who had seen what I had gone through, the hardness of being single during my prime childbearing years. God has been so gracious to us.

But I wonder for you, who are the people in your life who have loved you at your lowest point when you didn’t deserve it, when maybe you hadn’t necessarily treated them great? You have a parent or a grandparent who is just always in your corner, always praying for you, always loving you. Sometimes God’s love shows up in a meal on a Tuesday night because you’ve had a crisis in your life and you just can’t. Sometimes God’s love shows up with someone showing up for you.

It could be a happy time in your life where they’re celebrating with you, or it could be a time where you’re sad and grieving and they don’t know what to say, but they just show up and spend time with you.

If you’re someone who has a tendency to push other people’s love away from you, I want to challenge you to allow it to come in. This is going to help you connect with others, and it’s also going to help you connect with God if you’ve been hurt. I know it may feel really vulnerable, may feel super scary. But you can do it. You can open yourself up to that love. God wants you to receive that.

There are so many one-another passages in Scripture that we can’t live out the Christian life God calls us to live on an island by ourselves. We need to be able to love other people, and we need to allow those people to love us as well.

The last point on how to embrace God’s love that is there for us is to speak the truth to yourself daily until you believe it. I want you to get up in the morning and say, God, I believe that You love me, and I want to accept that love today. I want to allow that love in.

I believe that Psalm 139 says that I am fearfully and wonderfully made. I believe Psalm 36:7, how precious is Your steadfast love, O God. I believe Psalm 18:19, He brought me out into a broad place; He rescued me because He delighted in me. I believe Zephaniah 3:17, The Lord your God is in your midst, a mighty one who will save; He will rejoice over you with gladness; H He will exalt over you with loud singing. How amazingly beautiful is that if you get up every day and you read some scriptures about God’s love, meditate on them, memorize them. Allow that truth to absorb into your mind and into your heart. That is a life changing. God will use that word planted in you to produce fruit, and you’ll be not only be able to love yourself in a healthy way, but you’ll be able to love others, the way that God desires you to love them.

If we don’t have the love of God in us, it’s gonna be hard for us to love other people. I wanna leave you with Paul’s prayer for the believers in Ephesians three 18 and 19. I pray that you have strength to comprehend with all the saints, what is the breath and length, and height and depth to know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge that you may be filled with all the fullness of God. Lord, we ask that all who hear these words would believe and trust in your love, that you would allow them to see it in their day-to-day life, that they may be changed by it. Amen.

Check the show notes for the verses we used in this episode, and next week we’re going to be talking about why scrupulosity is so complicated and difficult to treat. So stay tuned for our next episode. Until next time, may you be comforted by God’s great love for you.

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