So, I was trying to find some articles online regarding loving self versus being
in love with yourself, mainly because I'm too lazy to write it myself.
The first one I found was worldly and, though it had good advice, I didn't feel it applied. She ended her blog by stating that you'd eventually madly love yourself. Though loving oneself is key to this thread, it is so that you can truly love others, not just so you can love yourself, if that makes sense.
Anyway, so the next one I found was Christian and started out really well (source will be provided at the end of this post):
Love as described in the Bible is quite different from love as espoused by the world. Biblical love is selfless and unconditional, whereas the world's love is characterized by selfishness.
I thought, "Yes. That is helpful." And then, after they listed some Scriptures, I read this paragraph:
The statement "love your neighbor as yourself" is not a command to love yourself. It is natural and normal to love yourself. The fact that the vast majority of people in the world care for their own needs is testament to the fact that love for self is not lacking. The statement "love your neighbor as yourself" is essentially saying treat other people as well as you treat yourself. The idea of loving yourself as a command of Scripture is not accurate. The Bible presumes that people already love themselves too much—that is our problem. We are to take our eyes off ourselves and care for others. At the same time, self-hate is equally unbiblical. The Bible nowhere instructs us to hate ourselves.
"It is natural and normal to love yourself." Is it? I daresay, though it is normal for us to love ourselves, I wouldn't say it was natural in the sense that we just do it, especially as Christians. I think this is part of our problem. Let me explain...if I can.
As Christians, we are called to become like Christ, to be holy as He is holy, and to look for the leaven of sin in our lives daily and, by power of Holy Spirit, purge and remove and deal with sin in our lives. In so doing, we see, as Paul did, that we are wretched sinners in the presence of a holy and just God. So it is that loving oneself doesn't come as naturally as one would like.
When one can ignore sin and failure, it is easy to love yourself and even be in love with yourself, but as we draw closer to Christ in our walk with Him, we develop humility and we see the truth in His word, the light of which shines into our darkness deep within and shows us the mess inside. Lovingly, tenderly, He begins to deal with sin and we respond. Sometimes it's painful, sometimes not, but always refreshing when the chains are broken and we're free to lift our hands, stomp our feet, and dance in the presence of the Lord.
The paragraph goes on to say that it isn't a command to love yourself and returns us to the point discussed earlier in this thread of one loving him/herself too much. This is definitely going on, though I think it is rarer among true Christians than it is elsewhere. Why? Because how can you truly love who you are when you see the horridness within?
At least, that's my struggle.
So, in order for me to know what love is, I must go to the source: God. As I commune with Jesus and know Him, as I draw deeper into Him and leave the mentalities of this world behind, I can see that all the good and beauty within me come from Him. That's a reason to celebrate. Considering that He loves me, and loved me even when I was rejecting Him, should help me to love myself with His kind of love and should, therefore, lead me to be able to love others with His level of amazing love.
Considering the love chapter in the Bible, it is something that can make us feel more miserable and dark and lessen our ability to love ourselves so that we may love others. I think I may do a study on this in a very deep level soon, as this love your neighbor as yourself is really hitting home with me.
Thanks for listening.
Source:
What does the Bible say about self-love, loving self?