“A friend is someone who knows all
about you and still loves you.”
— Elbert Hubbard
It was Carl Rogers, the humanistic
psychotherapist, who posited the theory of unconditional positive regard. It’s
about a safe form of therapy where the client is able to disclose any
information about themselves and never feel the threat of rejection from the
therapist.
Unconditional positive regard is
probably what friends offer us when they love us even when we don’t or can’t
love ourselves. Such a friend is a true friend; a blessing to know. People who
can love us unconditionally are used by God as if we were a phoenix, rising
from the ashes of our despondency.
Oh, To Practice the Unconditionality of
God’s Love
Although we can never sustain a
state of heart that would allow us to love as perfectly as God’s love can, we
are able, due to our surrender, to accept someone unconditionally in the moment of our loving focus.
Only one moment at a time can we
take this way. We only ever have one moment.
But we may be getting ahead of
ourselves; we could well imagine what it might be like to be loved
unconditionally—like, to the extent of never being able to fail that love.
Being loved suchlike inspires trust and the confidence to soar, for there is no
fear for disappointing the other person. Such a love oozes forgiving grace.
But such a love is no pushover.
It’s entirely prepared to
institute tough love where it’s necessary. But genuine tough love is not a hard
love, but one that is entirely fair and courageous enough to honour the truth,
to such a point that risks the relationship for growth.
Without tough love there could be
no true devotion.
We can only hope to become more
consistently better in our practice
of such care.
The Value of Unconditional Acceptance
Unconditional positive regard
issues unconditional acceptance: the
most valuable relational asset. In other words, there is nothing that an
individual could do to another individual that would sever the relationship.
Love’s strength is too strong for that.
Such a level of holy care rides
over the humps of disappointment and betrayal looking for the broader learning
and never once thinks of rejection.
This holy level of care takes the
absolute worst knowledge of one person and does not reject the person for
knowing such things. There is no shame beyond this love.
***
Biblical love, or the perfect
love, never fails because it never rejects. This is a holy level of care that
is invested in relationships. No matter what happens forgiveness is
instinctive, and there is nothing anyone can do to be rejected. This type of
relationship, where tough love is also necessary, does much to bless those who
need very much to feel accepted.
© 2013 S. J. Wickham.
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