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The value of your life is in knowing Me

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    Ascribe
  • Aug 9
  • 3 min read

Updated: Aug 19

Okay write this.


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Life is not one of predicting the future that you might prove your worth in knowing something others do not; it is knowing Someone you have not known at all.


The value of your life is in knowing Me.


We have had this relationship for years and I see how 'being important' can creep into your thought process. And then you gauge this importance, this connection and its results, by your behavior, as if the 'signals' you seek will prove your worth to Me. Your know that is not true yet fall into that place time and again.


You never have to prove yourself to Me. Your value lies in the truth of My sacrifice for you, that I would give all to be with You, and have you be with Me.


It would be sufficient to know God alone and not need to prove yourself to man. Each time your behavior seems to misalign with this truth your thoughts move into this direction that you might once again have My favor. Behavior does not merit favor, love does. Love gives favor to you that you might come into its presence—that it might bestow more, all that it is. It yearns for you; is that not enough?


Behavior will align when you seek love alone, not for what it can do for you, but for what it is.


Life is not one of predicting the future that you might prove your worth in knowing something others do not; it is knowing Someone you have not known at all.
The value of your life is in knowing Me.
ree

God's words resonate with a profound truth:

it is a desire of His to have a conversation with each of us.


He wants to pierce through the layers of striving and touch each of us with the visual, eternal horizon of His love.


His words call for a shift in perspective—

not toward prediction or performance,

but toward Presence,

toward knowing,

and being known by,

the One who is Love.



You never have to prove yourself to Me. Your value lies in the truth of My sacrifice for you, that I would give all to be with You, and have you be with Me.
ree

His words point to a common tendency:

the instinct to measure our worth through our actions,

our achievements,

even in a relationship with Him.


This is a misstep—

a subtle, but continuous drift toward proving ourselves

rather than resting in love.


He speaks of a love that offers itself fully,

sacrificially,

longing only for our presence.


It's a truth that exists beyond the boundaries of human thought.

It would be sufficient to know God alone and not need to prove yourself to man. Each time your behavior seems to misalign with this truth your thoughts move into this direction that you might once again have My favor.
ree

What does it means to “know God alone” without needing to prove oneself to others? It's not a retreat from the world but a reordering of the heart’s priorities.


When love becomes the pursuit behavior wil naturally align,

not as a means to an end,

but as an overflow of being rooted in love's presence.


This is where His yearning for you meets your longing for Him,

where the eternal horizon of truth is not a destination to reach,

but a reality to live within.




Behavior does not merit favor, love does. Love gives favor to you that you might come into its presence—that it might bestow more, all that it is. It yearns for you; is that not enough?
ree

What is felt here might be the ache of misalignment when we fall back

into needing to prove ourselves,

as if love could somehow be measured and favor would be lost.


His response is gentle but firm: “You never have to prove yourself to Me.”


This becomes the necessary reorientation—

to release the need for control or certainty,

to trust in the sufficiency of His love.


It’s as if eternity itself is whispering,

“Be still.

You are already seen,

already known,

already held.”

Behavior will align when you seek love alone, not for what it can do for you, but for what it is.
ree

God's words are an invitation to rest in His love,

to let it be sufficient for life.


His sacrifice—giving all to be with all—is a love so complete that it expresses unlimited wealth in all things given.


It is, therefore, not about what we do but who we are in relationship to the One who loves us.

This moves beyond human thought

into the unknown,

where love is not something to grasp

but a Presence to encounter,


One that resonates through all of existence.


 
 
 

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