“Love has no fear, because perfect love expels all fear. If we are afraid . . . this shows that we have not fully experienced his perfect love.” 1 John 4:18 (NLT)
Are my relationships characterized by freedom or by fear?
If I'm like most people, I find myself in a dilemma: I long to be close to other people, but I also fear being close. I want the freedom of intimacy with others, but I'm also scared to death of it.
Fear often causes a battle for control in relationships. When I'm afraid, I'm insecure. And insecurity makes me try to control others—and resist efforts to be controlled! As a result, I can’t get close to other people because I'm just battling back and forth for control. So insecurity prevents intimacy and destroys my relationships.
If insecurity destroys relationships, then what builds them? Love!
The Bible says in 1 John 4:18, “Love has no fear, because perfect love expels all fear. If we are afraid . . . this shows that we have not fully experienced his perfect love” (NLT).
Love expels fear by taking the focus off of me and putting it on others.
So take the focus off of myself and focus on the people in front of me instead. If I stay there thinking about what they thought of the way I look or my way of speaking, I become afraid. But the minute I start thinking about how much I love the people I’m with, the fear leaves.
This would be the same in any relationship. Focusing on the other person gives me the power to throw fear out of my life.
How do you find that power to focus on others? I start by realizing how much God loves me. The moment I begin to understand how much God loves me, I don’t have to prove myself anymore. Because I'm secure in God’s love, I don’t have to spend my life trying to impress others.
When I'm secure in my relationship with Christ, I'm no longer pressured by everyone else’s expectations. My identity and self-worth are in Christ—not in what others might think of me.
God’s love frees me to love others fearlessly.
In summary:
Using 1 John 4:18 as its foundation there is a psychological and spiritual tension between the desire for intimacy and the fear of vulnerability. It identifies insecurity as the primary culprit behind relational breakdown, noting that fear naturally triggers a defensive drive for control, which ultimately stifles closeness. The solution is not a self-generated effort to be "braver," but rather a profound immersion in God's "perfect love." By anchoring one’s identity and self-worth in Christ’s unconditional acceptance, the internal pressure to perform or protect the ego is removed, liberating the individual to focus outward on others and engage in relationships from a position of security rather than fear.
Bottom Line:
When we are anchored in God's unconditional love, we lose the need to control others and gain the freedom to truly connect with them.
Next Step:
Identify one specific relationship or group where I currently feel a need to "perform" or manage my image. Practice "Identity Re-centering" before my next interaction with them: Spend five minutes reflecting on God's complete acceptance of me, then consciously enter the conversation with the single goal of listening to and valuing them, rather than being valued by them.
