Building Belonging in a Lonely Worldਨਮੂਨਾ

Devotion 4: Barriers to Belonging
In John 4:4-26 we read of the encounter between Jesus and the Samaritan woman at the well. In the culture of the day, there were all manner of reasons why Jesus and the woman should not have entered into conversation: their different genders, their different ethnicities (Jews and Samaritans were known to hate each other), and the women’s past all presented a problem… but Jesus was far more concerned with ‘shalom’ for the individual than He was about social norms.
In the latter part of the passage (John 4:17-18), we read that Jesus confronted the woman's past, not to make her feel embarrassed or guilty, but because he knew it was a source of deep hurt for her. Her past trauma (from the Greek word for wound) was a barrier to her belonging.
Life's experiences, both good and bad, shape us and influence our relationships with the world. When those experiences are bad, they can cause deep emotional and spiritual wounds, which constrict our willingness to belong.
Many lonely people bear the scars of trauma, and so in response to loneliness, we must ask the Holy Spirit to help us emulate Jesus's patience and empathy in our approach.
Prayerfully Consider: Has God allowed you to experience some things that help you empathise with others?
For more on this, please see Session 4 of The Belonging Course.
ਪਵਿੱਤਰ ਸ਼ਾਸਤਰ
About this Plan

In this short devotional series, we will consider how we can play a role in helping others feel like they belong without causing damage to ourselves. Each of the six sessions is taken from The Belonging Course, a six-session small group course on the theme of Belonging, which is free for all UK churches.
More
Related Plans

Technology & God - God in 60 Seconds

National Week of Prayer Plan (Nwop), 2025

Evangelize Everywhere: Work Edition

The Missing Half: Why Your Prayers Feel One-Sided and What to Do About It

Through the Word: Knowing God, Making Him Known

The Good Enough Mom

01 - LORD'S PRAYER: Meditations by W. Phillip Keller

Parenting on Point

Financial Discipleship – the Bible on Cosigning
