
eBook - ePub
Without Rival
Embrace Your Identity and Purpose in an Age of Confusion and Comparison
- 256 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
Now a New York Times bestseller!
There is a reason we look at others as rivals and limit ourselves to comparison and competition. We have an enemy assaulting our mind, will, and emotions in the hope that we'll turn on ourselves and each other. It's a cycle that isolates us from intimate connections, creates confusion about our identity, and limits our purpose.
In Without Rival, bestselling author Lisa Bevere shares how a revelation of God's love breaks these limits. You'll learn how to stop seeing others as rivals and make the deep connections with your Creator you long for--connections that hold the promise of true identity and intimacy. With biblically sound teaching filled with prophetic insight for our day, Lisa uses humor and passion to challenge you to
· Flip rivalry so it brings out the best in you
· Stop hiding from conversations you need to be a part of
· Answer the argument that says women are unfit, easily deceived, and gullible
· Dismantle gender rivalry and work with the men in your life
It's time to step forward to live a life without rival.
There is a reason we look at others as rivals and limit ourselves to comparison and competition. We have an enemy assaulting our mind, will, and emotions in the hope that we'll turn on ourselves and each other. It's a cycle that isolates us from intimate connections, creates confusion about our identity, and limits our purpose.
In Without Rival, bestselling author Lisa Bevere shares how a revelation of God's love breaks these limits. You'll learn how to stop seeing others as rivals and make the deep connections with your Creator you long for--connections that hold the promise of true identity and intimacy. With biblically sound teaching filled with prophetic insight for our day, Lisa uses humor and passion to challenge you to
· Flip rivalry so it brings out the best in you
· Stop hiding from conversations you need to be a part of
· Answer the argument that says women are unfit, easily deceived, and gullible
· Dismantle gender rivalry and work with the men in your life
It's time to step forward to live a life without rival.
Frequently asked questions
Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
- Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
- Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, weâve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS or Android devices to read anytime, anywhere â even offline. Perfect for commutes or when youâre on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access Without Rival by Lisa Bevere in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Theology & Religion & Religion. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
1
An Identity without Rival
Our chief want is someone who will inspire us to be what we know we could be.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Have you ever had a rival?
I donât mean a bit of friendly competition in sports. Nor am I referring to toddlers who compete for the attention and affection of their parents.
Iâm thinking in terms of a more consistent detractor. A rival certainly does not feel like a friend or like family. When rivalry comes into play, its goal is not so much to win the game as it is to remove you from the field.
But what if you discovered that the life you have always wanted was outside the realm of competition? What if you learned you did not have to lose to opt out of the game? What if you discovered you couldnât lose? What if you could not only think outside of the box but also choose to live outside of it?
Decades ago I read a book that suggested that the end of the world as we know it would be brought about by widespread alienation (rather than an alien invasion). It theorized that the time would come when the world would be divided into two opposing camps or trains of thought. When this climate of widespread division existed, then it would be a small thing to incite opposing factions into attacking one another until we experienced a full-blown apocalypse.
Any systematic division this extensive would start on a much more intimate scale. It can begin close to home where divided houses are filled with wounded people with divided hearts. There are very real forces that whisper lying innuendos that assault your mind, your will, and your emotions in the hope of causing you to turn on yourself and then to turn on others.
It is hard to escape the messages and messengers that tell us we are not good enough, young enough, smart enough, fast enough, and rich enough. We are bombarded in the hope that we will shrink to their expectations. It is only human nature that we would want to deflect this incessant bullying that implies we are never enough. When this harassment reaches a critical point, some will yield by conforming and copying, while others will rebel as they sling back accusations of their own.
We judge when we feel judged.
We shame when we feel shame.
We hate when we dislike ourselves.
When weâve been bankrupted, it is not long before we want to rob others. It is a cycle in which everyone loses and nobody wins. But what if the words of Paul were true?
But godliness with contentment is great gain. (1 Tim. 6:6)
Godliness is the ability to adopt Godâs vantage point. This means just as we acknowledge how he sees others, we embrace how he sees us.
Contentment and being truly comfortable in your own skin wonât breed complacency; they will release creativity! Turn away from all the detractors and distractions. He has his eyes on us so we can lift our eyes to him.
What then?
Rather than compete for what was never meant for you . . . you would have the energy to discover what is yours.
I pray this book brings clarity to what the unwholesome everyday muddies. Rather than striving to win a competition that gains you nothing, I want you positioned to win the war. There is a very real battle going on for the strength of your soul. It is time you took your place in this world. Letâs expose the lies and distractions and find out who you really are.
Lost and Found
I love dogs. Recently, while I was far from home on a trip to South Korea, our beloved dog, Tia, was impounded. Apparently, a workman left the front door of our home open, and Tia left behind the warmth of our house in an attempt to brave the streets of a subzero Colorado winter. For whatever reason, she didnât find her way home that night. A yet unidentified neighbor was kind enough to take her in overnight and then drop her off the next day at the animal shelter.
Tia had a tag on, but it was next to useless because the phone number on the tag was no longer connected to our house. Then add into this mix the fact that her dog license had expired (sorry, I thought it was a onetime process) and you have a much-loved dog with a home but with no voice or identity markers to help her find it.
In Seoul, Korea, I was oblivious. My sons had wisely chosen to hide Tiaâs misadventure from me, but no doubt there was panic on the home front. They looked and looked but couldnât find the dog anywhere. They feared the coyotes had gotten her. As a last resort, almost on a lark, they followed someoneâs suggestion and called the dog pound.
When Austin arrived at the shelter and saw Tia, he wasnât sure she was our dog. The ordeal had so completely changed her demeanor that she appeared depressed rather than excited to see him. She remained in the corner of the cage, shaking and cowering. After Austin paid the equivalent of a night in a fine hotel and some hefty fines (apparently an expired license is severely frowned upon), she was ours to bring home once again.
When I returned home and learned of the whole story, I was a little hurt. Not by my sons but by my dog. Tia had been our dog for more than a decade, and this was the first time she had ever wandered away and not returned on her own. I was concerned . . . why now? Were her cataracts affecting her vision? Had her advanced age disoriented her? Was she looking for me?
Ultimately, the reason she left did not matter. She belonged to our family and her inability to find her own way home did not negate this fact. The search was made, the fine was paid, the license was renewed, and she was pulled out of her cage of shame and returned to her place on our bed at my feet. One errant night was not cause enough for us to disown her.
You probably know where Iâm going with this. If we (imperfect pet owners that we so obviously are) would do this much for a dog, what would our heavenly Father do for us? Your first step in knowing your identity is found in who you are to him. First John 3:1 gives us a window into how God sees us.
What marvelous love the Father has extended to us! Just look at itâweâre called children of God! Thatâs who we really are. But thatâs also why the world doesnât recognize us or take us seriously, because it has no idea who he is or what heâs up to. (Message)
Letâs talk about just how marvelous Godâs love is. It is awe inspiring, spectacular, and over-the-top. It is the very opposite of mundane or ordinary. Its depth is enough to cause us to marvel. And this marvelous love is an extension, kind of like a gift with a purchase but better, because this is a gift with a gift. We were gifted salvation. God saw us in our wretched, caged state, cowering in the corner of some religious humane society, and paid the price to save us. But he didnât stop there. He drew us close, renewed our license, and identified us as his own. (All before weâd even had a bath!) You really are his. And he loves all of his children marvelously. But he loves them uniquely.
Equal or Unique?
Often in our human attempts to make all things fair, we are tempted to think that God loves us all the same. As good as this may initially sound, same just isnât big enough. The word same implies that we might be somehow replaceable or interchangeable. Like, âOh no, I broke one of the purple glasses I bought at Target last week; I hope they still have the same ones in stock.â Or using my current example, âThe dog I loved for more than a decade wandered off the grid. Thatâs okay; Iâll just buy another one to replace her and I will love it just the same.â
This doesnât work for me, and I donât believe it works for God eitherâand I will tell you why.
One afternoon I took a nap. The problem was I was on my laptop and not my bed when I fell asleep. As my head bobbed forward, I abruptly woke up to discover eight pages of the letter ât.â
At which point I felt I really should go and take a real nap. So I picked up the dog at my feet and wandered off to my bedroom. As I was dozing off, I heard the Holy Spirit whisper, âI do not love my children equally.â
Shocked, I sat straight up in my bed. Where did this blasphemous thought come from? I blurted out, âYou have to love us the same or else it wouldnât be fair.â
My protest was answered with, âI donât. Equal implies my love can be measured, and I assure you . . . it cannot. Same would mean my children are replaceable or interchangeable, and they are not. My heart is not divided into compartments. No one could take the place of or displace another in my heart. For you see, I donât love my children equally, I love them uniquely.â
Take a deep breath and listen. God loves us uniquely rather than equally. Believe me, unique is better.
If you have more than one child, you probably already understand this. When that second, third, or later child was born, your love was not divided. It was multiplied in ways that were immeasurable. You couldnât quantify your love for each child even if you tried. How can you measure the pull on your heart? Your love for each child is unique. Each one awakens your parental love in a different manner. Interestingly, you may love something unique about one child that is the opposite trait of something you love in another. For example, I have a feisty granddaughter who is a whirlwind. She is the sister of my firstborn grandson, who is intentional and gentle. I donât compare them. I love, enjoy, and appreciate their very different approaches to life. I would not want them to act the same for the world. Neither one of them occupies more of the real estate of my heart; I love both of them completely, but uniquely.
Equal also implies Godâs love is measured or measurable, and it is neither. Itâs infinite. Unique carries so much more depth. There is only one like you! St. Augustine said it best: âGod loves each of us as if there was only one of us.â
Our Fatherâs love cannot be likened to a pan of brownies or a cherry pie that is painstakingly cut by a loving parent into equal portions so that no child feels slighted. His marvelous love is not subject to portion control. Do you understand he loved you before there was a beginning, and his love for you knows no end? You can turn from him, run away, and make your bed in hell, but your actions will not stop his love. (Seriously, though, whoâd want to sleep in hell?)
Through the prophet Jeremiah, the Lord said this about his love: âI have loved you with an everlasting love; therefore I have continued my faithfulness to youâ (Jer. 31:3).
Notice the tense here. It is past. His love is a settled matter. He loved you, the real you, the unique you, with an everlasting, never-ending, it doesnât matter how old or how young, how thin or how heavy you are kind of love. He loved you when you were young and foolish. He loves me more mature and random. God is love. Our Father does not have love for you . . . he is love for you.
Our Fatherâs marvelous love for us is infinite, intimate, and unique. And you are uniquely loved because you were uniquely created.
Unique means âthe sole example of, prototype or only one,â and my favorite definition, âwithout equal or rival.â Our Father God stands alone without rival, so we shouldnât be surprised that in his eyes we are daughters without rival, which eliminates every reason that we should ever compete with one another.
You are the only example of you!
You are the beginning and the end of you. There is not a designer sample scheduled for mass production. In his lineage, there are no copies, or same, and no equal. There is no rival for the way you express his love to others or for how he expresses his love to you. No one can do you like you!
God uniquely created your DNA and knit your frame in secret so he could surprise the world. He authored how your heart expresses itself; he was the architect of your smile and the melody of your voice; he made all of your features with the fondest thoughts of only you in mind. He celebrated along with your parents your first smile and watched with affection your first steps.
Because of this tender, intentional care, there are multiple facets of your life that express and reflect his love uniquely. He wove all these exceptional aspects and specific talents into the package of you, his daughter. He knew each attribute would be expressed best through your feminine form.
He knew you would represent and relate to him best as a daughter. This is the very reason he chose female for your gender. There is a very tender bond between fathers and daughters.
He didnât have another daughter in mind when he fashioned you . . . you are his delight.
This means you wouldnât do it better if you were taller, shorter, blacker, or whiter.
This also means you would not be a better carrier of the love he has entrusted to you if you were a male. God does not love sons more and daughters less. Nor does he love each gender equally. He loves male and female uniquely. Perhaps as you grew up you heard whispers, or even shouts, that your father or mother wished youâd been born a son. Maybe there was a time you wished youâd been born a male too. But know this . . . God never did.
Our Father rejoiced when you drew your first breath, and as the years unfolded, the angels of heaven rejoiced with him when you were reborn as his Spirit-quickened daughter.
Marvelously loved one, there is absolutely nothing accidental about you.
A Daughter without Rival
So what does all this mean? It means there is more than enough immeasurable, inexhaustible love for us all. You donât have to fight for your place at the table or win his love. No one can take you out or replace you . . . you have no rival.
But friends, thatâs exactly who we are: children of God. And thatâs only the beginning. Who knows how weâll end up! What we know is that when Christ is openly revealed, weâll see himâand in seeing him, become like him. All of us who look forward to his Coming stay ready, with the glistening purity of Jesusâ life as a model for our own. (1 John 3:2â3 Message)
Together weâre going to discover how to be our full selvesânot someone else in an attempt to earn the love and acceptance of others. Weâre going to stop comparing ourselves with others because comparison is not inspiration. Comparison is cheating us and this earth of who we truly are. Where is the need for comparison or competition if our value and identity are ultimately tied to our innate...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Endorsements
- Dedication
- Contents
- 1. An Identity without Rival
- 2. Our Unrivaled God
- 3. A Promise without Rival
- 4. Donât You Dare Compare!
- 5. When Youâre Seen as a Rival
- 6. Gender without Rival
- 7. The Rivalry of Fear and Love
- 8. Deep Wells and Wishing Wells
- 9. A Daughter without Rival
- 10. A Life Unrivaled
- Discussion Questions
- Notes
- About the Author
- Back Ads
- Back Cover