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From where does our worth come? When it comes right down to it, there is only One who truly matters. And that is God. God truly matters. Why does God matter? Because He is God. He created us; He redeemed us; He knows us intimately; He loves us relentlessly; and He calls us to anchor our worth not in our performance or our potential, but rather in His unwavering presence, providence, and protection.
Our worth is totally tied up in Jesus Christ. Apart from Jesus, our lives don’t matter; they lack eternal value; they have no worth. Jesus established our worth when He gave His precious life into death on the cross. That act made our lives priceless because of the immeasurable price He paid and the extraordinary sacrifice He made. That sacrifice of Jesus’ life was born out of love; relentless, astonishing love.
Bottom line: Our worth comes not from what we do or who we are, but it comes from whose we are. Because He matters, we matter.
“I have loved you with an everlasting love; therefore I have continued my faithfulness to you.” — Jeremiah 31:3
The Bible isn’t just a collection of ancient writings—it’s actually a beautiful, breathtaking love story. At the heart of this story is a God who sees us, hears us, knows us, and loves us with a relentless, unfailing love. Jeremiah 31:3 is God’s tender whisper to His weary people across generations: You matter to Me. I have always loved you. And. I will always love you.
This love isn’t based on who we are: on our present performance, our past, or our potential. Rather it is based on who God is. God is love, and His love defines our worth. His love freely offered up His Son to be our Savior.
Here’s the beautiful truth: that love extends to every human soul. All are cherished by God. Everyone matters–because Jesus died for everyone. Every single person, born and unborn, rich or poor, young or old, from every walk of life, and from every race. Everyone matters; each person is infinitely valuable because Jesus gave His life for them. At CLHS, this is our mission and our message: to proclaim the worth of every person through the love of Christ.
In Jeremiah’s time, Israel was a mess: broken, exiled, spiritually adrift. Yet God’s message wasn’t one of condemnation: “You’ve failed.” It was a declaration of unwavering grace: “I’ve never stopped loving you.”
The message that people matter to God runs from Genesis to Revelation:
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