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Monday, October 8, 2018

I HAVE EVERY RIGHT TO BE ANGRY AND UNFORGIVING

“Understand this, my dear brothers and sisters: You must all be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to get angry.” James 1:19 (NLT)

I had been lied to, betrayed, rejected and hurt. I was heartbroken, but after a while, that heartbreak turned to anger and unforgiveness, and I felt I had every right to both.

Day after day, the feeling of righteous anger would overpower the desires of my heart to forgive. Although I would ask God for the ability to give mercy and forgiveness, my long mental list of justifications for being angry would override my hollow prayer. It felt as if there were voices in my head arguing with each other, one trying to convince me I was justified in feeling angry, and the other trying to convince me forgiveness was the best choice.

For months, the loudest voice was the one partnered with my damaged human emotions, and unfortunately, it was the one I listened to the most: Yes, I have a right to be angry, and yes, I deserve to feel anger toward this person.
Anyone would agree.

However, after listening to the wrong voice, my thoughts and emotions began to steal my peace and ability to be happy. Because my mind was consumed with what had been done to me, it made it nearly impossible to have positive thoughts and feelings, much less enjoy life.

Then one morning while doing my Bible study, I came across today’s key verse, “Understand this, my dear brothers and sisters: You must all be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to get angry”(James 1:19).
In this passage, James is imploring God’s people to understand the damage negative thoughts and emotions can cause. Notice how he says “everyone” should be slow to speak and slow to anger, leaving no room for excuses or righteous indignation from those who feel they’ve been wronged.

From a worldly perspective, I did have every right to be angry and unforgiving, but from a godly perspective, my anger and unforgiveness held me hostage to a lack of joy. The longer I felt justified in my anger and the more I held onto it, the stronger a foothold the devil had in my heart, and the tighter the chains became.

I realized I’d been living in a state of oppression by the enemy, and it was affecting my every thought and action. Affecting how I lived out each day. Affecting my peace, joy and happiness. I wanted to be free, even if it meant forgiving someone I felt didn’t deserve my forgiveness and hadn’t even asked for it.

As I continued reading, I read James 1:22, “Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says” (NIV). Through this passage, God softened my heart, making me aware that although I had forgiven with my words, I had not yet truly forgiven with my heart. As a result, my habit of justifying my anger caused an overflow of negative emotions to build inside me. It was choking my happiness and preventing me from living my life abundantly — with the joy of my salvation.

In every area of life, including managing strong emotions and practicing forgiveness, God calls us to be “doers” of His Word, not just “hearers” — even when nothing in us wants to.

But I learned something through that experience: Forgiveness had set the prisoner free. And that prisoner was me. Forgiveness is a gift we give ourselves, not our offender, and this gift opens the door to living with joy.

Dear Lord, please forgive me for harboring anger in my heart, even when it feels justified. Equip me with a supernatural ability to forgive those who’ve hurt me and to guard my heart when old emotions threaten to surface. Strip my heart of anger, and replace it with joy. Thank You for Your mercy and for forgiving my own sins. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

Sunday, September 9, 2018

Fate and Destiny


Fate or destiny is often regarded as the “course that life takes” and karma is one of the factors that influence this course.

People often believe that fate is pre-destined and nothing can be changed, but is this really true?

“Your destiny is shaped according to the combination of conditions pre-determined at birth and other factors that you are able to change through your own efforts.”
— The Essence of Buddha

THE FACTORS THAT FORM A PERSON’S FATE

A person’s fate is decided by a complex combination of conditions and factors.
Some of them are already decided at the time of a person’s birth and some of them come into play later and shape the course further.

There are five factors that form our fate or destiny:
1. Tendencies of our soul, otherwise known as karma
2. Family environment
3. Social climate
4. Our own efforts and self-discipline
5. Influence of other people

Amongst the factors that shape our fate or destiny, some of them are settled and some are not.
It means that we have a certain scope to change our fate or destiny by our own efforts.

Factor 2 (the family environment) and factor 3 (the social climate) are elements that should be called the “destiny that is decided” before we are born; however, there is a great secret involved in these too.
Namely, before each reincarnation we draw up a plan for our spiritual training and we are born having agreed to such details as our parents, the environment, the social climate and our gender.
 However, as soon as we are born into this world, we forget it.

Knowing this truth, we can classify the factors that form our fate into another way:
a. The plan we draw up before reincarnation
b. Our efforts since we came onto the earth
c. Spiritual influences

FREEDOM OF CHOICE SHAPES OUR FATE

The most important factor that shapes our fate or destiny is, in fact, the decisions that we make at the turning points in our lives. Our life as it is now is created by the results of the choices we ourselves made according to the tendencies of our own mind, each time we encountered a specific event.

It may thus be said that it is none other than freedom of choice which is the most important factor in shaping a person’s fate or destiny.

KARMA AS SOUL TENDENCIES

Soul tendencies of how we react in certain events or how we regard and consider things, is known as karma.

Traditional Buddhist philosophy explains karma as “fate” that cannot be escaped from. However, karma is simply a set of habits of the soul – our tendency to come up with certain thoughts or take certain actions in a certain set of circumstances. Karma does not lead to fatalistic thoughts and it is simply a factor in forming our fate or destiny.

THE PRINCIPLE OF ACCEPTING RESPONSIBILITY

The existence of a realm known as hell in the Spirit World proves that a person’s fate is not 100% settled. Essentially, no one is born on the earth planning to go to hell but, nevertheless, more than half of people today go to hell when they die. In other words, people are responsible for their own fate, and going to hell is shouldering the responsibility for the results of their own mistaken decisions. This is “the Principle of Accepting Responsibility.” There is always a cause for everything, and that cause is always created by ourselves.

FATE CAN ALWAYS BE CONQUERED

The starting point to shaping our own fate is to abandon the cowardly attitude of blaming other people or our environment for our present unhappiness or mistakes; we must adopt the stance that “everything is our own responsibility.”

In addition, it is important to change the state of our mind, reflect on the tendencies of our own soul and break free from committing the same mistakes again.

PEOPLE WHO OBSERVE THEMSELVES AND OTHERS WITH AN ENQUIRING MIND, WHO MINUTELY ANALYZE THE HABITS, TENDENCIES, STRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSES OF THEIR SOUL, AND WHO CONTINUALLY STRIVE TO CHANGE THEMSELVES AND DISCARD THEIR CURRENT SELF: THESE ARE THE PEOPLE WHOSE FATE WILL CHANGE.

Thursday, August 30, 2018

WHEN EVERYONE’S GRASS LOOKS GREENER

You know that game, the one where everyone else’s grass looks greener?

The comparison game is all-consuming, exhausting and the enemy of peace and contentment. I’ve spent years trying to have the perfect house and create the perfect me. I’ve wasted so much time comparing my beginnings to someone else’s endings, looking at the idyllic life on the other side of the fence and feeling like my life is inadequate, like nothing I do or say is ever going to be good enough.

I want to transform myself into someone taller and skinnier with muscles.

Truth?

This year, I made one resolution. I decided to stop comparing — to stop hoping and wishing and planning and dreaming for something I wasn’t. Instead, I chose to embrace the me who has been there all along, the me who was created by an incredible, amazing, awe-inspiring God who designed me with a plan and a purpose. I’m imperfect and distressed and worn around the edges, with flaws and weaknesses. And I’m a sinner saved by grace.

Every detail. Every line. Every imperfection. If you’re like me, you’ve probably made a gazillion resolutions, and I want to encourage you today.

Psalm 139 declares this truth: You have an almighty Father who’s knitted you together in the most fearful and wonderful of ways. “I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well” (Psalm 139:14).

You are unique, special, incredible. Your gifts and talents are custom-designed by God. You are one of a kind. You are loved.

And the best part?
Resolutions or no resolutions, you, my friend, are perfect! Just the way you are