Category Archives: Our relationship with ourselves

Using the Bible as a true mirror

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One of the important milestones in our faith is when we begin to see ourselves as the Lord Jesus Christ sees ourselves.  Back when I was living in Louisiana, an old Baptist preacher by the name of Clarence Welch told me and another young man who was working in his garden that if we ever wanted to get a good look at our faith we could only do so through the mirror of the Bible.  At the time, I was 36 years old and was going through a personal crisis.  I had just been medically discharged from the U.S. Army for injuries that I had sustained. Then, without the comfort and security of a steady income and active duty military benefits, the woman I was married to left me and returned to her hometown where she moved in with her old high school sweetheart.  I was mad – mad at myself, mad at her, mad at those around me, mad at God – genuinely mad.

I wanted to share that because yesterday, my best friend called me and told me that on Friday of last week, as he was heading home, he decided to empty his heart’s contents to God.  He had reached a point in his life where he was desiring a closer relationship with God and from what he described to me, tired of the trapped feeling that unresolved anger can have in our lives.  What he had done, as I had done for so long, was to internalize and bury the unresolved anger and tried to build on top of that foundation. Can we get saved with unresolved anger in our hearts?  The answer to that is simply yes.  Can we spiritually grow with that unresolved anger in our hearts?  The answer to that is also yes; however we will reach a certain point where spiritual growth cannot occur unless we resolve the anger.  There is a reason why – anger occurs when we believe we have been wronged or harmed and we feel that the other party has not atoned for the transgression.  At the heart of the issue is forgiveness and our willingness to allow God to heal our wounds.

Forgiveness is important for the believer for many reasons and if we are not careful, we can actually carry anger with us for so long that we become accustomed to its bondage.  We excuse our anger and have a tendency to see it as justifiable; unfortunately, God does not see it that way.  During Jesus’ earthly ministry, he taught all that would listen, For if ye forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you: But if ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses (Matthew 6:14-15). When we harbor our anger we place ourselves under the same judgment, but from God, that we are placing on the object of our anger.  We have effectively blocked God from being in a position to help us and to bless us.  We cannot continue our spiritual growth until we have let go of the anger that holds us back. In fact, the gospel written by the apostle Mark records Jesus teaching those that followed him, And when ye stand praying, forgive, if ye have ought against any: that your Father also which is in heaven may forgive you your trespasses (Mark 11:25). Notice that when you pray…forgive, if you have ought against any. There’s no conditions, there’s no justification, there’s no reservations recorded in this verse.  Jesus’ teaching is clear – forgive.

As recorded in the gospel of Matthew, there is a parable that Jesus uses to teach this very concept.  The parable is about a man who receives forgiveness for a debt that he owed another.  The parable ends with this passage: Then his lord, after that he had called him, said unto him, O thou wicked servant, I forgave thee all that debt, because thou desiredst me: Shouldest not thou also have had compassion on thy fellowservant, even as I had pity on thee?  And his lord was wroth, and delivered him to the tormentors, till he should pay all that was due unto him. So likewise shall my heavenly Father do also unto you, if ye from your hearts forgive not every one his brother their trespasses (Matthew 18:32-35). This is a difficult lesson to allow to sink in – the forgiveness of God is complete; the forgiveness we offer others must reflect the forgiveness that He freely offers us.  It is not optional, it is not a nice request, it is something we must do if we are going to enjoy the fullness of our Christian faith.

The Bible is our mirror and our measuring rod; when we begin to see our lives through the mirror of the Bible, we do not get the distortions that we do when we look at our lives through the lens of the world.  When we look through the lens of this world, it becomes easy to justify our anger and our judgment of others. It becomes easy to hold on to that anger. The world even tells us that we are justified to hold on to our anger and judgment of others.  God tells us that our anger at others must be dealt with; the perceived wrong must be forgiven completely.  Once we have forgiven them, we must leave our anger in the past and pray for the person that wronged us.  By doing so, not only do we free ourselves up from the anger and judgment within our hearts, we allow ourselves to be brought into God’s perfect peace and we really begin to spiritually grow and enjoy the richness of the forgiveness of God.

Understanding the gift of “today”

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Instead of making new year’s resolutions this year, I decided to take things day by day.  I know what needs to be done around the house, for my family, at the community college where I teach, the printing ministry that my wife and I have the enjoyment of operating, and my personal needs such as exercise, diet, personal devotion, Bible reading, prayer time, and practicing.  It actually requires me to prioritize my time and to weigh the things that are the most important that I must accomplish each day.  Now since we are in the  third week of January, I have noticed that I am getting more done when I am concentrated on what needs to be done today instead of worrying about the long term goal or what needs to be done by Friday.

This morning, as I was doing my personal Bible reading, I came across this scripture in Proverbs: Boast not thyself of to morrow; for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth (Proverbs 27:1) which then led me to one of Christ’s teachings on that same topic: Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof (Matthew 6:34). Instead of keeping my focus on today, oftentimes in my past I have focused on the future and willingly sacrificed too much of the present.  Instead of enjoying the time with my children, with my family and friends, I chose to use all the time I had preparing for a future that may or may not have turned out to be the way I wanted it to.

This past Thursday, as I was returning home from an interview in Kansas City, Missouri, I needed to take a break from driving to stretch my legs and to refresh my mind.  I decided to stop at a tourist-trap shop named Ozarkland near Kingdom City, Missouri.  As I walked around the store full of the typical items normally found at such shops, I found a wooden sign that reads “Yesterday is history and tomorrow is a mystery.  But today is a gift, that is why we call it the present.”  Normally, I do not buy house signs but this one was different.  I honestly stood there for what seemed ten minutes looking at the sign and letting its simple message sink in.  Tomorrow is the past; I cannot change what happened in it. As a Christian, all I can do is to seek forgiveness for those whom I have wronged, to forgive those who may have wronged me, and to seek forgiveness from God when I have fallen beyond temptation and have chosen to sink into sin.  That’s all that I can do about yesterday and no amount of worrying or post-day analysis can change what has happened.

By fully accepting each day as a gift from God, we begin to see how important each day is and the people that fill our days.  It is a gift from God that I get to spend time with my two-year old daughter.  It is a gift from God when I get to attend church and enjoy the worship and fellowship with God and the other Christians that attend my church.  It is a gift from God when I have the chance to share my love of history with my students in the classes I teach.  When we begin to see the day and the things which are in it as time that is a gift from God we appreciate them more, waste less time, and are drawn to make every moment count. We begin to truly appreciate when our spouses, our children, coworkers, friends, and other family members want to share their time with us. It also makes us more careful in our interactions with others and with God; it creates a strong desire within us to avoid things that create discord between ourselves and those we care about.

It also causes us to prioritize what we decide to achieve each day; too many times in the past I had adopted the old attitude of if I cannot get it done today there is always tomorrow.  Instead of doing what needed to be done, I picked and chose those things I wanted to do, piddled with things that didn’t really matter in the big scheme of things, or was just a poor steward of my time.  Not only are we not promised tomorrow, but tomorrow has its own agenda and its own list of things that need to be done.  Just as the sign said – tomorrow is a mystery indeed!  We have no idea what tomorrow may hold and what could consume our time and keep us from getting everything we had planned to do.

I am not saying that we have to be productive every minute of the day; we do need our daily down time.  What I have learned is that we need to make sure that when we do take that down time we have actually earned it.  There’s nothing worse than running out of day before you run out of things to do – especially when unwise management of our time has left us with things that needed to be done and the things we did get done were the small items on the list that really didn’t matter. We allowed small things to take time away that we could be spending with our family, friends, and even our daily personal devotions with God.  When we really value the gift of today and accept the reality that we are not promised anything but this moment, we really begin to see what is truly important in our lives and what is simply filler.  In other words, we need to live each day as if it were our last.

As I was unpacking the car from the overnight trip to and from Kansas City, I shared the sign with my wife; she also agreed that we need to hang it where we can see it every day.  We’ve decided that the perfect spot for it is in our dining area where it will be visible to all who are sitting at our dining room table.  It’s a simple message that’s worth learning, memorizing, sharing, or maybe even just writing on a sticky-note and sticking it inside your Bible:  Yesterday is history and tomorrow is a mystery. But today is a gift, that is why we call it the present.