Help For A Prideful Heart

My dear sister,

I can tell when I’m getting there: my belly tightens, my countenance falls, and my eyes can’t meet theirs.   These physical reactions are manifestations of what is going on in my soul…choosing to not forgive the person for what they have done to me. After all, if I was in their position, I would have never made the choice they did: to hurt me. Or so I make myself believe so I can feel good about holding onto my resentment that is quickly rolling into bitterness.

I read somewhere that anger responds to an incident, about what someone did, where resentment (that leads to bitterness) is a settled stance against the person. I have found that true in my life, have you? I have determined in my heart that I will not like or forgive a person. The hurt they inflicted on me (abuse, break of trust, afflicting my child, adultery, firing me, etc.) is something that I can never forgive or forget.

I wish I had more than a few paragraphs to work through this, as it is an issue that is insidious in women’s lives and sometimes needs years of biblical counseling. But there is hope for you and me. Please let me preach to myself as I write to you.

Resentment and bitterness in my heart shows that I have forgotten how much sin Jesus paid for me on the cross. Please take time to read Matthew 18:21-35 where Jesus tells a parable of a servant who was freed from a lifetime of debt, jailed his servant who owed him a hundred days wage. Jesus has paid for all my ugly sin against God and all my neighbors, yet I can’t forgive one neighbor. “But I would never have done what they did!” Oh sister, but by the grace of God we are where we are. We are all capable of all sin. We murder in our hearts. We commit adultery with our choices of books, TV, or thoughts. We connive to get our way. We manipulate our husband, friend’s and family. And if you proudly say you haven’t done these, you now have shown your prideful heart.

We need God’s forgiveness in our lives! If we forget this, resentment against others moves in. As believers, we are known by our love to God and neighbor. If our love is not shown as forgiveness to those who have hurt us, how can we be sure that we truly trust that the Lord has forgiven us? If we genuinely believe that we have been shown mercy by our Creator, how can we not then show mercy to fellow offenders?

Finally, the Lord says that vengeance is His, not ours. We are not judge and jury over others, God is. Let the Lord deal with your offender. He will do them justice. He will give them what they deserve. So sister, let them go. Pray that they will find their forgiveness with the Lord rather than face the wrath of hell for eternity (what we all deserve). Serve them. Impossible? YES! That is why we need an all powerful God and Spirit to help us do what we cannot do on our own. Will we fail? Yes. Let’s be honest, we are human. But then…remember! Christ died for our bitterness and resentment! Repent! Find the refreshment of being cleansed by the blood. Then, let this be your inspiration to free your offender. Look them in the eye and forgive them as you have been forgiven.

Oh God! Help us! This is so difficult! We need you to help us not be resentful. Wash us anew in your grace and mercy and strengthen us to extend this mercy to others.

Your sister in Christ,

Colleen

Daunting Disappointment

 

Dear Sister,

Oh man, there I was, gazing at a steaming undercooked brownie crowned with vanilla ice cream that began to melt as it was placed carefully on the mass of brownie goodness.  I grabbed for the ordered dessert and noticed the caramel sauce sweetly simmering on top…and then I noticed the nuts.  I hate nuts.  It was almost enough to make me not even take a bite of the exuberantly priced prize that just moments ago looked like the answer to another bad day.  

I opened the mailbox to see yet another letter rejecting me from medical school.  My heart fell and I even got angry.  I told the letter how big of a mistake it was to reject the finest doctor they could have ever graduated.

The stick silently screamed once again that I was not pregnant.

Pain and sadness from disappointment is very real no matter how it is presented.  It can rear itself anywhere from an order made wrong to a marriage gone bad.  Each case seems just as painful at the moment.  How can that be?  How can I be just as disappointed from nuts on ice cream to a husband who no longer sees or hears me?  It is because at that moment, no matter what it is, I am trying to find my joy and contentment from something of this world.  I think the perfect brownie sundae or marriage will make life that much sweeter.  When it doesn’t, I am dreadfully disappointed.  Have you ever felt that way?  What are we to do with this discouraging disappointment?

First of all sweet sister, know that we can find encouragement that Christ was also disappointed in his time here on earth.  His disciples really bumbled around his teachings and showed lack of faith when Jesus taught or performed miracles.  On the hardest day of his life, his three closest friends should have been his dearest comfort, yet they couldn’t even stay awake with him as heanguished in prayer.  He knows what it is like to be disappointed.  But he is also the One who paid the ultimate price so we will never be disappointed ultimately again.  Our sins are forgiven forever, our debt is paid, and we have the hope of heaven!  Jesus not only understands disappointment, he made a way to overcome them forever!

So let us pray when disappointment claws at our hearts that we will remember three things: 1) Jesus is a mediator who understands what we are going through because he has experienced it; 2) Our disappointment shows us our sin of trying to find contentment in this world; and 3) Our ultimate salvation, joy and hope is in Christ, not in anything of this world.

Your sister in Christ,

Colleen