Repent and Be Free: Life Journey no. 7

Just The Hard Facts, Mam

ARE YOU a de-selfer, always giving in, or are you a self-assertive, always getting your way (because you’re convinced you’re right)? Some work needs to be done by you in either position. Both are unhealthy behaviors for anyone, not just for a Christian. When there is a lack of parity and acceptance without an allowance for differences in a relationship, it becomes weak, unhealthy, and unbalanced. The de-selfer becomes resentful because they are not heard and lack a voice in the conversation. The self-assertive becomes selfish, demanding, and even demeaning of others when they have no “check” on their behavior.

Father God, help this person to seek You in earnest. Show them the truth behind their actions. Give them the strength to make it right with those whom they have wounded in word or deed. Humble their heart. Free their soul. Renew their mind. Give them great grace. Amen

The time period during the separation but before the divorce is an awkward period. I’d been left after twenty-one years of marriage. Our five children and I were devastated. There was another woman, a decade younger than him. The struggle had always been there. We never could get it right though we tried. I was seeking God with my whole heart. I’d promised God that I would learn and then give out of what He would teach me. The days were long and sad, much like a thundercloud hovered over me. It was during that uncertain period of pain, suffering, and confusion, loving a man who didn’t love me, that I learned what genuine repentance is. I was looking at his faults and failings when God caused me to look at my own faults and failings. The remorse was overpowering. It was one of many lessons I learned during those long months.

You have it to do

You and I cannot repair anyone other than our own self. The goal is to be healthy in our emotions and to gain health in our spirit–our spiritual soul-side. To gain full freedom internally at some point there must be a sadness-type sorrow in us, like a deep regret, for having been the cause of pain to another person. When this happens, a person will have an inner compelling to repent of the misdeed and a sincere desire to acknowledge it, to confess it, to make it right, and to come clean of it before God.

Some of us have failed despite our desire to live holy lives and do it right. We’ve been arrogant with a holier-than-thou attitude. Pride may have mastered our beings. We’ve enjoyed and projected a superior attitude–seeing ourselves as better than other people. Some have blamed and shamed, possessed and demanded, or coerced and been condescending. Enough so that it caused confusion and loss of dignity. These acts impede a close walk with God.

Confess these areas to God–and to one another. It helps to put yourself in their shoes, to imagine you are the recipient of the comment, angry action, or withholding of acceptance. Become aware of your heart, your attitudes, your issues. Seek God for soul-cleaning, inside and out.

For our own spiritual growth, we are best served when we begin to see our own actions and how they affect others; when we admit we’ve been wrong–and want to change; when we allow the Spirit to cleanse us as we tell God where we’ve messed up, disappointed or  hurt others; when we let a sorrowing for our pride-filled actions or words to come to the surface in us–and then turn it over to God for His forgiveness, healing and grace.

 If we only see others faults and failures but never take a look at our own, we will not be able to become spiritually free. Humble people have been humbled more often than not. Once humbled, they address life from a different reference point. They are less needy, less in need of constant validation and acceptance from others. A humble heart can like and love those who may not deserve their acceptance and love (especially if they were hurt by them), because a humble person knows their own weaknesses and ability to harm and cause pain to another.

One of the steps in Alcoholics Anonymous is for the recovering alcoholic to go to the people they’ve hurt and apologize for what they did. They take a critical look at their relationships and choices, every stone is upturned. The past is carefully examined. Easy? Not at all. Worth it? Absolutely. In the saying of it and the reliving of it and the facing of their past, the person becomes real and stops hiding. This is true spiritually as well.

Emotional pain used to consume me. At the time, I was unable to see my own part. God did some surgery on my heart as He began to expose my wrong-minded actions and wrong ways of thinking. In time, I began to heal and get well in my emotions. One day I was flooded with an awareness of my past, the places where I had caused emotional injury toward my ex-mate. For a couple of hours I wept as I was writing down areas where I had caused him pain, acknowledging my lack of appreciation and validation, those times when I had withheld my support or was begrudging in action.

It isn’t easy

I took it a step further and apologized to him in person. A load lifted when I did. I felt different, free, whole. It was an amazing experience. I knew God had brought me to this point because sorrow had filled my soul, and it initiated the action. My ex-mate had caused me a great deal of pain, too. But I was not responsible for the pain he had caused, and it did not come into the conversation at all.

But it’s worth it

I find repentance walks hand-in-hand with the loving grace of God, my Father. Repentance is one step closer to finding your freedom.

Dear friend,

I am asking of you to do a hard thing, to forgive what you feel you are unable to forgive. But do you see how necessary this is? Let it go. Speak the words “I forgive _____ for ______,” and say it. Let the sobs come. Let the pain surface. Then give it a heave. Imagine launching the thing into a river and letting it depart. Ask God to help you. He will.

Your part, your need to repent of the bitterness, anger, and resentments, will come when your heart begins to mend, something that may take a measure of time and prayer. “I’m sorry for ________, ________, and  _______.”

I’m pulling for you. Leave me a comment or note about your spiritual progress and any understandings that have come on your quest for spiritual healing and growth.

Blessed by Jesus,

Norma

 

 

The book The Dance of Anger explains what de-selfing is.

INSTALLMENT 8 – FORGIVING

LIFE JOURNEY HOME PAGE

 

Sorrow and Story: Life Journey no. 5

God Walks With || Us

We are not alone

We stood in a huddle by the grave in silence with arms wrapped around each other, our tears falling to the already wet turf. Dad’s long arms drew us close together. Our grief too deep for words. One of the hardest days of my life. My family hadn’t planned on being there that day, grieving the loss of our sister and daughter. She was young, only thirty-three. Her death was unexpected, shocking, and tragic. As a family, we plunged into a sorrowing too great for words. I can’t describe the sorrow my family experienced then and for years to come as we tried to accept what is impossible to accept. (You can read her story here.)

We all have a story; sorrow is part of our story.

Sorrow, like pain and suffering, enters as the result of an unwelcome event. Loss often breeds sorrow like an accompanying shadow, which lengthens, grows, and darkens our ability to return to joy. We grieve for what we once had, the person we lost, the friendship that ended, the hope that died, the person we used to be before it happened, or the choice that ruined a future.

The pull is on our emotions, a form of inner devastation. The light dims that once shown brightly. We smile but life is missing in the smile. We forget things, misplace objects, are less attentive to the needs of others. We become less engaged, less confident, quiet, and sad while immersed in the shadow of grief.

Sorrow changes us. A stoic personality will not speak of this, but it never leaves. The sensitive personality may not want to speak of it for fear of becoming emotional, and the self-protected person will deny its existence and carry-on in a normal fashion without admitting its devastation, they are coping in their own way.

Why did it happen?

 I might as well say it, what trips us up is the why. Why did this happen to me, to us? We don’t know why. We want answers. We want to understand. We want to know why God allowed it and why He didn’t intervene. We want to know if it could have been prevented, and we want to know what to do with our anger. But we don’t get answers. Instead we learn to ask a different question. What do we do now? It helps to acknowledge sorrow. This allows grace to enter our hearts and gives hope to our future.

Enter the quiet place.

God ministers to us in the secret places of the heart. He carries us like a kind shepherd carries an injured lamb. He guides us as we wander through a foreign and heretofore unknown, darkened pathway where we don’t know the way. Our kind and gentle Father God offers comfort where there is sadness, hope where there is pain, and love where there is loss.

Dear beloved child of God, your sorrow is for a season in this life. One day it will be eased. We cannot escape sorrow or suffering. There is no other way than face it. “Turn your eyes upon Jesus, look full in His wonderful face.” These words are true, so true. Do not despair, you will live again. Sorrow takes you to new realms, there you will be ministered to in the depths of your soul, and God will tenderly guide you and teach you.

God saves our tears in a bottle, stored where our story is being written . . . through the grace of God as we draw upon His love. We come to trust our heavenly father as we walk with sorrow and suffering, twin companions that have upended us. Acceptance and grace will come when the sorrowing has lessened in intensity.

Some suggestions.

  •  Read helpful books on grief or related subjects.
  •  Embrace thankfulness with a grateful heart every day.
  •  Get alone with God and share your heart. Allow Him access.
  •  Journal write your thoughts, even the ugly ones.
  •  Seek counsel; professional, pastoral, lay, or other.
  •  Allow yourself to cry.
  •  Surround yourself with positive, helpful people. You will need them.
  •  Look to the good despite the bad. Look forward to a new day.

The Good Shepherd knows your name.

A book was given to me by a real estate professional the second time I was abandoned at age thirty-three; I was sorrowing, alone and afraid. This Christian brother gave me a copy of Hinds Feet on High Places, an allegory about a crippled hart appropriately named, Much-Afraid. The storyline in this book helped me understand sorrow and suffering and how the Chief Shepherd guides us on our spiritual journey. Its message might be helpful for you or someone you know who is in need comfort.

  • “Godly sorrow brings repentance that leads to salvation and leaves no regret, but worldly sorrow brings death.” 2 Corinthians 7:10
  • “How long must I struggle with anguish in my soul, with sorrow in my heart every day? How long will my enemy have the upper hand?” Psalm 12:2
  • “When he rose from prayer and went back to the disciples, he found them asleep, exhausted from sorrow.” Luke 22:45, 46

Audio Clip on Sorrow – 6:39 minutes

 

God’s best, Norma

What would you like to add to the conversation?

INSTALLMENT 6 – SECURITY

LIFE JOURNEY HOME PAGE