Women With Wise Words part 1

Some women struggle with their tongue. So here is practical advice for wives and mothers and for others who end up creating trouble through their words. The point is to stop contending and start sharing. Let me explain.

The Unruly Tongue

The Apostle James, Jesus’ younger brother, warned that the human tongue is impossible to tame. Everyone says the wrong thing at times, and those who rule their tongue have mastered their whole life.

“For in many things we offend all. If any man offend not in word, the same is a perfect man, and able also to bridle the whole body.” James 3:2

“But no man can tame the tongue; it is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison.” James 3:8

Only God can empower us to tame our tongue. So we need God’s wisdom and His grace and power to succeed in this important challenge.

The Argumentative Woman

bossyIt is significant that the Bible makes several references to an argumentative woman. On three occasions King Solomon advised that you are better off living on the rooftop or the wilderness rather than with a woman who wants to argue with you.

“It is better to dwell in a corner of the housetop, than with a brawling woman in a wide house.” Proverbs 21:9

“It is better to dwell in the wilderness, than with a contentious and an angry woman.” Proverbs 21:19

“It is better to dwell in the corner of the housetop, than with a brawling woman and in a wide house.” Proverbs 25:24

We know that men, women and children can all be argumentative, so the points made in this lesson can be put to use by us all. But the argumentative woman is clearly bad news and a common enough reality for repeated mention in the Bible.

Contending

Let’s look at the dynamics that occur in contention and argument. Contending is a form of fighting. Two people become adversaries when they contend with each other. One or both are trying to gain some victory over the other. Or one is trying to defend against the demands of another.

For some reason women have a propensity to become contentious. This means they will contend with their husband and their children. Possibly as younger women they will contend with their parents. And they probably contend with others, outside the family, as well.

Many husbands comment on how their wife “nags” them and how she will not let up on some point or other that she is trying to press upon them. Solomon even refers to this.

“A foolish son is the calamity of his father: and the contentions of a wife are a continual dropping.” Proverbs 19:13

The Roots of Contention

Contention springs from pride. King Solomon points out that contention only comes when pride is involved.

Only by pride comes contention: but with the well advised is wisdom.” Proverbs 13:10

The pride that produces contention is linked to a person’s desire to rule others or to judge them. We know that from the Hebrew word for contention, ‘midyawn’, which comes from a Hebrew root word meaning to rule and to judge.

When a person is given to contending with others they are most likely motivated by pride in their own opinions or their own importance, and will feel they have the right to rule others and to judge them.

A contentious person can often operate as “judge, jury and executioner”. They take rulership over others and execute judgement upon them. They will do this purely on their own account, according to their own opinions and evaluation of a situation.

Powerless Women

I suspect that one of the motivations for some women to become argumentative and contentious is that they feel powerless. They feel the need to gain control over their husband and children, so they are not so vulnerable.

The godly challenge for women, however, is to submit to their husband. So women need to find security in God, not in their powers of argument. Since it is God who asks them to submit, they can appeal to God to protect and bless them, even if they have grave concerns about their husband’s leadership abilities.

When women become secure in God’s care for them, they will not need to “rule” or “judge” others. They will be content and happy to get on with the life God gave them.

Contending on Autopilot

I have noticed that contentious people are quick to scoff, rebut, react and create arguments.

I recall an example from my time in New Zealand. While preaching, I asked a builder in the church for an on-the-spot estimate of the length of the building. I was showing how people develop good estimation skills. He scanned the building, then said, “Fifty Feet”. Immediately an older woman in the congregation gave a loud scoffing, “Hoh!” She clearly thought the estimate was ridiculous.

There was so much emotion in her mocking reaction that the builder later grabbed his tape-measure and confirmed that the building was within inches of the fifty feet he had estimated.

That lady had a problem. Without any ability to come up with an answer herself, she instantly and loudly contended with the very accurate information offered by someone who knew what he was talking about.

I am afraid many people who give in to contention are similarly ruled by it. They feel impelled to buy into things they are not qualified to speak about. They contend as if it was their automatic setting, whether they have anything to offer or not.

Getting Personal

Argumentative people also seem hard to instruct. When someone shows that they know what they are talking about the contender is likely to say something like, “You think you’re SO smart, don’t you?” They are unlikely to say, “Thank You. I’m glad you explained that to me.” Pride and the desire to dominate and judge others are at the heart of contention, so the contender will be too aroused to be humble and teachable.

Note too that if people feel threatened they will resort to personal attacks, rather than argue the issue at hand. Accusations, dredging up past failures, mockery, personal taunts and the like often find their way into arguments.

A Better Way

There is a much better way to communicate than to argue. Even if the other person is wrong there are better options than argument and contention. And it’s that better way that I really want to share with you. Now that I’ve taken so long with these background remarks, I’ll save the “better way” for Women With Wise Words part 2, which I’ll post in a couple of days.

Titchy Me

Yesterday my wife said something simple that really blessed me. She simply told me that she was feeling out of sorts and wasn’t sure why.

She recognised that her emotions, or her spirit, or something inside her was feeling unsettled and out of sorts. There was no drama. There was no argument. And she seemed to be fine afterwards. She experienced a time of being unsettled, and it passed.

It’s Your Fault!

In many relationships the kind of maturity which Susan displayed is completely missing. When the husband or wife feels unsettled they assume that it is someone else’s fault. Instead of taking responsibility for their own feelings, they lash out at others.

argument

I use the expression “loaded gun” to signify a person who is ready to pick a fight. They may even have a “hair trigger” ready to shoot off in any direction at the slightest prompting. Do you know people like that?

When these people are titchy they immediately act as if it someone else’s fault and as if they will feel better if they lash out at others. That kind of approach leads to such things as the “hormone hostage”, the “thunder dad” and “bad mood Sunday”.

Taking Responsibility

On the other hand, when a person recognises that the problem is internal, they are able to take responsibility for their feelings and the reactions that follow. That’s what Susan did.

She recognised that she was feeling out of sorts, but did not then assume it was someone else’s fault. She did not go looking for someone to vent her feelings on. She did not go and pick a fight so she could dump emotional baggage.

Instead, Susan simply acknowledged that she was struggling with something. She tried to figure out what it was, but couldn’t. She put that on the table. She did not create any sense of blame, or put-on to others. She simply put her own vulnerability out for open display.

Probably because of that, the feelings passed without incident and she got on happily with the rest of her day.

Pride and Anger

In many homes people’s pride and anger destroy and challenge their relationships. When people feel uncomfortable they are reluctant to admit that they have a problem. Their pride gets in the way. They don’t want to admit that they have a need or that they may be a problem or a cause of trouble. Their pride is much happier to accuse others and keep their own reputation clean.

And the uncomfortable feelings stir up reactions from within. We don’t like to feel unsettled and so it is easy to get aroused, making room for angry feelings, when things don’t feel right.

Pride and anger are relationship killers, leading to many of the arguments and strife that couples go through.

That’s why Susan’s handling of her feelings was so impressive. She humbled herself, rather than acting in pride. And she had control over her feelings. She ruled them, and they did not rule her.

Be Honest With Yourself

If you have emotional upheavals at times, or if you end up in strife with others, ask God to open your eyes to your own internal situation. Start being honest with yourself. Don’t blame others, but recognise what is happening inside you.

Here are some great sentences to say, to admit your situation. You might like to at least start saying these things to yourself.

“I’m struggling.” “I’m out of sorts.” “I’m feeling really unsettled at the moment.” “I’ve been struggling with uncomfortable feelings all day.” “I don’t know what’s going on, but I’m having a really hard time staying in control of my emotions today.” “I need help.” “Lord help me gain control of my inner life, emotions and responses.”

A Burden Shared

Once you can be honest with yourself it would be good to find others you can be honest with. Ideally that should be your spouse. However some spouses have their own baggage and do not want to help their husband or wife at these times. So, find some people of your own sex (that’s extremely important) who you can pray with and who will encourage you in godliness.

Don’t get bad counsel. I know of people who get advice from bitter, rebellious, selfish people and the advice is toxic. Get your advice and support from people who love God and are free from pride and anger.

As you share your situation with them you will likely find that you are better able to take control and take responsibility. That way you can walk into greater freedom.

Prayer

“Lord God, I pray for all those reading this who need to gain rule over their own spirit. I pray that You teach them to take responsibility and to humble themselves. I pray that You give them victory over anger, blame, shame and other devilish things that destroy them and their marriage.

Bless them with joy, peace and wisdom, so they can build the wonderful bonds that you intend us all to enjoy. I ask this in Jesus’ powerful name, Amen.”

Rejection 26 – Overwhelming Love

While the Steps to Release describe the issues I had to deal with in overcoming rejection, insecurity, inferiority and the like in my life, it was God’s Love that actually empowered the whole process.

My inner pain, ill-defined as it was, left me feeling afraid of letting anyone into the areas of my need. I had created an external image of happiness and success, and I desperately wanted that image to be my truth. God’s invasion of my inner life seriously challenged my internal comfort zone.

Grace and Truth

Some people think that to live in happy delusion is better than living in an unhappy reality. I challenge that. No-one can truly live if they are living a lie. The people locked in mental institutions, completely deluded about who and what they are, are not better for their foolish notions. We are far better to face reality and find God’s power to be real in our true circumstances, than to live enslaved to delusion and brokenness.

While God’s Love is powerful and was the awesome antidote to my inner pain, it came with a solid dose of “reality check”. And that’s Biblical. The Bible tells us that both “grace and truth came by Jesus Christ”.

“And the Word was made flesh (Jesus), and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth.” John 1:14

“For the law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ.” John 1:17

Grace is the special favour of God, His love, His mercy and His blessings into our lives. Truth speaks of reality and facing up to the whole picture, for what it is. Both these things came at the same time, in the same person, Jesus Christ.

In the same way, God brought both His truth and His love to my heart at the same time.

Supreme Love

God loves me just the way I am. His love is supreme. His love is unsurpassable. God’s love is overwhelming.

God’s love is SO wonderful and SO powerful that it totally outweighs all the love that every other person could give. If the whole world hated you and God loved you, you could experience total joy, complete fulfilment, overwhelming satisfaction and abundant delight in being alive. That’s how supremely powerful and wonderful God’s love is

Love Revealed

God’s amazing love was revealed to me through many preachers who taught on the subject over several years. Messages about the Father heart of God, the Biblical definitions of love, the example of the Prodigal Son’s father, and the many Bible verses that talk about God’s love opened my heart and mind to realise that God truly does love me.

I had been raised in good evangelical churches and heard the gospel message of faith in Jesus Christ a thousand times. The cumulative effect of that, however, did not leave me with a sense of God’s overwhelming love. It took some time before that new truth could settle in my heart.

Slowly I came to trust what the Bible said. Slowly I came to believe that God was not some angry potentate ready to judge all who fail His standards.

jesus hugsYes Jesus Loves Me

Somehow in my Christian journey I came to think of God’s love as the nice message to tell the children. It was fine for the children to sing “Yes, Jesus Loves Me”. But I thought that as we become mature in our understanding we are to move away from the childish notion of God’s love, and realise our responsibilities.

I carried a weight of obligation, linked to judgements upon those who “looked back”, were “unfruitful” and so on. In the development of those ideas I lost complete sight of God’s love for me.

Yet such passages as Romans 8 spoke clearly about the impossibility of being separated from God’s love. And the love of Christ was spoken of in many places too.

“Who will separate us from the love of Christ? Will it be tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?” Romans 8:35

“For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, Nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, will be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.” Romans 8:38,39

“And to know the love of Christ, which passes knowledge, that you might be filled with all the fullness of God.” Ephesians 3:19

I came to realise that Jesus does love me. God loves me.

Jesus Loves You!

You need a revelation of God’s love. That comes through the ministry of the Holy Spirit, illuminating the Bible. It is the Holy Spirit who pours God’s love through your wounded heart.

“And hope does not make us ashamed; because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit which is given to us.” Romans 5:5

A prayer I often pray for those needed healing from rejection and inner pain is that God’s Holy Spirit will release the Love of God through their heart, like ocean waves of God’s love sweeping over them. I want to pray that prayer for you. Then, in the next lesson I will take you even deeper into consideration of God’s Love.

Prayer for You

“Lord God, I pray for each person reading this, that You would pour Your love upon them. Let Your love be shed abroad in their heart, by the ministry of the Holy Spirit. Give them a revelation of Your great love for them. Let it flow over them like ocean waves of Your compassion, care, grace and blessing into their innermost being. And Lord, deliver them from rejection, shame, fear, insecurity and all inner pain. Let them enter into the joy of living in the glorious liberty of the children of God. I ask this for them, in Jesus’ precious name. Amen.”

White Wedding Magic

“And they all lived happily ever after”. Thus ends the umpteenth fairy story, where the charming prince and the beautiful princess are pronounced man and wife in a fairytale wedding.

It all looks like such sweet innocent and positively charming romanticism. But I have my doubts. I suspect that we are setting people up for some serious disappointment. “Happily ever after” just doesn’t happen!

What happens after the wedding ceremony is ‘life’ and ‘life together’!

The degree to which people are ready for ‘life’ and the degree to which people are ready for ‘life together’ is the degree to which they are ready for marriage.

Fantasy Wedding

As I walked through the local market on Saturday I passed a mum with a tiny daughter dressed in a wedding costume. The mother was busy announcing to her friends that the tiny daughter had just been ‘married’ to a boy earlier that morning.

child wedding

It seems that the girl was so delighted with her wedding dress costume that she wanted to have a ‘wedding’. So a pretend ceremony was arranged for the girl, much to the delight of the mother.

And that prompted my thoughts about the fascination we create for the wedding ceremony. We invoke a perception of “white wedding magic” and conjure up images of the “fantasy wedding”. The wedding dress has even more appeal than the man in the red suit we see at Christmas time.

Japanese White Wedding

A few years ago I saw an ornate cathedral in Melbourne city being used for a mid-week wedding. I paused to see what was going on, only to see a small group of Japanese people emerge onto the steps. I chatted with the chap waiting to drive off in an elaborate horse and carriage. He told me there are many of these weddings in Melbourne. Other sources tell me that Japanese couples travel to many places to experience the mystique of the western wedding.

japanese wedding

Apparently the Japanese have been impressed by the western idea of a “white wedding” in a church. Once the couple have been married in Japan, in their own traditional way, they arrange to fly to Melbourne, and other cities of the world, possibly as part of their honeymoon, and are joined by some family, for a western white wedding.

We have so created the mystique of white wedding magic that people from other traditions and backgrounds want to get some of the fantasy sprinkled on their own union. They want to live “happily ever after” too, so they go through the motions of the Hollywood magical moment.

Where is the Magic?

I am not a cynic. I am a realist. I want people to enjoy their life and marriage. So, the best preparation is with some common sense reality, not deceptive fantasy.

So, here is my question. Where is the magic in the white wedding? It is illusory. It is created by orchestrated music, emotional moments in a movie, smiles on the faces of actors, pretty photographs, gorgeous gowns and an evening of celebration. It is in the mind. It is not in the ceremony, or the dress, or the limo, or the honeymoon suite, or anywhere else.

A person who cannot handle life and who cannot maintain relationship and trust, will not be saved by the organ, the stained-glass windows, the flowers, the wedding rings, or anything else that happens on the “big day”.

Big Day a Big Flop

Have you ever heard of a “big day” becoming a Big Flop! Maybe not in those terms. Instead we call it “divorce”. Have you ever heard of divorce? Have you ever heard of adultery? Have you ever heard of heart-break? Have you ever heard or arguments, bitching, spite, jealousy, resentment and the like?

Those things can be summarised with the term “big flop”! Every wedding day that pre-empts those things is a Big Flop! The bridesmaids, photographer, music, smiles, confetti and all the rest of it were wasted! They did not save the marriage. They did not create “happily ever after”!

And they never can! They never will! The white wedding has no magic. The mystique is illusion. The fantasy wedding is just that; “fantasy”!

Expectation versus Preparation

Little girls do not need to have their “expectation” aroused. They need to make “preparation” for successful relationship building. The notion of “happily ever after” needs to be replaced with the confidence that “You can make it work, honey!”

Prepare your children and yourself for “life”, not for an expensive big day. Train your children that no-one is perfect. We all let each other down and upset each other in many ways. That’s why we learn to forgive and to ask forgiveness. That’s why we have to call on God for His grace. That’s why we “work at” and “build” a relationship, rather than have it delivered on a platter.

Every time your child is upset at you or a sibling or friend you can use that to prepare them for the “life” that follows the big day. Every time your child struggles with their emotions you can teach them to tame and guide their heart. Every time your child hears about relationships falling apart, you can teach them how to restore relationship and make it work.

Maturity over the Moment

There is no reason why your child should not enjoy and anticipate their big day. However you are much wiser to prepare them for the life that follows, rather than let them get lost in the fantasy of that “magic moment”. Help your child anticipate the “maturity” which they will grow into, rather than the “theme park ride” that passes in a few moments.

Speak to your child about their big day, but also about their coming responsibilities as a parent. Talk to them about what they will do when they are a grandparent. Prepare them, mentally, emotionally and spiritually, for those hard moments in life, like sitting up all night with a sick child.

Don’t just fantasise about the wedding day, but about them coaching their children in a favourite sport, teaching their children to catch fish, change a tyre, go camping in the wilds, mend socks and cook meals. Prepare your children for the maturity they will blossom into, not just the moment that will pass.

Mentor Your Child

Remember that your child is being mentored by you. Your attitudes and reactions instruct your child about what is valuable and important in life. If you go giddy over silly things, then they will too. If you are mature and wise, you will raise them to be mature and wise too.

If you are foolish and immature, it is high time you worked through that and became the kind of parent that will create mature, godly generations for the future.

Remember, you are preparing future generations, not coaching an actor for one scene in a movie.

Rejection 25 – Steps to Release

When God set me free from Rejection I thought everyone enjoyed the same release. I thought it came along with the experience of being Filled with God’s Holy Spirit. It all happened to me around the same time and I assumed it was all part of the same package.

I remember talking with my older brother toward the end of God’s major work in my life, and realising that what God was doing in me was not common to everyone. I said to him, “You know how God gets in and messes with your inner life and totally sets you free and transforms you ….” He looked at me blankly and said, “No”. So I tried to explain it to him differently. I finally realised that what I was going through was not a standard procedure, but a wonderful personal journey.

Challenged to Explain

Several years later, when I gave testimony of God’s wonderful healing in my inner life I was challenged to explain how God had done it. I couldn’t explain it and simply announced that it was God’s wonderful work, for which I am very glad.

Those who heard my testimony told me I had no right to share such a wonderful thing if I couldn’t also tell my audience how God did it, so they too could experience the same transformation.

That put me on my back feet, so to speak, and I went to prayer to ask God what it was that He had done to set me free.

Mileposts on My Journey

The Lord enabled me to reconstruct the journey which He had led me along in order to bring me to the release which I enjoyed. I realised that I did not take these steps quickly, but laboured over several of them for extended periods of time.

Reject 25 Steps to Release

I had no mentor on my journey and so I stumbled along, bogging down, drawing back and resisting the Lord’s work along the way. Yet, I gradually recognised the mileposts which I had passed along the way.

I wrote down the list of major steps God had me take. As I did, I realised that when I had prayed for others and given them godly advice, I was unconsciously directing others to follow the same path that I knew had worked for me.

I called the steps My Steps to Release. I have taught them around the world and used them in many diverse situations to help people young and old for a wide range of backgrounds. So I confidently teach them to others.

Widely Applied

As I saw the path which the Lord led me along I recognised that He asked very similar things of me for a variety of issues which He dealt with in my life. These were the steps God used to lead me out of Rejection, but He also used them to release me from masturbation, and from fear, and to deal with my pride, and to release my faith, and so on.

As you come to appreciate these steps I commend their use in the many challenges you have to work through, but also in your efforts to bless and help others.

A Road Not A Map

The problem with a distilled list of steps is that the “map” becomes an object of worship for those who learn them. Bookshops abound with texts espousing the “Six Steps” to this or that. “Become a better YOU in five simple steps!”

However you need to keep in mind that my Steps to Release describe a Road. They involve a “journey”, not a seminar session. They are about you stepping into freedom, not about you having a new trick routine to try out.

The steps are not magical. They do not teleport you to some destination. Instead, they are the steps upon which you must place your foot. If you really want to be free you must walk with the Lord, not just read about the road.

Milestones on the Journey

This is the journey which God took me along and taught me to use to bring others into wholeness and release. This is the journey which I have led many rejection sufferers along and seen them walk into complete healing and restoration.

It begins with the step of Admitting you have a need. This challenges you to be humble.

It helps to identify the real problem and the initiating events, if possible. The right medicine will only be given if the right diagnosis is made. Is your problem rejection, or fear, or shame, or something else? Where did it come from?

Repent of any wrong you have done to create the problem. Be honest with yourself and God. If you have initiated or perpetuated the problem in any way you need to ask God to forgive you.

Forgive all those who have been a part of the problem, including its initiation and continuation.

Renounce all of the evil associated with the problem. This is the process of breaking the spiritual connection between you and the problem. Break your link to all the elements of the problem, from its initiation and development in your life.

Now, resist the evil. Break the power of those things you have already prayed about. This is spiritual warfare against the evil spirits associated with your problem.

Then throw yourself at God’s feet, spiritually. Give God all of your problem, garbage, fears, sins, and so on. Let God take what is left of you and make of you what He wants.

Now bask in and receive God’s love and healing in your life.

More Clarity

I have discussed these Steps To Release in several of my books, in videos on YouTube and in articles on the ChrisFieldBlog.com site. If you would like to learn more about these steps then check out those resources.

Restraining Your Child

Have you ever felt like tying your child to a tree, or locking them in their room? Sometimes kids can be very exasperating! Parents can be overwhelmed emotionally and mentally by their inability to control their child.

A screaming child is a great annoyance to the shoppers or people they pass, but spare a thought for the poor parent who cannot walk away from the child and escape the noise. The same is true with a demanding child and a disobedient child.

Have you seen those parents who have their arms full, while their young child simply stops and won’t follow the parent? The mum can’t abandon her child, can’t grab him either, and can’t make him come. How exasperating.

Tied to a Tree

This picture was set up for fun by some friends of mine, and it captures the solution some parents wish they could resort to at times.

child restraint

If their problem child could simply be restrained for a while they could get some rest, or get some things done. Or maybe they could be sure that nothing would be broken and no more trouble would be created.

I am not advocating child abuse, or that you tie your boy to a tree. This is just a gag.

Train Up A Child

The Biblical way to deal with our children is not to simply restrain them, but to “train” them. We are told to “train up a child”. Our responsibility is to prepare them for correct behaviour, not just while they are young, but for the whole of their life.

Train up a child in the way he should go: and even when he is old he will not depart from it.” Proverbs 22:6

If you will not “train” your child you will end up struggling to “restrain” your child. The easier choice is to train properly. In fact – ‘to train is to restrain’.

Self-Control

While modern parents are directed by pop-psychology to concentrate on all the “self” issues of their child – like self-esteem, self-motivation and self-discovery, the Bible tells parents to teach “self-control”.

The key to child training is to bring the child to the place where the child makes the right choices, and controls their own actions, to bring their behaviour into line with what is appropriate. If a child is out of control, the parents have failed. If the child needs the parent to maintain the control, then the parents have failed.

Notice in Proverbs 22:6, quoted above, that the child’s personal will holds them in the right path. The verse tells us that if we train up a child in the way he should go then even when he is old “he will not depart from it”! It is “he”, the child, who will maintain his steps in the right path. This is self-control.

Two Simple Tools

Parents have two simple tools at their disposal to train the heart of their child to do right. Those tools are a rod of correction and words. The Bible refers to these as “the rod and reproof”, and both of these work together to bring wisdom to the child.

“The rod and reproof give wisdom: but a child left to himself brings his mother to shame.” Proverbs 29:15

The Rod is a means of physical punishment. It is a mechanism for inflicting a small amount of pain to a child to affirm to the child the parent’s commitment to directing the child to correct behaviour. The rod motivates the child, through their desire to avoid pain, to make right choices. When the child makes right choices, as an act of their own will, their will is strengthened in making right choices.

Reproof involves words that are used to rebuke, correct, direct and affirm a child. Parents have great power in their words to impart wisdom, instruct the heart of the child, expose evil and affirm good in the child.

Get Wise Not Mad

If you are often getting mad with your child then you need God’s wisdom. God promises to give wisdom to those who cry out for it. So call out to God for the wisdom you need in your home and with your children.

If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that gives to all men liberally, and upbraids not; and it will be given him.” James 1:5

Now it is wise to listen to God and to obey His Word. So, another path to wisdom is to read God’s Word, the Bible, and put into practice what God says. The Book of Proverbs has much to say about child training.

You will find much of that wisdom explained in my book, Parenting Horizons, available from the FamilyHorizons.net website. You will also find godly wisdom from many other Christian authors, such as the Ezzo’s Growing Kids God’s Way course.

So, don’t get mad, Get Wise!

Rejection 24 – Finding Freedom

Now we come to the most exciting part of this series – that of Finding Freedom. Jesus sets us free. God gives us “liberty”. God heals our broken hearts. So, how do we experience those things?

“If the Son (Jesus) makes you free, you will be free indeed (truly free).” John 8:36

“Our soul is escaped as a bird out of the snare of the fowlers: the snare is broken, and we are escaped.” Psalm 124:7

He heals the broken in heart, and binds up their wounds.” Psalm 147:3

My Journey to Freedom

Reject 24 Finding Freedom

In my late teenage years I was touched by the Charismatic Revival. It was a season of spiritual refreshing and release of the reality of the Holy Spirit. Many people who had been Christians for years, such as I had been, became activated in a new way.

As I encountered that process I found that God seemed to impress me with various thoughts in various ways. I particularly found God making me feel uncomfortable about the fake life I had built around me. I was hiding my pain behind a mask of confidence. Behind that mask I felt insecure and vulnerable.

My response to those impressions was to reject them. They made me feel uncomfortable, even though I sensed it was God who was speaking to me. My heart response was, “Go and pick on someone else! I’m doing much better than many. Go and pick on those who need more help than I do.”

I experienced this, and other challenging thoughts, over many months. My standard response was to resist the impressions and press on as best I could.

Admit Your Need

I realise now that the very first step toward freedom is to admit you have a need. As long as I resisted God’s challenge about my needs and my false life, I could not be healed and set free.

I have had people ask me to pray for their needy relatives. But when I ask if those people are open to God or would even admit their need I am told “No, they wouldn’t admit it.” I cannot help people unless they are willing to admit they have a need.

God pushed me to the point where I admitted I had a need, but I still would not let God deal with me. I was afraid of the damage He might do if He messed with my inner pain. I had buried all that stuff and didn’t even really know where it came from. So I didn’t want it all stirred up.

Trust God

I could not move further forward until I came to a place of trust in God. I needed to be confident that God would only do me good and not leave me in a mess or in pain if He messed with my inner life.

That confidence to trust God was built up in me in two ways. First I heard a bunch of messages about the Love of God. As God’s love was explained to me and I saw what the Bible had to say about it, I found faith built up within me.

And that’s biblical. The Bible says that faith works by “love”. When we get a revelation of God’s love our ability to have faith in Him is increased.

“For in Jesus Christ neither circumcision avails any thing, nor uncircumcision; but faith which works by love.” Galatians 5:6

The second thing that helped me trust God was truth from God’s Word, the Bible. I found several verses which spoke about God’s love and His trustworthiness. Those verses helped to undergird my struggling faith in God.

Bible Verses

Some of the verses which blessed me are listed here. Some of these verses had been put to music and I only learned them because they were sung regularly in church.

He heals the broken in heart, and binds up their wounds.” Psalm 147:3

“The LORD appeared to me of old, saying, Yea, I have loved you with an everlasting love: therefore I have drawn you with loving-kindness.” Jeremiah 31:3

“Call unto me, and I will answer you, and show you great and mighty things, which you do not know.” Jeremiah 33:3

“The Spirit of the Lord GOD is on me; because the LORD has anointed me to preach good tidings to the meek; he has sent me to bind up the broken-hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that are bound; To proclaim the acceptable year of the LORD, and the day of vengeance of our God; to comfort all that mourn; To appoint unto them that mourn in Zion, to give them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness; that they might be called trees of righteousness, the planting of the LORD, that he might be glorified.” Isaiah 61:1-3

The verse which gave me the greatest confidence to let God deal with the inner things of my heart was His promise not to damage the vulnerable.

“A bruised reed he will not break, and the smoking flax he will not quench: he will bring forth judgment unto truth.” Isaiah 42:3

Let God be God

I had to come to the place where I trusted God to be God. Up until then I trusted myself more than God. I knew that I would not let myself get hurt, if I could help it. But I was not sure about God.

How ridiculous! I put more trust in a hopeless and failing human than in the God of all eternity!

I also had to trust God to be the God of Love, since “God is love” (1John 4:8). I had to believe that God was telling the truth and that He had all the power to do it right, and all the love to only want what is best for me.

Once my faith had been bolstered by learning about the love of God and by seeing God’s precious promises in the Bible, I finally gave in and let God be God in my life.

Jumping in the Dark

I remembered hearing the story of a father who would stand his infant son on the table, turn out the lights and then tell the son to jump off. The boy had to trust his father’s good intentions, strength and promise, in order to happily jump off in the dark.

I had to take a similar leap of faith. I had to trust God to be God. I had to lose all control and trust God to know what He was doing and to be abundantly able to not only protect me, but to bless me, just as He said He would.

Taking such a leap of faith is hard when insecurity is an inherent problem in your life. Rejection leads to insecurity, so I made no hasty rush at this offer. But, praise God, I did finally get to the point where I would trust God.

Lord, Get Me Ready

Here is a prayer for those who feel much of what I have struggled with. This is for those who want to be free, but who are bound up by fears and insecurities.

“Lord God, teach me to trust You. I know in my head that You are God and that nothing is impossible for You. But in my heart I am fearful and insecure. I want to trust You from the depths of my being. I want to be free. Lord, get me ready to receive Your love and enter into the freedom which you have for me. I ask this in Jesus’ precious and powerful name. Amen.”

Rejection 23 – Many Kinds of Rejects

What we have seen in recent lessons is that people who suffer rejection can develop in various ways into different and even contrasting personality types. There is no one stereotype of a “Reject”. Rejected people are all unique individuals and they will respond differently, based on personality, things that influence them, their ambitions and the manner and degree to which their rejection has impacted them.

Motley Crew

A group of highly rejected people can contain quite diverse personalities and lifestyle characteristics. There will be leaders, followers, loners, negotiators, carers, retaliators, aggressors, crumplers, jokers, performers, high achievers, and everything else.

So, from a ministry point of view, I always have in mind that any person I meet, no matter what their appearance of success or wholeness, may be carrying some rejection baggage which needs to be cleared away. I don’t go looking for rejection, but I recognise that it can be present in unexpected places.

Pity Please Punch

Three of the main characters I tend to notice the most are those who give in to the Pity party, those who seek to Please others (such as the extrovert performer), and those who give in to aggression (that’s where the word “punch” fits in).

Reject 23 Variety

The crumpled ‘hopeless case’ type person may well be a rejection sufferer. But so too might be the ‘life of the party’ person who is always seeking to amuse and impress others. And so too might be the hardened aggressor who stands up to others and does his own thing.

We have also seen that rejection addicts and users are not uncommon types of people to emerge from a rejection background.

Outsiders

Many years ago I was speaking at a Christian meeting in Kings Cross, back when it was the ‘bad’ part of Sydney. Drugs, prostitution and all manner of vices could be readily accessed in Kings Cross at the time.

After the meeting, my host called me to the shop window and pointed out two youths walking up the street. They were kitted out in the most extreme punk rocker garb of the day. Everything about them shouted that they were outsiders to normal society.

My host, converted from the ugly side of life, asked me what I thought those kids were doing dressed like that. I had no answer. I had never thought it necessary to play the part of a misfit.

He advised me, from his own personal journey, that people who dress and act as those boys did were addicted to the pain of rejection. He claimed that they actually wanted people to scowl at them, be afraid of them, and reject them from normal society. These, then, were rejection addicts, in an extreme version.

No Good in Rejection

I know that some people are able to rise above their circumstances and use their challenges as stepping stones for personal success. This is true of those who have been rejected. Their experience of rejection motivates them to achieve, to prove themselves, to outperform others, and so on.

I think of a highly successful businessman who seems to run on high-octane (so to speak), since he is a high achiever in everything he does. He has risen above the pain of his past and the tragic loss of his parents when he was young.

So, some people might tend to think of hardship and pain as possibly a good thing in places.

However, rejection is an evil experience. It brings pain and harm. It is not good, even if people are able to rise above it in some way.

Do Not Use Rejection

I have seen parents, teachers and even peers, use rejection as a tool for manipulation or to motivate people. “You don’t want people to think you are STUPID, do you?” “If you don’t lift your grades then you are not one of us!” “We won’t be your friend any more, unless you do what we tell you.”

Humiliation was a tool some teachers resorted to in years gone by, sitting a child in a corner with a dunce hat on their head. The hope may have been that the child would be motivated by the experience to work harder, so as never to suffer that again.

But, even if you appear to create a positive outcome, rejection is toxic and is not a tool to use. Toying with people’s being, by using rejection, can bring untold damage.

Win and Lose

While rejection may appear to produce a desired result, it leaves deep scars which will not go away. Money, fame and success do not remove the pain of rejection.

The businessman I referred to earlier, who is a high achiever and highly successful man, is locked up on the inside. He is unable to relate to people with ease or with self-confidence. He is highly committed to performance and achievement, rather than relationship. He only understands “doing”, not “being”.

Those who could have helped him work through his pain and loss did not do so. He ended up relying on his personal abilities and living his life to compensate for what he lost. But he cannot have the warmth and depth of relationship that his heart was made for and which he is seeking at a deeper level.

Nothing Like Freedom

There is nothing like freedom. The Bible talks about the “glorious liberty of the children of God” and being “free indeed”. We are told to stand firm in the liberty which Christ has liberated us into.

“Creation itself will be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God.” Romans 8:21

“If the Son (Jesus) makes you free, you will be free indeed (truly free).” John 8:36

Stand fast therefore in the liberty with which Christ has made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage.” Galatians 5:1

Do not become attached to your rejection. Do not think of it as a gift or a blessing in your life. Do not use rejection on others. Do not live with your rejection any longer.

Be healed, by receiving the Love that comes from God. I will explain how God’s love impacts on rejection in the coming lessons.

Contingency Plans 2

I have already opened the subject of contingency plans with you. I have shown that if we go with the flow and follow the broad way we will head to destruction. We must that the road less travelled in order to be prepared for the challenges which will come our way.

Wise people check things out and are ready for the evil ahead. Foolish people just blunder on and end up in pain and trouble. King Solomon said that in Proverbs 22:3.

Not Equal

Not all people are equal. Communism and socialism seek to equalise everyone, but people are different not only in terms of age and strength. People generate different outputs and have different levels of protection around them.

The rabble is made up of simple people. They rush to the left and the right and end up in the ditch. Often they will be resistant to the help they need, because they will not respect or receive the wisdom that is offered to them.

The wise accept instruction and correction and even love those who rebuke them. Fools become angry and incensed when they are told their faults or given good advice.

Be Prepared

I often hear people discuss situations they are in and I quickly see that they are no prepared. Many people have never looked into the information given them. They blindly accept the populist ideas and have no protection from the inevitable tide of trouble coming their way.

How many times have you skipped reading the paperwork? How often do you simply get a quick summary of the facts from one of your friends? When you do that you are accepting the cultural notions, and not necessarily the facts of the situation. You may be the blind one being led by the blind!

But being prepared is not always easy. It can be costly in terms of money, time, energy and attention. Choosing the right selection, making the right plans and taking the correct precautions can be challenging tasks.

contingency 1

Setting up the right insurance, investments, course of study, career path, health program, exercise regime, information on key social processes, etc do not happen easily overnight.

So the challenge is to “be prepared”. Stop playing “follow the leader” and running with all the sheep. Step out of the path of ignorance and start climbing the hill of responsibility.

No Easy Ride

I love the idea of an easy ride. I’m an Aussie. I have been raised in a culture where our motto is “She’ll be alright mate!” This is to say that if we don’t do anything it won’t really matter. We are not culturally trained to be responsible or well informed. Aussies are just as likely to espouse empty opinions as anyone else on the planet.

So it is not easy for me to admit that life is not an easy ride. Malcolm Fraser, an Australian Prime Minister, once quoted George Bernard Shaw’s saying that “Life wasn’t meant to be easy!” He was ridiculed for saying so, but it happens to be true.

And remember that Jesus points us to the narrow and restricted path, not the easy, “go with the flow” path that everyone else is on.

That does not mean that life is meant to be downright impossible. But it does mean that we cannot be too complacent or casual about proper preparation for the life ahead.

What Will You Do?

Conspiracy theorists have all kinds of concerns about what the world might be in for in the next few decades. Forced injections, implanted identity chips and concentration camps for citizens in America and other first world countries are just some of the ugly spectres found in their materials.

What will you do if any of these things were to come about? Have you made any preparation? Have you investigated any of these things?

Overwhelmed By The Moment

My muslim friend from Boznia fled to Australia during the ethnic and religious warfare late last century. As the trouble spread he talked with his best friend, a non-muslim, and they both agreed that they would never do anything to harm each other.

However just a few weeks later that very friend was part of a vigilante group which expelled the muslim from his home. The friend said, “What else can I do?” He would have been expelled himself if he had stood up for his friend. All the best in intentions in the world were swept away in the crisis.

So, are your preparations disaster-proof? Or will they be overwhelmed in the heat of the moment?

Spiritual Preparations

The most powerful and important preparations are those you make with God. Being a son of God by faith in Jesus Christ is essential. You then access the many blessings that God has for His children, including wisdom, security, grace, blessing, forgiveness, and more.

But even there, keeping a Bible under your pillow won’t help you. Reading it and feasting on God’s words to you will do vastly more than simply owning a Bible.

Shallow, token prayers will never be as helpful and powerful as Spirit-anointed intercessions. Culturally sensitive sermons will be far less helpful than the truth of God’s Word preached fearlessly. Living your life the way it suits you will make you much more vulnerable than to determine to do all that God asks of you, His way.

God promises to give you wisdom if you ask for it. So if you feel incapable of knowing what to do, ask God for the wisdom He has promised you. Commit your ways to Him, cry out to Him and let God be your deliverer.

“If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all men liberally, and does not rebuke; and it will be given to him.” James 1:5
“Whoever calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.” Acts 2:21
“Then they cried to the LORD in their trouble, and he delivered them out of their distresses.” Psalm 107:6

Ignorance is Your Own Fault

If you remain stupid, foolish and ignorant, then don’t blame anyone else. It is your fault.

If others get through the storms better than you, then don’t resent their foundations, but learn from their example. Don’t build your life on the sand of human opinion and cultural conformity.

Your life is your own. Others will betray you, fool you, and set you up for destruction. But you, and only you, can choose to change all that by stepping into the light of God’s truth and taking responsibility for the rest of your life.

Contingency Plans 1

Not everyone is prepared. The same disaster will affect people differently. Everyone will have made different contingency plans.

Yet some will think it “unfair” that others were better prepared than them. People who are wise will get a better outcome than fools. Yet the fools will likely resent the difference. Hmmmm…

So, where are you when it comes to preparation? Have you made good plans?

Ignorance is Pain

You have all heard that “ignorance is bliss” but it is not true. Ignorance is painful. You cannot be ignorant and make wise decisions at the same time. If you are a fool you will have plenty of reasons to regret it.

contingency

If you simply go along with everyone else, doing what everyone else is doing, chasing what everyone else is chasing, you will end up with the mess that everyone else is heading into. If you do not stop and pay attention to where you are going and what the implications are, then you will suffer pain as a result of your ignorance.

Jesus warned that the easy way, through the broad gate to the broad road, leads to destruction. It is a narrow gate and a more restricted way that leads to life.

“Enter in at the narrow gate: for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leads to destruction, and many go in there: But narrow is the gate and the way that lead to life, and there are few that find it.” Matthew 7:13,14

Defensive Driving

A friend once attended a defensive driving course and told me it was all about being prepared. He was told to not simply follow the tail-lights of the car in front of him, but to look further ahead down the road. If he paid attention to what was going on ahead of the car ahead of him he would be better prepared and safer than if he just followed the leader.

That defensive driving key applies to the whole of life. You don’t have to end up in a mess, if you will only pay attention, do your homework, take responsibility and not just follow the easy way with those around you.

Quit or Defer

My brother and I both left Sydney University before our course was complete. I wanted to go to Bible College in the USA and so I left my university degree to raise money for theological studies. My brother also left his course and we worked in the same factory together. He helped in the office and with the accounts, which was his area of study.

After a year my brother announced he was going back to uni. I was shocked. I asked him how he could do such a thing. He advised that he had simply deferred for a year.

Defer! I didn’t even know you could do that. I “Quit!” I was gone, but he was simply on leave.

What troubled me was that I did not know the option of deferment even existed. I had not sought counsel. I had followed my heart and did what I believed was the only thing to do.

Mind you, I would not have gone back to my old course. I have no regrets about the decision and outcome, but I had a wake-up call about my awareness of my options and the bigger picture.

Safe Investing

Some years ago I knew several people who placed money into a risky investment. When it fell over they lost their money. I asked one chap how he felt about losing his money. He replied, “Oh, I didn’t lose any money! I had it in a special arrangement where my money was not at risk.”

He knew something my other friends did not know. He placed money into an account, but did not allow the funds to be transferred until certain conditions were met.

Now, how did he know to do that? He obviously made some effort to be better informed than others.

See the Picture

These examples show that not all people go through the same situation equally. Those who have wisdom and insight can go through a situation differently to those who have no clue.

“A prudent man foresees the evil, and hides himself: but the simple pass on, and are punished.” Proverbs 22:3

People you hear squealing about some new regulation, the economy, the weather, new social changes, or whatever, are probably the ones who are unprepared. They may be the simple ones who walked straight into trouble because they could not see it coming.

Audit Yourself

I’ve given you the picture. The question now is, are you prepared? In fact, are you one of the wise or one of the foolish?

If you investigate things yourself and take courses of action independently then at least you are not just going with the mob. If you are carefree and careless about these issues then I caution you to pay attention to the contingency plans you need for yourself and your family, and to keep these things in mind through the whole of life.

I am serious about your need to deal with these issues. So I’ll bring this up again with you soon in Contingency Plans 2.