Watching for change

Tuesday, July 15, 2003

My Oscar (it's a fish, not a monster in a trashcan) almost jumped out of my tank this morning. I held it's food pellet above the water and i was about to drop it in the water, and then SQUISHOOOO!!! it jumped out of the water! It was lucky it landed back in the water, because it jumped real high. Almost bit my finger off. I'm thinking i should buy it some fish again to eat....

Friday, July 11, 2003

hahahahaha!!!! FREE SLURPY DAY!!!!

http://www.7-eleven.com/newsroom/articles.asp?p=2246

Today is definitely a good day just because of that.

Thursday, July 10, 2003

hahaha i read something in someone's xanga, and it got me thinking... God used it, and it hit some tender spots in my heart... so you can all look at the rants that i vomit out in my 4th entry in this blog today. And if you read this and it looks like i ripped off all your ramblings, sorry. I'm biting off of you because i thought it was provocative how you said it and you pointed out the obvious that i could not see.

I have been so mad at romantic love, so embittered against it. For good reasons too. But I think what happened was this. In junior high years, i struggled with my first feelings of what i thought was love. And the pain i received from those infatuations had led to so much pain. Actually it was just one experience that gave me so much pain. I convinced myself it was love, but it wasn't. It was a stupid infatuation. I would even make excuses and put costumes on those excuses to make it look like God's voice. It was infatuation, and i wouldn't admit it. It was wrong, and i wouldn't admit it. And God had to end it himself because I wasn't going to do it. ANd then i became embittered. Not against God, because i understood what He did and had no choice but to allow him to. But it embittered me against love. Relationship love to be specific. But all that time after that, i fought with all my heart not to fall in love again. But instead of just getting rid of infatuation, i destroyed the very element of relationship. Not just relationship with a girl, but relationships with people. In an effort to suppress the eros (romantic) feelings i had, i destroyed the phileo (friendship) love along with it.

It took me so long to heal what i had tried to kill off. Even now, it's hard to have friendships. I am introspective. But much of the phileo love i had become so embittered against has become restored...

but that romantic love... I don't know if i still want it. But God keeps bugging me. He says, You can't know my AGAPE (unconditional, complete love) until you know every aspect of love, including romantic love. And He's showing me that what I thought was romantic love wasn't romantic love, it was infatuation. I don't think God's telling me to go ahead and fall in love. He's telling me to drop this bitterness i hold against romantic love. To drop this bitterness i've built up against those who have fallen in love, and i have thought abandoned me. To drop the bitterness i've built up against those i have fallen in love with. God is saying, drop your bitterness, not your guard. And there's such a fine line between those that I have never been able to see.

God, teach me how to love... Because i don't even know what it is.

I wrote a whole other paragraph... but it got deleted....

well simply put, the word abba is such a deep word. In Hebrew, it means father, but much more intimate... more intimate than even how we say "daddy" oh... it's hard to say how much it just hit me- God is my Abba.... but it just became so real what that word means... i would explain it... but i think it's too hard to do that... if you have time, just sit there and think about it.

Bitterness is one of my greatest enemies...

and this past week in which i've written nothing... i'v e been thinking about the meaning of love... i mean i keep saying love is what will change this world and it's the only solution to all the problems in the world... but do i really know what love is? love is something beyond my grasp. My heart is not big enough to know what it is, and if i don't know what it is... how can i give it? Does my heart really have the capacity to give true love....? I am stumped at how limited my human heart is, and how every time i fail it leads to bitterness. See, the love i think is love, isn't really love. It's so self centered. I try to love to gain love from others... can i just love without even a response from the other person that i want...? or is taht what love is? because that seems so imperfect....

so i'm utterly confused... except if I seek the love of God, His love will change my heart and some strange reaction in my sould occurs in which i love others... gee wiz, love is more complicated than ever. I wonder if i can EVER express true agape love...

word to mr. frangipine... (this is long, but it's worth reading)

"BITTERNESS IN THE GARDENS OF OUR HEARTS"
by Francis Frangipane
http://www.frangipane.org/


Coming up Short of His Grace

"See to it that no one comes short of the grace of God; that no root of bitterness springing up causes trouble, and by it many be defiled" (Heb 12:15).

It is impossible to pass through this world without being struck by injustice or heartache. Unless we process our struggles in Christ, a single wounding of our soul can create a deep bitterness within us, poisoning our very existence. In my 33 years of ministry, I have known far too many Christians who have perfected the art of looking polite, while living inwardly with an angry, cynical or resentful spirit. They have swallowed the poison of bitterness and they are dying spiritually because of it. The problem is that, as Christians, we know it is wrong to react with open anger toward people. However, rather than truly forgiving and surrendering that injustice to God, we suppress our anger. Anger is a result of perceived injustice. Suppressed anger always degrades into bitterness, which is, in reality, unfulfilled revenge.

The Bible not only provides the biographies of heroes of our faith, but it also documents the lives of common people, individuals who experienced the same kind of heartaches as we have. Some overcame wounding or loss and subsequent bitterness, while others became examples to avoid.

An Example from the Bible

Consider Naomi from the book of Ruth. A famine in Israel led Naomi's family to migrate to Moab. Without family or friends to support her, as aliens in a foreign land, Naomi then suffered the loss of her husband; his death was followed by the death of her two grown sons. When Naomi returned to Israel with Ruth, her daughter-in-law, she announced to those who knew her, "Do not call me Naomi; call me Mara (bitter), for the Almighty has dealt very bitterly with me" (Ruth 1:20).

The name "Naomi" means "pleasant." We can imagine that when Naomi was dedicated to God as an infant, her parents prayed that her name would forecast her future. Now, however, the very opposite had occurred. Naomi was deeply embittered by her loss, to the extreme of blaming "the Almighty" for dealing "very bitterly" with her.

If you have ever listened to a bitter person, there is nothing "pleasant" about them. Yes, we should weep with those who weep, yet a bitter soul is a spirit trapped in a time warp; they live in the memory of their pain.

Several years ago I met a woman who had suffered a difficult divorce. I talked with her every six months or so for two years, and each time we talked she said exactly the same things about her ex-husband. She was divorced from her husband, but now married to a bitter spirit that held her captive to her heartache. For Naomi, her bitterness was indirectly focused towards God. She was angry that He allowed hardship in her life. "The Lord has brought me back empty" (Ruth 1:21). My sorrow is God's fault.

A Contrast in Job

Contrast her life with that of Job's first encounter with loss (Job 1:1-22). Job lost his family and possessions, yet he bowed and worshiped. "The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away. Blessed be the name of the Lord" (Job 1:21).

How we handle sorrow reveals the depth of our worship of God. When life cuts us, do we bleed bitterness or worship? Job bowed and drew close to God. Naomi withdrew and talked about the Lord with her back to Him. I have dear friends who lost their only son when he was a teenager. In the midst of their heartache, they have become examples to everyone of true worship. Over the years, their pain actually purified and deepened their worship; their suffering made them more compassionate toward the suffering of others (See 2 Cor 1:3-4). And, I know others who have suffered the sudden loss of a loved one and, within weeks, withdrew from God and became bitter. Adversity does not perfect character; it reveals character. It exposes what is happening inside of us.

Bitterness Poisons

In ancient times mankind experimented with vegetation, seeking to learn which plants were edible and which were poisonous. In his search, he discovered that, generally speaking, if a plant or fruit was sweet, it was usually safe to eat; bitter plants, man discovered, would either sicken or kill. Likewise, the bitter experiences of life, if we ingest them into our spirits, can become a spiritual poison that destroys our thoughts, expectations and attitudes. Such an experience may enter your soul via a relational wound or injustice; it can begin through a major disappointment or loss. However, once bitterness enters the human soul, like ink spreading in a glass of water, it can darken every aspect of our existence.

Indeed, not only can bitterness ruin our lives, Hebrews warns that a root of bitterness can "defile many" (Heb 12:15). A spiritual root is a hidden, unresolved anger that is buried beneath the surface of our lives. Outwardly, we look "properly Christian" until we begin to discuss someone who hurt us. As we speak, that root "springs up" and it defiles others. If you haven't dealt with your bitterness, beware when you speak to others, lest you defile them with your words; and if you are listening to an embittered person, take heed that the spirit of bitterness is not being transferred to your life as well!

Bitterness through Neglect

In Genesis we find another bitter soul in Esau, the brother of Jacob. Esau had foolishly bargained away his inheritance when he was young and then lost his father's blessing when he was old. When Esau discovered he had lost both to his brother Jacob, the Bible tells us he "cried out with an exceedingly great and bitter cry" (Gen 27:34).

To lose something through our laziness or neglect can create bitterness of soul. Additionally, to have someone deceive us and take what was rightfully ours is equally as destructive. I know people who were lazy and did not esteem their education. Today they are bitter employees working for minimum wage. I also know young, unwed mothers who let deceitful boys steal their virginity, which later also embittered them. Even spiritual people can find themselves suffering with bitterness caused by neglect. I know a pastor who was so devoted to his ministry, he consistently neglected his wife. She finally divorced him; cry and plead as he would, he suffered the bitter losses of his wife and the respect of his church.

Esau's loss made him very bitter; yet, have we, like Esau, lost the more valuable elements of life because of our neglect? Have others received blessings that were earmarked for us, and has that loss created bitterness within us? May the Lord reveal to us these roots of bitterness that, like time-released poison, are quietly killing us.

God desires to return to us our ability to love and laugh again. Next week we will discuss how to uproot bitterness and get truly free. For now, let us sincerely approach the throne of God's grace and ask Him to show us our hearts. Let us ask Him if the garden of our souls is truly free of bitter roots.

by Francis Frangipane
http://www.frangipane.org/