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The
Christian and Emotions
There
hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man : but God is
faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able;
but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be
able to bear it"....1 Corinthians 10: 13
God
has not promised
Skies
always blue;
Flower-
Strewn pathyasis
All
your life through
Being
a Christian does not mean freedom from conflits .
Trials are a part
of development of Christian character .
The apostle Paul wrote in Romans
5:3,4 " We glory in tribulations also: Knowing that tribulation
worketh patience; And patience, experience ; and experience, hope."
Trials,
for the Christian, not only develop character; they also give a depth of
sympathetic understanding with others like wise afflicted .
This sympathy not only enables the Christian to helpful to others
in the presence life but, even more importantly, gives him the compassion
to deal with the human race when they are raised from the grave in the promised
resurrection of all.
In
this regard, their experiences are like those of Christ Jesus, their Lord
and Master. " For
we have not all high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of infirmities
; but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin
Let
us there fore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain
mercy, and find grace to help in time of need" (Hebrews 4: 15,16)
The
spiritual mind must learn how to deal with STRESS.
The hectic pace of life, especially in a technological age, creates
great pressures. Some
seek escape in the drug culture, others succumb to deep depressions.
These stresses contribute to high divorce rates and the increasing
violence so evident in
today's society. The
Christian must learn now to channel these pressures productively.
Learning that the only final solution is full and complete trust in
God, and his goodness, and
his personal watch care over his children.
Only
too frequently stress gives way to ANGER.
Anger is born of frustration in not achieving one's own goals and
is thus a form of self -love. The
Christian needs to learn now to control his temper and modify his own
desires with a consideration of the needs and desires of others.
There is a righteous anger when the principles of righteousness are
violated. But even this PERFECT HATRED (psalm
139. 22) needs
to be expressed in a productive} manner.
Another
stress in the Christian life is to CONFORM peer pressure, parental
pressure, and the entire framework of society emphasizes the necessity to
conform. The Bible
emphasizes to the contrary, "
be not be conformed to this world; but be ye transformed by the renewing
of our mind, that ye may prove what is good , and acceptable, and perfect,
will of God" (Romans 12;2)
The
trials of life are not easy to endure.
They are often accompanied by sorrow. Yet, each trial for the
Christian is ordered and overruled by a kind and loving God who ADDETH
NO SORROW (proverbs
10;22) to
the experience. Each
difficulty is accompanied with grace sufficient to endure and secure the
lesson intended. The
apostle Paul expressed it well when he wrote in 2
corianthians 12:9 " My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength
is made perfect in weakness. Most gladly therefore will
I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest
upon me".
Perhaps
there is no greater trial to bear than that of death--whether it be in our
own family, a close friend or those who succumb to the tragedies of which
we read in the daily press. The
GRIEVING process is universal Handling of this sorrow has troubled even
the best of psychologists. The
Bible doesn't promise immunity from the sorrows of grief, but it does say
that he should " sorrow not, even as the others which have no
hope" (
Thessalonians. 4; 13)
Its the hopes of the resurrection which ameliorates the sadness of
the death experience-- a positive assurance that our loved ones shall live
again.
Tragedies
and death often raise the question, even the sincere Christian, WHY
DOES GOD PERMIT EVIL? If
life is viewed in the narrow context of current existence, there is no
logical answer to this question.
It is only by taking broader and more far-- reaching view of God's
Kingdom that we can begin to appreciate the answer of this troubling
inquiry. If man's current experience of some 80 years, more or less, can be compared with an eternity of
life in perfect earth, the answer
begins to emerge. It is only
when man has learned both the results of a life
under sin and evil with its consequences of sorrow, sickness, and
death and the results of a life lived in obedience to God's
righteous principles with its consequences of joy, health and life,
that he can make the willing intelligent
choice to obey and live.
The
answer, easy to express but difficult to attain, is to live a life filled
with inner PEACE-- Not the
externals of peace, but the interior peace of mind which enables the
Christian to rise above the trials and tribulations of present life.
such peace is not obtained by one's own endeavors.
Such bring only frustration.
It is arrived at by a full and complete trust in God that all of
life's affairs will work out an ultimate good.
True peace is not man's ultimate attainment , but peace is the gift
of God.
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