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#1 (permalink) |
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Status: SAS Member
Join Date: Oct 2008
Gender: Female
Posts: 429
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I was sitting across from a friend at a fast food restaurant several years ago. As he related the story of how he had been slandered by a pastor at his church, I felt myself becoming more and more indignant on his behalf. "How is it that this person could get away with such behavior?" I asked myself. "How can he call himself a Christian, much less serve as a church leader?" But as my friend finished his story, the Lord brought a different perspective to mind. While on the surface my friend's antagonist seemed to be a poor example of a Christian, and while my flesh cried out for justice, this pastor was actually God's tool in my friend's life. "You know, as difficult as your pastor was," I said, "as wrong as his actions were, consider the fact that God is using him to help you grow. You have an opportunity to grow in grace by forgiving him and to sharpen your conflict resolution skills by going to him with your issue and letting him know how his actions made you feel. Viewed from this perspective, really he's God's grindstone, a tool to hone your character." How many times do we view difficult, contentious people from this perspective? Unfortunately, rather than seeing the positive way in which they may cause us to grow, we view them as a thorn in our flesh, a necessary evil in a fallen world. In so doing, we may be rejecting the very tool that God wants to use to help us grow. You pray for patience and He puts you behind a grandma going 20 miles an hour in traffic. You pray for discernment and He gives you conflict situations that require you to rely on the Holy Spirit. You pray for sensitivity and He gives you a boss who fails to consider the pressures closing in around you. In each instance, God is answering your prayers by putting a difficult person in your life. Such a person acts as His grindstone, knocking the imperfections off your character. As you choose to respond to sin not in kind, but with grace, your own capacity for righteousness increases. You look more like Him and you please Him more. Viewed from this angle, each person in our lives who makes us want to cuss is really a present from God to us, a declaration of His love for us. Consider the possibility that the more difficult the person, the bigger the imperfection in our character that God wants to smooth out through the friction in the relationship. Were we to respond with patience, grace, and love to the problems the person poses, then we would have already passed the test that they represent. Who are the difficult people in your life? What is it that God wants to teach you through them? Thank God for them. They are evidence that He loves you and wants to polish you on His grindstone. Then consider responding in grace. After all, you could be God's tool in their life, put there to model the kind of response that He looks for from them. Through your grace, everybody wins. You allow God to take the rough edges off your character, looking more like Jesus and, in the process, demonstrating yet again that His light can illuminate the dark places in our world. "Accept one another, then, just as Christ accepted you, in order to bring praise to God." Romans 15:7 |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Status: SAS Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Gender: Male
Posts: 741
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Well, for the past two years I had a college professor who was a personal family friend. But he is also VERY EXTROVERT.. and often would quite openly point out my shyness.. on many occasions.. in a class of 70 % girls.
Well, as you can imagine this became increasing uncomfortable. I began to feel angry I began to feel like "who the **** does this guy think he is" being forced into that sort of conflict daily eventually made me more confident. Am I completely out of the S-A woods yet, NO. But I am closer. |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Status: SAS Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: louisiana
Gender: Male
Posts: 25
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Along the same lines here - I heard a sermon from Mark Driscoll today asking "what are your idols?" - money,reputation,alcohol,drugs,tv, people? I realized that mine is people - what other people think about me. I need to smash this idol. Love people more and depend on them less for my well being. Focus more on the Creator and less on his creations.
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#4 (permalink) |
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Status: SAS Member
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Michigan\Wisconsin, USA
Gender: Male
Age: 19
Posts: 202
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Yea. Them difficult people sure help people grow.... Sure does............ yup..... Except of course the people that kill themselves because of them difficult people. Or instead of only killing themselves, they go on shooting sprees in their local school and then killing themselves.... They are stronger for hell now....... yup........... O.o
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#5 (permalink) |
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Status: SAS Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Gender: Female
Posts: 1,644
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Yeah, I don't thank God for them either. I thank God for God and his wisdom and strength and good people, etc.
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