Reactions make the Difference
Who shall separate us from the love
of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or
nakedness or danger or sword?...No, in all theses things we are more
than conquerors through him who loved. us. (Rom. 8:35, 37)
A young army officer said: “Weather,
in war, is always favorable, if you know how to use it.” That is
the point---if you know how to use it. The fact is that
everything that comes to you in life is favorable, if you know how to
react. (Everything, that is, except for your own personal sin, which
is never favorable; its results are always evil. But even then, God
can help you use your sins, if forgiven and conquered, to help others
in their moral battles.)
Life is determined perhaps more by
reactions than by actions. It comes to you on its own; it forces
situations upon you without your asking. What counts is your
reaction. You can react in self-pity and frustration. Or you can
react with confidence and courage. You can make the evil thing make
you better. Its origin may have been evil, but by the time you get
through with it, the destination is good---you have turned evil into
good.
A woman of culture surrendered herself
to God, only to have troubles pile in upon her; Her husband became
less and less responsive, while her daughter, a brilliant girl, went
into a mental hospital. The woman brought them both back through her
marvelous spirit. The daughter, restored by her mother's love and
faith, said: “Everything has fallen unto you. You get over one
thing, and then it's another. But you sit there and smile. You're
wonderful.”
In fact, she is, “Nothing hurts me
now,” she says in summary. “I have power to come back from
anything.” Her reactions have made all kinds of weather serve her.
Edwin Markham, the poet, said that
“sorrow stretches our hearts for joy.” It does, and more---it
stretches our hearts for new achievements, new usefulness. Sorrow
plows the field for God's sowing and our harvest.
I thank you, O Christ, that I can be
saved from all self-pity and frustration. I choose to react in Your
way to whatever comes. I am unafraid. Amen.
Taken from E. Stanley Jones' The Way
/ 365 Daily Meditations
"Coming to this place, fires will bring out the sweet aroma of Christ. We will not come out of them smelling like smoke, but seeing HIM more clearly."
"Coming to this place, fires will bring out the sweet aroma of Christ. We will not come out of them smelling like smoke, but seeing HIM more clearly."
Picture taken by Madison Berkemeyer
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