Friday, August 15, 2014

Highs -n- Lows Living with the Disease


Another Beautiful Morning!

I met another person with muscular dystrophy yesterday at work.  It was nice visiting with her and hearing her story. She was already in a wheelchair but seems to have accepted it.  I'm sure like most she has her good days and bad days.  I continue to be thankful for all I can do.  The medication seems to be holding off the diseases.

Today, Kaylee, Gracie and I are heading to visit grandma Gloria and grandma Faye in Faribault.  It's been awhile...

I am so thankful for family and friends...

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Today's Bible Study

Bitter Poison
By Charles Stanley
Read | Ephesians 4:31-32

Picture a miserable, depressed, and emotionally broken person hunched over a chemistry set. His eyes are narrow. His lips are pursed. His fingers are methodically adding just a pinch of this and a dash of that to the acrid green fluid in the test tube before him. His thoughts are a hodgepodge of outdated images, his heart a stale mosaic of hatred for a grievance long past. He is thinking of the one who hurt him, and he is busy concocting a poison for the offender.

It sounds like an excerpt from an old movie, doesn't it? However, here is where the scene changes direction. Envision that same obsessed scientist breathing a sigh of relief as he straightens up, marveling at the liquid vengeance he has created. Then he utters, “This will show him!”—and drinks the poison himself.

That’s a surprising twist—one that we would not expect in a movie. Yet there is a good chance you have done this very thing at one time or another.

Bitterness is a toxin that we prepare for someone else but then drink ourselves. It is a concentrated dose of emotional poison, often one that we carefully nurture and grow over the course of years. When we react to someone’s wrongdoing by withdrawing and giving free reign to daydreams of retribution and ill will, we are slowly poisoning our own hearts and minds.

Ask God to reveal any signs of poison in your system. Then ask Him to help you administer a dose of the antidote: forgiveness.

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