The Bible says that God is close to the brokenhearted and that He binds up all our wounds. There are some wounds that run so deep for people who were traumatized repeatedly throughout their lives. Even being a Christian isn't a protection as we can all tell from the story of Joyce Meyers. She was saved at the age of I believe 8 and yet repeatedly molested while praying for God to get her out of that situation, and it messed her up for a lot of years even as an adult.
There are also verses about being set free from bondage, and yet we see some that are set free the day they accept Christ and others who struggle many many years, some a lifetime.
There are verses about armor and casting down thoughts, and yet there are people who have a harder time doing that than others for medical reasons, traumatic reasons, whatever the case may be who don't seem to be standing on as equal a ground with those who were perhaps raised by loving Christian parents in a good home environment.
So my question is...how do we put all that together and try to find the solution to breaking bondage when the Bible does clearly say that only God can break all our chains. And if we truly want Him to do that, and we pray and pray for it, and do all we can to work towards change, yet remain in agonizing bondage to the programming we were fed by life situations, do we then look towards the passages of perhaps Christ going to the cross even if He didn't quite want to die anymore than anyone would...He did it because there was a bigger reason for it? Yet I cannot see the reason for a person suffering in their mind from bondages or how it brings glory to God if they are never healed or if it takes many years for healing. I just keep missing on this one and would like to gain some kind of understanding of it.
I'm not talking your better known sins of drunkenness, etc. But the sins of anger, irritation, worry, anxiety, depression, etc. Those things that are a sinful thing, but that the individuals truly feel they cannot control no matter how desperately they have tried to, how much they have prayed for healing, had prayers said over them, etc. People who have been counseled and everything, yet they are still tied into those bondages. Even Joyce Meyers took something like 20+ years of her adult life to break out of those cycles instilled in her childhood, and all the time praying for it, all the time a Christian. Those who don't spend a lifetime as a Christian can find it even harder. And it still doesn't explain those who seem to receive instant healing.
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I wonder though. Elijah had such strong faith, he could call down fire from God in front of all those prophets of Baal without blinking an eye, yet cowered under a tree to die all because of some puney little woman. I wonder if we have weak faith or seasons of it.
Interesting with Elijah...
in 1 Kings 19:9,10 Elijah was feeling alone, lonely and scared. In verses 11-13 God revealed Himself in the gentle whisper.
I think we can definitely go through seasons of weak faith... the times we take our eyes off of God and focus more on the 'physicalness' (word?) around us. We must train ourselves to see the unseen plainly so that what is in plain sight does not distract us. We walk by faith and not by sight.
I agree that we need to be refreshed daily, however, it's not because the Holy Spirit leaves us, but rather that we may step away. By us being refreshed daily, we are reminding ourselves who we are In Christ, and making the commitment to walk in faith, obedience, forgiveness, love etc... It's like pushing a reset button for ourselves each morning... but it's not God who has a tendency to leave,.... we have that tendency, so we need to recalibrate and refocus our hearts and our minds bringing every thought captive to the obedience of Christ.
Also, our actions can grieve the Holy Spirit which may 'feel' like He has left us, but He has not, and He promises He never will.
Excellent video message Amanda. Thanks so much for sharing.
I say a great big AMEN!
Ok, here is what I was trying to speak with you about earlier....
I DO believe God allows suffering (even depression), in order to work out something, either in us or in those around us, or both. My church however does not, and this is where I've had such issues in the mixed message. But the one article you sent seemed to me to say what the people in my church say...that we have to be joyful even if we are suffering. But maybe I am reading it wrong, that's just how it appeared to me. And that's where I falter cause that's what my mother and other church members say....smile no matter how much pain you're in so you don't bring others down. Well like I told mom....I can't be phoney like that...to which she took offense of course. If it works for her, but it doesn't for me. If I'm not well and if I'm in pain and sad, it shows. I can't just plaster on a smile and fake it til I break it. And that article sounded like that's what it was saying, at least when I read it.
I DO believe God allows it, just like He allowed it with Job. But then people in my church say that's OT, that all changed with Christ. Did it? Just because Christ has made us righteous, did that change that God is the same today, yesterday and forever? If He would allow it then, did He stop allowing it just because we're made righteous by Christ? I don't think so. Yet I keep getting told I'm wrong on that.
I've had some tell me I don't want it bad enough or haven't surrendered or let go of self...cliche after cliche after cliche. And I keep hearing that internal voice telling me to stop listening to the cliches from people who are stuck in their own forms of religious bondage. The church is supposed to act as a hospital to the broken, and yet many churches feel we're not supposed to let our feelings show and rely on God and smile through it. And if we haven't, we haven't died to self. And the Bible says to build one another up and encourage one another, bear one another's burdens....so how is telling someone they have it all wrong and haven't let go building them up? How is it bearing their burdens or weeping with them or mourning with them? I think so many pick and choose scriptures to suit what they want from it. And often, depending on where we are, we may just have to in order to make it through the day, or we see no other way to cope with it.
What we spoke of about truth being truth and how we apply it is what I was getting at. What is true yes is true. But being that everyone is on a different path and are in life, that everyone has different emotions and experiences, we can hear the same message and yet receive truth that applies to our own situation and apply it in the manner God can make it work for us. And sometimes just our own emotions get in the way of the truth.
What I've continually struggled with since I was saved is all the religious teachings contradicting what I was hearing internally and it's left me with such confusion and turmoil. It's a religious attitude I was brought up in. And some say that what I get from others in my church isn't correct and some say it is. So it's at odds as which to believe and I'm trying to learn to just lean on the internal voice right or wrong and pray God makes my path straight no matter what. But trying to line up what others tell me with what I read in scripture is what has caused such turmoil. So when someone says the internal voice is right that I'm hearing, it gives me relief. Then another comes and says no...you have to do this or you have to do that....and the turmoil comes on again. I'm trying to learn to shut out those things that cause the confusion and turmoil. Right or wrong what someone is saying, if it's causing confusion and turmoil, it's not going to help me. Only prayer and listening to the internal and staying in the Word is going to do it. I just pray it does it faster cause I hate depression and the hopeless feelings. And that is why, yes I DO want it bad enough. I don't think anyone wants to be in that state. But wanting something makes no difference if God is not ready to give us revelation or move in some form that will lift us from that season.
I get mired between Joyce saying we have to make up our minds. Well I've made mine up over and over, just to lose it again...lost my mind. LOL So apparently there is more to it than just setting our mind or it would stay set. Maybe it's just a matter of time. We set it enough until it takes permanent hold. We learn to be content in all things. Paul learned....but how long did it take him to learn? How long was he studying that we don't hear about?
Why I say I view depression as a sin...it's not a sin in and of we're intentionally sinning. But depression is not a Godly trait. We're BORN into sinful flesh, just as Paul said he does the things he does not want to do because it is the sin IN him. We have sin in the flesh, we're in the flesh. We can never escape sin. That doesn't mean we're intentionally sinning. When I get irritated, it's not a Godly trait and anything not Godly is sin. But it doesn't mean I want to be irritated, meant to be, or knew how to stop it/control it. But my flesh is sin and that comes out regardless of my efforts. And I simply seek stability and know that it is available somewhere. But I'm simply hoping it's not so many more years down the road because I truly just cannot stand the instability yet feel powerless to stop it.
I hope all this makes some sense.
That's how I feel. Not many have ever told me to seek joy or aim for it but that I'm supposed to be joyful anyway no matter what, and then I feel guilty on top of everything else and feel like I'm sinning for not feeling joyful and rejoicing.
This is exactly what I experience as well...feeling I'm sinning for not being joyful. Yet I've sought joy and aimed for it, but it is fleeting over and over. So there must be more to it or it just takes repeated efforts to sink in more permanently. I don't know. But yeah, that's exactly what I get told...be joyful anyway, and it's so at odds with what I read in scripture and it's so phoney feeling to me.
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