donderdag 16 oktober 2014
Appreciate the people God gives to us
In the kingdom of God we never should feel threatened by the abilities, character, talents and gifts of other people, even if they are more pronounced or developed than ours. Even if they challenge our status quo and shake us out of our comfort zone. They all belong to us. They have been given to us by God for our healing, growth and spiritual development so we are better equipped to serve Him. Our response should therefore be to thank Him for bringing them in our lives and show proper appreciation to Him and to them for the service they render.
maandag 13 oktober 2014
Trauma
Dealing with psychological injury
Helping someone deal with emotional and psychological trauma
It can be difficult to know how to help a loved one who’s suffered a traumatic or distressing experience, but your support can be a crucial factor in their recovery.
• Be patient and understanding. Healing from emotional or psychological trauma takes time. Be patient with the pace of recovery and remember that everyone’s response to trauma is different. Don’t judge your loved one’s reaction against your own response or anyone else’s.
• Offer practical support to help your loved one get back into a normal routine. That may mean help with collecting groceries or housework, for example, or simply being available to talk or listen.
• Don’t pressure your loved one into talking but be available when they want to talk. Some trauma survivors find it difficult to talk about what happened. Don’t force your loved one to open up but let them know you are there to listen whenever they feel ready.
• Help your loved one to socialize and relax. Encourage them to participate in physical exercise, seek out friends, and pursue hobbies and other activities that bring them pleasure. Take a fitness class together or set a regular lunch date with friends.
• Don’t take the trauma symptoms personally. Your loved one may become angry, irritable, withdrawn, or emotionally distant. Remember that this is a result of the trauma and may not have anything to do with you or your relationship.
Finding a trauma specialist for dealing with psychological trauma
Working through trauma can be scary, painful, and potentially retraumatizing.
Because of the risk of retraumatization if not done in a sensitive manner, this healing work is best done with the help of an experienced trauma specialist.
Finding a specialist may take some time. It’s very important that the therapist you choose has experience treating trauma. But the quality of the relationship with your therapist is equally important. Choose a trauma specialist you feel comfortable with. Trust your instincts. If you don’t feel safe, respected, or understood, find another therapist. There should be a sense of trust and warmth between you and your trauma therapist.
After meeting a potential trauma therapist/counsellor, ask yourself these questions:
• Did you feel welcome and at ease?
• Did you feel comfortable discussing your problems with the therapist?
• Did you feel like the therapist understood what you were talking about?
• Were your concerns taken seriously or were they minimized or dismissed?
• Were you treated with compassion and respect?
• Do you believe that you could grow to trust the therapist?
If your answer is no to any of these questions then find another specialist.
woensdag 8 oktober 2014
Overcoming Satan
Prerequisites for overcoming Satan: Romans 16:17-20
17 My friends, I beg you to watch out for anyone who causes trouble and divides the church by refusing to do what all of you were taught. Stay away from them! 18 They want to serve themselves and not Christ the Lord. Their flattery and fancy talk fool people who don't know any better. 19 I am glad that everyone knows how well you obey the Lord. But still, I want you to understand what is good and not have anything to do with evil. 20 Then God, who gives peace, will soon crush Satan under your feet. I pray that our Lord Jesus will be kind to you.
There are many books floating around full of new theories and new practices for Christians to defeat Satan. These can be very misleading and often bring divisions in the church so it is far better to look at Holy Scripture. In this passage Paul states that the act of crushing Satan under our feet is not something we can achieve but is something that God himself will do. It is unbelievable how many people proudly assert how they are going to defeat Satan and crush him as if they themselves have the power to do so. They are even blind to the fact that every time they sin, including the sin of thinking too highly of our spiritual prowess, that they are defeated and mislead by Satan. Instead of following the latest 'spiritual' fad we should do all we have been taught by Christ himself rather than what the currently famous 'spiritual' giants teach. Only if we faithfully obey, do what is good and stay away from what the Bible calls evil then God will give peace and crush Satan under our feet. For indeed the battle belongs to the Lord so we better hide under His wings by obeying all He has commanded us: Doing what is good in His eyes and avoiding all evil.
In other words: If we obey Jesus' requirements for discipleship 'to obey everything I have commanded you' we can be sure that His presence is always with us (Matt. 28:19-20) and as He has all power in heaven and earth (Matt. 28:18) Satan will surely be crushed.
17 My friends, I beg you to watch out for anyone who causes trouble and divides the church by refusing to do what all of you were taught. Stay away from them! 18 They want to serve themselves and not Christ the Lord. Their flattery and fancy talk fool people who don't know any better. 19 I am glad that everyone knows how well you obey the Lord. But still, I want you to understand what is good and not have anything to do with evil. 20 Then God, who gives peace, will soon crush Satan under your feet. I pray that our Lord Jesus will be kind to you.
There are many books floating around full of new theories and new practices for Christians to defeat Satan. These can be very misleading and often bring divisions in the church so it is far better to look at Holy Scripture. In this passage Paul states that the act of crushing Satan under our feet is not something we can achieve but is something that God himself will do. It is unbelievable how many people proudly assert how they are going to defeat Satan and crush him as if they themselves have the power to do so. They are even blind to the fact that every time they sin, including the sin of thinking too highly of our spiritual prowess, that they are defeated and mislead by Satan. Instead of following the latest 'spiritual' fad we should do all we have been taught by Christ himself rather than what the currently famous 'spiritual' giants teach. Only if we faithfully obey, do what is good and stay away from what the Bible calls evil then God will give peace and crush Satan under our feet. For indeed the battle belongs to the Lord so we better hide under His wings by obeying all He has commanded us: Doing what is good in His eyes and avoiding all evil.
In other words: If we obey Jesus' requirements for discipleship 'to obey everything I have commanded you' we can be sure that His presence is always with us (Matt. 28:19-20) and as He has all power in heaven and earth (Matt. 28:18) Satan will surely be crushed.
zondag 28 september 2014
Recognizing a codependent parent
8 Signs You
May Have a Codependent Parent
The
first thing that comes to mind when we hear the term “codependent” is usually
an abusive boyfriend-girlfriend relationship. However, this is not always the
case. Believe it or not, most codependent relationships are between a parent
and child, not romantic partners. In a codependent parent-child relationship,
the lines between overprotective and codependent, over-involved and engaged are
often blurred beyond recognition. The caregiver-care receiver nature of a
parent-child relationship makes codependency particularly difficult to detect.
Here are a few signs to help you figure out whether your parent-child
relationship is codependent.
The
codependent parent is always plays the victim but is the one who is powerfully
in control and victimises others.
1. The
codependent parent has a victim mentality.
We
all face obstacles in life, but the codependent parent believes that the other
people in their life, particularly their children, owe them penance for the
wrongs committed against them. Often this manifests in guilt-tripping behavior
intended to garner sympathy from the child for negative experiences the parent
has been through, with the end goal of altering the child’s behavior in a way
that will set things right. This is where the problems begin. Rather than
dealing with the traumas and difficulties in their own life through healthy and
empowering means such as self-reflection and seeking out therapy, the
codependent parent latches onto a child and demands compensation.
Compensation
can take many forms. Many times a codependent parent will live vicariously
through a child. For example, a mother who got pregnant in her teen years may
demand repayment of the burden she faced by putting expectations on her
daughter to seize advantages in life that she missed out on. A codependent
father may demand that his son excel in sports to make up for his own lack of
athleticism in childhood. If the child shows signs of taking their own path in
life, the parent will use guilt to manipulate them into compliance.
2. The
codependent parent is never wrong.
In
normal relationships, one party is right some of the time but never all of the
time. In a codependent parent-child relationship, the parent is always right.
Even when the child is an adult, the parent will refuse to approach an argument
or even a simple discussion with openness to the possibility of being wrong.
Instead, they will seek to impose their own view of the situation and “correct”
the adult child, as opposed to engaging in a discussion where neither party is
presumed right by default.
No or
insincere apologies
Even
if it becomes apparent that the codependent parent is wrong, they will not
apologize - or, if they do, it will come off as insincere. The codependent
parent requires absolute dominance over the child, and any admission of
wrongdoing on their part would be a sign of weakness and an invitation to
challenge their dominance in the relationship.
3. The
codependent parent is overly emotional.
People
cry, yell and give the silent treatment during the course of life’s ups and
downs, but the codependent parent has turned these acts into an art form. When
they feel that they are losing control of a situation or the upper hand in an
argument, they will resort to crying, screaming and other acts of intimidation
to restore the balance in their favor. If called out on this manipulation
tactic, the codependent parent will often accuse the child of being callous or
insensitive, or feign ignorance altogether.
If
the child cries, expresses hurt or anger, the codependent parent may get
unusually angry and claim that the display, no matter how genuine, is insincere
and being used to manipulate when, in reality, they are upset that their tactic
is being turned around on them.
4. The
codependent parent never truly listens.
Many
children of codependent parents complain that speaking with their codependent
parent is like “talking to a brick wall.” In fact, one doesn’t speak with a
codependent parent as much as to them. No matter how valid the argument, the
codependent parent will not be moved in their position. Instead, even when
prevented with irrefutable facts that would cause a normal person to reconsider
and re-evaluate their argument, the codependent parent will either refute the
facts or move onto a different argument without addressing the point being
made.
5. The
codependent parent parrots words and phrases.
If
the child claims that the parent is hurting their feelings, for example, the
codependent parent will, perhaps seconds or even hours later, return with
“You’re hurting my feelings!” Whatever concern the child expresses, the
codependent parent will find a way to turn it around and regurgitate it as
their own, thus reversing the defensive and offensive roles in the
conversation. If called out on this behavior, the codependent parent will
ignore it, become angry or act bewildered and confused.
6. The codependent
parent has mood swings.
These
can happen over a couple of minutes or a couple of days, but the codependent
parent has the ability to rapidly shift from one mood to another. This is
especially true when their manipulation tactics have succeeded in garnering the
child’s acquiescence. The codependent parent may be yelling and screaming one
moment, but once they get their way, they may be exuberant or, conversely, they
may sulk in an effort to rebuff any guilt as a result of their power play.
For
example, a mother screaming at her son for not calling often enough may
eventually get him to give in and promise to call more. Once she attains what
she wants, in an effort to keep her victory and her role as the victim, she may
say something like, “No, never mind. I don’t want you to call. You’ll just be
doing it because you have to.” Then, the son will not only have to call more,
but ensure her that this is what he truly wants to do of his own free will,
thus absolving her from any responsibility and guilt.
7. The
codependent parent must maintain control at all costs.
Control
is the end game of all codependent relationships, whether the means are love,
money, attention or anything else. Most codependent parents expect a level of
devotion and love from their children that is unhealthy and unnatural, intended
to make up for that which they lack in other relationships. Often the codependent
parent wishes to garner from their child the love and/or attention they failed
to receive from their own parents. This creates a dramatic role reversal of the
parent-child relationship and turns it into a vampiric dynamic rather than a
mutually beneficial one.
Meltdown
shows the true nature of what is in the co-dependents heart
Whatever
it is that the codependent parent seeks to gain by controlling the adult child,
when it becomes clear that they won’t succeed, a meltdown will often ensue. If
the parent controls with guilt by appearing frail and playing the victim card,
they may become uncharacteristically venomous and aggressive when the adult
child refuses to give them what they want. A codependent parent who controls
through subtle manipulation and passive-aggression may suddenly become dominant
and plainspoken. It is important to remember that these dramatic shifts in the
face of lost control are not a mood swing or an “episode.” Instead, the
codependent parent is revealing their true nature as opposed to the façade
they must maintain in order to keep things going their way. Once there is no
hope of getting their way, this façade will become useless and be easily
stripped away.
8. The
codependent parent manipulates – subtly.
The
most effective form of manipulation is the kind that you can never be called
out for directly. Examples include the silent treatment, passive aggressive
comments, denial of wrongdoing and projection, among others. The codependent
parent will leave the child in a state of confusion, wondering who really is
“the bad guy”.
Codependent
are not always aware of their manipulation
In
many cases, they will be genuinely unaware of their own manipulation. Many
codependent parents truly believe that they are doing what’s in their child’s
best interest and execute some of the most unsettling control tactics and
manipulative power plays with simultaneous mastery and obliviousness. In fact,
when called out on their manipulation with specific examples, the codependent
parent will often be genuinely, deeply hurt and bewildered.
Codependents
do not know how to relate to people they cannot control
In
fact, the codependent parent does not usually manipulate because they want to;
the codependent parent manipulates because they have to.They simply don’t know
any other way to communicate with the adult child who is beyond their direct
control. Thus, they will manipulate with finances, emotion, guilt and any other
tool at their disposal to maintain the imbalance of the codependent
relationship.
Codependent
No More - Summary
This
is not an exhaustive list but it does cover the basic signs and symptoms of
codependency to watch out for. In my experience with my own codependent parent,
many of these are hard to recognize but, on closer inspection, they deviate
significantly from the norms of a healthy parent-child relationship.
There
is no single, quick and easy way to deal with a codependent parent. In some
cases, the only thing the adult child can do is sever ties with the codependent
parent completely. In others, carefully imposed boundaries, discussion and
family therapy can be used to maintain a healthy relationship for both parties.
It depends on the individuals as well as the severity of the codependency
within the relationship.
Information from: http://lanablackmoor.hubpages.com/hub/8-Signs-You-May-Have-a-Codependent-Parent
vrijdag 19 september 2014
The narrow road to true Spiritual Maturity in Christ
THE ROAD TO MATURITY
Colossians 3:12
"Therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, put on tender mercies, kindness, humility, meekness, longsuffering"
Phil. 3:12-16, 18-19
12 I have not yet reached my goal, and I am not perfect. But Christ has taken hold of me. So I keep on running and struggling to take hold of the prize. 13 My friends, I don't feel that I have already arrived. But I forget what is behind, and I struggle for what is ahead. 14 I run toward the goal, so that I can win the prize of being called to heaven. This is the prize that God offers because of what Christ Jesus has done. 15 All of us who are mature should think in this same way. And if any of you think differently, God will make it clear to you. 16 But we must keep going in the direction that we are now headed.
18 I often warned you that many people (in the church) are living as enemies of the cross of Christ. And now with tears in my eyes, I warn you again 19 that they are headed for hell! They worship their stomachs and brag about the disgusting things they do. All they can think about are the things of this world.
God wants us to be spiritually mature, Christlike and wear his spiritual garments. He expects us to approximate our daily condition to our heavenly condition as people belonging to God. He wants us to put off the sins of our old sinful and selfish disposition and put on the disposition of the new man, our new nature in Christ. BUT, we cannot put on the robes of the new man until we have put off the rags of the old man.
It is not befitting a Christian to come to God wearing the rags of criticism and bitterness, of slander and malice. We cannot put on the robes of the righteousness and love of Christ over those rags. We should wear ‘tender mercies’, ‘kindness’, ‘humility’, ‘meekness’ (gentleness) and ‘longsuffering’ (compassion & solidarity). Clothed in these robes of Christ-like righteousness we should strive to live responsible, caring Christ-like lives of doing good to all people whenever we get the chance, particularly to those in the family of God (Gal. 6:10), but also to outsiders, even to our enemies (Col. 1:10; Eph. 2:10; 1 Peter 2:12; Heb. 10:24). It is for this purpose we are in the world as Christ’s witnesses (Acts 1:8; Titus 2:12-14) as we make our light shine in the darkness of this world, and provide the world with a foretaste of the coming Kingdom of God (Mt. 5:13-16, 43-48).
However, it requires that we let go of worldliness and impurity, of everything that hinders us from becoming mature and ready to be used for all kinds of good (2 Tim. 2:21). For us who compared to 75% of the world are rich it means letting go of our arrogance as if we are better than those who are poor. It also means no longer putting our trust in our wealth but in God but instead abound in doing good deeds, being very generous in helping those who have less than us as 1 Tim. 6:17-19 reminds us:
17 Warn the rich people of this world not to be proud or to trust in wealth that is easily lost. Tell them to have faith in God, who is rich and blesses us with everything we need to enjoy life. 18 Instruct them to do as many good deeds as they can and to help everyone. Remind the rich to be generous and share what they have. 19 This will lay a solid foundation for the future, so that they will know what true life is like.
But if we fail to live like this and instead live as enemies of the cross by mainly being focused on worldy things we will not reach the glorious destination God had in mind for us. With tears in our eyes and sorrowful hearts we warn you as Paul did that you are headed for hell (Phil. 3:18-19).
Colossians 3:12
"Therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, put on tender mercies, kindness, humility, meekness, longsuffering"
Phil. 3:12-16, 18-19
12 I have not yet reached my goal, and I am not perfect. But Christ has taken hold of me. So I keep on running and struggling to take hold of the prize. 13 My friends, I don't feel that I have already arrived. But I forget what is behind, and I struggle for what is ahead. 14 I run toward the goal, so that I can win the prize of being called to heaven. This is the prize that God offers because of what Christ Jesus has done. 15 All of us who are mature should think in this same way. And if any of you think differently, God will make it clear to you. 16 But we must keep going in the direction that we are now headed.
18 I often warned you that many people (in the church) are living as enemies of the cross of Christ. And now with tears in my eyes, I warn you again 19 that they are headed for hell! They worship their stomachs and brag about the disgusting things they do. All they can think about are the things of this world.
God wants us to be spiritually mature, Christlike and wear his spiritual garments. He expects us to approximate our daily condition to our heavenly condition as people belonging to God. He wants us to put off the sins of our old sinful and selfish disposition and put on the disposition of the new man, our new nature in Christ. BUT, we cannot put on the robes of the new man until we have put off the rags of the old man.
It is not befitting a Christian to come to God wearing the rags of criticism and bitterness, of slander and malice. We cannot put on the robes of the righteousness and love of Christ over those rags. We should wear ‘tender mercies’, ‘kindness’, ‘humility’, ‘meekness’ (gentleness) and ‘longsuffering’ (compassion & solidarity). Clothed in these robes of Christ-like righteousness we should strive to live responsible, caring Christ-like lives of doing good to all people whenever we get the chance, particularly to those in the family of God (Gal. 6:10), but also to outsiders, even to our enemies (Col. 1:10; Eph. 2:10; 1 Peter 2:12; Heb. 10:24). It is for this purpose we are in the world as Christ’s witnesses (Acts 1:8; Titus 2:12-14) as we make our light shine in the darkness of this world, and provide the world with a foretaste of the coming Kingdom of God (Mt. 5:13-16, 43-48).
However, it requires that we let go of worldliness and impurity, of everything that hinders us from becoming mature and ready to be used for all kinds of good (2 Tim. 2:21). For us who compared to 75% of the world are rich it means letting go of our arrogance as if we are better than those who are poor. It also means no longer putting our trust in our wealth but in God but instead abound in doing good deeds, being very generous in helping those who have less than us as 1 Tim. 6:17-19 reminds us:
17 Warn the rich people of this world not to be proud or to trust in wealth that is easily lost. Tell them to have faith in God, who is rich and blesses us with everything we need to enjoy life. 18 Instruct them to do as many good deeds as they can and to help everyone. Remind the rich to be generous and share what they have. 19 This will lay a solid foundation for the future, so that they will know what true life is like.
But if we fail to live like this and instead live as enemies of the cross by mainly being focused on worldy things we will not reach the glorious destination God had in mind for us. With tears in our eyes and sorrowful hearts we warn you as Paul did that you are headed for hell (Phil. 3:18-19).
dinsdag 16 september 2014
The life worth living
To reach the wonderful destination God predestined for you, and to experience a foretaste of His kingdom on earth and its fullness of life you need to live in such a way that you can receive His blessing:
3 God blesses those people
who depend only on him.
They belong to the kingdom
of heaven!
4 God blesses those people
who grieve.
They will find comfort!
5 God blesses those people
who are humble.
The earth will belong
to them!
6 God blesses those people
who want to obey him
more than to eat or drink.
They will be given
what they want!
7 God blesses those people
who are merciful.
They will be treated
with mercy!
8 God blesses those people
whose hearts are pure.
They will see him!
9 God blesses those people
who make peace.
They will be called
his children!
10 God blesses those people
who are treated badly
for doing right.
They belong to the kingdom
of heaven.
11 (for) God will bless you when people insult you, mistreat you, and tell all kinds of evil lies about you because of me. 12 (so don't be depressed but..) Be happy and excited! You will have a great reward in heaven. People did these same things to the prophets who lived long ago.
13 (if you live in this manner then...) You are like salt for everyone on earth. But if salt no longer tastes like salt (if you do not live like described above), how can it make food salty? All it is good for is to be thrown out and walked on (religion that is not lived has no value).
14 You are like light for the whole world (that is your task while still on earth). A city built on top of a hill cannot be hidden, 15 and no one would light a lamp and put it under a clay pot. A lamp is placed on a lampstand, where it can give light to everyone in the house. 16 (so) Make your light shine,(do it for Gods glory) so that others will see the good that you do and will praise your Father in heaven.
Matthew 5:3-16.
3 God blesses those people
who depend only on him.
They belong to the kingdom
of heaven!
4 God blesses those people
who grieve.
They will find comfort!
5 God blesses those people
who are humble.
The earth will belong
to them!
6 God blesses those people
who want to obey him
more than to eat or drink.
They will be given
what they want!
7 God blesses those people
who are merciful.
They will be treated
with mercy!
8 God blesses those people
whose hearts are pure.
They will see him!
9 God blesses those people
who make peace.
They will be called
his children!
10 God blesses those people
who are treated badly
for doing right.
They belong to the kingdom
of heaven.
11 (for) God will bless you when people insult you, mistreat you, and tell all kinds of evil lies about you because of me. 12 (so don't be depressed but..) Be happy and excited! You will have a great reward in heaven. People did these same things to the prophets who lived long ago.
13 (if you live in this manner then...) You are like salt for everyone on earth. But if salt no longer tastes like salt (if you do not live like described above), how can it make food salty? All it is good for is to be thrown out and walked on (religion that is not lived has no value).
14 You are like light for the whole world (that is your task while still on earth). A city built on top of a hill cannot be hidden, 15 and no one would light a lamp and put it under a clay pot. A lamp is placed on a lampstand, where it can give light to everyone in the house. 16 (so) Make your light shine,(do it for Gods glory) so that others will see the good that you do and will praise your Father in heaven.
Matthew 5:3-16.
dinsdag 9 september 2014
Worship in Spirit and Truth
John 4:21-24
21 Jesus said to her: Believe me, the time is coming when you won't worship the Father either on this mountain or in Jerusalem. 22 You Samaritans don't really know the one you worship. But we Jews do know the God we worship, and by using us, God will save the world. 23 But a time is coming, and it is already here! Even now the true worshipers are being led by the Spirit to worship the Father according to the truth. These are the ones the Father is seeking to worship him. 24 God is Spirit, and those who worship God must be led by the Spirit to worship him according to the truth.
Worship Him in Spirit and Truth
In response to questions concerning the dispute between Jews and Samaritans where and in what manner God should be worshiped Jesus explains that what God really seeks is people who worship Him in Spirit and Truth. God does not need people to sing his praises or extol His virtues while they themselves are living a lie! All of us can be gradually tempted until we reach the point that our lifestyle does not reflect the Lordship of Christ but rather a service to the idols of this world, whether money, sex, success or power. None of us is immune, even those who serve in Christian ministry can fall in these traps. We need to regularly self-reflect in the light of Christ's example and if we recognize we have gone astray we need to repent and learn again what it means to follow the One who is the embodiment of Truth.
Too many people wear their outward religious masks in church or religious gatherings but in their daily lives they are ferocious wolves that mainly look after themselves without much concern about the needs of others, particularly the weak and powerless. They are not genuine in following the example of Jesus and seek to hide behind a mask of religious ritual and outward religious experiences. Their outward spirituality which can be very convincing is in fact hiding the self-centered evil and ferocious darkness which is hidden in their hearts. Some of them are full of resentment, self-serving pride, envy, or bitterness as they stubbornly refuse to forgive and let go of the evils which were committed against them. Some have turned to being victims of the destructive work of the devil into becoming his agents as they project their resentment, hatred and abuse on other victims. No better way to hide this darkness by pretending to be in the light. However, even if we succeed in fooling people, God cannot be fooled. He knows those who have learned from Christ to be humble and gentle, forgiving and kind. Those who demonstrate by living a life of doing good even to those who oppose them that they are truly children of the Father.
The genuine followers of the way of Christ are truthful and honest about themselves. They face their weaknesses and faults rather than hiding them. Confident of God’s loving kindness, forgiveness and abundant grace they cast themselves upon Him. They strive to follow Christ in everything in trust that He will empower them to do so by His Holy Spirit. Redeemed by Christ and empowered by the indwelling Holy Spirit to make the most of every opportunity to do good to all humanity they become living sacrifices. Their loving holy lifestyle of doing good to all humanity, even their enemies, being the kind of religion God seeks: a life of worship to God in Spirit and Truth.
21 Jesus said to her: Believe me, the time is coming when you won't worship the Father either on this mountain or in Jerusalem. 22 You Samaritans don't really know the one you worship. But we Jews do know the God we worship, and by using us, God will save the world. 23 But a time is coming, and it is already here! Even now the true worshipers are being led by the Spirit to worship the Father according to the truth. These are the ones the Father is seeking to worship him. 24 God is Spirit, and those who worship God must be led by the Spirit to worship him according to the truth.
Worship Him in Spirit and Truth
In response to questions concerning the dispute between Jews and Samaritans where and in what manner God should be worshiped Jesus explains that what God really seeks is people who worship Him in Spirit and Truth. God does not need people to sing his praises or extol His virtues while they themselves are living a lie! All of us can be gradually tempted until we reach the point that our lifestyle does not reflect the Lordship of Christ but rather a service to the idols of this world, whether money, sex, success or power. None of us is immune, even those who serve in Christian ministry can fall in these traps. We need to regularly self-reflect in the light of Christ's example and if we recognize we have gone astray we need to repent and learn again what it means to follow the One who is the embodiment of Truth.
Too many people wear their outward religious masks in church or religious gatherings but in their daily lives they are ferocious wolves that mainly look after themselves without much concern about the needs of others, particularly the weak and powerless. They are not genuine in following the example of Jesus and seek to hide behind a mask of religious ritual and outward religious experiences. Their outward spirituality which can be very convincing is in fact hiding the self-centered evil and ferocious darkness which is hidden in their hearts. Some of them are full of resentment, self-serving pride, envy, or bitterness as they stubbornly refuse to forgive and let go of the evils which were committed against them. Some have turned to being victims of the destructive work of the devil into becoming his agents as they project their resentment, hatred and abuse on other victims. No better way to hide this darkness by pretending to be in the light. However, even if we succeed in fooling people, God cannot be fooled. He knows those who have learned from Christ to be humble and gentle, forgiving and kind. Those who demonstrate by living a life of doing good even to those who oppose them that they are truly children of the Father.
The genuine followers of the way of Christ are truthful and honest about themselves. They face their weaknesses and faults rather than hiding them. Confident of God’s loving kindness, forgiveness and abundant grace they cast themselves upon Him. They strive to follow Christ in everything in trust that He will empower them to do so by His Holy Spirit. Redeemed by Christ and empowered by the indwelling Holy Spirit to make the most of every opportunity to do good to all humanity they become living sacrifices. Their loving holy lifestyle of doing good to all humanity, even their enemies, being the kind of religion God seeks: a life of worship to God in Spirit and Truth.
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