WRITING A DEVOTIONAL

WRITING A DEVOTIONAL

Back in 2003 after having spent the year before reading Sarah Ban Breathnach's book "Simple Abundance" I took her suggestion to heart and wrote my own daily devotional. Each day I took a line or two from one of the various spiritual authors from the last three centuries I was reading and wrote my own thoughts on the subject. I then looked for a scripture that illustrated the truth that had been revealed to me. What follows is the result.

"Our greatest bondage is to have our own way; our greatest freedom is to let God have His way." Warren Wiersbe

Saturday, January 8, 2011

January 8

“We fall into a lethargy and despondency saying it is the will of God and saying it accusingly as if God’s will were always the most disagreeable thing possible....What we must do...with God’s help, is to accept sorrow as a friend, if possible.  If not, as a companion...”  Eugenia Price, S.P.S., 1/8

God’s will has always been a scary thing for me.  In my imagination it was indeed the “most disagreeable thing possible.”  I always figured God’s will would be hard and unpleasant at best and unbearable at worst.  So why did I think this?  Was it because He didn’t answer my prayers as a child that my Dad would stop drinking?  I must have figured it was God’s will for me--and it was, indeed, unpleasant at best and unbearable at worst.  Now that I’m an adult looking back I can see how the life I had shaped me in a positive way.  Yes, it also shaped me in negative ways, but I see that as dross that God can burn away quickly if I allow myself to succumb to His furnace.  What is left is the character that was built through the trials and tribulations of living such an insecure childhood.   I was also saved from making many of the mistakes youth perpetrates.  But even though I have been able to have a positive outlook on my past I realize I haven’t “made friends” with the sorrow it created.  Seeing my father destroy his life as well as my mother’s in the long run is a sorrow I will always carry because it’s a wrong I can never right.  It would make sense, then, to see that sorrow as a companion, accepting it into my home, and allowing God to show me how this companion adds to my life rather than subtracts.

“For whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother, and sister, and mother.”  Matthew 12:50

2 comments:

  1. I can just imagine what it was like for you growing up. I too & our brothers had a difficult time not having a Dad full time. My Mom did get our brothers a "Big Brother" through the Big Brothers-Big Sisters Organization. But for some reason, she did not get me a "Big Sister". I remember tugging on her skirt saying Mommy-Mommy & her responding "not now Sandy". Maybe that is why I like to talk so much now. Yearning for attention, etc. It has made me a stronger person though. So I can relate that trials do build character & make us strong. I love having you as my Sister Cathy. Love, Sandy xoxo

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    1. I know, Sandy. I always felt guilty having your daddy, and I always hated having to say goodbye after those few visits we had growing up. Your mother told me a few years before she died that she was glad you had me as a sister in your life now.

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