Contemplating the Celebration of Romantic Love as February 14th Approaches

Contemplating the Celebration of Romantic Love as February 14th Approaches

In another couple of days, the celebration of Valentine’s will be upon us. It’s a special day, extolled as a celebration for couples in love –  a day their single friends bemoan their ‘alone’ status. Some singles use the time to celebrate as well, however, either alone or with their other single friends.

Having come into existence sometime during the 5th century as a Roman celebration for the coming of Spring, which included fertility rites and pairing of women with men via a lottery, over time, it has morphed  into the holiday we know now, making February 14th one of the most common wedding days of the year throughout the world.

Valentines Day is a Celebration of Eros Love or Is It?

  1. Eros – Sensual or Romantic Love. This is the type of love shared between two people. Sexual desire, physical attraction and physical love. 

In today’s society, we tend to shy away from the discussion of erotic love. The word erotic is associated with Eros, as it is a product of the word itself. Eros defined: Eros (Ancient Greek: “love” or “desire”) is a concept in ancient Greek philosophy referring to sensual or passionate love, from which the term erotic is derived. Sometimes, the word erotic is used in a negative or worldly connotation, but this doesn’t mean the word is bad.  Indeed, Eros is a love to be celebrated.  One of the best examples of this type of love can be found in the Song of Solomon, which depicts the celebration of love between a bride and her groom.

Solomon’s Song of Songs.

She[a]

Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth—
for your love is more delightful than wine.
Pleasing is the fragrance of your perfumes;
your name is like perfume poured out.
No wonder the young women love you!
Take me away with you—let us hurry!
Let the king bring me into his chambers.

Friends

We rejoice and delight in you[b];
we will praise your love more than wine.

She

How right they are to adore you!

Dark am I, yet lovely,
daughters of Jerusalem,
dark like the tents of Kedar,
like the tent curtains of Solomon.[c]
Do not stare at me because I am dark,
because I am darkened by the sun.
My mother’s sons were angry with me
and made me take care of the vineyards;
my own vineyard I had to neglect.
Tell me, you whom I love,
where you graze your flock
and where you rest your sheep at midday.
Why should I be like a veiled woman
beside the flocks of your friends?

Friends

If you do not know, most beautiful of women,
follow the tracks of the sheep
and graze your young goats
by the tents of the shepherds.

He

I liken you, my darling, to a mare
among Pharaoh’s chariot horses.
10 Your cheeks are beautiful with earrings,
your neck with strings of jewels.
11 We will make you earrings of gold,
studded with silver.

She

12 While the king was at his table,
my perfume spread its fragrance.
13 My beloved is to me a sachet of myrrh
resting between my breasts.
14 My beloved is to me a cluster of henna blossoms
from the vineyards of En Gedi.

He

15 How beautiful you are, my darling!
Oh, how beautiful!
Your eyes are doves.

She

16 How handsome you are, my beloved!
Oh, how charming!
And our bed is verdant.

He

17 The beams of our house are cedars;
our rafters are firs.

There is No Shame in Sensual, Physical Love

We are taught to celebrate romantic love. Yet there is an underlining ideal that physical love is shameful and should be hidden. However, as we see in the Song of Solomon, there is no shame in the sensual, physical love shared between spouses. There should be no shame in physical displays of affection; kissing, hand holding, hugging. We need to stop feeling like there is something wrong with these things. We should not withhold our physical affections because of what other people think.

This type of thought and behavior is a lot like the belief that Christians should be poor. The Bible doesn’t tell us we need to be poor; it tells us not to worship money, which is NOT the same thing. We don’t need to withhold our affection. We need to be, under the right circumstances, an example of the proper way to love.

As I shared in my previous post, there are different types of love that God has blessed us to be able to share. They are unique to the type of love we give. We work toward having agape love, the unconditional love of God, so we can be a light that points toward Him. We share Eros love with our spouse that celebrates the love between two people. Philia love is what we share with our best friends and family members.  Finally, there is Storge love, shared with everyone else in an empathetic (the ability to understand and share the feelings of another) way. God has blessed us with the ability to pour out our love on others and as we do our tanks continually fill up.

More Than A Lover

How great is it to be filled with an over-flowing love toward our spouse. The life partner God has given us. We must remember it is impossible to be everything to one person (only God can fully complete a person). We need to have friends, family and a life both together yet separate from our partner. We grow stronger by remaining unique individuals who build each other up and strengthen each other. (I think Kahlil Gibran describes this wonderfully in his Two Sides of Love – see below.)

“Let there be spaces in your togetherness,
And let the winds of the heavens dance between you.

Love one another but make not a bond of love:
Let it rather be a moving sea between the shores of your souls.
Fill each other’s cup but drink not from one cup.
Give one another of your bread but eat not from the same loaf.
Sing and dance together and be joyous, but let each one of you be alone,
Even as the strings of a lute are alone though they quiver with the same music.

Give your hearts, but not into each other’s keeping.
For only the hand of Life can contain your hearts.
And stand together, yet not too near together:
For the pillars of the temple stand apart,

And the oak tree and the cypress grow not in each other’s shadow.”

Two people are strengthened by the physical love that binds them together. We put our trust in each other; they are our best-friend, our sounding board, our lover, our confidante. They don’t need to share all our hobbies and views. They support us when we are weak. They have our back in times of adversity. They give us wise council –  all from a place of love. 

When you have a partner who celebrates and delights in the Lord, it is a blessing, as you share not just Eros, the physical love, but agape – the unconditional love. You want the best for that person. When you hear the term that God is love, He isn’t just one type of love, He is all encompassing love. He fully loves us. He wants the best for us. He leads us and guides us with His grace and wisdom. God created Eve for Adam so he wouldn’t be alone. God gave a partner to him so they would share foundational truths, and when they were cast from the Garden of Eden, they still had each other to share the new burdens that were placed on them due to their disobedience. Mark 10:9 “Therefore what God has joined together, let not man separate.”

Being Single on Valentine’s Day Just Gives You a Chance to Celebrate Loving Yourself

Yet, even though we have set aside this ‘holiday’ for couples, it is important to consider that it has become a celebration of love. Transformed from its beginnings as  the spring celebration of fertility and all that came with it, we now mark it as a day to celebrate those we love. This means, if you are single, you should celebrate the love you have for yourself. The love you have for your Creator. You should spoil yourself and know that where you are is where God wants you to be. Being alone doesn’t make you less on this day. You are as special as the couples who are celebrating their love; you are just celebrating in a different way.

We don’t follow the rules of man, we acknowledge them. Even the Bible says to pay Caesar what is due to Caesar and give God what belongs to God. So, while the world may say that the 14th is meant for couples, we can acknowledge and agree that it is a day of love. Celebrate love.

 

Love: 16 Aspects of God’s Love For Us

Love: 16 Aspects of God’s Love For Us

As we enter the month of February our focus is love. In this coming month we will delve into the four aspects of love. The first, of course, God’s love for us. It is the most powerful definition of love. In order to measure it all we have to do is read 1 Corinthians 13. It is how we should aspire to love yet we often fall short. This is not a flaw or a mark against us.

We can only set our goal to love like this. This is the ‘target’ that we shoot for and aim to hit. It is a good goal for us to work toward having this type of love. However, we also need to accept that we may continually fall short. The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak.

1 Corinthians 13

The Way of Love

13 If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. And if I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. If I give away all I have, and if I deliver up my body to be burned,[a] but have not love, I gain nothing.

Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful;[b] it does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but rejoices with the truth. Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.

Love never ends. As for prophecies, they will pass away; as for tongues, they will cease; as for knowledge, it will pass away. For we know in part and we prophesy in part, 10 but when the perfect comes, the partial will pass away. 11 When I was a child, I spoke like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I gave up childish ways. 12 For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known.

13 So now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; but the greatest of these is love.

Aspects of Love

  1. Patient
  2. Kind
  3. Not Envious
  4. Doesn’t Boast
  5. Isn’t Arrogant
  6. Is not Rude
  7. Doesn’t insist on its own way
  8. Is Not Irritable
  9. Is Not Resentful
  10. Does not rejoice in wrongdoing
  11. Rejoices in the Truth
  12. Bears All Things
  13. Believes All Things
  14. Hopes All Things
  15. Endures All Things
  16. Love Never Ends (Fails)

The Four Types of Love Defined

  1. Agape – unconditional love. This is the love God has for us. It is the embodiment of what 1 Corinthians 13 is written about.
  2. Eros – Sensual or Romantic Love. This is the type of love shared between two people. Sexual desire, physical attraction and physical love. This is the difference between wanting one person and wanting multiple people. The difference between being in love and loving someone.
  3. Philia – friends.  It is a powerful deep, emotional bond between two people who share commonality; values, interests and/or activities. Trusted confidents.
  4. Storge – empathy.  It is a love that develops naturally between family members, parents and their children, siblings.  Or through familiarity or bonding by chance.

The Love Of Our Creator

The focus of this post is Agape love. The love that our creator has for us. Agape is an unconditional love. It is REALLY hard to give unconditionally. We like to think we can and sometimes we do, for a short while, until the flesh starts to rise up and we have to fight against questioning what we are doing and why. We struggle with ourselves. “For we wrestle not against flesh and blood.” We are fighting a spiritual warfare. We are often so absorbed in what is happening to our flesh, in our physical world, that we forget the fight isn’t ‘here’.

It is one of the biggest reasons we are called to pray. We need to pull our minds back and remember that it is a spiritual fight. One that we fight on our knees in prayer.  It is why we are to put on the full armor of God so that we can stand against the attacks we are under. All you need to do is look around at what is happening in society to recognize that we are fully under attack.

Yet, when we ‘forget’ that this fight isn’t a physical one but a spiritual battle, God is patient. He waits on us. He waits for us to remember His word and to trust in Him. He is Kind. When we finally do ‘wake up’ and realize we need to fall to our knees. That we need to pray and meditate on His word, He doesn’t chastise us for our forgetfulness. He doesn’t shake a finger at us for taking all these troubles and cares as our personal burden. He waits for us to remember to cast all our cares on Him.

God doesn’t desire to have what we. Although He is a jealous God, He is not an envious God. There is a difference between jealousy and envy. We need to remember that. Often times we will mix the two up. However, envy is desiring possessions whereas jealous is being fiercely protective and vigilant. We, on the other hand, interchange these two. We become “jealous” over things that we desire to possess.

When we do ‘own’ something, we often tend to boast about it to other people. This is where the ‘love of money is the root of all evil’ comes into play. We could exchange ‘money’ with ‘power’. The love of power is the root of all evil. We see this more and more. People who have a lot of wealth, who think they are better than others. Who desire to control other people and boast about how they have used other people to get to their position of power. They become arrogant and rude while they are drowning in their positions believing they are better than others.  (I am not going to go into how God removes and sets up leaders as this post isn’t about that.)

We Have The Power to Choose

When we get to the part of 1 Corinthians about love not insisting on its own way. The greatest thing I can point to is the fact that God gave us FREE WILL. In other words, we are not forced to choose Him and the path He has set out for us. We are not forced to follow His will in our lives. He has given us a choice.

We also know that God doesn’t get irritable, although the word does speak about His righteous anger. Again, there are subtle differences in the meaning of words. This is why education is so important. In order to really understand what the Bible speaks about we have to know definitions so we can fully comprehend what the word is telling us. We also know that God isn’t resentful. He doesn’t get angry when we wander off the path He has for us. He doesn’t get angry at us when we find ourselves out in the brambles and losing our way. No – He is PATIENT AND KIND while waiting for us.

We know He doesn’t rejoice in wrongdoing. The very first story we learn is the fall of Adam and Eve. They were disobedient. He wasn’t happy that they did what they weren’t supposed to do. He wasn’t happy when Cain killed Able. He did discipline them in a manner that they would benefit from. In a way that would allow them to see His mercy and grace in their lives. Even though God was disappointed in what they did He wanted to hear them speak the truth. He wanted them to recognize what they had done. Then we could rejoice and know that there was a way back to Him. It set in motion the path for Jesus to sacrifice on the cross for us.

The Greatest Love The World Has Ever Known

It is in the life and death of Christ that we see that love bears all things. Jesus offered up His life as a sacrifice. Why? He bore the burden of our sins so that we could rejoin the family. He BORE the BURDEN for US. All of our sins. Not just some of them. ALL OF THEM. What a heavy weight that was and is. No one else could have done it. Love BEARS ALL THINGS.

He did it because He believed in us. He believed we were worth saving. He believed that the sin that marred us didn’t need to keep us down. He believed we should have the opportunity to ”turn from our wicked ways” to call upon the Lord. He believed we should have the chance to worship our Father in Heaven and that He would Hear us and respond.’ He believed in the reunification of family.

Our hope is in God. It is hope that gives us strength in the darkest of times. God is OUR hope in all things. No matter the situation or circumstances we have an anchor in time of crisis.

Love Endures All Things

God’s love for us endured the loss of His son on the cross. How painful it was for Jesus to see His Father turn away from him when he was on the cross taking our sins upon himself. Jesus belief and hope in our reunion with the Father was His Focus. He endured not just the physical pain of crucifixion but also the emotional pain of loss of connection with His Father. He bore this so we wouldn’t have to. What an amazing love that is!

Love Never Ends

God’s love is eternal, everlasting, it is forever. He is the alpha and the omega. The beginning and the end. The first and the last. He is omnipotent. Almighty. He gave us the greatest sacrifice of love. He didn’t do it for Him, He did it for US. Then He went a step farther and gave us the ability to CHOOSE if we would accept His gift. This most incredible sacrifice that was given. This most wonderous, beautiful gift that was offered, He lets us make the decision to come and be part of His family.

He knows we will stumble and fall along the path. Yet, when we accept Him into our lives, it isn’t the failure that is the focus. It is the acceptance of a gift. A gift that teaches us how to truly love. A gift that lets us know that even when we are weak, He not only can, but will make us strong. He offers us a place of refuge in difficult times. He offers us peace. He helps to turn our weeping into joy. Our mourning into dancing. He is steadfast and patient when we wander off the path that He has called us to. He did ALL this and so much more because He Loves Us! He has called us for such a time as this!

Know that God loves you. Know that we can all put into practice the many facets of 1 Corinthians 13. It isn’t a secret recipe. It is attainable and real. We can love the way that God has taught us to love. There has never been a more relevant time in our lives than now to practice and show God’s love. Be strong it the Lord and the Power of His Might.

Do you want to know more about God’s love?

Would you like to have a personal relationship with Him? The first step is accepting Christ into your heart. Jesus said: “I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man comes unto the Father but by me.” (John 14:6) . God hears even the simplest of prayers. All you need to do is to recognize you are a sinner and need forgiveness. Say a prayer to the Lord acknowledging these things and invite Jesus into your heart and life as your personal Lord and Savior.

Our relationship with Christ is personal. However, when we first accept Him into our lives, we need to find people who are like minded. We need a body of believers to help support us. With so many churches not being able to meet due to the current pandemic, this may seem like it is impossible. I want you to know it is not. There are so many believers out there and so many churches. If you are on Facebook I would recommend finding one and being a part of the community. I generally do not do this, however, I don’t want to leave you with nothing therefore I am going to post a link to a church I know is on fire for the Lord. Again, there are many out there that you can find on your own. I just want you to have a place to start with your fellowship. 🙂

Harvest Foursquare, Shelton, WA

Focus on the Family

First Build a Strong Foundation; Everything Else Will Follow

First Build a Strong Foundation; Everything Else Will Follow

We have all heard the story of the man who built his house upon the sand and the man who built his house upon the rock. The lesson of the story is that it is important to choose what kind of foundation we will build on. Will it be weak or strong? Not only is it important factor when physically building something but it is in our spiritual lives as well.

If your foundation is made up of lies and taking shortcuts, then the life you grow will be built on them. When you try to shortcut your life. you can end up far away from where you want to be or planned to be. It is easy to find yourself off the path that God has set for you. Not only are you hurting others, but you are hurting yourself.  When you build your life on the fruits of the spirit: love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, gentleness and self control – you will find that your foundation is strong. It takes a lot to follow this path as sometimes it may seem easier to take advantage of people’s kindness to step on them and get ahead.  Yet in the long term, we are not only building our lives for this realm but also for the next one. (more…)

I am but a humble servant

I am but a humble servant

I thought I knew what humility was until I was put in a position where I was unable to take care of myself. I had to rely on someone else to help me do everything.

I am, after all, a very independent individual. I am the one who takes charge and cares for others. So, to have this situation happen where I was unable to take care of myself was a very difficult position to be in. I had a back problem that completely incapacitated me for a time. Yes, I am very, thankful that it was only for a time. However, it put me in a position to understand what really being humble was.

We are a society that prides ourselves on our accomplishments. On our works. On our actions. A lot of us like to say we are humble individuals. Yet, are we? Or is it just another word we toss around to make us sound better?

 

Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and he shall lift you up.

James 4:10

Mother Teresa was, in my opinion, a very humble woman. She didn’t go out of her way to point to her works. Her works spoke loudly about who she was. Even though she began her “mission within a mission” at the age of 36, most of us didn’t become aware of her or really know about her work until later in her life; when her humanitarian efforts were broadcast by others.

While I am sure this media attention helped her ministry, she didn’t seek it out, it came to her. She did the work she was called to do and didn’t say, “Look at me. Look at what I am doing to help the poor and needy.” She simply did it. Can we say the same? Would we follow in her footsteps?

It is a difficult road she traveled and she remained humble about it, faithfully in service to her calling.

In a lot of churches, there are foot washing services. This is pretty much just what it sounds like. Someone in the congregation comes with a bowl of warm water and a cloth and washes your feet. The idea is to experience the sense of humbleness & humility that it takes to serve someone in this manner.

The experience is shared as both the servant and the ‘master’. The person whose feet is being washed generally feels humbled by having someone attend to them in this manner; washing their bare feet. It is comparative to what Jesus experienced when the prostitute washed his feet with her tears and dried them with her hair. Her humbleness in that moment of pure servitude is something most of us will never experience. We are too full of who we are and think too highly of ourselves, it is hard to get out of our own way in order to act voluntarily as a servant for anyone else. We want to be served, not be the one who is doing the serving. Yet, even when being served, we want it on our terms.

(Parents can be a great example of this. They serve their children’s and meet their needs, yet they often forget to pass along this very valuable lesson to them. That the act of serving is as great if not greater than that of ‘master/mistress’ ie the person being served. Also, we often only give this way to our children.)

We want to be healthy and in charge. We don’t want someone helping us because we are unable to help ourselves. We don’t want to be in that “weak” position. That very humbling position. We want to be powerful and strong, both in body and mind. We want to take the strength of our youth and carry it throughout our entire lives. What we want and the reality of our situation may not be the same. The older we get, the more our bodies tend to fail us in unexpected ways or at inconvenient times. Even the seemingly healthiest person can unexpectedly fall to unforeseen factors. 

This is where our ‘community’ come into play; in other words, we are supposed to rely on those around us. We gain strength from it. It makes us better people when we learn to balance our lives with not only our strengths and but our weaknesses. We gain even more strength when we allow others to help us in our weaknesses and in our times of trial and tribulation. Whether it lasts a few moments or decades. We are put in a position that not only can benefit us, but also be blessed to those who willingly choose to help us.

Unfortunately, it is our mindset that keeps us from learning these lessons. The way we are raised. The things we are taught. The ability to survive on your own and be independent having a high value. Taking care of yourself and others and not having anyone there to help support and take care of you, etc. These actions, these situations, they work against our personal growth. It may take those of us who truly believe we are self-sufficient even longer to learn certain lessons.

There are many scriptures, books, sermons, speeches that talk about humbleness. We listen to them without hearing them. We believe we are humble without truly knowing what it means or ever having experienced it. There are some amazing role-models out there that really do exhibit this trait. People who are often over-looked or not thought about. If you look around you will find them and you can learn great lessons from them.

 

If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.

2 Chronicles 7:14

Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves.

Phillipians 2:3

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The Path to Joy – a Simple Message

The Path to Joy – a Simple Message

There is only one way to find true Joy for your life.  And it’s a simple way!  Here are some steps to follow:

(1)  Accept the Lord Jesus as your personal Savior.  (Read John 3:16).  He created you.  He wants you to be filled with the Joy of His Spirit.

(2)  Be obedient to His commandments.  And they are simple, too.  Love God first and foremost.  Love your neighbor as yourself.  (Yes, that means you need to love yourself, even as God loves you – so much He even died for you!).

Obedience, in this day and age, may seem difficult.  We naturally want to be “rebels” – with or without a cause.  Rebellion includes doing things our own way, disregarding God’s way – whether it’s not following the basic commandments, or failing to put God first and treat others as we would like to be treated.

I can tell you, from personal experience, that going away from the commandments of the Lord (which He has in place not to punish us, but to keep us in joy and peace), brings nothing but trouble.   It’s a lesson many of us have to learn the hard way – and sadly, some never learn.  But following in God’s way – the way as set out in the Scriptures – and asking Him for guidance and wisdom, and to open the door to walk in His will for our lives – brings so much peace and joy that it’s often beyond comprehension.  God is so good – He loves us and wants us to live full and joyful lives.  We can choose to respond to that love, or not.

I hope for you the peace, joy and love that passes all understanding, through His grace and mercy.

Confession or manipulation; sharing your heartache to benefit others

Confession or manipulation; sharing your heartache to benefit others

We all have secrets. Skeletons that lay dormant in our closet. Things we never speak of or we don’t want to talk about. Things that have damaged our psyche and have scarred us. When is it okay to talk about what you have gone through? What you are going through?  Recently, or not so recently depending on how much you follow the news, the spotlight has been shining on the abortion issue. More recently “celebrities” have been stepping forward to share their abortion stories.

First, I must admit, at this point, I haven’t read the stories. I don’t know if they did it because of crisis, due to sexual assault or where the pregnancy wasn’t viable for whatever reason. In other words, the baby had expired or wasn’t forming correctly and an emergency D&C had to be provided. There are situations where abortion may indeed be needed.

In so many cases, though, it is a life choice that someone is making because they made the mistake of not using birth control. Not because they were assaulted. Not because the child wasn’t viable (missing a part of their anatomy, brain dead, etc.) In the case of viability, yes, I believe the mother needs to make a choice. A decision to decide how to best proceed for themselves.

We are all made differently. Our strengths and weaknesses are different. What we can handle or we can’t handle. I admit, my own beliefs are colored by my experiences. Having a child wasn’t an option for me. I had miscarriages. Unfortunately, the system was set up against me. Health insurance covers abortion, and other preventative measures to not get pregnant. The majority of the time it does not cover fertility treatments or other methods of getting pregnant and sustaining that pregnancy. Unless you are wealthy enough to pay for the premiums that do cover this, you are out of luck. (Military insurance does cover fertility. And I know there have been cases where women have afforded fertility treatments and had multiple births – when they were on welfare.)

So, what is my argument? Part of it is based on my faith and my belief system. The other part is based on personal experience. The first time I knew I was pregnant I couldn’t prove it. What do I mean by that? The tests came back negative even though I showed all the signs of pregnancy. We didn’t say anything to anyone. We dealt with it when I miscarried, and then we went to the doctor and he said, “we can’t do anything about it or even investigate it until you have had multiple miscarriages.”

The last time I miscarried, we knew the baby had already expired in my womb. I was given the option for a D&C or to wait until nature took its course. I chose the latter as my choice is anti-abortion unless there is NO other option. I ended up in the hospital after an ambulance ride, with a morphine drip while I lived through a very painful delivery. After that, we chose not to try again. (I am blessed to have adopted a child in between these things, but that is another story for another time.)

The biggest issue I have with abortion is that too many people use it as a method of birth control. They use it for their “accidents” instead of protecting themselves to prevent it. We are one of the countries whose birth rate has been dropping dramatically. Germany is another one.

However, I digress: the real point I am trying to share here is when is our personal tragedy, our personal pain, something worth sharing and for to what end? Are we sharing these things in the hope to prevent the same situation or help other’s deal with their own burdens? Are we sharing them to manipulate others into doing what we feel is the right thing? My stand on abortion isn’t going to be the same one that others take. As a matter of fact, rather than share my pain, I would rather point out that not only are birth rates dropping, but there is a large group of women, who for whatever reason, are unable to have children. They have tried and were not able to, yet, still crave having a family.

Adoption is something that we should focus on more. I read an opinion piece of why are “Christians” against abortion when they are failing to do anything to help the children who are in the system? I might agree with this opinion except I did adopt a child out of the system. Not only did I do that, but I had to fight in order to do so. (Again, this will have to be another story for another time.) I would point out that we are focused on other countries before our own. We are focused on helping children and adopting them from these countries, rather than our own. I would point out that our focus shouldn’t be on what others are doing, but on what we are doing ourselves.

We can’t change someone else. Change has to come from within. What are you doing to help with that change? What are your motivations? Are you “helping” out of a desire to truly help? Or are you “helping” because you want to manipulate someone into changing? Into doing something that you want them to do?

You know your heart. You know your reasons. No one can read into that, except for God who sees us and knows us for who we truly are. I am not judging why people are sharing their stories. I am simply asking for us all to check our own motivations when we do things. Are we confessing for health, growth, and comfort? Or are we confessing to manipulating and control?