SOMEBODY'S GOT TO MOVE  

Our word for today from the Word of God comes from Hebrews 12:15. God is 
showing us here that there are two things that can't live in the same house at
the same time. Well, actually, in the same heart. There's no way they can 
co-exist. Here's what it says, "See to it that no one misses the grace of God
and that no bitter root grows up to cause trouble and defile many." Now, with 
the stress you have you sure don't want to miss God's grace; you don't want
to miss His sustaining love. But this says you can, you can miss God's grace! 
How do you do that? Well, by having this other guy living in your heart.
It talks about having "no bitter root." If bitterness is living in your heart, 
grace cannot move in. One or the other has to go. 

Could it be that part of your stress and part of your struggle is that 
poisonous root of bitterness in your heart? I mean, maybe you've been hurt, 
rejected,
abused, maybe disappointed, and there's a growing resentment in your heart. 
Notice growing. It says the bitter root grows. Bitterness and anger never stand
still. They keep growing, they start to "defile many," to spill over into our 
other close relationships. 

Just last week a mother told me about how she'd been hurt some years before and 
how her heart, she said, had grown hard. She said, "Now my hard heart is
affecting my husband, my children." You see, it was bitterness that turned it 
hard. The irony is that a grudge actually chains you emotionally to the person
you dislike. "I don't like so and so, so I'll think about her a lot." That's 
what happens! Unforgiveness is like this emotional cancer and it eats you
up inside. It may be costing you God's sustaining grace. They can't live in the 
same house at the same time! 

Isn't it time to release that bitterness? Hasn't it done enough damage? It 
isn't hurting the person you're bitter toward. It's hurting you, and probably
others you love. Bitterness can only be moved out by something called 
forgiveness. Going to the great Forgiver, the One who said of those who had just
nailed Him to a cross, "Father forgive them," and you say to Him, "Lord give me 
the grace to release this person, to forgive them, to release them to You.
Not to excuse them, but to choose to treat them not as they treated me, but as 
you've treated me, Jesus. 

In the words of Colossians 3:13, "Forgive as the Lord forgave you." Forgiving 
is the beginning of healing the damage of the past. There's a truck full of
God's grace pulled up in front. He's waiting to move that grace into your heart 
and your life as soon as the bitterness moves out!

~~~

O. Addison Gethers
e-mail address : [EMAIL PROTECTED] or [EMAIL PROTECTED]
window live messenger: [EMAIL PROTECTED] aim: durangoadd64 skype: cowboys62 
yahoo messenger: OADDISONGETHERS
 
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