Monday, June 23, 2014

The Poison of Bitterness


Bitterness is a poison that destroys the physical and spiritual health of an individual.  
Someone said, “Bitterness is like the acid you have inside that you want to spew on others; but it may well eat you alive before you get the chance.”

In April, 1995, Bud Welch’s 23-year-old daughter, Julie, was killed in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Bldg in Oklahoma City.  Three days after the bombing, Bud watched Tim McVeigh being led out of the courthouse, & hoped someone would shoot him dead.  Bud wanted him to fry.  In fact, Bud said: I’d have killed him myself if I’d had the chance.

Unable to deal with the pain of Julie’s death, Bud started self-medicating with alcohol until eventually the hangovers were lasting all day.  Then, on a cold day in Jan., 1996, Bud came to the bombsite – as he did every day – & he looked across the wasteland where the Murrah Building once stood.  His head was splitting from drinking the night before & he thought, “I have to do something different, because what I’m doing isn’t working”.

For the next few weeks Bud started to reconcile things in his mind, & finally concluded that it was revenge & hate that had killed Julie & the 167 others.  Tim McVeigh & Terry Nichols had been against the US government for what happened in Waco, TX, in 1993 & seeing what they’d done with their vengeance, Bud knew he had to send his in a different direction.  Shortly afterwards Bud started speaking out against the death penalty.
  
In Dec 1998, after Tim McVeigh had been sentenced to death, Bud had a chance to meet Tim McVeigh’s father, Bill, at his home.  Bud wanted to show Bill that he did not blame him.   Bill's daughter also wanted to meet Bud; the 3 of them sat around the kitchen table.  Up on the wall were family snapshots, including Tim’s graduation picture.  Bud said, “What a good looking kid.”

Earlier Bill had asked Bud, “Bud, are u able to cry?”  Bud had told him, “I don’t usually have a problem crying”.  Bill said, “I can’t cry, even tho I’ve got a lot to cry about”.   But now, sitting in the kitchen looking at Tim’s photo, a big tear rolled down his face.  It was the love of a father for a son.

When Bud got ready to leave he shook Bill’s hand, then extended it to Bill's daughter, Jennifer, but she just grabbed Bud & threw her arms around him.  She was almost the age as Julie but felt taller to Bud.  Bud didn’t know which one of them started crying first.  Then Bud held her face in his hands & said, “Look, honey, the 3 of us are in this for the rest of our lives.  I don’t want your brother to die & I’ll do everything I can to prevent it.  As Bud walked away he realized that until that moment he’d walked alone, but now a tremendous weight had lifted from his shoulders. 

About a year before the execution, Bud found it in his heart to forgive Tim McVeigh.  It was a release for Bud rather than for Tim McVeigh.

Revenge & bitterness are poisons that will eat you from the inside out.  Forgiveness is the key that releases bitterness.

Ephesians 4: 32 says, “be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God in Christ forgave you.”  Jesus said, "Blessed are the merciful, for they will receive mercy" (Matthew 5:7).

Monday, June 2, 2014

Celebrate the Holy Spirit!


Sunday, June 7 is the 50th day after Easter, which is the day the Holy Spirit came on the followers of Jesus in Acts 2.  Some call it Pentecost Sunday.  The Greek word for pentecost means fifty.  Acts 2 tells us that Jesus’ disciples were gathered in the upper room when they were filled with the Holy Spirit; they heard a great wind and spoke in different languages as tongues of fire settled upon them.

The Holy Spirit convicts us of our sin, which is essential for salvation.  The Spirit counsels and comforts us (John 14:16, 26).  The Spirit guides us.  In John 6:63, Jesus said, “The Spirit gives life.”  The Spirit renews us.

In the languages of the original Bible, Hebrew and Greek, the word for “Spirit” is the same as the word for “breath.”  Genesis 2:7 speaks of creation as God breathing the breath of life into Adam and Eve’s nostrils.  Sometimes we say that the Spirit is like the wind.  We can’t see it, but we can see what it does.

The Apostles’ Creed says, “I believe in the Holy Spirit.”  Do we truly believe that the Spirit is working in us and through us?

When we pray and read the Bible, do we expect the Spirit to speak God’s Word to us?  Do you let the Spirit guide you and lead your conversations with others?  Are your relationships marked by the love, joy, and peace of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23)?  When we meet together in a small group, class, committee or in worship, do we really expect the Spirit to work in us or through us?

I encourage you to keep your eyes and ears open.  It’s too easy to miss what the Spirit is doing.  The Spirit is working in our midst, but if we’re not alert, we miss the special things that God’s Spirit is doing.  God’s Spirit is alive and moving and making old things new!  Let us give thanks to the Lord and praise Him for the work of His Spirit!

To God be the Glory!

This is the “Come holy Spirit” prayer from Cursillio:
Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful,
and kindle in us the fire of your love.
Send forth your Spirit, and we shall be created.
And You shall renew the face of the earth.
O God, who by the light of the Holy Spirit,
Did instruct the hearts of the faithful,
Grant that by the same Holy Spirit,
We may be truly wise and ever enjoy His consolations.
Through Christ our Lord, Amen.aler