Hello, Welcome to GoRighteous Initiative. We are happy to see you around. Please navigate this site with the website tab menu below. THANKS

Sunday, December 1, 2019

The Call to Salvation from sin, self and the world

The call to Holiness, flee sin, self and the worldly way of life and repent and be converted.

UNIVERSITY OF HELL
P.O. BOX 666 LAKE OF FIRE
ADMISSION IS CURRENTLY ON (IT'S FREE).

FACULTY OF IMMORALITY

Department of Fornication
Department of Masturbation
Department of Pornography
Department of Homosexuality
Department of Lesbianism
Department of Lusting

FACULTY OF WORLDLINESS

Department of Fashion
Department of Carnivals/Festivals
Department of Pride of Life
Department of Circular Music

FACULTY OF SOCIAL LIFESTYLE

Department of Occultism
Department of Idolatry
Department of Smoking
Department of Drunkenness
Department of Drug Addiction
Department of Hypocrisy
Department of Fraud/Malpractice

FACULTY OF WICKEDNESS

Department of Hatred, Malice
Department of Anger, Wrath
Department of Murder
Department of Envy, Jealousy
Department of Witchcraft

FACULTY OF COMMUNICATION

Department of lies
Department of slander
Department of backbiting
Department of Gossiping
Department of Tail-bearing
Department of forgery & faking.

FACULTY OF MARINEAEROLOGY

Department of spiritual wickedness
Department of powers and principality
Department of witch and witchcraft
Department of Hydro-Spiritism
Department of demonology
Department of household wickedness
Department of evil operations
Department of obsession, oppression,possession and depression.


SIGNED: Devil Satan, Vice Chancellor - the prestigious UNIVERSITY OF HELL.




It is not possible to profess to be a Christian when you're not living to God's glory.

GOOD NEWS FROM MASTER JESUS CHRIST our Lord.

  That there is an opportunity for a change of institution to life everlasting (Heaven) by repenting and forsaking all your sins, and hold on to Jesus Christ the Author and Finisher of our Faith (Hebrews 12:2).
And the devil that deceived them was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone...
And shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever (Revelation 20:10-15).
I believe you won't want to be there not to talk of going there, that's while you have to make a positive choice now on where to spend Eternity
Choose wisely were you belong, God's love is too great to not to be accepted into one's live. Eternity is too big to spent in Hell Fire, escape for your life today, repent and be converted! Live a Holy life to God's glory.

God bless you.

Saturday, November 23, 2019

HEALTH BENEFIT OF TURMERIC

   Turmeric is the rootstalk of a tropical plant in the ginger family. This root has been in use for thousands of years in India and China as a spice, and medicine for conditions including heartburn, diarrhea, stomach bloating, colds, fibromyalgia, and depression. It is sometimes applied on the skin for ringworm and infected wounds as it's said to have antibacterial properties. It is the spice responsible for the yellow colour of curry. One of the main components of the spice is a substance called curcumin which has potential healing properties.
  

   Curcumin is a substance with powerful antiinflammatory and antioxidant properties. It has been scientifically proven that Curcumin could be helpful in the prevention and cure of some inflammatory conditions such as tendonitis and arthritis. It could also be used for curative and preventive measure in the following ways: 
   As a natural antiseptic and antibacterial agent, it could be useful in disinfecting cuts and burns. When combined with cauliflower, tumeric can prevent prostate cancer and stop the growth of existing prostate cancer. It could also be helpful in the prevention of the spread of breast cancer to the lungs. It reduces the risk of childhood leukemia and it is a natural liver detoxifier.
   Tumeric is a potent natural anti-inflammatory that works well without side effects. It is a natural painkiller and cox-2 inhibitor. It aids in fat metabolism and helps in weight management. It can also be used in the treatment for depression. It boosts the effects of chemo drug paclitaxel and reduces its side effects. Tumeric has been shown to stop the growth of new blood vessels in tumours. It speeds up healing in wounds and assists in remodeling damaged skin and other inflammatory skin conditions. It could also be used in the prevention and treatment of Alzheimer disease.

Turmeric can be used in the following ways: 
   As spice, add it to anything, besides sweets for a new flavour and a ton of health benefits. You can use turmeric to add some taste to cooked vegetables, eggs and meat dishes. You can also add it to boiling water for cooking pasta, rice, soups, more.
   As tea, boil four cups of water and add one teaspoon of ground turmeric. Reduce to a simmer for 10 minutes, Strain the tea through a fine sieve into the tea through a fine sieve into a cup, add honey and/or lemon to taste. 
   As a skin detox, mix it with Castor oil for skin detox. Castor oil with turmeric powder is a powerful toxin releaser for your skin. For women, it is great to apply to the breast and under the arm because it will pull out harmful toxins from the lymph nodes and fat cells of the breast.
   
How great is Turmeric plant? For more vital information and the tropical place one can get this medicinal plant please open the left column of the home page of this site and search it via Wikipedia Search. 
   Now you have seen it all how one can get healing even with natural things God Himself has put in place, but come to think of it: what will physical healing or wholeness do for you if you're still sick spiritually? If you're still sick spiritually, its as a result of prayerlessness, not yielding again to God's Holy way of living, not studying the unchanging Word of Truth, not having sweet fellowship with the Spirit anymore, to crown it all; having S I N  in your life. God said in (2 Chronicles 7:14); "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 sins, and will heal their land." Beloveth, God is ready to heal you of that spiritual impotency, that spiritual lukewarmness and as such like. What He wants from you now is to come out from sin and allow Him to cleanse, sanctified and heal you through the most precious blood of Jesus Christ and be saved. God loves you so much that no matter how far you've gone in sin He is still ready to forgive you if only you will forsake your sinful practice and allow him to help and heal you body, soul, and spirit. Think and meditates on these. The Good Lord of Host will help out. Amen!

God bless you.

Sunday, November 10, 2019

Unconditional Love

Seven Steps to Finding True Love

There is probably no topic which has captivated people throughout the centuries and from most every culture than the topic of love. We put a man on the moon, broke the speed of sound, and mapped the human genome, but love remains a complete mystery. Science has not been able to explain it. Mathematics cannot predict it. Poets still wrestle with adequate words to describe it.
It may have been more than two centuries ago, but Plato’s words have never sounded more true, “Every heart sings a song, incomplete.” We are all looking for love. At any given moment, we may be far from it but we never stop hoping the next opportunity is just over on the horizon. We are all looking for true love.

One of our frustrations with love is our complete inability to keep it. Like sand slipping between our fingers, the harder we grasp the faster it seems to fall through. It would be nice if love was as simple as baking a batch of cookies or building a bird house for the backyard; a simple set of ingredients, a logical list of steps to take. But we all know the truth; love cannot be manufactured. It cannot be bought or traded. It cannot be forced. It cannot be controlled. It cannot be plotted on a map or broken down into a checklist of to do’s.

But, it is possible to find true love; even unconditional love! Here are seven steps to finding true love.

1. Love Requires You to Reveal Your True Self to Another

The famous author, C. S. Lewis, puts it best, “To love at all is to be vulnerable. Love anything and your heart will be wrung and possibly broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact you must give it to no one.” Lewis is right. What makes love so hard, and sometimes painful, is the vulnerability that always seems to accompany it.

To love at all is to be vulnerable.

We use the word love to describe a lot of things. We love food. We love music. We love a good joke and we love having a good time. Using love to describe such simple things makes the word seem a little safer. It is safe because we are not exposed. A great cup of coffee cannot reject us. A song from our favorite band does not leave us feeling useless. But when we choose to share our life with another person, we inevitably make a choice to become vulnerable. Unfortunately, vulnerability leaves our defenses down and often we get hurt.
We all know the feeling: rejection, humiliation, desperation. Opening our heart to another person, only to be rejected, is one of the most painful experiences in life. It hurts the most because in love we are most vulnerable. It’s worse than physical pain because it shakes us at the core of our identity, our hopes, and our dreams. Love rushes us to the mountain-top, and when lost, sends us careening back to the valley below. We cannot help but feel empty. We cannot help but feel worthless. We cannot help but feel hopeless.

2. Finding True Love Can Be Difficult

The Bible has a remarkable story about a woman named Leah who discovered that finding true love was difficult. Leah was the daughter of a wealthy and manipulative man named Laban. Leah also had a sister named Rachel, one of the most beautiful women in the whole region. Leah, was described as, “weak in the eyes.” We do not know exactly what that phrase means, but it is not hard to guess. Even without the side-by-side comparison to her beautiful sister, Leah was not drawing much attention.
One day, Rachel was herding the sheep when a young man named Jacob came to the well. His journey's purpose was to find a wife, so it did not take him long to notice beautiful Rachel approaching. He rolled away the stone over the well, and watered the sheep for her. Learning he was her father's nephew, she ran home to tell Laban the news. Already head-over-heels in love, or call it love-at-first-sight if you wish, Jacob stayed on with Laban. When asked what his wages should be, he immediately asked to marry Rachel. Laban made Jacob an offer. “Work for me, seven years without pay, then I will give you my daughter.”
It is starting to sound like a romantic story for the ages! Jacob was so madly in love that he did not hesitate. Seven years he worked, everyday focused on his prize. One day he would finally be able to marry the woman of his dreams, Rachel. The Bible records the event with all of the poetry we would expect from a great love story. “Jacob served seven years for Rachel, and they seemed to him but a few days because of the love he had for her.”
After seven years of labor, the wedding day finally arrived. The party must have been massive. When night came, Jacob and his new bride, probably wearing her wedding veil, went into their tent.
The next morning Jacob awoke, the Bible says, “and behold it was Leah!” Jacob had been tricked. Laban had switched his daughters on the wedding night and tricked Jacob into marrying his oldest, Leah. Why? Laban wanted another seven years of free labor before he would allow Jacob to actually marry Rachel. Still madly in love with Rachel, Jacob agrees and works another seven years to marry this younger daughter.
We like the image of Jacob! He was willing to submit himself to over a decade of manual labor as an act of love for Rachel whom he considered to be his soulmate. Like a great Shakespearian tragedy, we want desperately to find that kind of love, too. We want to know that someone would make such a sacrifice for us. This expression of love is the deepest craving of our heart. But allowing ourselves to be quickly carried off in the ecstasy of the moment misses the real heart of the story for Leah.
Leah had never been able to draw much attention. She had always been the hopeless romantic. But now things were much worse. Leah was married to a man who never for a moment loved her, and manipulated by a father as payment for help around the farm. Leah was not loved by her husband, nor even her father. She was used and discarded. When she was most vulnerable she was rejected.
What happened next is subtle, but important for us to understand our own struggle with love and rejection. In Leah’s first century world, women cared deeply about building a family, especially having sons, to which they could pass on their family name. A father’s proudest moment was the birth of his first son. Soon after being married, Jacob wanted a son. Leah saw an opportunity! If she could be the first to give Jacob a son, surely then he would love and appreciate her. Leah must have been excited to find out she was pregnant, and even more excited when she gave birth to the family’s first son, Reuben.

Now surely her husband would love her.

Leah believed in her heart that God had blessed her with this son so that now her husband would finally love her. But nothing changed. Leah gave birth to a second son, she named him Simeon.
Again she believed God had seen her rejection. Now, surely her husband would love her. But nothing changed. Leah had a third son, who she named Levi. She honestly hoped that now her husband would care for her and love her. But again, nothing changed.
Leah’s story teaches us that finding true love is difficult. True love goes beyond the passion of romance and even finding a partner for the sake of being married. While romance and having our needs met for provision and security are important, there is more that we must discover.

3. Your Need for True Love Reveals Your Need to Be Loved Unconditionally

Leah’s life was controlled by the hope that she could somehow make herself lovable. She was desperate to find a way to earn her husband’s attention. Her broken heart and desperation to be loved teaches us a deeply personal truth about our own search for true love. We inevitably all feel the crushing weight of trying to earn it.
Marketers sell us the idea that if we were just a little bit more attractive, a little thinner, and a little better dressed, then someone would finally take notice and we would feel loved. But we do not. Culture pressures us to set aside our prudish reluctance and instead give-away our bodies; it promises us intimacy leads to love. But it does not.
The harder we try, the more desperate we become to find the magic potion. We believe that with the poison-tipped arrow of Cupid in our hand, we need only hit our target and watch as love and intimacy explodes into a vibrant life of confidence, fulfillment, and passion. But, that is not real life. So, we end up settling for watching it play out in movies and dreaming about it in novels. Our own experience feels more like crawling our way through the dunes of the Sahara Desert, desperate to find an oasis with water. Just when we think we have finally found true love, we are crushed with the reality that it was just a mirage and we have nothing to show for it.
Leah helps us realize that most of what we call love and our search for it, is really a desperate expedition for evidence that we are valuable enough to be loved in the first place. We want to feel like our life is worth something to someone. We are desperate to be known, not just as a body, but as a soul. We want to be vulnerable and in that vulnerability to be accepted. We want to be loved unconditionally.

To be known and not loved is our greatest fear.

This is where we find the great struggle of looking for true love. As one author puts it, “To be loved but not known is comforting but superficial. To be known and not loved is our greatest fear.” Each of us wants to find a way to open up our hearts and lives and know that in that moment of honesty we will be accepted and not rejected.
We all know the risks, so we tend toward pretending. Too nervous to share the truth, we morph into whatever seems most desirable. But that is empty. We know it and we just do not know what else to do. We feel like we have to keep the show going. After all, what is the alternative? If we open up with the whole truth, we face the risk of being ridiculed, rejected and thrown away.
Honestly, true love has never really been about romance or passion at all. It is about truth and value. It is about vulnerability and acceptance. It is about wholeness and finding peace. It is about discovering a foundation on which we can build our lives and on which we can place our hope and confidence. It is about feeling like we are worth something. It is about sharing vulnerability and in the midst of it, feeling loved unconditionally.

4. True Love is Complicated by Our Self-Interest

Let me tell you a secret that you probably know already but are not willing to admit. Unconditional love, the kind that pours meaning and significance into your life, is hard to find in another human being because we are all too self-interested and too self-motivated. Our hearts are bent toward protecting and promoting ourselves. It is not hard to see! We live in a culture that constantly measures every relationship by what we get out of it. We stay married only as long as it is benefiting us. We commit to a relationship only until something better comes along. The success of our relationships is measured by our need for love being met, instead of seeking to meet the need for true love in others.
The Bible speaks clearly to this fact. It calls our bent toward self-interest sin, and it was neither the way humanity, nor the world was created originally. Adam and Eve were the first to experience love and it was much deeper than what we call love today. Adam and Eve’s relationship was perfectly woven together with one another, with God, and with the enjoyment of creation around them. There was no self-interest. Instead, their whole lives were shaped by caring for each other, caring for the world around them, and thanking God for the experience. Neither Adam nor Eve ever felt a moment of fear, rejection, or failure.
If you are familiar with the Bible’s story of the first sin, you will remember it involved a simple proposition. Adam and Eve were forbidden to eat from one tree in the Garden of Eden. As Eve passed by, a serpent whispered a temptation. “Eve, if you eat of this fruit you will be like God.” It is strange that the serpent did not tempt Eve with how delicious the fruit looked. The real temptation had nothing to do with appearance. Instead, the Serpent did something more subversive. He offered Eve a thought about herself. Eve asked herself a question she had never wondered before, “What’s in it for me?”
Temptation
This moment of self-discovery came with massive consequences. Eve ate the fruit and passed it on to her husband who ate it as well. This act of disobeying God led Adam and Eve to the startling realization they had been naked this whole time. It is as if they had been so enjoying one another, and the world around them so much, that they never thought to look down at themselves. For the first time they felt vulnerable and ashamed. They made clothes to cover and protect themselves.
God discussed their disobedience with them, because He knew that all of their relationships were falling apart as a result of their self-interest. Eve blamed the serpent for tempting her. Adam blamed Eve for giving him the fruit and then even went so far as to blame God for giving him Eve in the first place! Neither one wanted to take the blame but was concerned only for their self-interest. It is starting to look more like the world with which we are familiar!
The consequences for disobeying God were the loss of relationships. Adam and Eve would never be allowed back into the perfect garden world. They lost everything. We know their new world of self-interest and self-protection, because we carry with us the same sin-bent reality. We long for real love, because we were created to love and be loved unconditionally. This is probably the most important point in this entire article. You will never find or experience the true love you are looking for in this world alone. Each of us and the world around us is too soaked in sin. The great news is that there is One who is the very definition of Love and you can be in relationship with Him!

5. There is Only One Source of True Love

Let us return to Leah’s story for a moment. Leah was caught up in the struggle to earn her husband’s love. Three sons later, she was still clinging to the hope that one day he would wake up and start to appreciate her. She kept waiting and waiting. Eventually, Leah gave birth to another son, her fourth. Leah named him Judah and announced, “Now I will praise God.” Judah’s name means something special. It means to praise, or be thankful to God. But, how could she praise God when her outward circumstances had not changed? Jacob did not rush home with a bouquet of roses and an apology card. Leah was no more loved now than she had ever been. But somehow, she was now worshiping and thanking God.
With the birth of her fourth son, Leah had a life altering realization. She realized that while her husband refused to love her, God was present in her life! God had noticed every pain, every sorrow, every moment of rejection she had ever experienced and he was pouring blessing into her life. God loved her unconditionally!
You need to realize something important, as well. You may feel completely neglected and empty, but God is paying attention to you. You would not be reading this if that was not true. Right now, the God of the whole universe is trying to show you, there is a greater love and acceptance being offered to you, than you ever thought existed. That love is God’s love. He loves you unconditionally.
Leah did not realize it at the time, but Leah, and her son Judah, were ancestors of a man named Jesus. This is the Jesus, whom Christians worship and who the entire Bible anticipated. It is a fitting end to the story, because no one would ever offer greater hope and love than Jesus. He would offer exactly what Leah was trying desperately to find.
The Bible tells that Jesus was not merely a man, but the son of God Himself, who came to earth.
He did so because God was not content to leave us in hopeless despair and rejection, stumbling our way through life trying to manufacture the love that had been lost all the way back in the Garden of Eden. Even though our own selfish hearts had blinded us from God’s love, God was determined to lead us back to it.
Jesus knew all too well this pain of rejection. He was rejected at times by His best friends, His own family, and in the end, by the world around him. Jesus lived a perfect life, never out of self-interest but always doing the will of the God the Father, and offering Himself to serve and help those around Him. But no one recognized what He was doing.
They saw it as weakness and sentenced Jesus to death, and crucified Him. Jesus satisfied God's justice, but was not rejected by God–or there would have been no resurrection!

God is paying attention to you.

Our rebellion and self-preference is disobedience to God, and that keeps us for a relationship with Him. We are not interested in His plan, we want ourdreams to come true. So we reject Him and chart our own course. We ignore His instructions and believe whatever feels right to us. We turn down His love and try to replace it with romance and passion because it makes us feel good temporarily. This is the most remarkable part of the Gospel. God did not wait for us to call out to Him for help or love.
He blessed Leah even when she was caught up in trying to earn love for herself. God does not wait for you either. He chose to act on your behalf while you were still lost in your sinful and selfish ambitions. God took all of the punishment, that your disinterest and rebellion deserved, and He poured it out on Jesus, His only son. Jesus stepped into your place and accepted the punishment, because He loves you.
The real struggle for love, is our desire to be fully known, and yet fully accepted. When you hear the phase, “Jesus loves you,” this is not a Christian cliché, but rather the truth of unconditional love. Jesus knows better than anyone who you are; the good and the bad. He knows every secret, every pain, every sin, and every wrong. He knows you better than you know yourself. He knows, because He took your place. He has already paid the price for your sins, and He did it before you ever paid a moment of attention to Him.
Do you realize what that means? In Jesus, you are fully known and still fully accepted. Jesus is under no allusions. He knows exactly who you are. His love is not something you earned or deserved, yet here He is offering it to you. No one knows you better, and no one could possibly love you more. He gave his life for you. And now, He is willing to take the journey with you, from where you are, to where you need to be in Him; so that you can experience true love.

6. Accepting Jesus’ Love Opens the Door to a New Life

The good news of what Jesus has done for you is not just salvation from a coming apocalyptic destruction but accepting Jesus’ love, will begin to transform and fill your life with purpose, strength, and value. Like Leah, you will be amazed at the realization that you have discovered true love! You can thrive in the amazing joy of worshipping Him with a thankful and pure heart regardless of what is going on around you.
Gateway
Your value and your identity is secured for all eternity with Jesus, who loves you so passionately that He gave His own life. When you understand that truth, it transforms the way you think about love. No longer is love solely a romantic relationship that meets your desperate need to find significance and value. You are able to approach every new relationship, already possessing a full grasp of your significance. Living in God’s love and following Him places you in a position of strength for you know, to whom you belong and who you are. You do not need love to prove your self-worth or value. God is yours and you are His.
Understanding God’s love fills you with the stability and confidence to face any rejection or loss, and to know, no matter how much it hurts, your identity and value can never be shaken. You are secure in God! Without the need to use another’s love, to salvage your self-worth, you can finally start to enjoy and appreciate all of the people and experiences that surround you every day. You can enjoy your life and your relationships the way God that intended.
Learning to live and grow in the love of God can be a process, as you throw off the old nature and ways of thinking, and put on God’s love and right way of living. The world around us is constantly trying to challenge you, and to pull you back. But, every single day, Jesus continues to express His love as an alternative. All that is left is for you to make a choice.
Are you ready to make a life-changing decision to follow true love and to be loved unconditionally? God is the source of our value and our hope. Nothing you face in this life will shake loose the love of God.
With God on our side like this, how can we lose? If God didn’t hesitate to put everything on the line for us, embracing our condition and exposing himself to the worst by sending his own Son, is there anything else he wouldn’t gladly and freely do for us? . . . Do you think anyone is going to be able to drive a wedge between us and Christ’s love for us? There is no way! Not trouble, not hard times, not hatred, not hunger, not homelessness, not bullying threats, not backstabbing, not even the worst sins listed in Scripture. . . . None of this fazes us because Jesus loves us. I’m absolutely convinced that nothing—nothing living or dead, angelic or demonic, today or tomorrow, high or low, thinkable or unthinkable—absolutely nothing can get between us and God’s love because of the way that Jesus our Master has embraced us. (Romans 8:31-32, 35, 37-39, The Message)

7. Your Search for True Love Begins with This Simple Prayer

Your journey for true love and to be loved unconditionally begins with a simple prayer. Would you read and believe this prayer Beloveth?
"God, right now I’m experiencing deep hurt and rejection. I realize that I have spent much of my life trying to find love and value in the wrong places. I don’t want to go on living like this. Forgive me for trying to find my own way. Forgive me for neglecting You. I thank you that even before I was aware of it, You were demonstrating Your love for me in Jesus’ death. I thank You that His death offers me a way to know You and to experience Your love. God, fill my heart with a sense of your love. Help me to realize that you are the source of my worth and value. I trust you with my life and my broken heart. Heal it. Help me to turn to you, and worship you. Amen."
God bless you.

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Forgiveness: The Eraser of Anger

   Forgiveness really is the eraser of guilt and anger. It is the key that unlocks the shackles of the past and permits us to move forward with our life in a freer, far lighter way. Once we understand this we can start the process of healing that we deserve.

    "And forgive us our sins; for we also forgive every one that is indebted yo us. And lead us not into temptation; but deliver us from evil" (Luke 11:4).
    "For if ye forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you: But if ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses" (Matthew 6:14-15). --KJV.

Forgiveness: how vital it is?

Bear these strategies in mind as you reflect and move along on your journey of forgiveness:

-- Your main goal is to release the hurt and the anger that is feeding the pain. Just as you can heal from a painful thorn in your foot by pulling it out, so you can recover from any painful experience by moving forward. Once it doesn't have a place deep in your heart and mind, it can no longer trouble, and the harm can at last come to a stop. Choosing to forgive means you allow those bad feelings to leave your life once and for all.

-- It's essential to replace negative feelings with neutral ones. When the facts remain unchanged, but those facts no longer have the ability to damage, then you are free of the past. You can change from being a victim to the victor. You are human, and so you can be hurt. Human beings really are resilient, and because you are human you can heal - from a love betrayal or awful, unfair experiences in your life. If you're still reacting, then you're still stuck in some kind of emotional mud. With forgiveness you can be free of those toxic reactions.

-- Humor is a wonderful agent of healing. If you are able to smile about the love that once hurt you, or joke about the years you fought with a sibling, family member, or lover then you trade pain for a different emotion. That heavy load is shifted, substituted by a much lighter newfound feeling that can even put a spring in your step. The healing power of forgiveness comes from our ability to let go of our anger and resentment. These emotions don't really hurt those who have hurt us, but they certainly do hurt us. When we forgive we're actually protecting ourselves; we unburden our mind, our emotions, and a great deal of our time. Putting focus on more empowering and positive areas frees and moves away from the event or person who has hurt us.

   Forgiveness keeps us from harm's way. As far as we continue to dwell on and concentrate on hurt in the past, continually reacting to the pain someone has caused, we remain emotionally stuck with that person and with what they have done. Forgiveness breaks the chains that lock. With it we take a gigantic step forward with our lives, disengaging the negativity and shielding ourself from harmful emotional involvement.


-- Constantly going over a hurtful experience over and again keeps it fresh in the mind, creating mental and emotional upset. Should the topic arise in conversation, it's much wiser to respond with: 'I've decided not to focus on that experience. I'm allowing it to fade from my life, and I'm moving on to better things.'

-- One of the most important aspects of the emotional recovery process is our own self-talk. What we say to ourself is the strongest driving force. Choosing words that feel authentic, we may say: 'I choose to feel good today. Regardless what others say or do, my happiness comes from within through the enablement of the Holy Spirit. I alone determine how I feel by the love of Jesus Christ ruling in my. No place for the devil to make me feel lonely.'

   Statements such as: 'I am now nurturing the child within, and I am doing a really good job. I alone have direct control over my psychological wellbeing. I look at the positive things in life. I get up every day and focus on what's beautiful and what's right.'

   Once we at last come to see that our anger hurts only ourselves, then we are able to arrive at that state where forgiveness becomes reality. With forgiveness we draw that line under the past and allow ourselves to move on with our life.

   In this freer state, we can finally let go of the past, and at last begin to live the life with which we have been gifted through the help and strength of God. Remember, when you forgive; you're the one winning and also on a safe side.

God bless you.

Thursday, October 31, 2019

Resolving Conflict

   All of us, whether young or young at heart, married or single, mother or not, will encounter conflict in our lives. The way we handle conflict becomes either an amazing opportunity to give God glory in how it is resolved, or a thorn in our side that we struggle to get right.
Many of the hurts of my past resulted in a great deal of conflict in my life. And all of you have had events in your life, both negative and positive, that have shaped your ability to resolve conflict and more importantly, your willingness to do so.
Proverbs 11:2 says Pride leads to disgrace, but with humility comes wisdom.

What are some of the things in our lives that cause conflict?  There are many, but here are just a few:
  • Insecurity – (Whether our own insecurity or someone else’s, it can cause major problems.)
  • Misunderstanding  - (Sometimes we simply misunderstand someone’s intention.)
  • Satan’s plan of division – (Why wouldn’t he cause conflict & division? He’s masterful at it).
  • Exhaustion – (When we are doing too much, too often, and not resting, conflict arises.)
 All of us will face misunderstandings or exhaustion and many have dealt with insecurity, so, what do we do to resolve these conflicts well?
Issue grace.  – Most of us would rather receive grace than issue it. It’s easier for us to see all the reasons why God should give us grace, because our heart is good and we’re good people and we didn’t mean to fail Him – than it is for us to see the good in others and just give them a break.  Maybe they are completely unreasonable. And maybe you are completely right. But it’s so important for us to look at how we can maintain and mend relationships than how we can be right.  (Ephesians 4:3 – Make every effort to keep yourselves united in Spirit, binding yourselves together in peace.)
Take your offense directly to the person. (See Matthew 18:15.) Friends, it is unfair to assume others in our lives know what we are hurt about, when we don’t talk to them about it. And it is even more unfair to discuss it with others when you haven’t discussed it with them. And we do both. Don’t gossip about it. Don’t fester about it. Take it to them in love. And when you take it to them, take it to them in hopes of resolution with a pure heart - not in hopes that you can convince them how right you are.
Speak life over the situation. The power of life and death are in the tongue. (Prov. 18:21)  Most of us are church girls/boys, men/women. We get it. We understand about keeping our tongue in line with God’s word. Yet, we struggle to do so. When we want to resolve conflict, we must speak honor over those we are in relationship with. If you think you can speak negatively about your friend, your brother, your sister, your pastor, your boss, your Bible study leader, and NOT grow division in your heart, you are wrong.  Wouldn’t our lives be so much better if we could just watch our mouths?  Never make light of the king, even in your thoughts. And don’t make fun of the powerful, even in your own bedroom. For a little bird might deliver your message and tell them what you have said. (Ecclesiastes 10:20)
Battle your thoughts.  Philippians 4:8 says to fix our thoughts on whatever is true, honorable, right, pure, lovely, and admirable.  You cannot keep playing in your mind over and over and over what they said, what they did, an expect resolution. You cannot keep negative thoughts from coming into your mind. But it is your choice what you do with them, when they get there.
Friends, we are all armor bearers of something. Whether it’s your spouse, a friendship, your pastor, your boss, a ministry you are passionate about, your kids --- you are championing the cause for something and someone. And as such, you must begin to see yourself as mightily carrying the armor for someone else in your life to complete their mission – just as there are those in your life bearing armor for you.
What’s at stake if we don’t battle well? Rest assured, the conflict will grow. It becomes bigger than it ever needed to be. It shapes us. We become bitter, anger, and offended and no one can stand to be around us, instead of humble and graceful and strong. And we will also be so distracted with the conflict that we don’t focus on fulfilling our purpose. How could we be busy about our Father’s business, when we’re telling anyone who will listen about our conflict?
Let’s decide today that we are going to be problem solvers, not problem seekers. And when conflict does seek us out, we’ll be strong women/men of God who see it for what it is and determine in our hearts that we’ll overcome it with God’s help.

God bless you.

Friday, October 25, 2019

Encountering Misguided Prophecies: When to Say No to a Thus Saith The Lord

Twenty-three-year-old George Whitefield sat on a ship ready to sail for America from the port of Deal, located approximately 70 miles southeast of London. For some time, he had experienced a compelling call to preach the gospel to colonial America and now the day for his departure had finally arrived. His heart was filled with gratitude, excitement and expectation.

As he waited for the ship's crew to hoist anchor and sail, a letter was delivered to him from John Wesley who had just returned from a failed mission to Georgia. He opened the letter and was stunned by what he read. Wesley wrote that when he saw that the same wind that brought him in was taking Whitefield out, he inquired of the Lord about Whitefield's journey. Wesley emphatically stated that the word God gave him for Whitefield was, "Let him return to London."


Whitefield was shocked and momentarily confused. Wesley was 10 years his senior and had been a mentor to him. He held the Wesley brothers, John and Charles, in very high esteem. However, this word from John contradicted everything he believed about his call to America.
Whitefield went to prayer, and as he prayed, there came to his mind a story from the Old Testament about a "man of God" who lost his life because he listened to the words of an "old prophet" instead of diligently adhering to what God had instructed him.


I Kings 13 tells this story of the unnamed "man of God" whom God instructed to go to Bethel and prophesy against the idolatrous altars that had been established there by King Jeroboam. God also instructed him not to stop to eat or drink but to return directly home to Judah when he had completed his assignment.
Based on this directive from the Lord, he went to Bethel. As he prophesied against the idolatrous altars, they miraculously split apart, and the ashes were poured out on the ground. As he departed Bethel according to the Lord's instructions, an "old prophet," who heard of what had happened, saddled his donkey, caught up with the "man of God" and invited him to his home to eat and drink.


When the "man of God" recounted to the "old prophet" what the Lord had instructed him, the "old prophet" said, "'I am a prophet like you, and an angel spoke to me by the word of the Lord, saying, 'Bring him back with you into your house so that he may eat bread and drink water'" (1 Kings 13:18). The "old prophet," however, was lying.
The "man of God" went back with the "old prophet" in contradiction to the instructions the Lord had given him; and as a result of his disobedience, he lost his life and was not buried in the burial ground of his ancestors.


With this story so vividly impressed on his mind, Whitefield knew what he must do. He sent back a reply to Wesley in which he said, "I cannot return to London." Whitefield said no to Wesley's "thus saith the Lord."
History has demonstrated that Whitefield made the correct decision, for he became the major figure in the Great Awakening that rocked Colonial America and prepared her for statehood. Everywhere he went, great revival followed his preaching.
Because of God's blessing on his labors, he became the most recognizable person in colonial America and Thomas S. Kidd, who teaches history at Baylor University, calls him "America's Spiritual Founding Father."
We can all be thankful that Whitefield said no to Wesley's "thus saith the Lord."
I pray that God will helps us to always take the right decision[s] at all time in Jesus name. Amen...! 
Pasted from: Charisma Magazine.


God bless you.

Sunday, October 20, 2019

The Flesh

   If a man or woman does not know himself/herself or who he/she truly is, nine out of ten times, he will take the wrong decision. That is why spiritual knowledge is very crucial.
Who Are You?
   Do you know who you are? Do you know why you do the things that you do? Do you know why you respond to situations the way that you respond? Do you know why you get angry? Do you know why you don’t get angry? Do you know why you make the choices you make? Do you know what motivates your life?
 
If you don’t know who you are, nine out of ten times, you will take the wrong decisions. And if somebody keeps taking the wrong decision, his life can never make any progress.
    As a reminder,  man is - spirit - soul and body.  The body, which is known as the FLESH, is the outer part. Let us use an egg as an illustration; an egg is made up of three parts, the shell, albumen (the white matter) and the yoke. The real life is inside the yoke. But the shell is necessary as a house ,case container for the yoke and the albumen, once you break the shell, the egg is finished you don’t have an egg anymore. Once the shell is broken, the shell has finished its work, it is thrown away, it can’t be used again for the same purpose.
   That is the way the body of a human is once this flesh is destroyed, once it is broken, the spirit man and the soul goes out, and we say or hear,  a man is dead. But while the man is alive, his flesh has the capacity to suffocate the spirit-man and suffocate the soul. However, whatever God is going to do in any life, God is going to work through the spirit.
   Therefore, your flesh must be submissive; your flesh must be broken . The resistance and the sinfulness that is in the flesh must be destroyed. When people do terrible things, they smoke, they commit adultery, they tell lies, and they gamble, it is not the devil, it is the flesh. When people gossip, slander, harbour unforgiveness, or are malicious, it is not Satan, it is the flesh.
   There are people whose lives are controlled by the flesh. They never mind their own business, it is not the devil, it is the flesh. There are people who bear grudge, they are so stingy, so selfish, some are so self-centred, and yet some are so proud; for some they crave for recognition and unless you give them, there will be trouble. It is not Lucifer, it is the flesh. If the flesh is what is controlling a life; the person is going to have a hard life. You will be wondering why people don’t like you, you will wonder why wherever you go people seem to resist you, and you will wonder why you pray, and it never get answered. What some people do is that they transfer the responsibility of their personal weakness to a devil. Some transfer it to an invisible and imaginary enemy and some churches encourage them by teaching them to pray: “All the enemies of my life, all the enemies of my progress, all the enemies in the village, all the enemies in Lagos.”
   The bitter truth is, there is no enemy anywhere; you are the enemy of yourself
If you don’t know yourself, you will not face reality, you will keep blaming other peole. It is unfortunate, there are a lot of Christians who blame everybody under the sun but themselves, but in actual fact, they are the problem of themselves.
   Many claim ancestors who are supposed to be sleeping in peace inside the grave are responsible for their problem.  Some will say they are going to break ‘ancestral covenants’.  which they believe are the ones that keep troubling them every time.What has ancestral covenants got to do with you?
   “They say it is something in the village that the ancestors used to worship...  The scriptures say, “if any man be in Christ, he is a new creation, old things are passed away.” Whatever your ancestors worshipped, he has died with it. If you chose not to worship that thing, it cannot exercise dominion over you. It can’t.  It is what you surrender yourself to that can have dominion over you. So if you surrender yourself to anger, anger will have dominion over you, if submit yourself to unforgiveness, unforgiveness will have dominion over you. If you submit yourself to adultery, adultery will control your life, when you surrender yourself to drinking; drinking of alcohol will control your life. The bible says, “Whoever you yield your members to, the servant you are” if you submit to a man, then you become the servant of that person... (to be continued)

God bless you.

Tuesday, October 15, 2019

The Present-Day Christian and His Emotions

 In some Christian circles, repressing or disavowing authentic emotions is considered a virtue or perhaps even a gift of Spirit. Denying anger, ignoring pain, skipping over depression, running from loneliness, and avoiding doubt are not only considered normal but actually virtuous ways of living out one’s spiritual life.


But this is not the model we find in Jesus, who freely expressed his emotions without shame or embarrassment:
  • He shed tears (Luke 19:41).
  • He was filled with joy (Luke 10:21).
  • He felt overwhelmed with grief (Mark 14:34).
  • He was angry and distressed (Mark 3:5).
  • He was sorrowful and troubled (Matthew 26:37).
  • His heart was moved with compassion (Luke 7:13).
  • He expressed amazement (Mark 6:6Luke 7:9).
Jesus was anything but an emotionally frozen Messiah.
In Gethsemane, we see a fully human Jesusanguished, sorrowful, and spiritually overwhelmed. He is pushed to the extremes of his human limits: and being in anguish, he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground (Luke 22:44).
So, we must ask ourselves: Where did we get the idea that acknowledging and expressing authentic emotion is somehow less than spiritual? And why do we believe that we canor somehow shouldgrow in spiritual maturity without simultaneously growing in emotional maturity?

And then there’s the example of Job:
After this, Job opened his mouth and cursed the day of his
birth. He said:
“May the day of my birth perish,
and the night that said, ‘A boy is conceived!’
That daymay it turn to darkness;
may God above not care about it;
may no light shine on it.
May gloom and utter darkness claim it once more. . . .
If only my anguish could be weighed
and all my misery be placed on the scales!
It would surely outweigh the sand of the seas—no
wonder my words have been impetuous.
The arrows of the Almighty are in me,
my spirit drinks in their poison;
God’s terrors are marshaled against me.”
(Job 3:15a; 6:1—4)

Job was one of the richest men in the world in his day. In contemporary terms, his assets would have included a fleet of Rolls-Royces, private airplanes, yachts, thriving global companies, and significant real estate holdings. “He was the greatest man among all the people of the East” (Job 1:3). After a series of natural disasters, however, something unthinkable happensJob is reduced to poverty and his ten children are killed in a terrible natural disaster. When he attempts to get on his feet, he is infected with sore boils from the soles of his feet to the top of his head. Physically, it looks like he is about to die at any moment. His wifes compassionate counsel? Curse God and die (Job 2:9).
Job finds himself alone, isolated, and living outside the city walls in the garbage dump. As the text indicates, Job is very angry. But there is a lesson for us even in Job’s anger. Here is how author Philip Yancey describes it:
One bold message in the Book of Job is that you can say anything to God. Throw at him your grief, your anger, your doubt, your bitterness, your betrayal, your disappointmenthe can absorb them all. As often as not, spiritual giants of the Bible are shown contendingwith God. They prefer to go away limping, like Jacob, rather than to shut God out. In this respect, the Bible prefigures a tenet of modern psychology: you can’t really deny your feelings or make them disappear, so you might as well express them. God can deal with every human response save one. He cannot abide the response I fall back on instinctively: an attempt to ignore him or treat him as though he does not exist. That response never once occurred to Job.”
In the same way, God invites us to feel our emotions, experiencing them without self-condemnation, and exploring them in his loving presence.
Question to Consider
In what ways do you tend to suppress or deny difficult emotionsanger, sadness, fearrather than admit them to yourself and God?


Prayer
Father, the idea of being emotionally transparent with youespecially when my emotions are rawis very difficult. In fact, it almost seems disrespectful. Thank you, Lord, that you love all of methe good, the bad, and the uglyand that your love is without conditions. In Jesus name, amen.
________

Adapted from Emotionally Healthy Relationships Day by Day: A 40-Day Journey to Deeply Change Your Relationships by Peter Scazzero
In this groundbreaking devotional book, Peter Scazzero reintroduces and expands upon the ancient spiritual discipline of the Daily Office. The basic premise is simple: Christians need to intentionally stop to be with God twice each day to create a continual and easy familiarity with God’s presence for the rest of the day.

Stray Blessed.

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

Manipulated by a Curse

   Different from the instance of Saul who was plotting to plant his daughter in the life of David, like a timed device, for future detonation with maximum devastation, the forces that manipulate into disaster do not always reside in a person; they sometimes reside in a curse. 



That is our next story, about an elderly priest who worked so hard all his life yet in the evening of his days was mis-‘led’ to join a promising but doomed political party; a step that became the irreparable mistake that suddenly cost him everything, according to a strange and ancient pattern that had followed his ancestors in the past 150 years.
26 And unto Abiathar the priest said the king, Get thee to Anathoth, unto thine own fields; for thou art worthy of death: but I will not at this time put thee to death, because thou barest the ark of the Lord GOD before David my father, and because thou hast been afflicted in all wherein my father was afflicted.
27 So Solomon thrust out Abiathar from being priest unto the LORD; that he might fulfil the word of the LORD, which he spake concerning the house of Eli in Shiloh (1 Kings 2:26-27).
According to the passage, Abiathar’s sudden loss of his priestly office was the result of an ancient curse that was pronounced in Shiloh against his ancestors.  That story is told in 1 Samuel chapter 1 – chapter 5.  Abiathar’s great-great grandfather was the high priest Eli, who had two very irreverent sons that abused the worshippers that came to the house of God. They brazenly stole from the offerings of the men and mindlessly slept with the female parishioners, right in the sanctuary. Displeased by their conduct, God sent warnings, but those wicked associate-priests seemed too drunk to care, forcing God to declare that He would cast them out of the office, kill them all in one day, and  make the surviving other descendants to never see old age or enjoy the fruit of their labour (1 Samuel 2:29-36; 3:12-14).
Shortly after God had announced His verdict against that household, the first phase of the curse came into effect, and all sons plus father and daughter-in-law died in one day. It was the unforgettable inauguration of worrisome multiple deaths (1 Samuel 4:18-22).  About 80 years later, the next recorded phase occurred.  In their priests-village of Nob, they often received visitors.  One day, however, the active curse manipulated or ‘invited’ some wrong visitors.  David had been there to seek the Lord.  Coincidentally, another man was also at that sacred place on a ‘personal retreat,’ but apparently planted there by the curse that had ripened for another season of bloody harvest.  That other visitor, Mr Doeg the Edomite, a chief pastor of the king’s flock, witnessed the priests serve hollowed bread and protection to David.   Promptly, Doeg ingratiatingly and deviously reported their care to King Saul who had been seeking David’s head.  The consequence was the massacre of eighty-five priests with their wives and children, along with their livestock, on allegations of conspiracy with David to undermine the regime (1 Samuel 22:6-22).
We might blame the massacre on the bloodiness of the demonized King Saul; we might blame it on the restless lips of Doeg the gossip, but realising that the sad event was in continuing fulfilment of the pronouncement that had been made years earlier in Shiloh, we can only say that Doeg was planted there that day by the curse that had been seeking expression and merely found ready vessels in the duo of Doeg the gossip and Saul the demented sanguinary despot.
Now Doeg the Edomite, Saul's chief herdsman, was there that day, having been detained before the Lord (1 Samuel 21:7, NLT).
Did Doeg know that a Curse might have led him there that day; that he had merely been responding to a mystical impulse that found him in that place at that time to see those things that he was further ‘compelled’ to report?  Would he ever have agreed that the steps of a wicked man are ‘ordered’ by the devil (Psalms 37:23)?  Can a curse manipulate even the choices of a person?  Did an unseen hand coordinate the visit of David to coincide with the ‘retreat’ of Busybody Doeg, so as to bring about the subsequent disaster of over three hundred and fifty deaths?
The Bible states that Doeg at the tabernacle had been “DETAINED before the Lord.”  What does that mean?  Detained, held back, super-ordinarily restrained from departing, until David would be on the scene so that Doeg could see what to report?  Can a curse instigate a people against a person?  Can it also inspire the kind of rumours that are spread about someone?  Should we then entirely blame the impetuous lips or also diagnose the manipulating curse?
Several years after Abiathar as a little lad had escaped Saul’s massacre in Nob, that priest of God felt verily ‘led’ (or mis-‘led’) to join the new political party of Adonijah the surviving eldest son of David.  The reverend priest probably had a dream or some strong ‘ministration’ that urged him to take the step.  Only too late did he realize and regret the ‘lying spirit’ that had assumed the voice of Jehovah and urged him on in his fatal path.  He joined the masses to endorse Adonijah, only to discover that the incumbent king’s electoral-collegiate preference lay in Solomon.  Others paid with their life for the error; he escaped again with the skin of his teeth, but he lost all that he had spent years labouring with David to build up. 
The Scripture interprets Abiathar’s sudden political, social and religious disaster as a fulfilment of the word of God that had been spoken in Shiloh 150 years before.  In other words, all the events that lined up to that priest’s abrupt sack: his ‘righteous’ persuasions to endorse the wrong political candidate, the ‘friends’ and ‘worshippers’ who had ‘genuinely’ and ‘caringly’ persuaded him with the idea, the subsequent ‘ungrateful’ actions of the young and purportedly ‘wise’ Solomon, etc., had been remote-controlled by a slithering Curse that the respected priest never perceived.
Again, sometimes it is helpful to look beyond the hands that perform the act, as there might have been primary hands unseen, manipulating the secondary hands we see.

God helps us all to overcome in Jesus Name. Amen!

Stray Blessed.