Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Article from: The American Association of Christian Counselors


To renew your mind is to involve yourself in the process of allowing God to bring to the surface the lies you have mistakenly accepted and replace them with truth. -Charles Stanley
If your mind is filled with the Word of God, then it can’t be filled with impure thoughts. -David Jeremiah
Crazy thoughts… we all have them from time to time.
Consuming thoughts… those are the ones that won’t be denied.
Unrelenting thoughts… that won’t let you sleep.
Private thoughts… that stubbornly fuel emotions of lust, anger, fear, sorrow, and even hopelessness.
Infected thoughts… that are often destructive in relationships with those closest to us, even our relationship with God.
“Anxious thoughts (that) multiply within me…” (Psalm 94:19 NAS)
The scary part? When we start believing them. “For as a man thinks within himself, so is he.” (Proverbs 23:7 NAS)
The antidote? “…do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.” (Philippians 4:6 ESV)
However, we must not miss vs. 8 which begins with the word “Finally”— a word which could be translated “From this time forward”“Finally, (from this time forward) brothers, (and sisters) whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things.” (ESV)
That’s a bunch of “whatevers” to think about.
What you fill your mind with will largely determine what type of thoughts you have. What you put in — comes out…
And there is a challenge; the “evil one”, known as the “father of lies”, constantly and consistently bombards our minds. And his mind games become a battlefield.
Paul said we should take “every thought captive to the obedience of Christ.”(2 Corinthians 10:5 NAS) Knowing it and doing it are two different things.
Speaking of war, when Paul delineates and lists the “full armor of God” used to“stand firm against the schemes of the devil” in Ephesians 6, he only records one offensive weapon — “And take…the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.” (v. 17 NAS)
The spiritual weapon given to us by the Lord, to battle the formation of these debilitating and controlling thoughts, is God’s word.
Flip back a page to Ephesians 5. Paul says that Christ sanctifies and cleanses the body of Christ “by the washing of water by the word” (v. 26 ESV)
Our thought life can, and will be washed clean by soaking and meditating in His written word.
Spend time reading the Bible. Study it. Memorize it. Saturate your thoughts with it. Immerse your soul in it. Drink deeply of its truth. Let the word of God dwell in you richly.
As you do this, “the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, willguard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 4:7 ESV)
It will turn your thought life around.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

2/7/13 Christian Inpirations/Thoughts of the Day:


COUNTING THE COST OF WHAT IT MEANS AND WHAT IT TAKES TO LIVE FOR CHRIST:


  • God greatly humbles the heart of those whom He will use greatly. If you want to be used greatly for God get ready to be humbled greatly! 
  • God brings us to the end of ourselves and rids us of ourselves so that He can live in us. God wants His body to be whole, pure, and holy to glorify Him in us. In and of ourselves we are "useless." In the Bible Apostle Paul says apart from God we can do no good thing. So If you are being humbled by God this is "Good News" because God works on His own within the church first, and then to the world. Humility during brokenness or times of trials is a sign that God is working in your life and giving you a story to share with others. We can't share our story with others of how God is changing us and currently working in our lives if we have no story. 
  • We must first open ourselves to His changing so that we can be in a position to share this with others and have an impact on others. This is the calling to every believer. Will we accept the call and submit to Him and what he is doing in our lives? I say yes because I want to know God more, I want the best of what God has for me, and I know that in and of myself apart from Christ I have nothing, I am nothing without Him. It is important to me that others hear the message of Christ and receive His love. I want others to experience this same love and what Christ has done for me; especially my family, husband, children-- I love experiencing Christ with them because we are all on the same page and His love brings us closer.... I count the cost because no amount of my own life, my own pride, doing things my way is anything compared to the Glorious riches I experience in Christ. 

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never ends.: John Gottman’s FOUR HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE

Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never ends.: John Gottman’s FOUR HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE: John Gottman’s FOUR HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE: 1. Criticism: Attacking your partner’s personality or character, usually w...

John Gottman’s FOUR HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE


John Gottman’s FOUR HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE:



1. Criticism:


Attacking your partner’s personality or character, usually with the intent of making
someone right and someone wrong:
Generalizations: “you always…” “you never…”“you’re the type of person who …” “why
are you so …”

2. Contempt:


Attacking your partner’s sense of self with the intention to insult or psychologically 
abuse him/her:
- Insults and name-calling: “B-, bastard, wimp, fat, stupid, ugly, slob, lazy…”
- Hostile humor, sarcasm or mockery
- Body language & tone of voice: sneering, rolling your eyes, curling your upper lip

3. Defensiveness:


Seeing self as the victim, warding off a perceived attack:
- Making excuses (e.g., external circumstances beyond your control forced you to act in
a certain way) “It’s not my fault…”, “I didn’t…”
- Cross-complaining: meeting your partner’s complaint, or criticism with a complaint of
your own, ignoring what your partner said
- Disagreeing and then cross-complaining “That’s not true, you’re the one who …” “I did
this because you did that…”
- Yes-butting: start off agreeing but end up disagreeing
- Repeating yourself without paying attention to what the other person is saying
- Whining “It’s not fair.”


4. Stonewalling:

Withdrawing from the relationship as a way to avoid conflict. Partners may think they 
are trying to be “neutral” but stonewalling conveys disapproval, icy distance, separation,
disconnection, and/or smugness:
- Stony silence
- Monosyllabic mutterings
- Changing the subject
- Removing yourself physically
- Silent TreatmentRemedies:
- Learn to make specific complaints & requests (when X happened, I felt Y, I want Z)
- Conscious communication: Speaking the unarguable truth & listening generously
- Validate your partner (let your partner know what makes sense to you about what they
are saying; let them know you understand what they are feeling, see through their eyes)
- Shift to appreciation (5 times as much positive feeling & interaction as negative)
- Claim responsibility: “What can I learn from this?” & “What can I do about it?”
- Re-write your inner script (replace thoughts of righteous indignation or innocent
victimization with thoughts of appreciation, responsibility that are soothing & validating)
- Practice getting undefended (allowing your partner’s utterances to be what they really