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How Does Looking In Help Me Look Out?

August 22, 2020 Cathleen Zahradnik
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“You, my brothers and sisters, were called to be free. But do not use your freedom to indulge the flesh; rather, serve one another humbly in love. For the entire law is fulfilled in keeping this one command: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’” ‭‭Galatians‬ ‭5:13-14‬ ‭NIV‬‬

Have you ever been to an emergency room? I have so much respect for emergency room personnel. They never know what they are going to face. From tragic accidents to homeless drug addicts, to babies with fevers and frantic first-time parents, they need to be ready to serve each patient with care and concern. But the first thing they need is wisdom. The very first task in an emergency room is to assess the patient and decide how serious their condition is and how quickly they need treatment. The emergency room personnel have to objectively determine what needs to be taken care of first. It’s called triage.

You and I need the same kind of wisdom, don’t we? We need to be able to honestly and objectively assess our own selves so that we can treat others with care and concern. It’s difficult to love and serve others if we haven’t taken care of our own issues. Our “triage” starts with looking in with honesty so that we can look out with love.

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Tags discovery, encouragement, Christian living
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I'm Not Angry! Or Am I?

June 20, 2020 Cathleen Zahradnik
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What triggers anger in you? There’s a lot to be angry about right now. Things haven’t gone the way anyone expected. Even though businesses are starting to reopen, nothing is the same. Nothing is the way that you and I are used to. It’s uncomfortable. Do respond with anger to having to wear a mask to Walmart? Or to wait in line even to enter? Or maybe you are like me and tend to be angry at people who refuse to wear a mask or complain about any restrictions. Maybe you are angry because you had to cancel your vacation because there are too many hoops to jump through just to prove that you are healthy enough to travel. Or you are angry because your kids have already been home for months with school being closed and you didn't feel like the district handled things well, or your kids didn’t handle it well, or....you didn’t handle it well. Perhaps you are angry because your church re-opened but limited capacity to 25% and you missed the cut and didn't get to attend. Or your church hasn’t opened and you think it should. 

Yes, there are a lot of things that could trigger anger in regard to our current health crisis. 

But there are other things that could be touching an angry place in you. You may be angry at the way you have been treated by society because of your ethnicity or your gender. How do you handle that anger? The murder of George Floyd has sparked tremendous anger, rage even, that has ignited rioting and looting, shouting and demanding, name-calling and pointing fingers. Many protests have honorably remained peaceful, but there is always enough anger bubbling under the surface to boil over if the right conditions encourage it. Then that anger becomes dangerous to everyone. 

Anger is an appropriate response to injustice, but how are you handling it? What are you doing with it?

Anger was the primary expression of emotion I saw growing up, it scared me and I didn't want to be like that. Let me explain. If you have taken time to think about it, you have probably noticed that for some people, anger is the way they express almost everything. Fear comes out as anger. Hurt comes out as anger. Frustration, rejection are all experienced in the form of anger. That is what I saw as a child. It frightened me, made me feel insecure and caused me to want to protect myself. I tried to protect myself by avoiding that anger. I would try to do everything “right” so that anger wouldn’t explode on me. Let me say that this expression of anger was vocal, not physical, and not particularly abusive in choice of words. Just loud and unsettling to my sensitive kid spirit. Even now I prefer strings to electric guitar when it comes to sound. That aspect of my personality made it difficult for me to navigate loud. I still don’t like loud. So, I worked hard to avoid that loud anger. 

What about you? How did you see anger expressed? What did you learn from that? Anger is an important aspect of our lives, but most of us have never really thought about or been taught healthy ways to handle anger. We either let it take over or we treat the anger itself as a sin and try to avoid it at all costs. That’s the way I used to handle anger. But I have been learning to look at it differently. 

When you and I are angry, and anger itself is not a sin, it is natural to focus on the person or situation that has triggered the anger. But anger comes from inside you and me. Nothing forces you to get angry, but a trigger from outside sparks anger inside. So the real question is “What does this anger say about me? And what does God want me to do with it?”

Be angry. It is okay to be angry. The Scripture does not forbid anger. Ephesians 4:26 says, “Be angry and do not sin." Being angry is a normal part of being human. Anger is an indication that I feel like something wrong has happened. Anger is an indicator and is most often a secondary emotion. 

Since loud expressions of anger scared me I didn’t want to be angry because I thought angry meant loud yelling.  But that isn’t the only way to be angry, is it? I didn’t think I was an angry person until I had a two-year-old. That’s when I began to recognize the anger in me. I didn’t yell, but I noticed the tension, the tight lips and the desire to make this little human being do what I wanted him to do by any means possible. What did it show me about me? My need to control this little person and my inability to do so because of his unique individuality and autonomy, given him by God, by the way. I quickly realized that I needed God’s help to love my son well. 

In the case of my two-year-old, the wrong that I felt was happening was that he was not doing what I thought he should be doing, like doing what I said, or taking a nap, or sitting still. That sounds silly compared to all the injustice that causes anger, but at the core of much anger is the desire for things to go in a certain way — let’s just call it what it is, a desire to control — and anger rises up when it doesn't go my way. Anger is meant to cause us to act on injustice, against sin. The Scriptures describe God getting angry at sin. Therefore, it isn’t a sin to be angry. But what do I do with my anger?

Do not sin. The New Living Translation of Ephesians 4:26 says, “Don’t sin by letting anger control you.” When you are angry does it take over? What scared me about being angry at my little boy was that I knew that if I let the anger take over I could hurt him, either verbally or physically, in my attempts to make him do what I thought he should be doing. If I let that anger control me, the result would cause damage, because sin always causes damage. Is that what you want from your anger?

Anger is a complicated emotion, but let’s think of it as a message rather than a feeling. It’s a message to you, not to those around you. My challenge to you, Dear Friend, is to find out what the message is and deal with that. Let your anger lead you to positive action rather than letting it lead you to sin. Let it lead you inside to deal with the triggering emotions, the hurt, fear, the desire to control. Learn to recognize it and go below the surface with God. Then let Him lead you to the proper action, the proper way to deal with your anger. Sometimes it is simply an internal change that is needed. A shift in attitude. A release of an offense. Allowing God to heal a hurt. Sometimes it is meant to lead you to action on behalf of another, to battle injustice, to speak for those who can not speak for themselves or to stand with those whose voices have been ignored. When that is the case, let your action be born of conviction, not emotion. 

I am praying for you, Dear Friend, that God will help you to recognize your anger, acknowledge it, learn from it and act appropriately. Be blessed, dear friend. Be angry. Don’t let it lead to sin.

Key thought: Let your anger lead you to God, not sin. 

Scripture: “Be angry and do not sin; do not let the sun go down on your anger,” ‭‭Ephesians‬ ‭4:26‬ ‭ESV‬‬

A YES Challenge: Take a few minutes with God and consider together what your anger looks like. What makes you angry? How do you recognize it? How do you express it? Go with God into what is under your anger. As He reveals the hurt or fear or desire to control, ask Him how He wants you to handle your anger. Thank Him for His presence and ask Him for His strength to change.  

Prayer: Lord, I haven’t always recognized my anger as a problem. I have let it control me in more ways than I care to admit, but I don’t want anger to lead me into sin. Help me to recognize, acknowledge, and grapple with the things that make me angry and then lead me into an appropriate way to deal with them. Amen. 

Tags discovery, challenge, Christian living
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Sad is not Bad. Anger is not Evil. What Does God Want Me To Do With My Feelings?

June 6, 2020 Cathleen Zahradnik
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So much is happening in our nation and world right now. The COVID-19 crisis has forced everyone out of the routines that bring them comfort and a sense of control, causing anxiety levels to increase like smoldering kindling. The atrocity of George Floyd's death has ignited what was smoldering and given vent to all the pent up anxiety and anger, re-injuring the deepest of unhealed wounds. The pushed-down, unexpressed, unprocessed emotion has erupted in protest. Some righteous anger has led to righteous action, while other expressions have been retribution and revenge. 

I have watched these unfolding events without being aware of emotion on the surface. I have mentally acknowledged the horror and injustice without a sense of emotion attached, but I know that I do have feelings about it. I realized that I needed to take time with God to go with Him into that place of feeling, following a process I shared with you a few weeks ago. (What’s Going On In There? A Guide For Staying In Touch With What’s Beneath the Surface? Click here to read.) 

I started by getting in touch with God's presence and giving Him thanks. Then I asked myself and God, “What am I feeling about all this?” As God and I began to go together into my feelings, I recognized a feeling of helplessness. It all seems too big for me to do anything about it. But I sensed God whisper to me, “If you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem.” I don’t want to be part of the problem. This is a place where I had to get right with God, to repent, and it challenged me to go deeper. 

We had to grapple through a few layers of reflection to get to the root, the depth of what I have been feeling. God helped me to name it as sadness. What I feel about the racial divide gaping in our nation. the COVID-19 crisis and people's responses, is deep sadness. So much loss and hurt. It can be overwhelming to feel that sadness. "It isn’t supposed to be this way!" echoed in my soul. As God and I grappled with this, He showed me that the sadness is a reflection of His sadness. It isn’t supposed to be this way. This is not what He wants for the people He has created. God designed us to be in perfect unity with Him and with each other. It’s the sadness that results from living in a sin-cursed world. 

An article at GotQuestions.org entitled "What does the Bible say about sadness?" (Click here to read. ) says this,  “Sadness is either the direct or indirect result of sin, and since we live in a fallen world, sin is a normal part of life. (Psalm 90:10)” Jesus must have felt this kind of sadness every day of His life. This isn’t what He planned for humanity. This isn’t what He wants. If we take the time to be honest with ourselves about our emotions, we might recognize that we also feel this sadness more often than we would like to admit. Recognizing the sadness is one thing, but what am I supposed to do with it? Your first reaction might be to try to make yourself feel better through a variety of appropriate, or even inappropriate, activities. Or, you might ignore it completely and move on. But I believe that God has something better for you and for me.

God has given us emotions to lead us to action. Many people are extremely angry right now and they are taking action, from righteous protests to unrighteous rioting. I am more likely to feel sad than angry. But that sadness is equally valuable. Just like righteous anger it is meant to lead me to righteous action. For me, then, this sadness isn’t fully my own. It is the burden God has given me to lead me to pray. It is a reminder to intercede on behalf of individuals and our nation. I am asking God what other action He might be asking of me. I will not use a call to prayer as an excuse to do nothing else. If God leads me to other action I want to obey, but I have to start by recognizing that the feeling that this is too big for me to be of any help is not true. It's a lie and every lie is an enemy of God. If I am not part of the solution, then I am part of the problem. I want to be part of the solution.

Prayer is a valuable action that connects to God’s power, but not only His power. It also connects me to His compassion and care for people. Prayer is not about making God do something. It is about connecting with what He wants to do and agreeing with Him. Prayer is uniting with God’s heart in a powerful way. Prayer is about changing me so that I can become God’s instrument in changing circumstances.  Beginning with prayer allows me to be a conduit of His power into circumstances that only He can affect. My agreement with Him in prayer invites Him to enter into the situation in His power and for His purposes. It cooperates with Him in what He wants to do. 

Dear Friend, where does God have you in all of this? How are you feeling? What actions might your feelings be leading you to? How might God be calling you to cooperate with Him in what He wants to do? 

Discover these things by getting in touch with God's presence and giving thanks and then by going with Him into your feelings and grappling with them together with Him. Get right with God where you need to, and then go forward into the action He is calling you to. (Click here to further explore this process.)

Reconciliation is part of who God is. it will always be a part of what He does. Forgiveness and justice are also part of who He is and, therefore, are part of what He does. Righteous anger leads to righteous action, not retribution. As a believer, God calls you and me to reflect His character in how we respond. 

How might He want you to be a part of the solution? 

Key Thought: God has given us emotions to lead us to action. 

A Scripture to consider: “From the ends of the earth, I cry to you for help when my heart is overwhelmed. Lead me to the towering rock of safety, for you are my safe refuge, a fortress where my enemies cannot reach me.” ‭‭Psalms‬ ‭61:2-3‬ ‭NLT‬‬

A YES Challenge: Take time in God’s presence to recognize and name what you are feeling in response to current events in our world. Ask God what action He wants you to take as a result. 

Prayer: Lord, I never learned to recognize my emotions as messages from You. I have been feeling a lot recently, but have tried to ignore or smooth them over. Help me learn to process my feelings with You and help me learn to seek You for how I need to act in response to my feelings. Amen. 

Tags discovery, surrender, challenge, Christian living
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Bicker or Better?

May 9, 2020 Cathleen Zahradnik
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Those little annoyance. The dishes in the sink. The lights left on. The TV too loud. The food set aside for dinner eaten for snack. Those little things often seem big. Put a few of those things together and they seem HUGE! They stir up emotion. Emotion you didn't realize was right below the surface. What’s your reaction?

Sometimes those emotions spill over into words that you wish you could take back, actions you wish you could undo. You find yourself hurting someone you love. It isn’t what you intended to do. It isn’t what you wanted to do. Now it’s done and all you can do is try to clean up the emotional mess. You apologize. You try to repair what’s been broken. But as you do, you are asking yourself, “Why do I keep doing this? How can I stop? What can I do differently?” Somehow, no one has ever taught you and me how to deal with these daily occurrences. You would think that something so common to all of us would be a part of common core curriculum! How do you deal with the little annoyances that become big issues?

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Tags purpose, Christian living, challenge
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Staying Anchored To Hope: The Pick One Devotional Method

April 4, 2020 Cathleen Zahradnik
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We are living in a whirlwind right now. We are all being touched personally in some way by this pandemic. We need ways to keep hope alive within us. What habits have you developed to keep you anchored in hope? Not just now, but for the rest of your life?

If you had not developed a regular devotional time before this crisis, now is the time to begin. In a world that is uncertain and insecure, we need an anchor for our souls. A regular time in the Word and in worship will anchor you like nothing else. I want to offer you a way to get started.

Maybe you already have a regular devotion time. That"s great! This method will give you a way to change things up and perhaps even deepen your time with God.

If you have already signed up to receive my blog by email then you received a printable download: 5 Ways to Jumpstart Your Daily Devotions. If not, click here to sign up and I would love to send it to you and to be able to encourage you by email every week. The printable will give you some guidelines on getting started and being consistent. You can apply this method to the time you spend.

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Tags Hope, challenge, Christian living
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Someone Is Always Watching

September 28, 2019 Cathleen Zahradnik
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“If you had left, we would have left, too.” Her words shocked me. I never imagined that our decision to stay or leave the church after the change in leadership would have had such an impact. More details about that later, but that experience made me intensely aware of this truth: Someone is always watching. Someone is always watching me, and someone is always watching you. You may not feel like your decisions impact anyone, but let me tell you emphatically that you are wrong!

It doesn’t matter who you are or what your history, there are people that only you will reach for the Gospel. Your mistakes and sins may be the very things that God uses to help someone else draw near to Him. As you respond with grace and integrity, you will show others that God forgives and changes lives. People need to see examples of lives that are being transformed by the power of the Gospel. Lives like yours.

You don’t believe me, do you? Well, it is true. So, let me elaborate and encourage you.

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Tags purpose, Christian living, encouragement
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Avoid The Comparison Trap

September 14, 2019 Cathleen Zahradnik
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You do it. You know you do, so don’t deny it. I do it, too. None of us is immune. Someone in your life seems to be excelling in an area that you are struggling in. Your good friend seems to have all her ducks in a row when it comes to parenting. All her kids seem to be thriving and happy, without the kinds of struggles that your kids face. Or maybe, your neighbor just got a promotion at work. You watch as they purchase a new car and beautiful additions to their home, while you struggle to put groceries on the table. You have lunch with a friend whose stylish and put-together outfit makes your everyday, pull-on-what-feels-good garb seem like a brown paper bag. Or a member of your small group is in the middle of a nightmare family struggle and somehow they seem to respond in the most Christ-like manner that you’ve ever seen. You begin to question your own spirituality. “Am I even really saved? Why do I continue to struggle with anger and depression instead of responding like them?” In any situation, and at any time, you and I can find ourselves falling into the Comparison Trap.

When someone else's success causes you to contemplate, consider and complain, then you have slipped over the edge and fallen in. “I wish I was like... I should be like...I wish I had....People would like me better if...I would be happier and more successful if...” You get the picture. Any “ouches” there? I know there are for me. OUCH!

So, how do we keep from falling into the comparison trap? How do we appropriately measure our success and progress?

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Tags Overcoming, purpose, Christian living, loved
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Clear The Path. Be An Example Worth Following.

August 17, 2019 Cathleen Zahradnik
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This walk with Jesus is not an easy one. Constant obstacles threaten to divert us. It might be the temptation to head in a wrong direction. Not necessarily a bad direction, just not the best one. Or it might be a person who grates on your last nerve. You know who it is. The person whose words and actions bring out your least Christlike thoughts and reactions. Then there are the day-to-day distractions. The kids need to be chauffeured to friends, activities, school, doctors. The boss wants you to do what? By when? That unexpected bill. The unforeseen illness. That conflict with a loved one. Life throws us a lot of curves. Something in us is always expecting the level path, but that isn’t the way it works, is it? When the path gets steep and rock-strewn how do we keep our focus? How do we push past the obstacles and stay focused on walking with Jesus?

I’ve heard that the best way to clear a path is to walk it. So, here’s how to keep walking with Jesus in order to clear the path when it seems full of obstacles:

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Tags Overcoming, purpose, Christian living, encouragement
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Saturday: Contemplating The Cost

April 20, 2019 Cathleen Zahradnik
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It is Saturday of Holy Week. Good Friday has passed. Easter Sunday is yet to come. We wait in anticipation of that joyous celebration. But what did the disciples do on that Saturday after the crucifixion? They did not know that joy awaited them. They observed the Sabbath in obedience, but that day of rest from work was most likely anything but a day of rest in the mind. How could they do anything but continue to relive Friday’s horror and wonder how they would ever face, not only Sunday, but every day after?

It is in human nature to avoid the painful, but what if you and I took this Saturday to relive some of Good Friday’s pain? Might it increase our joy of the resurrection?

Contemplate with me the cruelty before the cross.

How does one describe unimaginable pain? Physical and emotional suffering beyond what any of us has ever experienced?

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Tags purpose, Christian living
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When You Don’t Know What To Do, Know Who You Want to Be

February 16, 2019 Cathleen Zahradnik
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When I think about who I wanted to be, I can’t not write about Sharon. It didn’t take long after I became a Jesus-follower for me to decide who I wanted to be when I grew up. I wanted to be like Sharon. Sharon was my friend’s mother, my pastor’s wife and my mentor. She didn’t know she was my mentor, but mentors aren’t always people you get together with and ask questions of.  Sometimes they are simply the people you look up to who show you who you want to be. I wanted to be like Sharon. She was a loving, passionate woman of God. She knew the Scriptures and taught them well. She encouraged and inspired other women to live whole-heartedly for God. She was gracious and had a warm smile added to her gentle Southern drawl that made people feel comfortable and welcomed.

I wanted to be like Sharon so I began to model my behavior after her, or at least I thought I did.

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Tags purpose, inspiration, Christian living
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