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Faith Life

Sabbath Quiet: The Heart And Its Affections

The heart has its reasons which reason knows not. ~Blaise Pascal

The Heart And Its Affections: by Jonathan Edward

The nature of human beings is to be inactive unless influenced by some affection: love or hatred, desire, hope, fear, etc. These affections are the “spring of action,” the things that set us moving in our lives, that move us to engage in activities.

When we look at the world, we see that people are exceedingly busy. It is their affections that keep them busy. If we were to take away their affections, the world would be motionless and dead; there would be no such thing as activity.

It is the affection we call covetousness that moves a person to seek worldly profits; it is the affection we call ambition that moves a person to pursue worldly glory; it is the affection we call lust that moves a person to pursue sensual delights.

Just as worldly affections are the spring of worldly actions, so the religious affections are the spring of religious actions.

A person who has knowledge of doctrine and theology only–without religious affection–has never engaged in true religion. Nothing is more apparent than this: our religion takes root within us only as deep as our affections attract it.

There are thousands who hear the Word of God, who hear great and exceedingly important truths about themselves and their lives, and yet all they hear has no effect upon them, makes no change in the way they live….

No one ever seeks salvation, no one ever cries for wisdom, no one ever wrestles with God, no one ever kneels in prayer or flees from sin, with a heart that remains unaffected.

Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758)

Can God be found in the deepest affections of your heart?

Photograph, Lands End, San Francisco by Melanie Hunt


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Categories
Faith Life

Fifth Deadly Thought: Anger

 Of the Seven Deadly Sins, anger is possibly the most fun. To lick your wounds, to smack your lips over grievances long past…in many ways it is a feast fit for a king. The chief drawback is that what you are wolfing down is yourself. ~Friedrich Buechner

Anger: 1. The fit and proper response of God to evil and injustice. wrath. 2. A permanent disposition toward someone who has wronged you, bitterness. 3. The ongoing resentment toward those who fail to live up to your standard, outrage.

Has there ever been a time when so many have stayed so angry for so long for so little reason? What good has it done?

We love anger, it tastes so good, but it is well named as one of the Eight Deadly Thoughts that keep us from love.

Don’t misunderstand. We were made to share in God’s anger–the healthy, right response to cruelty, to all that destroys his good creation. If nothing matters enough to shake our complacency, there’s something wrong. But anger can be dangerous to our souls,

  • If it is without focus, splattering over everyone we encounter.
  • If it is chronic, unresolved because of something in the past.
  • If, in protest against evil we become evil ourselves.
  • If we’re convinced we are the judge and the standard–others must believe and behave as we do, or they deserve our wrath.

Antidotes to Anger

  1. The sun is setting, it’s time to quit. What if every sunset is a can’t-miss-it reminder to release into God’s keeping all that frustrates your heart? Take a few moments each evening to repeat the words of Jesus, Father, forgive them for they know not what they do, until your heart is tuned to his.
  2. I’m angry, but I’m not answering the door. The devil, suitcase in hand, rings your doorbell the minute anger is stirred. Address your anger directly to God and the devil will flee.
  3. I’m only responsible for me. Turn your focus from what “they” are doing to what you can do to overcome evil with good.
  4. This is my Father’s world. If anger has a grip on you, take a walk outside and let creation remind you–new growth is often hidden by the dead and decayed.
  5. “God knows I’m angry, I’m not alone.” Read Romans 12 and Ephesians 4:17-5:2 and allow God’s words to reshape your thinking.

What antidotes to anger can you share?

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