Though my past has many awful components and lingering consequences, I am seeing God use it for good. I want to share a message of hope with others. I don't want to hide in shame. I want to make God the hero and speak of His amazing goodness and redemption.
A reminder I have to tell myself is that "my identity is not in my sin." I never want to fall into the trap of Satan's lies again. Adultery is NEVER worth it. I want my present and future to be about faithfulness to Amy, to God, my kids, and be full of integrity, honor, and courage. With Christ, this is possible.
From time to time, I go to the website called, All Pro Dad.
It is full of resources for men related to parenting, marriage,
relationships and more. It has some great information that can guide men in the right direction. One of those articles from the TOP 10 list,
called, "10 Ways to Overcome a Painful Past" is copied below. It has
some great suggestions that I have found to be true in my own life as I
am overcoming my painful past.
I pray that if you have a painful past, too, that some of these suggestions will guide you toward healing. You and I can't "fix" ourselves. We can submit to Christ and let Him do His work in us, in His way, and in His time, though. He knows what we need. As He leads, pray for the courage to trust, follow, obey, submit, surrender, persevere, and worship joyfully.
I pray that if you have a painful past, too, that some of these suggestions will guide you toward healing. You and I can't "fix" ourselves. We can submit to Christ and let Him do His work in us, in His way, and in His time, though. He knows what we need. As He leads, pray for the courage to trust, follow, obey, submit, surrender, persevere, and worship joyfully.
10 Ways to Overcome a Painful Past
Author Scott Peck opens his classic book “The Road Less Traveled” with the following phrase: “Life is difficult.” The line works because it is so true. Life is not easy, yes - but it’s especially not easy if we don’t, or won’t, or can’t move through that truth and then on into the light.
- But moving on requires more than simply getting a shovel and burying
the past. And men, I think we all can agree, are typically fairly handy
when it comes to using that particular shovel. We’d simply rather not
talk about it, and that turns out to be the very worst we can do.
-
Talk about the hurt with someone you trust: Be
honest, be yourself. It’s OK. There is powerful medicine in sharing the
load. Acknowledging hurt does not make you less of a man.
-
Don’t evaluate yourself in terms of your past: The
past can hold us back (if we allow it), but it does not have the power
to define us. The fact of hurt does not determine who we are today or
who we can be tomorrow.
-
Make a commitment to (always) learn and move forward:
Leverage the past to launch a more positive future. Kind of like karate
– the opponent’s blow used as your strength, shifting the momentum to
secure a brighter future.
-
Live in the truth of the present: Light is always stronger than darkness. Today’s joy speaks the truth about the impotence of yesterday’s pain.
-
Work tirelessly to provide your family with a present that will never become a “hurtful past”: Use the fact of your hurt as motivation to protect your family today.
- Were you hurt by unfaithfulness? Be faithful now.
- Did you experience an abusive home? Saturate yours with love.
- Did you live in fear? Provide security to your family today.
-
Get involved in efforts to help others heal: Reaching out to those who are hurt always involves healing for the volunteer. Be generous and loving, open your heart.
-
Be 100% honest in your relationships: Making sure
you’re always up front with your spouse opens the door for
breakthroughs, both in the present and in our past. Honesty is not only
preventative, but restorative too.
-
Learn how to pray: Healthy family relationships
promote healing, help us to move through hurt from the past, and serve
to head off a repeat performance when it comes to pain. Prayer takes
that same principle to another level, and puts us in touch with
resources we simply must engage if we are to overcome hurt.
-
Count your blessings: It’s good to unearth hurt so
we can deal with it. But it’s also important that we pay attention to
joy. Joy doesn’t mask pain, it actually deals with it.
-
The bionic man - stronger in the broken places:
Sometimes, when a wound heals or a broken bone is knitted back together,
the human body is actually stronger than before. This doesn’t happen by
magic, or by chance, but in response to A) Acknowledging the hurt - B)
Allowing others to care for us – C) Believing that we are healed and
stronger than before and – D) Living without that chip on our shoulder
any more.
A hurtful past may include a failed marriage, Vietnam, bullying in school, abusive parents, poverty, discrimination, disappointment, bankruptcy, the loss of a parent – or a combination of events. Whatever the hurt, a way forward is always possible if we’re willing to take a few simple steps. All Pro Dad recommends starting with this list, 10 ways to overcome a hurtful past:
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