Sunday, March 24, 2013

Get Over It

JOEL @ LAKEWOOD CHURCH

  • A lot of people go through life thinking that people owe them something. Your poor upbringing, that bad relationship, none of it was a surprise for God. God wasn't having a bad day when he made me.
  • Psalms 139:14 NLT
    Thank you for making me so wonderfully complex! Your workmanship is marvelous—how well I know it.
    • You can be pitiful or you can be powerful but you can't be both.
    • God has given me the grace that I need to run my race. So I don't need to start comparing myself to others because I'm anointed to be me.
    • God had already arranged a comeback for every setback.
    • If anyone had a right to have a chip on their shoulder it was Job. There he was living right and he lost everything.
    • It's very easy to make an excuse for being bitter. Sometimes we want things from people that they don't have. If you only look to people, they will always let you down. No one person can meet all of your needs, they will always fall short. Let people off of the hook. When you are bitter it poisons every area of your life.
    • It's easy to remember what we didn't get.
  • Psalms 27:10 NLT
    Even if my father and mother abandon me, the L ord will hold me close.
  • Matthew 5:45 NLT
    In that way, you will be acting as true children of your Father in heaven. For he gives his sunlight to both the evil and the good, and he sends rain on the just and the unjust alike.
    • A bitter root will always produce bitter fruit. If the whole world stinks then maybe you need to make some changes on the inside. When we don't let things go it doesn't hurt the other person, it hurts you. You forgive for your own sake.
  • Hebrews 12:15 AMP
    Exercise foresight and be on the watch to look [after one another], to see that no one falls back from and fails to secure God's grace (His unmerited favor and spiritual blessing), in order that no root of resentment (rancor, bitterness, or hatred) shoots forth and causes trouble and bitter torment, and the many become contaminated and defiled by it--
  • Mordecai Peter Centennial Brown(October 19, 1876 – February 14, 1948), nicknamed "Three Finger" or "Miner", was an American Major League Baseball pitcher at the turn of the 20th century. Due to a farm-machinery accident in his youth, Brown lost parts of two fingers on his right hand[1] and eventually acquired his nickname as a result. Overcoming this handicap and turning it to his advantage, he became one of the elite pitchers of his era.
  • Your handicap can become your advantage if you just get over it.

No comments:

Post a Comment