General Articles Archive

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Baggage Check: What’s In There?

It’s so important to be honest with ourselves. So often we get married and it’s as though we’re smuggling drugs through an airport baggage check, hoping not to get caught. But it’s inevitable, we will get caught. Both husband and wife sneak poison into the marriage without even realizing it. And all of these things in our bags are packaged so beautifully, some a little more tattered than others, but underneath the mess there is one thing we are all carrying around: PRIDE.

Let’s take a closer look at our baggage so we can see how each thing eventually points us to pride.

Insecurity. I’m not just talking about women here. Yes, our womanly insecurities are obvious. But men also deal with insecurities. They often create this picture of an ideal man in their mind. He is intelligent, good with money, provides for his family, helps out at church, etc. He also, through his tainted view of beauty and women, creates a fantasy world where he is admired and wanted. He uses women to feel better about himself. And women do the same. They use others to feel better about themselves. They use the gazes of men to validate their beauty, and they use the unattractive qualities of other women to validate their flaws or say to themselves, “Well, I look better than her at least.” It’s a never-ending cycle of comparisons and judgments. A desire to live up to an unattainable worldly goal. To be something we are not. And underneath the wrapping paper of insecurity we see something loud and clear. Pride. There it is. “I want to be better than others. I want to be admired and loved by the world.”

Self-Righteousness. We pray every day, we go to church, we think we’re awesome and we think our spouses are the cow dung we shovel up every day. This may look good on the surface, but we know underneath there is one beautifully ugly thing peeking out at us. Pride. Women, we put down our husband’s for being so horrible. He lusts, he gawks at women, he won’t change no matter how many times we take our rings off and throw them at his face. He is a liar, a betrayer, a scandalous man who has hurt us time and time again. And we aren’t so bad. We are faithful Christians, right? We try our best to love him through, albeit we lose our temper and patience and don’t always treat him with gentleness. And men, you have done all this changing, all these wonderful things, and your wife is still insecure, she steal beats you down with words. But you’ve changed! You’re a better man! Why can’t she just grow up already? Men, you use women for our own self-pleasure and betray your wives, and then you think because you changed in a few weeks she should just get over it? Pride, my friends. It makes you think you are better than others when you really aren’t. It’s insecurity gone astray. It’s insecurity playing the defense.

Anger. Isn’t it interesting that Jesus says lusting over women is adultery of the mind, and anger is murder of the mind, yet we ladies like to get upset over our husband’s lust and not our own anger. Which is worse in the world’s judicial system? Murder or adultery? Which one of those often deserves an execution? But in our own pain we view adultery as worse than murder, because we are looking through our own glassy eyes. Everything is distorted when you are looking through your pain and not seeing Jesus on the other side catching your tears. Anger is the mask pain likes to wear when pain is too afraid to show its face. But pain is closer to Jesus than anger. Righteous anger is when we are angry because God has been wronged. How often do we get angry when Jesus’ name is used in vain during a movie we are watching? And how often do we get angry when our husband’s cheat or our wives continue to badger us? Think about it. Self-righteous anger comes from, low and behold, pride. Until we get angry when we hear Jesus’ name abused in our highly valued entertainment, we really should check our self-righteous anger when we are hurt.

Depression. For so many years we’ve wasted tears on unmet expectations when we could’ve been weeping our own sins. We’ve focused on not being good enough, instead of resting in Him who is good enough. We’ve focused on our worldly failings, instead of resting in our King and allow Him to transform our weaknesses. We’ve loathed suffering and embraced comfort, only to have it swept from under us and replaced with more suffering. We’ve kept thankfulness at bay, afraid to be thankful for suffering because we don’t want more of it. Martyrdom isn’t appealing. Self-sacrifice is too difficult and not worth trying. We’ve desperately tried to take care of ourselves, all these years, only to realize we don’t do a very good job at it and things are getting worse. We are depressed. And you guessed it. Depression stems from pride. “I want something and I’m not getting it.” Like a spoiled child, we refuse to look at our Father’s will as something to be thankful for, even when it hurts, and instead we complain that we aren’t getting what we want. Instead of embracing the cross, we want to skip that and get to the resurrection already. Depression stems from the pride of wanting things in this world, instead of desiring God fully and allowing Him to be enough. Instead of rest, we prefer to strive after endless goals.

All of our baggage shows our true colors. You can add any to this list and most likely at the bottom of the pretty wrapping paper you will find pride.

Do we get angry over God’s name being used in vain? Do we weep and run out of a film when we hear Jesus’ name used as a PG-13 curse word? Or are we too focused on our own pain to even realize what righteous and holy anger is? Are we too consumed in our own tears to even taste the tears of our God? To know what it’s like to be a Father who wants His children to find peace in His arms, but they keep looking to the world? Are we too wrapped up in our own pride and desires, that we can’t love our spouses selflessly? Are we always justifying our actions and blaming the other person? Are we too afraid to romance our spouses, because we are afraid we won’t measure up or get something in return? Are we withholding love because of pride?

Do we want more than we are willing to give?

Check your baggage. Get honest with yourselves. Ask your spouse to write down every last baggage they have ever noticed in your life. What have you brought to your marriage that is making it suffer instead of shine? And instead of getting angry, look at the bottom of the package to see that ugly sin called Pride staring you in the face. Then, together, realize you are both just as bad as the other and turn to God, asking Him to help you love Him more and become more like Him. To replace your ugly baggage with the light and easy yoke that is His and to find hope, rest, and freedom in the life you were called to. A life of holiness. A life that is always reaching closer to Jesus and further from the world.

Discuss this further on the forum.

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Where Does Your Addiction End?

Not how or when … where does your addiction end? I know several men who have been addicted to some form of lust. It all starts with a second look at a passing woman. When that no longer satisfies the lustful passion, it moves to a fantasy in the mind of the passing woman, and if that doesn’t satisfy, on to magazines and videos. Eventually these videos and magazines will get old too, so we look for more extreme porn. And eventually that becomes old news, so we look to 900 numbers, prostitutes, sensual massage parlors, chat rooms, or Craigslist. Our addiction is NEVER satisfied, so it keeps looking for more. And eventually, it meets the END. What is the end for our most common addictions? Let’s take a look.

The End of Lust Addiction
A person who follows the path of lust follows the above path. They give in to the temptation to objectify someone or something for their own self-pleasure. At first, this is a pleasure of the eyes, but it moves on to a pleasure of the mind and then becomes a pleasure of the body. The eyes allow something to come in, the mind allows this thing to be objectified, and the body allows it to be used for the pleasure of a self-seeking heart. This addiction keeps looking for more and more. It’s never satisfied. And here is where it ENDS: loss of spouse, marriage, and possibly children, loss of self-dignity and integrity, loss of self-control and purity, depression, anxiety, pain, and ultimately, death of everything that’s good.

The End of Anger Addiction
A person who follows the path of anger starts out with pain. An arrow flies into the heart, punctures it, and it begins to bleed. This blood boils and turns into anger. The tears dry up and the wrath flies out. It’s generally a form of self-defense, but can also be a form of self-offense. Either way, it is a path of protecting the self from being hurt. It is the mark of a person who is wounded and cares too much about itself to love others above itself, instead of sacrificing itself in love and humility. This addiction keeps looking for more and more. It’s never satisfied. And here is where it ENDS:  loss of self-control and humility, depression, anxiety, pain, more anger, possibly the death of the target, bitterness, unforgiveness, divorce, stifled and broken relationships, and ultimately, death of everything that’s good.

The End of Insecurity Addiction
Insecurity is wounded pride. This is pride that has been injured. The self wanted some sort of praise or validation from the world, didn’t receive it, and becomes discouraged. It loses confidence in who God created it to be, and focuses more on who it wants to be in the world and to the world. This leads to more and more striving. An insatiable desire to measure up to someone or something’s standards. And this addiction keeps looking for more and more. It’s never satisfied. And here is where it ENDS: depression, anxiety, discontentment, jealousy, fighting, bitterness, pride, causing other men and women to stumble, obsession with appearance, wasted money on keeping up youthful appearance, depression, depression, and more depression, and ultimately, death of everything that’s good.

The End of Pride Addiction
Insecurity is wounded pride. While pure pride is puffed up and fully-functioning pride. The self wants praise from self or the world and does whatever it can to receive it, whatever the cost. Wounded pride (insecurity) can often lead to this pride, and this pride can often lead to wounded pride. Sometimes you can’t even tell the two apart, they are best friends. Both with the same goal, wounded pride is just too wounded to run after it, but that’s okay, because pride has quite enough on its own, and pride doesn’t share. This addiction keeps looking for more and more. It’s never satisfied. And here is where it ENDS: depression, discontentment, jealousy, arrogance, anger, bitterness, selfishness, self-reliance, atheism (who needs a God?),  obsession with appearance to the world (outward and personality), false personalities, lying, attachment to earthly possessions, stealing, cheating, and ultimately, death of everything that’s good.

The End of God Addiction
This is what our hearts are really longing for. A person addicted to God may start off in any of the above addictions or some other one, some addiction to the world or self, but when it realizes that no other addiction is fulfilling, nothing ever satisfies, and they all lead to death, this addiction will let go of all addictions and attachments to the world and cling to God with all it’s got. It will look for God in all things, never seeking satisfaction in the world. This addiction, like the others, keeps looking for more and more. It’s never satisfied. It can never love God enough and always strives to love Him more. It’s the central focus of its entire existence. And here is where it ENDS: joy, contentment, peace, humility, selflessness, forgiveness, sacrifice, patience, obsession with God, true freedom, honesty, integrity, self-control, thriving relationships, love, beauty, goodness, faithfulness, Jesus, The Father, eternal life in Love, and ultimately, TRUE LIFE and attainment of everything that’s good.

We can all choose what we want to be addicted to. It’s not something we are forced to be or do. We can choose our reactions to temptations of this world, and we can choose what we want to set our hearts on. So, in the end of our end, we choose…. we choose our end.

Jesus answered, “I am the way and the truth and the life.”
John 14:6

For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will find it.
Matthew 16:25

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We Love to be Loved

I remember desiring to be loved since I was a little girl. I made up stories when I was only 7 years old. It was never the story of the prince rescuing the princess, instead it was a story about a prince and princess falling in love and living happily ever after. No rescue involved. Just love. As I aged I tried to make that story come true by falling in love 98,737 times. You would think this odd fascination with “being in love with love” would have made the “real deal” less amazing. But no, my story wasn’t cheapened by the 98,737 times I “fell in love” before that. (In reality, it was, but I didn’t want to believe that….)

In love with love. That was me. And my love story had a twist I didn’t know about. I saw the red flags, but I ignored them. I wanted the “happily ever after” so bad that I was willing to ignore reality just to have the fantasy. I was so angry with George, so hurt, by his fantasy world, but I didn’t realize that my pain was so much deeper because I had lived in a fantasy world for so many years as well. A world where love was always lovely and my prince charming would love me almost perfectly, only messing up in ways that were okay by my fantasies standards.

I wanted to be loved. Isn’t that what we all desire for so long? We loved to be loved. And when we’re hurt, we spin out of control, we lose ourselves, we get lost in insecurity and anger, bitterness and depression, anxiety and fear. Our fantasy flickers like a flame in a light breeze, and then whoosh, it dies out when we catch him looking at her. Darkness is the only thing we know.

Because we want to be loved. We spend our lives trying to attain love from others. When they fail us, we look in other places. We date people, test them out, then marry one who seems to love us best. When our spouse fails us, we look for love from our children, when they fail us, we look to our friends, when they fail us, and we have nothing, we sink into a darkness so rich you can’t even see yourself.

My fantasy world crashed. And I had to face reality. I had to figure out if I loved Love enough to love others when they didn’t love me. Or if I only loved Love when it benefited me, made me feel good, or in some other way satisfied me. I was faced with a choice.

Ashley, do you love God more than you love being loved? If so, your life should display the fruits of the Spirit, which you have memorized and yet don’t live out … love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.

Well, at least I was faithful, I thought.

But no, I wasn’t. I thought I was faithful to my husband because I never lusted over other men. I never cheated. I didn’t do what he did. But I was unfaithful to my husband because I loved myself more than I loved him. I loved my own fantasy world. It may not have been porn, but it was a fantasy nonetheless. A fantasy he couldn’t live up to if he tried. Just like my husband looked to porn stars to fill a desire that can only be satisfied by God, I looked to my husband to fill a desire only satisfied by God.

I was unfaithful to God by loving the world, loving earthly love and admiration, and loving my husband more than I loved Him. And through that, I was unfaithful to George because I loved my own idea of love, my own desire to be loved, more than I loved him.

I wasn’t willing to love him when he hurt me. I locked him out of the house, gave him back my rings, wanted to see him tortured, literally. My thoughts were cruel and my desires were not birthed from a heart that truly loved Love.

A heart acquires nothing more than what it wants. If a heart desires fantasies and earthly passions, it will receive what it wants and grow weary when it’s never satisfied. If, however, a heart desires truth and love, God and things that are pure and holy, it will receive what it wants and grow joyful even amidst trials, it will be satisfied and find rest, and through that Love it will be able to love others who injure it.

I lived much of my life as the first heart. The heart that loved to be loved, but didn’t love to give love when it hurt. I was self-centered and filled with a pride that believed I deserved something better, yet I was blind to my own unfaithfulness. I spent my life chasing after that fantasy, desiring something unattainable, only to end up miserable and dead.

But I have good news. My romance story has been resurrected. And it’s so much better than the fantasy I desired since my early childhood dreams of happily ever after. It’s so much better, friends. I can’t even describe to you how much better it is.

No longer is it based on conditions, fantasies, and expectations. It’s based on pure love. This kind of love is birthed from my love for God and my desire to please Him. Through my love for Him, my King, I have the strength to love those who hurt and slander me. Through this love … this true love … I am able to love my husband regardless of his faithfulness or kindness to me. Because this kind of love doesn’t care whether it’s loved or not. It has only one desire … to love God and its neighbor. To love.

And if it receives love in return … it knows that it doesn’t deserve it. Humbly, it accepts the love granted to it, but the real burning desire is to set the world aflame with the love of Christ and to never give thought to how much love can be attained for itself.

I would like to go back to that little girl Ashley and say something to her. “Dear Ashley, don’t spend your life dreaming of being loved. Spend your life giving love, no matter how much it hurts, no matter how much you suffer, because it’s there that you will show the world God’s glory and set the world ablaze with His consuming fire, His all consuming and perfect Love. There is no satisfaction outside of Him. So stop seeking it in men and fantasies of love. He is your Love. Rest in Him.”

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Love Letters to Porn Stars

If you haven’t already, check out MTD’s sister site:



www.loveletterstopornstars.com

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