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November 21, 2012
November 21, 2012
"Island Isolation"
Scripture Reading:
James 5:16 (HCSB) Therefore, confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, so that you may be healed. The urgent request of a righteous person
is very powerful in its effect.
James 5:16 (HCSB) Therefore, confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, so that you may be healed. The urgent request of a righteous person
is very powerful in its effect.
Devotional Reading:
Keep the Son in your eyes,
“Confession is good for the soul,” or so the old saying goes. When we
are struggling with an area of insanity in our own lives, there is great
freedom and power in being able to tell another human being, “This is
where I am. This is my addiction, my problem, my sin.” When a person
comes into a meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous, he introduces himself by
saying his name and calling himself an alcoholic. I, for example, would
not say, “I’m Ben, and I drink a little too much from time to time.”
That would not cut it. “I’m Benn, and I’m not sure I need to be
here,” wouldn’t do either. For healing to begin, I would need to say
the words, “I’m Benn, and I’m an alcoholic.” At some point in the
recovery process with AA, each addict selects a sponsor – someone to
whom he or she will be accountable and honest about their addictive
behavior. Jessica McClure was an eighteen-month-old girl who fell down
an abandoned well pipe a few years back. It took nearly 400 rescuers in
her hometown of Texas, some fifteen hours to pull her from the
well, with only a few bumps and bruises. Early in the rescue process, a
key decision was made about how to save baby Jessica. First, they sent
someone down to be with her while the rescue took place, so she would
not be frightened by all the noise and machinery and manpower it would
take to save her. Panic, disorientation, anxiety – all could have been
life threatening for her, so they sent someone down to get next to her
and comfort her. This is what happens when we confess our sins to one
another. It’s like having someone else down in the pit with us,
providing a face and a form to comfort and listen as we go through the
process of recovery. We have the mistaken idea that if we let someone
else know we are struggling, somehow our credibility as s Christian will
be ruined, and that no one will trust us again or believe in us. But
confession to a Christian brother or sister who will pray and encourage
is not a damaging process, but a healing one. "No man is an island unto himself"!
Keep the Son in your eyes,
Pastor Ben J Lahay
Galatians 2:20
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