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Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you. Ephesians 4:32 ESV
Sometimes we really get on each others nerves, don’t we?
Recently my daughters were having a conflict over the expected standards of cleanliness and organization in their room. Both are little neat freaks, but they have different expectations of what that looks like.
They wanted to focus on who had done more, who was right, and whose turn it was to put away stuff.
How do we get along in relationships when these types of conflicts arise?
Relationships aren’t 50%/50%.
Relationships are 100%/100%.
For a relationship to thrive, this needs to be our stance whether we think the other person is giving their whole 100 or not. We simply assume they are and we focus on doing our part.
But what does giving 100% look like?
Kindness includes FORGIVENESS
What is forgiveness? A practical definition is: accepting the pain and releasing the offender from the obligation to remove it.
This is what Jesus did for us. He took on the pain and suffering of the cross and his forgiveness free us for any obligation to make that pain go away.
Besides, most of the time, there really isn’t anything the offender can do to take away the pain anyway. They can apologize, which is helpful, but it doesn’t really take the pain away.
Kindness includes being TENDERHEARTED.
Not everyone is in your place. What comes easy to you may not come easy to others. Often people are also fighting a battle in their own mind of guilt, shame, embarrassment, or defeat worse than anything we can see on the outside.
A wise friend once suggested: God is working on everyone. If it doesn’t seem like he’s working on a particular area that frustrates you, that just means he’s working on something more important. Extend grace.
Finally, I like to think of relationships like a figure 8, or an infinity symbol.
∞
Each circle represents a pattern we can go around:
Cycle of togetherness
This circle builds communication, community, connection, and love.
Cycle of aloneness
This circle builds resentment, victimhood, pride, and isolation.
As we go around these circles, we move through 4 processes:
It looks like this:
Or
I believe that I’m the only one working on this relationship, so I feel alone, which causes me to act as if it’s all up to me in a resentful way, and I notice what I do, what they don’t, and what they should be doing, which leads me to believe that I’m the only one working on the relationship, which continues the cycle.
At any moment, in any one of the four processes we can jump on or off one of the cycles.
Whatever we are doing, we are always proving one or the other cycle true with our beliefs, feelings, actions, and results.
To recap:
Giving 100/100 all the time.
Choosing forgiveness.
Being tenderhearted.
What is that one thing that hits home for you in your relationships with others?
The post Kindness vs. Pesky Sisters appeared first on Ultimate Christian Podcast Radio Network.
By Mary Aldrich5
1010 ratings
Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you. Ephesians 4:32 ESV
Sometimes we really get on each others nerves, don’t we?
Recently my daughters were having a conflict over the expected standards of cleanliness and organization in their room. Both are little neat freaks, but they have different expectations of what that looks like.
They wanted to focus on who had done more, who was right, and whose turn it was to put away stuff.
How do we get along in relationships when these types of conflicts arise?
Relationships aren’t 50%/50%.
Relationships are 100%/100%.
For a relationship to thrive, this needs to be our stance whether we think the other person is giving their whole 100 or not. We simply assume they are and we focus on doing our part.
But what does giving 100% look like?
Kindness includes FORGIVENESS
What is forgiveness? A practical definition is: accepting the pain and releasing the offender from the obligation to remove it.
This is what Jesus did for us. He took on the pain and suffering of the cross and his forgiveness free us for any obligation to make that pain go away.
Besides, most of the time, there really isn’t anything the offender can do to take away the pain anyway. They can apologize, which is helpful, but it doesn’t really take the pain away.
Kindness includes being TENDERHEARTED.
Not everyone is in your place. What comes easy to you may not come easy to others. Often people are also fighting a battle in their own mind of guilt, shame, embarrassment, or defeat worse than anything we can see on the outside.
A wise friend once suggested: God is working on everyone. If it doesn’t seem like he’s working on a particular area that frustrates you, that just means he’s working on something more important. Extend grace.
Finally, I like to think of relationships like a figure 8, or an infinity symbol.
∞
Each circle represents a pattern we can go around:
Cycle of togetherness
This circle builds communication, community, connection, and love.
Cycle of aloneness
This circle builds resentment, victimhood, pride, and isolation.
As we go around these circles, we move through 4 processes:
It looks like this:
Or
I believe that I’m the only one working on this relationship, so I feel alone, which causes me to act as if it’s all up to me in a resentful way, and I notice what I do, what they don’t, and what they should be doing, which leads me to believe that I’m the only one working on the relationship, which continues the cycle.
At any moment, in any one of the four processes we can jump on or off one of the cycles.
Whatever we are doing, we are always proving one or the other cycle true with our beliefs, feelings, actions, and results.
To recap:
Giving 100/100 all the time.
Choosing forgiveness.
Being tenderhearted.
What is that one thing that hits home for you in your relationships with others?
The post Kindness vs. Pesky Sisters appeared first on Ultimate Christian Podcast Radio Network.