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Some of the most painful stress we carry is relational: a friend who drifted, a family member who crossed a line, tension in a church community that never got named. We talk about restoring broken relationships through Matthew 18:15, where Jesus offers a surprisingly practical form of Christian conflict resolution: go directly and speak privately. That one choice can stop gossip, reduce defensiveness, and create space for real understanding.
We walk through why our default reactions often backfire. Avoiding the person, venting to others, or letting bitterness grow can feel protective, but it usually keeps the wound open. So we slow down and reframe confrontation as restoration. The goal is not scoring points or proving someone wrong; it is “gaining your brother,” rebuilding connection where it is possible, and keeping your own heart free from resentment.
You’ll also get gentle steps you can put into practice right away: start with prayer, speak in love instead of accusation, use I statements, and listen with compassion because there may be more to the story than you know. We also talk about forgiveness as freedom, even when no apology comes, and about leaving results to God when you cannot control another person’s response.
If a relationship in your life needs healing, let this be the nudge to take one courageous next step, whether that’s a conversation, a letter, or quiet forgiveness in your heart. Subscribe for more daily faith encouragement, share this with a friend who needs peace, and leave a review with the one step you’re choosing next.
By Edwine MbuzaaSend us Fan Mail
Some of the most painful stress we carry is relational: a friend who drifted, a family member who crossed a line, tension in a church community that never got named. We talk about restoring broken relationships through Matthew 18:15, where Jesus offers a surprisingly practical form of Christian conflict resolution: go directly and speak privately. That one choice can stop gossip, reduce defensiveness, and create space for real understanding.
We walk through why our default reactions often backfire. Avoiding the person, venting to others, or letting bitterness grow can feel protective, but it usually keeps the wound open. So we slow down and reframe confrontation as restoration. The goal is not scoring points or proving someone wrong; it is “gaining your brother,” rebuilding connection where it is possible, and keeping your own heart free from resentment.
You’ll also get gentle steps you can put into practice right away: start with prayer, speak in love instead of accusation, use I statements, and listen with compassion because there may be more to the story than you know. We also talk about forgiveness as freedom, even when no apology comes, and about leaving results to God when you cannot control another person’s response.
If a relationship in your life needs healing, let this be the nudge to take one courageous next step, whether that’s a conversation, a letter, or quiet forgiveness in your heart. Subscribe for more daily faith encouragement, share this with a friend who needs peace, and leave a review with the one step you’re choosing next.