WE’RE ALL BROKEN AND IT’S OK – GOD LOVES US ANYWAY

Written by Laurel Aiyana


Recently, I took a trip to Maine to visit my mother. I’ve always been very close to her, but our relationship has been strained since I joined a fundamentalist church and started working on inner healing. This has involved pastoral counseling, which included healing for sins, including general ones – both my sins, sins of ancestors, sins committed against me, and my sinful reactions torepparttar people inflicting them. Healing of memories has been a part ofrepparttar 126775 process as well. It’s been a wonderful process, and a grueling process, as I unlockrepparttar 126776 layers of self.

This trip to Maine, my mother made an off-the-cuff comment that I felt that I was an abused child. By her tone of voice, I could tell she took this personally, and it bothered her greatly. I’m assuming my attempts at getting help for myself, were to her, a way of transferring blame onto her for my issues in my life. That has never been my intent. At some point we all have to stop blaming our parents, circumstances, and start taking responsibility for our own problems and healing. I could see, however, that I had shared too much with her about my process, which I thought would be exciting to her, and she misinterpreted it, partly, I believe, because ofrepparttar 126777 differences in our spiritual views.

After pondering this incident, and many others that had occurred in my life, what I discovered was, that we’re all broken, as a result ofrepparttar 126778 sin committed first by Adam and Eve. We all make mistakes and this affects not only ourselves, but our families. Personally, I have adversely affected my children’s lives in ways that may require them to seek psychotherapy or spiritual counseling, and so did my mother, father, and their parents. We can’t help it – we’re members of a fallen race.

Fortunately, we can find redemption, withrepparttar 126779 Lord’s help, with forgiveness for ourselves, and by forgiving those who have sinned against us. It’s easier to forgive when we look at it fromrepparttar 126780 words of Jesus, himself, in John 8:7, “He who is without sin among you, let him throw a stone at her first,” in speaking ofrepparttar 126781 woman caught in adultery. We are all sinners, who am I to judge another when I too am a sinner. Judgment is mentioned again as Luke quotes Jesus again in Luke 6:41, “And why do you look atrepparttar 126782 speck in your brother’s eye, but do not perceiverepparttar 126783 plank in your own eye?” These perspectives help us learn to forgive. Hurting people hurt others, and if we possess our own degree of brokenness, we have hurt others as well. It makes loving your enemies, and forgiving your parents when you chooserepparttar 126784 perspective of Jesus.

I present myself to God, my Father, regularly, for forgiveness, and He gives it to me, because He loves me unconditionally, even inrepparttar 126785 broken state, before I’ve changed every wrong behavior or attitude. He loves me right where I’m at. He may not love allrepparttar 126786 behaviors, but He loves me just as much broken, as when we are whole. If only all of us could embrace this unconditional love for ourselves and others, but it is harder for us to do without a little help from above. Unfortunately, we humans don’t always get A’s inrepparttar 126787 course of life on unconditional love. Our past wounds often cause us to take things personally, and we react, not respond appropriately. I have been guilty of such behaviors inrepparttar 126788 past, and boy, that has landed me in so much trouble! I feel my mother is guilty of that with me, or is that a judgment – if so, I’m sorry mother! I’ve been guilty of not accepting her just as she is. I know in my heart that my mother has always loved me, and still does. I don’t hate her for being human and making mistakes in raising me. We’re all guilty in making mistakes in our relationships with others. I do get upset that she doesn’t understand that my desire for inner healing isn’t a personal attack against her. I’ve made mistakes in sharing too much of my healing process without realizing it would be a trigger for her into feeling I was attacking her parenting skills. My mother is a hurting person, I am a hurting person. My mother needs my prayers not lack of forgiveness from me. We also need to forgive and accept ourselves – broken earthen vessels.

A Prophet is Rarely Recognized in His Own Family

Written by Laurel Aiyana


Spiritual gifts are still looked upon by far too many inrepparttar world with some reservation, more so in Western civilization. Such isrepparttar 126774 case in my family. Raised Catholic, my parents believed inrepparttar 126775 Augustinian theory of cessation ofrepparttar 126776 gifts afterrepparttar 126777 days of Jesus and his apostles shortly after his death. At age 36, I was born again, and departed from Catholicism for empowered Evangelicals. As with Jesus, whose own brothers, at first anyway, thought He was a nut. My own family treated me like an outcast, regularly mock me, and don’t value my spiritual gifting.

Spiritual gifts are blessings from God to be used to bless others as an instrument ofrepparttar 126778 Lord. My gifting is more in healing and intercessory work, but in working within these gifts,repparttar 126779 Lord will give me prophecy to share with people. I pray for increased spiritual gifts as a regular part of my prayers.

Gradually, as members of my family have come torepparttar 126780 Lord, these people have come to embrace me for who I am. Jesus’ brother James was thought to berepparttar 126781 author ofrepparttar 126782 book of James inrepparttar 126783 bible. One saved member does infectrepparttar 126784 rest ofrepparttar 126785 body. I keep prayer that it further infects my own family, but some ofrepparttar 126786 hearts have been difficult to penetrate. They won’t outrun my prayers though. God can penetraterepparttar 126787 hardest hearts. He got through to me, and my hide was pretty thick.

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