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bluidkiti
08-03-2018, 07:45 AM
Answers for Each Day

Forgetting the Past

Yesterday we looked at Philippians 3:13. I want to draw our attention to this verse again today, but for another reason.

Brethren, I do not count myself to have apprehended; but one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forward to those things which are ahead.

The key word I want to have you focus on today is forgetting. I want you to understand the importance of forgetting the past so you can move forward.

Some people—perhaps you—cannot reach forward because they are continually looking backwards. Their focus is on their past sins, their past mistakes, their past failures, their past hurts.

God does not want you to live in the past, but rather focus on the future.

A while back I was visiting a friend who had a great impact on my life as a young believer. As I was sitting at a meal with him and his wife, he began to share with me a great personal failure.

About ten years earlier, when he was pioneering a church, he fell into an adulterous relationship. It rocked the foundation of his marriage; but he repented, got out of the relationship, and over time, God healed his marriage. But he has not been in ministry since.

As he told me, tears began to stream down his face. He got up from the table, went to the bathroom, and his wife looked at me and said, “Bayless, if you can help him, please do. My husband has lived a holy life for the last ten years. God has forgiven him, I have forgiven him, but he hasn’t forgiven himself.”

This man chained himself to this one past failure, and he can’t get on with what God had called him to do.

Bury your past so you can uncover your future.

willbe275
08-03-2018, 01:26 PM
Great lesson to live by. That was a very deep share.
Thank you.

MajestyJo
08-04-2018, 12:13 AM
Went to a therapist at 6 years sober. I hadn't been in her office long when she asked me, "Why haven't you forgiven yourself?" i was shocked, looked at her in surprise and said, 'i never thought to ask." To me, what I had done was unforgivable. I think I hoped my God would forgive me at the Pearly Gates, that was then, not now. i had been abused for many years and it took a long time for my self-acceptance and self-confidence to return.

As I shared tonight, I knew I was an addict, in denial about being aan alcoholic, until I could accept my alcoholism as being part of my addiction, I stayed stuck. i stayed clean and sober, but it was lip service that I paid until I found out what I wanted, and it ended up their program got me. I used alcohol like I used prescription drugs, food, men, and work.

I had one reason to go to AA. I had one reason to go to NA. I have 3-33 reasons to go to Al-Anon, family and friends who relapsed or never made it to the doors of recovery.