Category: Applying Biblical Principles to Everyday Problems

Part Two: Blame Keeps Wounds Open

  One of our closing thoughts last time taught us that the mind has a mind of its own. Individuals can choose to remember or choose to block out the memory of things depending on the value or lack of value of that thought. Often thoughts are buried deeply during difficult episodes in life. They …

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Blame Keeps Wounds Open

  This title, Blame Keeps Wounds Open, is an incomplete statement. The balance of the statement is:  Only Forgiveness Heals. The last article was concluded with the truism:  The Bowl That Holds the Acid is Eaten by the Acid. This Acid can be un-resolved anger and/or un-resolved resentment. This Acid can also be un-forgiveness. And …

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Anger: Wanting Someone Else to Pay

  Last time we learned, we can change our actions faster than we can change our feelings. One of the hallmark Scriptures regarding anger is found in Ephesians 4:26-27 which admonishes the reader:  “Be ye angry, and sin not:  let not the sun go down upon your wrath:  Neither give place to the devil.” Dr. …

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Love Is Action Not Feeling

  We can change our actions faster than we can change our feelings. This is an easy lesson to understand, making it easy to teach, because we have all perhaps been there and done this at some point in our lifetime. Picture the following scenario: Two people are feuding, fussing and fighting or yelling, hollering …

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Prescription for Great Communication: Bless, Edify, Share and TOUCH

In our previous articles we have been expanding on the full breadth of communication through the acronym BEST. We have noted this is a prescription written by Dr. Ed Wheat, M.D. in his book Love Life for Every Married Couple for attaining and maintaining Great Communication:  Bless, Edify, Share and Touch. The principles we have …

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Prescription for Great Communication: Bless, Edify, SHARE and Touch

  In our previous articles (here and here), we have been expanding of the full breadth of communication through the acronym BEST. We have noted this is a prescription written by Dr. Ed Wheat, M.D. in his book Love Life for Every Married Couple for attaining and maintaining Great Communication:  Bless, Edify, Share and Touch. …

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Prescription for Great Communication: Bless, Edify, Share and Touch

  Last time I introduced Dr. Ed Wheat, M.D., and his best selling book, Love Life for Every Married Couple. I noted many of the prescriptions Dr. Wheat issues are applicable to relationships outside of marriage. As a physician, he offers the following prescription stated in this acronym:  The BEST prescription for a superb relationship:  …

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The Mechanics of Silent and Listen

  Last time we stated that just because a person is silent it does not pre-conclude they are listening. Indeed, the silent person may the thinking of their reply or retort. In either case the listener may be missing out on important details being shared. This would be particularly critical in trying to build or …

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Communication Is a Two-Way Avenue

  A placard displayed in a frame shop window attracted my attention causing me to pause and mediate upon the two-word inscription. This vital truth attracted me as a teaching tool for our counseling ministry. As a teaching technique I use impact statements based on a verse, passage or Biblical principle. These impact statements deal …

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Comparison Is Spelled K-I-L-L-E-R

  Glancing back at last week’s article, I repeat:  Emily Dickenson, in one of her poems said, “A word is dead when it is said, some say; I say it just begins to live that day.” To say comparison is spelled K-I-L-L-E-R is a lesson in stark reality. Comparison is the key element in advertising …

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Negative Humor and the Sensitivity Level

  Emily Dickenson, in one of her poems said, “A word is dead when it is said, some say; I say it just begins to live that day.” Lawrence J. Crabbe, in his book The Marriage Builder said, “Words do one of three things:  Words can give life; they can wield death; or they can …

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How to Attack the Problem without Attacking the Person

Last time we looked at the first two phases of the following diagram. This time we will walk through the third phase. In a brief review we saw when a problem presented itself two people often attack each other – which obviously doesn’t resolve the issue. Next they begin to attack the problem the way …

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Attack the Problem and Not the Person

This principle is based on the axiom:  An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. If we can prevent a problem from developing, obviously, we do not have to cure that problem. But how do we do this? This is a three-step process outlined by the following diagram. This is taught in the …

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Don’t Try to Make it Make Sense – Right Now

  Many subliminal signals alert us that something is amiss. Our five senses of human nature, to wit:  hearing, seeing, feeling, smelling and tasting work separately, or in concert, for the purpose of warning us and prompting us to take averting action(s). Yes, instant action is often appropriate; if the house is on fire call …

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Cover Over Problems Effectively

  In this series we are looking at three ways people attempt to solve problems that do not work and why they do not work. First we pointed out that a person’s objectivity for problem solving is often based on their most recent experience(s). We concluded this is an ineffective tool for problem solving for …

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Things People Do To Solve Problems That Do Not Work and Why They Do Not Work

  There are three primary things people do to solve their problems that don’t work. Objectivity in Problem Solving Cover Over Problems Effectively Don’t Try to Make it Make Sense Right Now Starting this week and for the following two weeks we’ll examine why these approaches do not work. Doing things that have not worked …

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The Three Levels of a Problem

  The first level of a problem usually begins as a feeling accompanied by a thought. We think something doesn’t seem to be right. We’re not certain what is amiss, but we feel there is something going on. Following this thoughtful feeling, if we haven’t concluded what may be amiss, we voice our concern to a …

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The Problem is ________________.

  My father-in-law during his latter years, he died at age 94, would reply when asked how he felt, “Well, I hurt all over more than any where else,” which usually evoked a chuckle from the inquirer. But would that answer satisfy his physician?  Would that answer satisfy a counselor?  The obvious answer is, “No.” …

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Problems Are Solutions in Disguise

  This may seem an over-simplification of all you have been struggling with for perhaps too long, but it is not. God’s Word has a solution for every problem known to mankind. A key verse supporting this teaching is I Corinthians 10:13: “There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man:  …

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Choices, Choices, Choices

From the moment our day begins until it ends we make choices. Choices are amoral, that is, being neither moral nor immoral. Like sins, however, choices carry consequences. First John 1:9 gives partial relief to the repentant sinner:  “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to …

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