Sermons

Summary: "Bitterness is like drinking rat poison and waiting for the rat to die."(John Ortberg Jr.).It contributes to physical sickness and doesn't allow us to experience the peace God wants for us. Live at peace with everyone. (Romans 12:18).

BITTERNESS

"Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you, along with all malice. Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you”. (Ephesians 4:31-32)

Bitterness is defined as anger and disappointment at being treated unfairly. It is an attitude of intense and prolonged anger and hostility which is synonymous with resentment and envy. Often, it also involves feelings of resentment and a desire for revenge. It is the result of not forgiving someone, which makes hurt and anger to grow until the pain and resentment hurt the person’s view of life.

It occurs when we feel someone has taken something from us that we are powerless to get back. We hold on to the hurt in an attempt to remind ourselves and others of the injustice we’ve experienced in the hopes that someone will save us and restore what we’ve lost. Unfortunately, bitterness only makes our sense of the injustice grow. It does nothing to heal the wound caused by the injustice. In fact, it causes the wound to become infected with anger. Bitterness has the power to destroy us from within and can negatively impact those around us in many ways.

"Bitterness is like drinking rat poison and waiting for the rat to die."(John Ortberg Jr.).

Eventually, bitterness will kill us either physically - because it can contribute to physical sickness - or spiritually by not allowing us to experience the peace God wants for us. The more we hold onto past hurts the more we become drunk on our pain and the experience can rob us of the joy we can find in anything. Bitterness will affect you physically, emotionally, and spiritually because the fruit of bitterness is an acid that destroys its container.

Bitterness starts out small. An offense burrows its way into our hearts. We replay it in our minds, creating deep ruts that will be hard to build back up. We retell our hurts to any available listener, including each sordid detail. We enlist support, pushing us further into our resentment. We hear the offending person's name and cringe. We decipher the offense as intentional and our offender as full of spite. We look for other reasons, both real or imagined, to dislike our villain. With each new piece of information, we form another layer of bitterness. We fool ourselves into thinking no one will know but anger and resentment have a way of seeping into everything. (Reference - https://www.christianitytoday.com/)

One of the most well-known stories of bitterness in the Bible is the tale of Cain and Abel (Genesis 4:1-8). Cain becomes consumed by bitterness for his brother and God, when he feels unjustly treated relative to his prosperous brother Abel. Cain damns God and kills his brother out of hatred and pity for himself.

Bitterness is the opposite of God’s way of thinking, and it can take us away from God. (Stephan M. Koenig) .Hebrews 12:15 says, “See to it that no one fails to obtain the grace of God; that no ‘root of bitterness’ springs up and causes trouble, and by it many become defiled”.

It is a sin that can linger in our lives and separate us from God; which removes holiness and peace of mind from our lives. Romans 12:19 commands us not to seek revenge, but instead to let God avenge.

"If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone." (Romans 12:18). So how can we do that? How can we prevent bitterness from moving into our hearts? How can we deal with our feelings instead of letting them grow into bitterness? How do we know we have bitterness in our hearts?

Below are 7 signs that you have bitterness in your heart:

1. You feel anger every time you hear a particular person's name.

We've probably all experienced our muscles tighten and teeth clench when we hear certain people's names. Although that is expected when we've been hurt in a substantial way, it is a sign that we have not fully forgiven the person.

2. You replay a conversation or experience over and over in your mind.

Whether it's a conversation or an experience, you make something that's in the past come into the present every time you replay it in your mind. Jesus came to redeem our pasts, even the parts that are not a result of our sin. However, when we relive them, we're not allowing Him to do that. We must do what the Apostle Paul tells us in Philippians 3:13, "Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead."

3. You're happy when someone else fails.

Celebrating other people's misfortune is malice and it is sinful. Malice shows that we are harboring bitterness in our hearts.

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Talk about it...

Hugh W. Davidson

commented on Aug 4, 2020

Excellent message, I hope you don't mind if I use a few thoughts. Hugh

James Dina

commented on Aug 4, 2020

Hello Hugh, thank you for your comment. Please use it, it's free; share the message to your friends.Remain blessed. James

Stephen Wakuloba

commented on Apr 27, 2021

I love this!!

James Dina

commented on Apr 27, 2021

All Glory be to Almighty God, the fountain of Knowledge.

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