Cristo es Superior a Moises

[siteorigin_widget class=”WP_Widget_Media_Image”][/siteorigin_widget]
[siteorigin_widget class=”WP_Widget_Media_Audio”][/siteorigin_widget]

La Victoria en Cristo

[siteorigin_widget class=”WP_Widget_Media_Image”][/siteorigin_widget]
[siteorigin_widget class=”WP_Widget_Media_Audio”][/siteorigin_widget]

El Autor de La Salvacion

[siteorigin_widget class=”WP_Widget_Media_Image”][/siteorigin_widget]
[siteorigin_widget class=”WP_Widget_Media_Audio”][/siteorigin_widget]

2 times

[siteorigin_widget class=”WP_Widget_Media_Image”][/siteorigin_widget]

#2 Admit to God and to others where you have been wrong

TODAY: Admit to God and to others where you have been wrong.

1 John 1:9 says, “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.” Agree with God that your attitudes have been wrong when you have harbored hate or have been critical. Where you have wronged another person in your anger, confess it to God, and to the other person involved. Ask for that person’s forgiveness; heal the relationship.

REMEMBER: There are other ways to deal with anger

Anger is our natural reaction when someone wrongs us, or when we think someone has wronged us. It’s not a sin to get angry, however; Jesus himself got angry at injustice and sin. You must understand that we can be angry without dipping into sin!

When we lash out at others, we often do enormous damage. On the other hand, when we suppress our angry feelings, we risk becoming bitter and depressed. Someone has wisely said: “Anger is the powerful acid that can do damage to the vessel in which it is stored as well as the object on which it is poured.”

So how should we handle anger? What should we do with feelings of rage?

 

Daily Prayer

In Prayer tell God you repent for all those situations when you have lost your temper and became angry for no reason. Ask God for forgiveness and pray for courage, so you can go to the other person and heal the relationship.

[siteorigin_widget class=”social_interaction_buttons”][/siteorigin_widget]

Ocupados hasta que YO Benga

[siteorigin_widget class=”WP_Widget_Media_Image”][/siteorigin_widget]
[siteorigin_widget class=”WP_Widget_Media_Audio”][/siteorigin_widget]
[siteorigin_widget class=”WP_Widget_Media_Audio”][/siteorigin_widget]

1 vez

[siteorigin_widget class=”WP_Widget_Media_Image”][/siteorigin_widget]

#1 Lidiando con La Ira

Una charla sobre otras formas de lidiar con la ira.

El enojo/ira es nuestra reacción natural cuando alguien comete un error, o cuando creemos que alguien nos ha hecho mal. Sin embargo, no es pecado enojarse; Jesús mismo se enojó con la injusticia y el pecado. ¡Debes entender que podemos estar enojados sin sumergirnos en el pecado! Cuando atacamos a los demás, a menudo hacemos un daño enorme. Por otro lado, cuando reprimimos nuestros sentimientos de enojo, corremos el riesgo de amargarnos y deprimirnos. Alguien ha dicho sabiamente: “La ira es el ácido poderoso que puede dañar el recipiente en el que está almacenado y el objeto sobre el cual se vacia”.

Entonces, ¿cómo debemos manejar la ira? ¿Qué deberíamos hacer con los sentimientos de ira?

HOY: Enfrenta tus debilidades. 

Examina dónde se ha justificado tu enojo y dónde no. Anota las cuatro veces que te has enojado más en los últimos dos o tres meses. ¿Por qué te enojaste? ¿Tus motivos estaban equivocados? ¿Canalizaste tu ira en una dirección constructiva?

No ofrezcas excusas por tus fallas, tales como “Esa es mi naturaleza” o “No puedo evitarlo, así soy yo”.

Tu Oración para Hoy

Determina una situación molesta que sabe que enfrentaras en las próximas 24 horas. Hablo con Dios específicamente sobre esto en nuestro tiempo de oración conversacional esta noche. Preparate ahora para aplicar conscientemente lo que hemos discutido esta noche a su situación.

[siteorigin_widget class=”social_interaction_buttons”][/siteorigin_widget]

1 time

[siteorigin_widget class=”WP_Widget_Media_Image”][/siteorigin_widget]

#1 Face your weaknesses

A talk on other ways to deal with anger.

Anger is our natural reaction when someone wrongs us, or when we think someone has wronged us. It’s not a sin to get angry, however; Jesus himself got angry at injustice and sin. You must understand that we can be angry without dipping into sin!

When we lash out at others, we often do enormous damage. On the other hand, when we suppress our angry feelings, we risk becoming bitter and depressed. Someone has wisely said: “Anger is the powerful acid that can do damage to the vessel in which it is stored as well as the object on which it is poured.”

So how should we handle anger? What should we do with feelings of rage?

TODAY: Face your weaknesses

Examine where your anger has been justified and where it has not. Write down the four times you have become most angry in the last two or three months. Why did you become angry? Were your motives wrong? Did you channel your anger in a constructive direction? Don’t offer excuses for your faults, such as “that’s my nature” or “I can’t help it; that’s just the way I am.”

Daily Prayer

Determine one annoying situation you know you will face in the next 24 hours. Talk to God specifically about it in our conversational prayer time tonight. Prepare now to consciously apply what we have discussed tonight to your situation.

[siteorigin_widget class=”social_interaction_buttons”][/siteorigin_widget]