Christian Peer Counselors Club - La Union

Christian Peer Counselors Club - La Union A platform where people who need help like, counseling for any persistent problems or challenges in life be given HOPE, help, and support they deserve.

They will later become Peer Counselors themselves. Peer Counseling by trained members among their peers in Christian perspective. Leading them to Christ who is the ultimate Friend to be with.

My Story: How My Life Changed-----------------------------------We All Have a StoryThe stories God writes for us take us...
24/09/2022

My Story: How My Life Changed
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We All Have a Story
The stories God writes for us take us down various paths. No matter where you are on the journey, there is a plan and a purpose to what you experience.
If you are struggling, take comfort in knowing you are not alone. We hope you will be encouraged to read about the experiences of others who have seen the transforming work of Jesus in their lives. You may do so by simply putting on the comment section such experiences or stories that led you to circumstances which God had used that transformed your life. Those also led you to ask some questions which led to further discoveries in your life and sharing those with others who might be currently experiencing such which you've already undergone would surely be a great help and would create a great impact upon them.

REAL LIFEThe true meaning of life. These three perspectives show where you can find real life, real meaning…Have you eve...
18/08/2022

REAL LIFE
The true meaning of life. These three perspectives show where you can find real life, real meaning…

Have you ever felt there must be something more? Something beyond merely existing? The following are some straightforward accounts that offer opinions about life and God's role in it.

The Meaning of Life: Being Fulfilled [by John G.]
Maybe you've heard about the guy whose life goal was to climb a certain mountain. When he finally reached the top, he was terribly disappointed. There was nowhere else for him to go, and something was still missing in his life. It's like the pro football player who gets depressed after winning the Super Bowl.

My university experience was a lot like that. By my senior year, I had achieved everything that people were telling me would bring me fulfillment. I was in a fraternity and other campus organizations, had lots of fun partying, made decent grades, and spent time with attractive girls.

Everything that I wanted to do and achieve while in college happened. And yet, I was still unfulfilled. Something was missing.

Of course, no one knew I was feeling this way about life. On the outside I didn't show it. Maybe some people even wished their lives were more like mine. But they didn't know how unfulfilled I was on the inside.

The summer after my last year in school, I heard someone reading a passage from the Bible. I had heard parts of the Bible recited before, and had read a little bit of it, but for some reason this time it sounded completely different. I was astounded. "Hey, that stuff's right-on-the-money." Like never before, I realized how true and relevant the Bible is.

It was as if God was trying to get my attention... but I still didn't want to let him in. I kept thinking about how my life would change and how my friends would think I was weird. I was frightened. But the more I thought about it, the more I realized (no doubt, with God's help) that choosing Him over anything and anyone else makes sense and is the right choice.

What happened next is difficult to describe. I can only put it this way: I discovered that God Himself is the source of true fulfillment. My experience is not unique. It's what He impartially offers anyone who seeks Him in the way He wants. He said (and still says), "I am the bread of life. He who comes to me will never go hungry, and he who believes in me will never be thirsty."1

Of course, life still has its ups and downs, disappointments, and struggles. But what gives life true meaning is God Himself – knowing that He is alive and real, that He is the Reason for my existence, and that truly finding Him is what it's all about.

The Meaning of Life: Being Accepted [by Robert C.]
Real Life Growing up, I remember watching The Wizard of Oz on TV. Maybe you remember the story. Dorothy and her friends go to the Wizard of Oz for help, and instead are greeted by an angry, frightful voice that demands a near-impossible task for proving themselves: obtaining the wicked witch's broom.

So much for the wonderful Wizard of Oz.

When I was growing up, God, to me, was a lot like the Wizard of Oz. I thought he was mean and short-tempered and that he actually knew very little about me. The few images I saw of him in church as a child made him seem distant, other-worldly, unreachable. His death on the cross -- a constant image -- I understood as a great sacrifice, but one he seemed to do reluctantly. What really counted with him, I thought, was how well I behaved, and how well I lived up to his standards. If I was ever going to be accepted by him, I needed first to prove myself worthy. As you can imagine, God was not a great figure in my life. Wonderful was not a word I used to describe him.

Then, in my freshman year of college, all this changed. The curtain was pulled back. For the first time in my life, someone showed me in the Bible -- a book I'd always thought was full of a lot of smoke -- who God really was. He was not angry or mean -- just the opposite. He was loving and compassionate. He knew I was incapable of living a perfect life and of ever keeping his standards. So, out of his great love, he became that perfect human being and met those standards for me.

Jesus Christ, I learned, was not my example, he was my substitute. I wasn't supposed to imitate his suffering, but to take advantage of it. In his death on the cross -- which I discovered he did willingly -- my sin and my failures were judged. On the cross God demonstrated his great love for me. It was there he showed me how well he did know me. It was there he accepted me. As the Bible says, "God made him [Jesus] who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God."2

Real acceptance, I discovered, lies in the someone new behind the curtain. I challenge you to pull it back and discover him for yourself, and to consider his offer of acceptance and forgiveness.

The Meaning of Life: Finding Purpose [by Marilyn A.]
Real LifeI have always thought that life should be meaningful. Not necessarily every moment of every day. I mean, how meaningful is it doing laundry? Nor should life always be serious. We all need extremely large doses of just having a good time!

But life has to be more than pleasure-seeking, partly because the enjoyment doesn't last. It's here for a moment, then gone. Author Ravi Zacharias said it well: "If there is no larger meaning to life...then life is without a driving force, without overall substance or explanation."

For several years I studied the philosophies of Dostoyevsky, Sartre, Nietzsche, Socrates and many others -- looking for an overriding, motivating purpose to my life. Every few weeks I would "try out" a new philosophy to see if it could work. But I found these philosophies disappointing when applied to actual life situations. My search continued.

An international news correspondent for TIME Magazine, Dr. David Aikman, shed some light on this subject. He has a couple of post-graduate degrees, is an expert in Russian and Chinese history and communist affairs, has worked in more than 30 countries, is fluent in six languages, and is a serious thinker about life issues. He said, "Each of us has a purpose, a reason for being here, that no one else can tell you, but you can find out from God." Dr. Aikman recommended beginning a relationship with Jesus Christ.

Dr. Aikman gave this account, "When I heard the words of Jesus [in the Bible], it seemed to me he was speaking to my heart, and he was saying, 'I am the way to life. If you follow me and do what I say, your life will change.'" He then talked about taking the first step to starting a relationship with Jesus Christ, by asking him to enter his life. Dr. Aikman concluded, "I can promise you...anybody that takes that first step toward Jesus Christ will have a very exciting life."

Like Dr. Aikman, I came from an atheistic background. And like him, I found that Jesus' statements about himself were quite unique. Jesus didn't point people to his philosophy on life, he pointed people to himself. Jesus said he could forgive our sins, give us inner peace in the midst of tough circumstances, and guide us to a life of freedom.

I determined that if there really was a God, I wanted to know him. But I was still skeptical. I debated and challenged the Christians I knew. I wanted proof that Jesus was God. One day I took an honest look at the evidence for God's existence and Jesus' deity, and I was shocked to find so many logical, historical facts. I then knew I had a decision to make. Was I going to ask him to enter my life and influence it in whatever way he wanted, or was I going to close the chapter on this part of my life and refuse to consider the possibility of "God" ever again?

After reviewing the concrete, intellectual reasons to believe in Jesus, I asked Jesus if he would come into my life. And that very day my search for the meaning of life was completely resolved.

It amazed me that I could have a relationship with God. I talked to him and, through changes in circumstances, he indicated that he heard me. He led me to career paths that are far more expansive and exciting than I ever dreamed. And I asked him questions and he guided me to appropriate, helpful answers in the Bible.

These things didn't occur just on one obscure, stormy day. It was a genuine two-way relationship with God that I was enjoying on a consistent basis, and still do. It wasn't because I became a saint, but because Jesus Christ will enter anyone's life who truly wants to know him and follow him.

There is a deep joy that comes in following God. Unlike anything or anyone else, knowing Jesus Christ has brought real purpose to my life.

How to Find the Meaning of Life
Real Life A real life of meaning is a life filled with fulfillment, acceptance and purpose. We find it in a relationship with Jesus Christ. No one in human history has made the claims Jesus made and given such great proofs to back them up. He claimed to be God, to be able to forgive sins, and to be the only way through which we can know God the Father. Jesus backed up those claims through his resurrection from the dead. He is, truly, the most unique person who ever lived...much more than a great teacher.

The Bible says that Jesus was God who became man -- "The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us."3 He was "the exact representation of his [God's] being."4 In short, Jesus Christ revealed exactly what God is like. So how do we begin a relationship with him?

We don't begin a relationship with God by trying to be a better person. Trying harder to win God's approval is not the way he wants us to live. Have you ever been in a relationship with someone in which you had to try to win that person's approval? It's no fun.

God has such a genuine love for us that he himself provided the way for us to get close to him...but there is a problem. Currently, what stands in the way of us connecting with God is our sin (our self-centeredness shown by our anger, our hurtful words, our impatience, our selfishness, greed, etc.). If you've ever wondered why your prayers seem to go nowhere, that is why. Our sin has separated us from God, who is holy.

So what has God done so we can have a close relationship with him? Jesus Christ ("God in the flesh") took all of our sin on his shoulders while he willingly died on a cross. He did this so we could be completely forgiven, completely acceptable to him.

Our problem is illustrated by the college student who is charged with a crime. The judge sentences her to 30 days in jail or a $1,000 fine. The student can afford neither the time nor the money. The judge, knowing this, takes off his robes, walks to the front of the bench, and with his own checkbook pays the fine. Why? Because, as a just judge, he cannot overlook the offense. But, because he is the student's father, he chooses to pay the penalty on her behalf.

This is exactly what Jesus did for each of us on the cross. He made the great sacrifice of being beaten, humiliated, whipped and crucified on our behalf. He now asks us to respond to his sacrifice by inviting him into our lives.

Knowing God
He wants us to know him and to experience his love, joy and peace. When we ask him into our lives, we receive his forgiveness, and we begin a relationship with him that's meant to last forever. Jesus said, "I stand at the door (of your heart) and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come into him (or her)."5

If this is now the desire of your heart, the following is a suggested prayer (but the words aren't as important as the attitude of your heart):

Dear God, I confess that I have sinned against you. Thank you for taking all of my sin upon yourself on the cross. I want to receive your forgiveness. I want to enter into a relationship with you. I ask you to come into my life as my Savior and Lord. Please give me the real life that comes only from you.

For more on the meaning of life, please see The Source of a Changed Life or other articles on this site.

► I just asked Jesus into my life (some helpful information follows)...
► I may want to ask Jesus into my life, please explain this more fully...
► I have a question or comment...
Footnotes: (1) John 6:35 (2) 2 Corinthians 5:21 (3) John 1:14 (4) Hebrews 1:3 (5) Revelation 3:20

From the Bible...

"He who has the Son has life; he who does not have the Son of God does not have life." (1 John 5:12)

"To all who received him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God." (John 1:12)

"For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life." (John 3:16)

"For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith...not by works, so that no one can boast." (Ephesians 2:8-9)

"If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come." (2 Corinthians 5:17)

"Now this is eternal life: that they may know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom you have sent." (John 17:3)

Why Is Life So Hard?"Why?" When life is hard, is there a way to have peace?How do we explain what we see in this world? ...
15/08/2022

Why Is Life So Hard?
"Why?" When life is hard, is there a way to have peace?

How do we explain what we see in this world? Terrorist attacks, s*x slavery, racism, world hunger?

Subconsciously, we probably ask ourselves questions like these quite often. But consciously we rarely do. We're so busy living our lives we rarely stop and wonder WHY?

But then something happens to wake us up. Our parents get divorced. The girl down the street gets abducted. A relative gets cancer. That wakes us up for a while. But then we can often sink back into the denial. That is, until another tragedy hits, another incongruence. Then we're likely to think, Something isn't right here. Something is really, really wrong. This isn't how life's supposed to be!

So, WHY do bad things happen?
Why isn't this world a better place?

There is an answer to the WHY question, found in the Bible. But it's not an answer that most people like to hear: the world is the way it is because it's the world that we, in a sense, have asked for.

Sound strange?

What or who could make this world different than the way it is? What or who could guarantee that life is pain-free, for everyone, all the time?

God could. God could accomplish that. But he doesn't. At least not right now. And we're angry with him as a result. We say, "God can't be all-powerful and all-loving. If he were, this world wouldn't be the way it is!"

We say this hoping that God will then change his position on the matter. Our hope is that putting a guilt trip on him will make him change the way he's doing things.

But he doesn't seem to budge. WHY doesn't he?

Photo of a woman amid a protest march. She wears a mask due to COVID-19. In this world, there is political unrest and pestilence.God doesn't budge -- he doesn't change things right now -- because he's giving us what we asked for: a world where we get to treat him as though he is absent and unnecessary.

Remember the story of Adam and Eve? They ate the "forbidden fruit." That fruit was the idea that they could ignore what God said or gave them, and strike out on life apart from God. For Adam and Eve sort of hoped that they could become like God, without God.

They consumed the notion that there was something more valuable in existence than God himself, something more valuable than having a personal relationship with God. And this world system -- with all of its faults -- came as a result of the choice they made.

Their story is the story of all of us, isn't it? Who hasn't said -- if not audibly at least in their hearts -- God, I think I can do this without you. I'll just go this one alone. But thanks for the offer.

We've all tried to make life work without God.
Why do we do that? Probably because we've all bought the notion that there's something more valuable, more important, than God. For different people it's different things, but the mindset is the same: God isn't what's most important in life. In fact, I'd just as soon do it without him altogether.

What is God's response to that?

He allows it. Many people experience the painful results of others' or their own choices that run contrary to God's ways...murder, s*xual abuse, greed, lying/fraud, slander, adultery, kidnapping, etc.

All of these can be explained by people who have refused to give God access and influence over their lives. They are going about their lives as they see fit, and they and others suffer.

What's God view on all of this?
He's not smug. In fact, God could rightly be viewed as leaning forward, compassionate, hoping we will turn to him so that he can bring real life to us.

Jesus said, "Come to me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest."1 But not all are willing to go to him. Jesus commented on this when he said: "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who kill the prophets and stone those sent to you, how often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing."2

Again, Jesus brings the issue back to our relationship with him. "I am the light of the world. He who follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life."3

But what about when life is unfair, when bad things happen to us?
What about those horrible circumstances that hit us in life, caused by someone other than ourselves? When we are feeling victimized, it's useful to realize that God himself endured horrendous treatment from others. God more than understands what you are going through.

Photo of a crown of thorns, with blood dripping off, to show just one of the physical tortures that Jesus of Nazareth underwent.There is nothing in life that could be more painful than what Jesus endured on our behalf, when he was deserted by his friends, ridiculed by those who would not believe in him, beaten and tortured before his crucifixion, then nailed to a cross, in shameful public display, dying of slow suffocation.

He created us, yet allowed humanity the freedom to do this, to fulfill Scripture and to set us free from our sin. This was no surprise to Jesus. He was aware of what was coming, foreknowing all the details, all the pain, all the humiliation.

"And as Jesus was going up to Jerusalem, he took the twelve disciples aside, and on the way he said to them, 'Behold, we are going up to Jerusalem, and the Son of man will be delivered to the chief priests and scribes, and they will condemn him to death, and deliver him to the Gentiles to be mocked and scourged and crucified, and he will be raised on the third day."4

Imagine knowing something that awful was going to happen to you. Jesus understands emotional and psychological anguish. The night that Jesus knew they would arrest him, he went to pray, but took some friends with him.

"And taking with him Peter and the two sons of Zebedee, he began to be sorrowful and troubled. Then he said to them, 'My soul is very sorrowful, even to death; remain here and watch [keep awake] with me. And going a little farther he fell on his face and prayed, 'My Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me; nevertheless, not as I will but as thou wills."5

Though Jesus confided in his three friends, they didn't understand the depth of his torment, and when Jesus returned from prayer he found them asleep. Jesus understands what it's like going through pain and extreme sadness alone.

Here it is summarized, as John describes in his gospel: "He was in the world, and the world was made through him, yet the world knew him not. He came to his own home, and his own people received him not. But to all who received him, who believed in his name, he gave power to become children of God."6 "For God sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through him. For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life."7

There is no question that there is pain and intense suffering in this world.
Some of it is explained by selfish, hateful actions on the part of others. Some of it defies an explanation in this life. But God offers us himself. God gives us the knowledge that he has endured also, and is aware of our pain and needs. Jesus said to his disciples, "Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid."8

There is ample reason to be afraid, troubled, but God can give us his peace, which is greater than the problem before us. He is after all, God, the Creator. The one who has always existed. The one who created a universe on the backstroke.

Yet even in his power, he's also the one who knows us intimately, even the smallest, insignificant details. And if we will trust him with our lives, relying on him, though we encounter difficulties, he will hold us securely.

Photo of a young man reading the Bible by a lake. The Bible is where God shows that He has a plan and is in control of all things, but also that He has allowed people to have free will, which has resulted in all sorts of problems.Jesus said, "These things I have spoken to you, so that in me you may have peace. In the world you have tribulation, but take courage; I have overcome the world."9 He went through our ultimate threat -- death -- and overcame it. He can take us through the difficult circumstances of this life, and then bring us into eternal life, if we will trust him.

We can either go through this life with God or without him.
Jesus prayed, "O righteous Father, although the world has not known you, yet I have known you; and these have known that you sent me; and I have made your name known to them, and will make it known, so that the love with which you loved me may be in them, and I in them."10

You might find yourself asking, "Why is life so hard?" Without God, humanity is easily drawn into hatred, racism, s*xual abuse, murdering each other.

Jesus said, “I came that you might have life, and have it more abundantly.”11 To find out how to begin a relationship with God, please see How to Know God Personally.

Coronavirus (COVID-19) - How to Deal with the AnxietyHere’s a reliable way to deal with the anxiety, stress of the Coron...
15/08/2022

Coronavirus (COVID-19) - How to Deal with the Anxiety
Here’s a reliable way to deal with the anxiety, stress of the Coronavirus or any worry, and live with greater peace…

For many, the Coronavirus (COVID-19) has escalated to an alarming concern. The outbreak continues to add new countries, new deaths to its list.

However, you might feel anxiety over some other threat. Daily we are confronted with all sorts of reasons to feel stressed.

The list is so long...terrorism, climate change, racism, wars, government dysfunction, poverty, s*xual assault, human slavery, natural disasters, personal finances, illness, job security, stressful relationships, addictions, etc.

It’s painful to itemize these.

We are no longer merely aware of what’s affecting us personally. The Internet has made us global citizens. We’re aware of serious problems in every corner of the world...every day...every minute.

News outlets feed our fear, our human tendency to pay attention to what is alarming.

However, most of what causes anxiety is very personal. It’s what’s going on in our lives.

It’s that sinking feeling that we can’t control the circumstances. We feel at risk. Powerless. It is the fear of something being done to us, and we can’t escape it nor do anything to change it.

Is there a way to experience peace in the midst of this? Yes.

Peace in the Midst of the Coronavirus
This article will give you real, reliable ways to gain peace in the face of the Coronavirus outbreak or other anxious-causing circumstances.

First, let’s add a word about medications. If you usually struggle with anxiety, if your anxiety causes you to spiral into depression and thoughts of self-harm, please see a doctor for medical help. There might be a chemical imbalance that requires medication. Sometimes there are patterns, pathways in our brains that might need medical help in order to form new pathways of thought.

Just like diabetics need insulin, there are medications that allow you to view concerns more objectively, more calmly. Medications have shown to significantly improve the lives of many who suffer with anxiety.

However, being able to view situations calmly and rationally is only part of a solution. It helps, but it stops short of providing real peace. It’s like a person who has a broken leg and stops walking on it. It helps. But they still have a broken leg.

Being able to hear the coronavirus is subsiding in your country helps, but there are so many other potential causes of anxiety. Life is challenging.

What you need is an inner peace that is enduring, that allows your mind and heart to rest, in spite of difficult situations.

A Reliable Approach in Anxious Situations
For years as an atheist, I searched for a philosophy that would always be reliable. I wanted one that would guide me through all of life, and “work” in any situation. I studied Sartre, Plato, Socrates, Dostoyevsky, Nietzsche, Hume, and on and on.

What I came to find out is that a philosophy was insufficient. It still left all the problems squarely on my shoulders.

Some people suggest, “Just view the circumstances differently. Tell yourself it’s not that bad.” It’s hard to view the Coronavirus (COVID-19) differently when thousands of people are being diagnosed with it and the number of deaths is climbing.

In my search for a genuine peace in spite of any circumstance, religion also seemed quite empty. I wasn’t looking for rituals, meditation, doctrines.

I knew the potential in life for real difficulties. I wanted to know an approach that would be reliable no matter what life threw at me.

Many people are hoping that science will find both a cure and prevention of the Coronavirus. However, as viruses go, it is also likely that it will be with us, even in mutated forms, for years. Science is not all-knowing or all-powerful.

As I was searching for a source of lasting peace, I became friends with someone whose life I admired. She often talked about God. It caused me to wonder if God actually existed.

The possibility of God’s existence started me on a long process of questioning, researching, and holding resolutely to a lot of strong defenses. The last thing I wanted was to be fooled into believing in something that wasn’t real.

Science Points to a Solution
After about a year and a half of serious searching, the evidence for God became too weighty to avoid. It was science that brought me to acknowledge God’s existence...the earth’s perfect position to the sun, the complex properties of water, the design of the human body, etc.

I asked God to come into my life in order to have a relationship with him.

I came to find out that indeed, “God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.”1

Peace While Facing Fear
Knowing God exists and that he actually cares about us has a profound impact on our ability to be at peace no matter what the circumstances. Let me explain.

Picture an 8-year-old little boy being harassed by a bully. His lunch is taken each day. He’s physically pushed around, humiliated for fun. He tries talking to the bully, to no avail. He tries avoiding the bully, which also fails. He tells his teacher; it too does little good.

Then one day an older student (much bigger than the bully) compassionately steps in, and informs the bully that his days of terrorizing this student are over. The bullied student is now at peace. The bully still exists, but the 8-year-old can relax, because someone greater than him is taking care of him.

We are offered the same help in life. God is greater than any problem that confronts us, including this epidemic virus. He created us and is willing and wants to take care of us.

Peace in the Midst of This Virus
In the midst of life’s pressures, Jesus tenderly says, “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”2

This is the God who created the universe, created galaxies of stars and planets, billions of life and plant species, an intricate ecosystem and human life. “Nothing is too hard for him.”3 He invites us to come to him for help.

Jesus constantly described God as our “Father” in heaven who loves us.

One of our greatest fears with the Coronavirus (COVID-19) is going through it alone, or not having the emotional or physical strength to deal with it, on behalf of ourselves or our loved ones. That’s true for anything that scares us. “Will I be able?”

Strength While Facing Challenges
God, who created you, knows everything about you. Your background. Events that have happened to you. Accomplishments. Dreams you have for your life (or lack thereof). Your pain. Your future. Relationships. Absolutely everything. Jesus said he’s aware of the smallest, insignificant details of your life, “Even the hairs of your head are all numbered.”4

“O Lord, you have examined my heart and known everything about me. You know when I sit down or stand up. You know my thoughts even when I’m far away...You know everything I do. You know what I am going to say even before I say it…”5

He knows everything about you. The most secure relationship we can have in this world is a relationship with God, who loves us.

Guidance in the Darkness
God never intended that we would go through this life on our own. God wants to lead us into a different life with his guidance. We don’t need to keep stumbling in the dark, in uncertainty.

Jesus said, “I am the light of the world. He who follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.”6

We’re invited, “Cast all your anxieties on him, for he cares for you.”7

This is what it’s like to be in a relationship with God, which he offers anyone. The Bible describes God as the wonderful counselor, everlasting father, prince of peace, mighty God. And he is all that.

Freedom from Doom
At the same time, let me underscore, being in a relationship with God does not mean we avoid life’s problems.

There was a time in my life when I encountered an event that I couldn’t do anything about. At four months of pregnancy, I was told there were problems. I knew God well enough that I could trust God with this, no matter what the outcome. Our child was born stillborn.

Because I was able to trust God with this, though there was great sadness, I never struggled with bitterness, anger or anxiety.

However, there was an emotion that caught me by surprise. After the death of our child, I began to struggle with fear over the possibility of my husband also dying. I asked God to speak to this fear, to show me how to view it properly.

My answer came soon when God led me to this statement in Psalms:

“Because you have made the LORD your dwelling place—the Most High, who is my refuge—no evil shall be allowed to befall you…”9

I knew that God does not promise that no one will ever die. That just isn’t something God promises. However, with God as my refuge, the one I trust, even if my husband died, God would not allow that to be “evil” in my life. God would not let it overcome me, destroy me, harm me. I would be ok.

“No evil shall be allowed to befall you.” God sets limits. If we will trust him, we can go through situations differently...with peace.

No Problem is Too Big, Including Coronavirus
Jesus said, “In the world, you will have tribulation, but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.”10

The earth we’re on right now is spinning at about 1,000 miles per hour (1,600 km per hour). Yet we feel perfectly calm, enjoying the beauty of the sunrise and sunset this twirling creates.

The earth is also rotating around the sun, traveling 67,000 mph. Even at this speed, it maintains the perfect distance from the sun, not too far away, not too close.

In the same way that God is aware of the billions of galaxies, God is aware of every large and small detail of your life. And he loves you.

Someone Who Cares
He loves you, not because you or I deserve it, but because it is his nature to love and to take care of those who will trust him.

God says, “Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.”12

“Have you never heard? Have you never understood? The Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of all the earth.
He never grows weak or weary. No one can measure the depths of his understanding. He gives power to the weak and strength to the powerless.

Even youths will become weak and tired, and young men will fall in exhaustion. But those who trust in the Lord will find new strength. They will soar high on wings like eagles. They will run and not grow weary. They will walk and not faint.”13

Jesus said, “My peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid.”14 He is greater than any problem we can encounter.

Freedom from anxiety about the Coronavirus, (COVID-19) or any serious issue, is knowing that God is capable, he cares and will act on your behalf.

If you would like to begin a relationship with God and know his love for you, this explains how: How to Know God Personally.

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Dolores Street
Bacnotan
2515

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+639369146320

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