Bitterness is that hateful, spiteful sourness in the heart that creeps in when you have been or think you have been, maliciously wronged. I looked up the word in a dictionary, and it was defined as a sharpness affecting the taste, the feelings or the mind. It comes from an old English word that meant "sharpness to the taste".
How does bitterness show itself ?- in at least three ways.
You are angry, and you say,"Lord, if you love me so much, why did this happen? If you
answer prayer, why didn't you answer mine? Either you are not powerful enough, or you
didn't care enough. Either way, I'm angry with you!"
A second kind of bitterness is against other people. It can be there in a child who decides
to rebel against his parents, to run away from home because he believes they are unfair
to him. It can be there in a wife who says,"I'll have a nervous breakdown if my husband
keeps treating me like this, and I'll get even with him."
It might be a person who says,"OK, if I forgive them for what they did to me, that wouldn't be fair.
They don't deserve to be forgiven. I'm going to carry this a little longer and maybe somehow along
the way they'll see what it has done to me, and something will happen to them."
You and I cannot afford the luxury of holding on to bitterness and resentment against others, because
it only becomes the root of other problems.
Your bitterness can also be directed against yourself, and show itself in an inability to forgive yourself,
even though God has forgiven you. You carry that load until you say,"I deserve it, but I'm strong enough
to take it, and I'll just carry this thing and deal with it myself." Self-centered pride latches onto your heart
and you refuse the forgiveness of God and others.
This can also cause you to live in self-pity. You say,"OK, I deserve this. God's trying to punish me. I shouldn't
have done this or that, and now I deserve what I am getting, and I'm just going to have to be a martyr and carry it."
So you trudge along in life nursing bitter resentment and a grudge against God or someone else. You carry it
until you make life miserable for yourself and everyone around you. Why ? Because you never dealt with your
bitterness. The Bible says to watch out for such bitterness(He 12:15)
Not only am I to "look diligently" for bitterness, but because it may be unseen, I may not be aware of it; and being
unaware of it, I may be especially liable to it's danger.
Look what the Scripture says: "See to it that no one misses the grace of God, that no bitter root grows up..." Now,
where is a root? Usually under the ground. You don't see it, but it's there. I have some weeds in my yard, growing
through everything--even bricks! There are roots down there somewhere. They cause weeds to grow, whether there's
shade or sunshine---I can't get rid of them. I don't see the roots, but the evidence is everywhere.
Bitterness can be an unseen enemy, growing like a tumor in your mind and in your spirirt. The Bible says we should
look out for it. Just because we don't see it, doesn't mean it's not there.
Bitterness is the unharvested fruit of anger, and in time it will show itself. As Numbers 32:23 says,"Be sure that your sin
will find you out."
The Bible warns that the root of bitterness will spring up, and when it does, what does it do? Cause good things to happen?
No! Cause joy? No! Cause love? No! Cause peace? No! "See to it...that no bitter root grows up to cause trouble!"
Bitterness, improperly handled, causes trouble--and it does so in at least two ways.
Bitterness can also show itself in our mental condition. Bitterness is really displaced anger. We can be angry at other things, other
people and other objects, not knowing it comes from bitterness. All our energy and mind are set in an anger mode, and we are affected mentally.
Ther is no joy, no creativity, no positive power flowing through our lives, because there is resentment there.
The good news is, anyone can overcome a bitter spirit. God encourages us to deal with it. He says in Ephesians 4:31,"Get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger..."
Begin by dealing with any bitterness toward God. The following steps may help:
First: trust God's wisdom. This doesn't mean you should believe that everything that happens on Earth is good. Sin is in the world, yet I must believe that God allows
things to happen that He may not like, but in His wisdom, somewhere down the line, God will turn it around for good for His children, as promised in Romans 8:28.
Second: I have to ask God what He is trying to teach me through this. The Bible says we're the disciples of Jesus. What is a disciple?--a learner. The Bible says that
the Lord is the teacher, and we are the disciples. We are learners. The experiences of life are teaching experiences. Sometimes we are so anxious to get to our destination that we forget how
much joy can be ours along the way. When bitterness comes and you are tempted to be angry with God, ask Him what He is trying to teach you.
Third: Apply only one of God's promises to your situation.
Fourth: Reject self pity. Have you ever been the victim of the "poor me syndrome"? Perhaps you know someone else who always seems to be saying,"poor me, just
look what's happened to me". No one likes being around such a sad sack for very long, because it is no fun. So don't get into that syndrome.
Fifth: Put time into proper perspective. Every difficult experience you may be dealing with now, circumstances that tend to make you angry and bitter, will in time pass away.
Sixth: Be quick to give thanks. It's amazing what praising can do. You can't be bitter against God and praise Him at the same time.You can't be blessing Him while you're also
shaking your fist at Him. So the Bible says,"In all things give thanks..."(1Thes 5:18) Learn to give thanks unto the Lord and praise His name, and it's really amazing what praising can do.
Many times we get angry with ourselves. It shows up in many forms--we feel rejected, we wallow in self pity, our self image is poor.
How do you deal with bitterness against others? One thing you must do is to keep your anger temporary. In Ephesians 4:26 God tells us we should not let the sun go down on our anger. If you're mad at somebody
today, you should get it settled before the sun goes down. If it goes down and you don't deal with it, it will simmer all night, and tomorrow there's a good chance you'll be twice as angry and bitter about it as you are
today. Washington Irving said that a tart temper is the only thing that doesn't mellow with age. So deal with your anger before the sun goes down. Keep a short account.
There's something else : Forgive and forget. How can you forget something negative that's stuck in your mind? The Bible says God remembers our sins no more; so how can God forget something
when He is omniscient?How can He know everything and still forget? Here's the thing; When you forgive and forget, the forgetting means that you, like God, don't hold that wrongdoing to the offender's account. God forgets
the charge against us; He remembers it no more. Oh, He knows about it, just as you do, but He will never bring it up again. That's what we are to do. Don't fish the pond of history, leave it there.
Do you have some trees of bitterness standing in your life? Bitterness towards God? Towards others? Towards yourself? Cut them down and forget them !
|