“To worry yourself to death with resentment
would be a foolish, senseless thing to do.” Job
5:2 (GNT)
If you hang on to resentment, it will always hurt you
more than anyone else.
Resentment is self-destructive and will devastate your
ministry.
If any guy ever had a reason to be resentful, it was
Job.
He was a godly man, who had everything he wanted—wealth,
fame, and a great family. One day he lost it all.
Enemy nations killed all his livestock.
All of his children were killed.
He got a terrible disease.
He literally lost almost everything he had.
Then his friends came along and said, “Job, it’s all your
fault.”
Though Job had every reason to be resentful, he tells us
that resentment is a bad idea. Job says, “To worry yourself to death
with resentment would be a foolish, senseless thing to do” (Job 5:2
GNT).
You might have every reason to be resentful, too.
Maybe you’ve been hurt by someone in your church. Maybe
ministry demands have damaged your family.
Job shows us we have a choice.
He knew he didn’t have time to be resentful.
He knew it was foolish, senseless, and illogical.
If you think back through experiences in your own life,
you’ll probably agree. We can do silly things when we’re caught up in
resentment.
We’ll say, “I’m going to get him!” Then we often do the
ridiculous to make that happen.
When we give in to resentment, we act in self-destructive
ways and hurt ourselves much more than those we’re holding grudges against.
It’s like a scene from the old comedy act, “The Three
Stooges.” Mo kept hitting Curly on the chest.
Curly said, “I’m going to get even with that guy. I’m
going to stop him!” So he took a stick of dynamite and strapped it to his own
chest.
Then he said, “Next time he slaps me, it’s going to blow
his hand off!!”
That’s what happens when we’re resentful—we do really
dumb things to try to get even with people.
It makes us miserable in the process and never ends with
us getting what we want.
So why do it?
Don’t hold on to your resentment.
Let it go. Forgive.
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