What You Refuse, You Lose; What You Reject Will Defect; What You Train, You Gain
Then I was thinking along the lines of "Isn't it wonderful?!" If we can reverse our thoughts and believe we receive a good job, high pay, an encouraging boss, great living situation, wonderful friends, etc., etc., AND REJOICE IN THAT END, that collection of wonders will become.
If we accept it. I was all hyped up about thinking this way when someone came to the door. I have been anxious about some overgrown trees and was looking up tree service contractors, and here one had noticed the trees while driving by and stopped to ask if I could use his service. I HANDLED IT POORLY. I showed him the trees and asked for a bid, as I wanted to get three or four estimates and find a qualified, inexpensive contractor. Here's the thing: the kid (relative to me) was desperate. He came back the next day to check, as he had no other work to do. I still wasn't ready to hire anyone, but instead of dismissing him, I should have prayed with him for divine guidance to a lucrative job somewhere else. A successful day would have inclined him to help me. NOT praying with him was an opportunity lost. That's the "refuse, you lose."
So I saw that opportunities I refuse, I lose; those things I reject will leave, but without improvement; and that if I want improvement to my or others' situation, I have to train my mind to think I/we have it.
4 Comments:
It's real. Had this happen with my car exactly. I started thinking and talking of the (old) car badly after driving some nice, newer rentals. Sure enough, a short few weeks later, said car got totalled (while parked in front of my house) in wholly improbable circumstances. It left me. And I didn't get a better car for it. I'm walking now...
By Marek, at 6:41 AM
Hello, Marek,
Sorry about your car. If our words are the wisdom and power of God, driving our junker we should be saying, "This is a fine new car given to me by the Lord." That actually is an effort, isn't it, to see or hear bad in experience and see or hear good in the imagination? The grandfather stood on his empty lot and told everyone of the marvelous building that was there. A woman in the "telephone technique" received bad news, but refused it and "heard" good news. Early on in my discovery of Neville's point of view, I read a comment by a woman who said she had manifested her own divorce. That's the trouble with negative thoughts and comments, they do manifest in a way we do not want. So we have to dwell in hell (i.e, this physical experience), as it were, and denying it (i.e., ignoring it--we aren't insane as to think it isn't really there) confess in our mind that we have received and experience what we desire from God. Which leads into my next post.
By Daniel C. Branham-Steele, at 10:07 PM
It's Dr Joseph MURPHY.
By Neuromantic*, at 9:04 PM
Too true! What an embarrassing mistake. Murray was my teacher in Taiwan.
By Daniel C. Branham-Steele, at 11:57 AM
Post a Comment
<< Home