Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Power of Addiction by John Eldredge

The Power of Addiction
08/11/2009
This is the power of addiction. Whatever the object of our addiction is, it attaches itself to our intense desire for eternal and intimate communion with God and each other in the midst of Paradise—the desire that Jesus himself placed in us before the beginning of the world. Nothing less than this kind of unfallen communion will ever satisfy our desire or allow it to drink freely without imprisoning it and us. Once we allow our heart to drink water from these less-than-eternal wells with the goal of finding the life we were made for, it overpowers our will, and becomes, as Jonathan Edwards said, “like a viper, hissing and spitting at God” and us if we try to restrain it.

“Nothing is less in power than the heart and far from commanding, we are forced to obey it,” said Jean Rousseau. Our heart will carry us either to God or to addiction.

“Addiction is the most powerful psychic enemy of humanity’s desire for God,” says Gerald May in Addiction and Grace, which is no doubt why it is one of our adversary’s favorite ways to imprison us. Once taken captive, trying to free ourselves through willpower is futile. Only God’s Spirit himself can free us or even bring us to our senses.

(The Sacred Romance , 133–34)

Monday, August 3, 2009

Sin the Problem and Love we have with it

For many of us we would shutter at the idea that we love our sin. We would think that cant be yet as I have been thinking about this idea in light of counseling for over 20 years now. I have come to believe that if your remove the addictions, disorders, and many of the psychological words we use to describe the human condition you find that sin answers what they are all trying to describe. I dont mean that is to be easy to agree with our sin nature raise its fist and want to say no way. However the fact remains that sin entered the world with Adam and Eve when they said no to God and we have been doing that ever since. I want to spend the next month exploring the cause, consequence, curse, and cure for sin. Sin is our problem. And there is only one way to really overcome the problem, I believe it is intimacy with Christ and a true dependency on the Trinity.