'SMITH HAPPENS'
Brandon, Candace, Brayley and Addyson

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

What’s Your Family Inheritance?










Copied from: Proverbs 31 Ministries


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Though you have made me see troubles, many and bitter, you will restore my life again; from the depths of the earth you will again bring me up.
Psalm 71:20 (NIV)
     Every family has both baggage and facets of beauty. What blessings and curses does your lineage carry with it? What family troubles have you seen, what miracles of restoration?
My own family is dichotomous this way—I am the product of a messy divorce, yet the beneficiary of my grandmother’s fervent prayers. I have in my lineage an excommunicated opera singer and a steadfast Sunday school teacher. I have teetotalers and those struggling with addiction. I have family members who don’t speak to one another and others who work tirelessly to bridge the riffs.
     For many of us, we spend the first part of our lives struggling to deal with our negative “family inheritance,” and the rest of our lives desperate to undo the things we enacted in response. Many of us live in a state of regret for things we’ve done and unforgiveness for those who have done unto us.
This is not “living abundantly” as Jesus has promised His followers. We should not have unfinished business at the end of our lives, for we’ll only pass it along to those who follow behind us.
     In the Old Testament, we read that families could be “cursed.” Generation after generation did evil and lacked favor with God. Yet it only took one person to break a family curse and start living anew with God’s blessing. Likewise, a family could also be blessed, but it only took one to come along and lose favor with God and influence others for evil.
     In 2 Kings 23:37, we read about a man who “did evil in the eyes of the LORD, just as his father had done.” And alternately, about a man who “did what was right in the eyes of the LORD and followed completely the ways of his father, not turning aside to the right or to the left” (2 Kings 2:22).
     In the New Testament, however, we see that by receiving Christ, we are born into a new family: God’s family. It is clear—we are not captives to our lineage here on earth but have the choice to be agents of change. We do not have to follow in the footsteps of our “fathers,” right or wrong—yet we sometimes choose to do so.
     Being a genealogy buff, I enjoy learning about the colorful characters in my lineage as they help me to understand where I come from. But where I’m going is up to me. I can choose to dwell on the problems from my past or the consequences of my “fathers’” sins that have come before me. Or I can choose to set my own path straight, and to understand and forgive the sins of my “fathers.” I can choose to seek God in all that I do and ask for blessings upon my life, on my children’s lives, and all who come after me.
I choose to be a blessing in my family tree. What about you?"

- Nicole Seitz
Dear Lord, please help me understand the people who came before me, and who I am today as a result. Lord, on this day, I choose to let go of those things which might hold me back, and to offer forgiveness and unconditional love to those whom have harmed or disappointed me. Please use me to be a blessing in my family tree. In Jesus Name, Amen.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Dialogue Monday













After spending the day with me at work, we went to Yogurt Mountain for a prize for good behavior.  The conversations went like this:

Mommy: "B, you look tired!  Are you sleepy?"
Brayley: "Yes, you're work is hard!!"