Quotes from Edward T. Welch
James intentionally enlarges the scope of suffering when he writes, "trials of many kinds." By doing this, he invites those who experience depression to learn that, whatever the cause, depression will test our faith and serve as a catalyst for growth rather than a reason for despair. Yes, depression is spiritual in the same way that all suffering brings us face-to-face with critical spiritual realities.
~ Edward T. Welch
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Aren't most diets, even when they are ostensibly under the heading of "health," dedicated to impressing others? The desire for the "praise of men" is one of the ways we exalt people above God.
~ Edward T. Welch
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God tests us because we are so oblivious to the mixed allegiances in our hearts. The purpose of the test is to help us see our hearts and if they are found traitorous, we can turn back to God.
~ Edward T. Welch
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Augustine wrote, "That first way [to truth] is humility; the second way is humility, and the third way is humility."1 If humility does not precede our wisdom and help, our efforts are meaningless. Paul, it seems, would agree. Life in Christ starts with humility.
~ Edward T. Welch
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When your emotions feel muted or always low, when you are unable to experience the highs and lows you once did, the important question is not "How can I figure out what I have done wrong?" but it is, "Where do I turn—or, to whom do I turn—when I am depressed?" Some turn toward their beds and isolation; others turn toward other people. Some turn away from God; others turn toward him.
~ Edward T. Welch
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a lingering sense that something was very wrong with him. That sense is called shame.
~ Edward T. Welch
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Why didn't you just pray by faith?" He taught me one of the most important lessons of prayer: that prayer depended on God and his promises, not my own quixotic emotions.
~ Edward T. Welch
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The idea of sin being able to deceive us, suppressing truth so that we believe a lie, should send shivers down our spines. It is one thing to deceive other people. That is scary enough. It is even more frightening when we realize that each lie we tell leaves us more self-deceived. All practiced sin teaches us to believe lies. WE don't often consider the boomerang effect of our deception. In the end it will get us.
~ Edward T. Welch
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The important thing was the shedding of blood. Sounds barbaric, but the Old Testament was reminding us that there was a significant cost involved in moving from unclean to clean. You didn't have to pay it, but it still had to be paid.
~ Edward T. Welch
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Even desperate people are slow to ask for help.
~ Edward T. Welch
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The visitor (what Scripture calls the "foreigner" or "alien") comes first. The visitor who returns comes next. The less popular, the introverts, the marginalized, or those sitting alone come next. Then come the children. Jesus singles them out as examples of the marginalized. "Hi, _______" is offered to as many people as possible, which doesn't have to be accompanied by a hug or a handshake.
~ Edward T. Welch
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Knowing and being known—by design we enjoy human connections, and those connections are forged over time through normal interactions and questions that gradually ask for more. Such connections are the foundations for mutual help, and they are helpful in themselves since they are expressions of love.
~ Edward T. Welch
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Beneath our questions about God's generosity and his care for our needs is something darker. What we really care about is our wants.
~ Edward T. Welch
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At this point, we know that worry and fear are more about us than about the things outside us. They
~ Edward T. Welch
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My wants are what concern me. That's where the battle must be fought. I
~ Edward T. Welch
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If addictions are really as prevalent as they seem, we would think that Scripture would be preoccupied with this struggle. And it is.
~ Edward T. Welch
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Since the desires for power and control are in every heart, you don't have to look overseas for lawless brutality. It happens every day between parents and children, boyfriends and girlfriends, husbands and wives. Where there is injustice, shame will be part of its fallout.
~ Edward T. Welch
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You have been given amazing gifts, and I have been praying that God would protect you so you can continue to use them well.
~ Edward T. Welch
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Sin by its very nature is more often quiet and secretive than loud and public. For every overt episode of rage, there are dozens of jealousies, manipulations, white lies, and malicious thoughts, none of which immediately register on the conscience. And, according to Scripture, the greatest sin of all is even more covert: I do not love the Lord my God with my whole mind and heart. If our failure to consistently worship the true God is the key feature of sin, we are sinners all.
~ Edward T. Welch
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Sin is ultimately against God. It is any failure to conform to the law of God in either action or attitude
~ Edward T. Welch
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Side by side is most suitable for helping. We
~ Edward T. Welch
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When you look at it closely, drunkenness is a lordship problem. Who is your master, God or your desires? Do you desire God above all else, or do you desire something in creation more than you desire the Creator? At root, drunkards are worshipping another god—alcohol. Drunkenness violates the command "You shall have no other gods before me.
~ Edward T. Welch
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It is just to say that, for the addict, slavery with the object of desire is sometimes preferable to freedom without it.
~ Edward T. Welch
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Life in the kingdom isn't easy, at least not when we want to share the throne. But
~ Edward T. Welch
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