Nicki
Koziarz
|
"My child, don't lose sight of common sense and discernment.
Hang
on to them for they will refresh your soul." Proverbs 3:21-22a
(NLT)
"Women are ridiculous," I said to my husband as I
crawled
into bed, tears dripping. He gave me an agreeable stare, since he had no
words
to console my aching heart.
I'd just learned a friend lied to me. It was about
something senseless, which just made it worse. As the hours ticked by, I
wrestled through troubling thoughts.
Why would she lie about THAT?
Were we ever really friends?
The combination of hurt and middle-of-the-night
thinking
was toxic, forming a very self-centered attitude in me. I decided I no
longer
had room in my life to deal with someone who had lied to me. So in my heart,
I
just unfriended this friend.
I have other people I can be friends with, I
thought as I drifted off to sleep.
The next morning I realized how my emotions had
distorted
my perceptions. It concerned me how quickly I was willing to write off this
friend, since we had been through a lot together. And I really did value our
relationship.
So I pondered the emotions swirling in my
heart.
In our cyber culture today, it's easy to sit behind
computer screens and smartphones while we reject the reality of many things,
including friendships.
My profile on Facebook says I have 900 "friends."
Social
media convinces me I have hundreds of people in my corner. But in reality, I
don't have 900 friends I could call in the midst of a crisis or even go meet
for
a cup of coffee.
And that "unfriend" button is mighty tempting when
someone
hurts me. But the truth is, ending a relationship is much more complex than
the
way social media convinces me it can happen — as easily as clicking an
icon.
Social media is a relational tool, but it's not a
relational reality.
More than ever, I need to see my friendships through
the
lens of reality, and this verse helps me do this: "My child, don't lose
sight of common sense and discernment. Hang on to them for they will refresh
your soul," (Proverbs 3:21-22a).
God has given us two trustworthy filters to help us
see
things as what they really are: common sense and
discernment.
In this situation with my friend, common sense,
reminded
me: You don't really have 900 friends, but you do have one or two people
you
can really count on. And you need to cultivate those relationships through
good
times and bad.
When I wanted to reject our relationship because I was
hurt, discernment said: Your friend is human. At the core of her heart
she
cares about you and didn't mean to hurt you.
We will always be susceptible to flawed perceptions in
our
friendships. But when we hang on to the realities God offers us through
common
sense and discernment I believe we will be much wiser with our
perceptions.
Using God's Word as my filter, rather than my
emotions,
allowed me to work through the hurtful issue with my friend. That experience
made me a more compassionate friend and it strengthened our friendship, so
that
when I mess up (and I'm sure I will), hopefully she'll forgive
me.
God, we are so grateful for Your gifts of common sense and
discernment. Give us the grace to use these filters when things get foggy.
In
Jesus' Name, Amen.
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