A Beautiful Scent
Feb 01
“For we are God’s handiwork…” Ephesians 2:10a NIV
Last Saturday was our winter Seasons of the Heart – a morning of a craft, food, and friendship for women of our area. This particular Saturday we were taught how to make candles (and told some very interesting facts about candles) from a local candle-maker, and I had been asked to speak. After lots of prayer, I decided to speak about the scent of bitterness that often infiltrates our lives, penetrating every corner. Because of people’s responses, I decided to give a brief overview of the talk on my blog. I began with a story I wrote for the occasion…
Once upon a time in a town not so far away, there was a girl. This girl was just like all other little girls. She laughed at knock-knock jokes, twirled like a ballerina and sang along with her Disney Princess DVDs as heartily as if she herself were a Disney princess. She threw a football with her Daddy, baked cookies with her mom, and got into a just a bit of mischief with her little brother. Although she was far from perfect, her little life was a sweet perfume day after day.
Rarely does life stay that sweet. In elementary school she quickly discovered she was not a princess. Daily she was reminded that she was not very smart or pretty at all. Small drops of self-pity and bitterness seeped into the sweet perfume of her life.
On the first day of Middle School she earned the nickname “Thumbs” when she dropped her binder on the way to class – all of her newly-sharpened pencils, crisp lined paper, and bright pink erasers littered the freshly polished tile. Instead of helping, her peers just stood watching as she clumsily tried to gather her scattered supplies and shattered pride. Drip. Drip. Drip. Anger, deeply hidden, added drops of its stench to her life.
Hoping for a fresh start in High school, she tried out for the school play but was told that her abilities did not fit into this dramatic production. Then, her dad lost his job and the financial strain ripped her parents apart. Her younger brother committed suicide. Anger swelled, bitterness intensified, self-pity surged.
Of course, no one else smelled the reeking odor she carried inside. On the outside she looked and smelled good. But beneath her washed and perfumed surface she knew there churned a stinking mass.
She kept her despair and bitterness well hidden until, in her fifth year of marriage, she miscarried for the second time. Why God? Why? I don’t deserve this. The anger exploded at herself, her family, and God. Suddenly this odor, this awful stench filled her nostrils and she sobbed. She didn’t want her life to be this way, she didn’t want this reeking mass of bitterness to cling to her. She wanted to be free – to weather the storms of life as a sweet perfume, but by this time the awful odor of anger and self-pity had infiltrated every part of her being. And she sobbed.
Each of us has had plenty of experiences that hurt us. Some are as seemingly small as not making a school play or not receiving a promotion at work. Others are hugely traumatic such as sexual, physical, or emotional abuse. We all have had these experiences that push us down, causing bitterness, anger, and self-pity.
Is there hope? Most of us have had disappointment. Most of us have cause to be angry and bitter. But is that the way you want to live? Wouldn’t life be more enjoyable if we let go of our bitterness, if we acknowledge our anger and hand it to God? God gives hope. God gives peace. God gives love. I am not a trained counselor, and I am not saying that getting rid of the hidden bitterness and anger is easy. But too many of us walk around beautiful on the outside but a stinking mass on the inside.
Ephesians 2:10 says that we are God’s handiwork. You are a masterpiece created by God. You are loved. God can take away the stinking mass and replace it with beauty, with sweet-smelling fragrance. There is hope.
If there is one thing I would like you to truly ponder today, it is the thought that God loves you, and he can take the bitterness and anger that you have stored up and replace it with peace, love, and joy. Life is tough, but God can give us the strength to make it through each circumstance without becoming a bitter stench.
Read More
Recent Comments