What’s Eating You: The Rot of Envy

Have you ever felt a little sick when someone else succeeded?
That’s envy talking. Envy rarely shows itself but prefers to
seethe and boil beneath the surface.

We are warned that envy is no small thing but is spiritual
cancer. Proverbs 14:30 puts it bluntly: “Envy makes the bones
rot.” What a vivid picture of how it drains life from within.
While we may think envy is a harmless, personal struggle
within, it can block growth, damage relationships, and even
lead to sin that destroys.

Cain’s story is a clear example. When God accepted Abel’s
offering but rejected Cain’s, Cain didn’t turn inward for repentance.
He glanced sideways at his brother’s favor, and envy took root. God
counseled him, “You will be accepted if you do what is right. But if you refuse to do what is right, then watch out! Sin is crouching at the door, eager to control you. But you must subdue it and be its master (Genesis 4:7 NLT).” But Cain opened that door wide. Envy led him to
murder.

Galatians 5:19–21 reminds us that envy is among the “works of the
flesh” that lead to destruction. It’s in the same category as sexual
immorality, idolatry, and hatred, and is not just a shortcoming, but a
serious spiritual issue. And Proverbs 23:17 reminds us of where our eyes should be: “Do not let your heart envy sinners, but always be zealous for the fear of the
Lord.” In other words, don’t envy someone else’s path or success, but
fear the Lord and trust His timing, His favor, and His provision for you.
Pay attention to what you are thinking and feeling.

Envy cannot grow where contentment lives. The antidote is intimacy with God, living as loved, walking obediently by His Spirit, cultivating thankfulness for
your life, and trusting that He sees and rewards rightly.

This was originally published by First Stone Ministries in their Summer 2025 newsletter. For more information about First Stone, you may click through to the site. www.firststone.org

Selah

One definition suggests that it means to pause and reflect. It is from that definition I use the word “selah.”

I’ve had some intense things going on over many recent years. I’m sure I’ll talk again about the caregiving years in some posts soon. In this post, I will share a bit about pauses.

I’ve learned that the pause is much more significant to the one experiencing it or choosing it than it is to those on the outside looking in–unless you are in an orchestra and your score reads with a profound set of rests–then everyone experiences that profound pause.

Pauses can produce so SOOO many positive outcomes. A pause when traffic is crossing paths can avoid an accident. A pause in heavy pedestrian traffic can extend a moment of courtesy to the others around you.

On a trip to Portland, OR, this Oklahoma City native took frequent pauses to take in that lush, green beauty of their city and to smell the freshness of the air where brief rains happened daily. Then, on a recent trip to Kansas, I was amazed at the beauty of  Flint Hills when we left the turnpike and took backroads for a few hours. Yes, pauses can look different from one another.

Pauses allow processes to happen. I’m thinking now about chemistry, for example. We can mix items together, but time allows something beautiful to happen. Bread will rise. The individual ingredients of a cake will become flavorful delights.

One of my Selah experiences was that of leaving the full-time ministry. It was necessary, and it was a good decision. I remember my initial communication with people around me. One man summarized that it would be like a sabbatical. A woman translated my leaving as disobedience and a less-good thing. Another person suggested that it was a refining fire.

Before I type myself into a full, eye-roll I will summarize it myself and say it was none of those things. It was, however, just a pause. I had no way of knowing that at the time. It felt like I was leaving vocational ministry permanently to take on something equally permanent–caregiving.

It was right away the most difficult thing I had ever experienced. I was cast into a level of isolation, a change of identity and purpose, an immediate reordering of priorities, and a loss of things and relationships that were important to me. It was shocking and confusing. I was disoriented in my new “role.” It affected my marriage, my home, our household income, and our freedom to come and go. Every source of spiritual refreshment, growth, and engagement was immediately changed. There was, initially, nothing familiar or grounding for my soul. Privacy was disturbed along with routines. When do I sit with God? How do I order my time? Will I ever read or study again? Oh, Lord! I longed for silence! My thoughts were curiously empty. I felt driven into the shallows. Initially, I got very little sleep.

I know that new moms deal with this often. In my case, I was now serving my fully-disabled mother. Her disability was so complete that she could do nothing for herself–not even scratch an itch…or move her hair…or shift her position…

It took months for me to begin to orient myself to the changes. I was NOT able to find that pause. It seemed that my God, my friends, and the known world were far away from me. It had another shocking effect on me…

I. Felt. Totally. Alone.

Aloneness pulled to the surface all of the internal, ignored, unformed, unhealed, fearful, judgmental, selfish, dark, confused, unbelieving things that lurked in the depths of my heart. Soon, the reckoning began. The rhythms of my former life (the one I had recently lost) had become very comfortable. It was time to see what I was made of. In some ways, the woman who suggested that this season was a “refiner’s fire” had it right! But, I don’t think my “Refiner” had put me in that situation for the purpose of refining. Instead, I think that God simply used the extremely common human experience to invite me into a deeper work. Some things were quick. Other things continue to work in me even 14 years later.

At this time, you might be asking, “How is THIS an example of selah?” Good question! If life just happens to us and we never pause to consider and to reflect, how can the days not just fade one into another until weeks and years have passed with nothing gained except some money and some age? Some of the most valuable lessons in life are learned during the mundane moments. If we persist in hurrying through life in the many ways that individuals do, we won’t be able to fully enjoy it nor will we experience the life we are living. We will remain disconnected from experience and gain nothing. This disconnect makes the already difficult experience I am going through even more difficult. There is another way.

Selah.

When I take time to wrestle my difficulty into a place of pause….and…consider what it is…consider myself in it… consider the Lord… consider the people around me… reflect on my experiences… pay attention to my reactions… really pause and take notice, well, time doesn’t rush by.

Selah.

When I left caregiving just less than 4 years later, I rushed back into my former vocation as a pastoral caregiver. I know that that quick move was an attempt to re-establish myself as my mother’s death had set me adrift again. My husband and I were living in her home knowing that we had no home of our own. We had completely shifted our life to serve her needs. So, the idea of immediately returning to my job and the identity of it was inviting to me. However, there was no pause. There was no time to think about what we had just experienced and certainly no time to grieve.

A few years later, in 2014, God invited me back to the process. He used the Lenten season to invite me to a fast of a different kind. He said, “I want you to fast despair and choose joy and gladness.” You will hear me revisit this theme often. What that invitation did for me is invite me to pause and to consider what the despair of my life was and (and this was the hard part) to choose something different in light of it. This return to the pain was excruciating. Not only was I working and caring for souls, but I was being directed to care for my own. I was clearly in that place for three years. I made time most days to consider despair (the absence of hope or the refusal to hope) that was found in my life. There was a lot of it. The point here is that I had to stop! I had to pause and bring that stuff into focus and make some clear choices in the midst of it. Will I continue in despair as I face my pain? As I consider my great loss, is there then no hope for me?

My friend, Charles, gave me some new language as I processed. He introduced the words lament, consolations, and desolations to me. I had to pause (to consider and reflect) in order to find the God of hope in the midst of my despair. This practice of selah began to put things in order for me. I began to recognize what I was thinking and what I was saying and what I was believing. All I had to do was…

Selah.

Suspicion

It is more shameful to distrust our friends than to be deceived by them. –Confucius

As I prepare a talk about the value of same-sex friendships for men and women, I have found myself pondering the destructive power of suspicion and betrayal. I think these things destroy whether you are on the receiving end of it or if you are the one harboring it in your soul. I cannot find a scriptural description of love (or any other fruit of the Spirit for that matter) that allows me to close my heart to another–no matter their behavior.

suspicionScripture records that “Jesus entrusted himself to no man” in John 2. However, he did. Although he knew the heart of man, he surrounded himself with disciples who would both deny him and betray him.

I’m challenged today by this wise quote from Confucious above. I’m asking God for a fresh empowering of His Spirit to open my heart in new ways again. Sometimes I do this pretty well, but I’m more than a little convicted by my own preparation for my talk.

In the context of suffering 1 Peter 4:
7 The end of all things is near; therefore, be of sound judgment and sober spirit for the purpose of prayer. 8 Above all, keep fervent in your love for one another, because love covers a multitude of sins. 9 Be hospitable to one another without complaint. 10 As each one has received a special gift, employ it in serving one another as good stewards of the manifold grace of God. 11 Whoever speaks, is to do so as one who is speaking the utterances of God; whoever serves is to do so as one who is serving by the strength which God supplies; so that in all things God may be glorified through Jesus Christ, to whom belongs the glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.

Shocking

Jesus said some shocking stuff. Someone said to me on Saturday, “You’re driving people away from Jesus.” It hurt my heart. Then, on Sunday morning the Spirit said, “Jesus drove people away from Jesus.” Plain. Candid. And, it got me thinking. My reading that morning took me to Matthew 15-20. Each chapter said something hard. Shocking. MyHammerAnvil1 take-away this week is that the sayings of Jesus are much harder than the Ten Commandments because he took everything up a level. To the Pharisees, he pointed out that they preferred traditions that argued against the Word of God. To the young commandment-keeping ruler with lots of money, he told to sell everything and give it to the poor (not a commandment, not a law) and then come and follow him. To the discussion about marriage and divorce, Jesus dared to say that it was only because of the hardness of heart that Moses permitted divorce. By the time I got to chapter 20 and read the fact that Jesus told them all that they would have to drink his bitter cup…well, I was done.

I really know that to follow Jesus is costly. While I don’t think I can make an application from what the Lord requires of me to someone else, I can say without apology that to follow God is costly. This week I am tired of pseudo-Christian conversations that say that he would not say what he would, IN FACT, say…and say over again.

We genuinely are in a culture that holds supreme that to love is to not disturb, not confront, not disagree, not change ANYTHING.

The conversations have changed because where we once could sit with a Christian person and point them to the scriptures and to prayer and we could assume that we both agreed that the scriptures had authority in the Christian’s life, we now are having conversations with Christians who DO NOT believe the Bible at all OR they pick and choose among the scripture verses and say, “I believe that is no longer relevant.” Truthfully, these Christians MOSTLY are not reading the Bible as a matter of their personal discipleship. Most of these Christians pray a little here or there for this or that, but they have no roots in Christian faith or practice. This concerns me greatly. We genuinely are in a culture that holds supreme that to love is to not disturb, not confront, not disagree, not change ANYTHING.

Yes! It is sort of freaking me out. FAR TOO MANY of my sisters (and brothers) have completely departed from the devoted Christian life to pursue something that takes a massive revision of the scriptural texts to affirm what they are choosing. Immorality and Impurity of every kind! Drunkenness! Greed! Lust! Gluttony (of which I am also guilty and need God’s grace for repentance and transformation)! Gossip! Hatreds of every kind! Dishonor of parents and one another! Forsaking the fellowship of believers because THEY (other believers, not themselves) are hypocrites!

I’m worried. Do you get worried? What do you do about it?

Little Intrusions

She has developed a routine of stepping into our offices to just rest in the peace of the front room away from the busyness of our location and from the threat of every stranger she meets. For me, she was an intrusion. Though I’d like to think I’m always a better person than that, I am also rather introverted and I like to plan my spontaneity (if you know what I mean).

She quotes random truths in a rapid-fire way that is obviously meant to insulate her from the threat that living among mere mortals brings. I struggled to catch the wave of her sharing to begin to understand her. (I prayed for understanding.)

I don’t presume to take on every soul I encounter. (Nobody has energy for everyone!) It became obvious to me that I would befriend her.

We spent the morning together tending to some very necessary business for her life. We filled out forms and navigated businesses and governments. It wasn’t a sacrifice. I was just being friendly.  Oddly, she never changed her way of communicating but I’ve started to “understand” and I’m certain that is God’s help. I could hear what this woman was saying.  She is tender. We talked about friends and foes and concerns and there was NO DIFFERENCE in the kind of conversation I had with this lady than those I have with all my closest friends. (Perhaps, I didn’t share, but the topics were very similar.)

I really never welcome intrusions. I will inwardly roll my eyes a little…sigh a little…grouse a little. Still, in the little intrusions there can be beauty. I saw her face relax. I saw her worries reduced. She giggled. She joked.

 

 

 

When Should I Decline an Invitation?

LAST Thursday was quite a test. I left the day exhausted and defeated. I simply couldn’t see how things would work themselves out. (That is a perspective thing that I couldn’t shift at the moment.) I had dumped a full cup of coffee (with creamer) into my laptop computer, I had received a HUGE bill for our portion of some testing I had a couple of weeks before AND my 2013 car broke down on the way to groups. The group night was okay but ended with a situation that took an hour to deal with and then I had the car to deal with. That is how the night ended. I’ll tell you that I let it really dealt the temptation to hopelessness. I completely invited that perspective in and let it nest in my hair, so to speak.) My overall view was fear and that was all I could see.

Now then, do you have days like this where the invitation is to fear? I get them often but I also, often, take a pass and choose to move past the fear in hope. Days like Thursday are demoralizing. I feel earthbound and helpless, faithless and hopeless. It DIDN’T EVEN OCCUR to me to cry out to Jesus! (Not even.)

Today, I reassembled my computer and booted up to find that it has been delivered from my carelessness. No sticky keys. No injury. Just fine. My car deal was only a battery. (Normal maintenance!) The bills are doable. And, my perspective is not one of fear.

I would like to see my USUAL response to be a believing response when I encounter a full-on breakdown in my day.

I have a favorite verse:

Psalm 27:
13 “I would have despaired unless I had believed that I would see the goodness of the Lord
In the land of the living.
14 Wait for the Lord;
Be strong and let your heart take courage;
Yes, wait for the Lord.

Yes, I would like to be the gal that chooses that first rather than later. I would certainly be less tired and less affected.

Learn from me, friends! Don’t do it like I did it!

“Refuse despair!”

Façade

6/26/2015

MaskLLS (2)

I‘m always walking in a straight line
Always pretending that I am fine
Ignoring the warning and the sign
It’s a façade

Layer upon layer I make my mask
Pull it up tightly before you ask
Make it the goal of my every task
It’s a façade

Always confining, your motives divining, in fear I’m resigning
Always confining, your motives divining, in fear I’m resigning

Contriving and striving I live my lies
Hoping outsiders won’t hear my cries
I’ve got it together like that’s my prize
It’s a façade

Under the rug I have swept my fears
Hardening my heart to avoid the tears
Gets harder and harder throughout the years
It’s a facade

 

(C)2015 Laura L. Stanlake

To Begin, Begin

Maybe it was Providence that, on this day of new beginnings, I ran across this minuscule quote:

“To begin, begin.” –William Wordsworth

Of course, this opened the door to a 20-minute, unsuccessful search to finding the origin of such a quote. But, I go back to Providence.

Over and over I am asked if I write for others and my short answer is that I have. I get all hung-up on expectations I have of myself and what I feel might be the expectations of others. I am a verbal processor and, as the ideas develop, some pretty deep stuff comes out of my brain.  Also true is the fact that many good things are spoken, imagined, crafted but lost.  I have gotten better at grabbing and documenting those processes and it is becoming a tentative habit now.  But Providence keeps bringing the writing part to my attention.

Some years ago I was part of a social blogging site called “VOX” and I was so happy there. From 2006-2010 I posted regularly and had a great little community of creative and interactive people who were there with me (most, from the beginning). We had to migrate our posts to TypePad (not my cup of tea) and Flicker (also, not my cup of tea) and so I chose WordPress and then I was GuitPicken’s Weblog. But here was not in any way comparable to what I had experienced at VOX.  Life happened and posts became less frequent, my community out here was far less interactive and I fizzled out.

It is my old community from VOX who asked most often about my writing until the recent four years. Now, it comes from everywhere. My small group of Christians who are professional therapists or Biblical counselors ask the most if I have written this or that. My work environment wants article-length stuff. My close friends and family ask about songs. And, now, there are individuals I randomly meet who ask if I have written. Little speaking engagements bring other queries.

It has seemed to be one of those subjects that will not go away. Write! Poking…prodding…provoking…

Annoying.

It is working. Like all good persistence does, it is finally moving me.

I’ll work out the details as I go, but I have found a name for this thing that will allow me to explore the diverse ideas that come into my head. I will commit to this even when it will mean that I publish before the writing is refined.  My commitment to myself is that I will no longer ask the question: “To blog, or not to blog…”

So we have arrived at my very first post of this new blog. I’ve decided to call it:

Laura Leigh Chats