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I had a road rage incident the other day. Not proud of it. I responded pretty much how most people respond to political debates. It didn't help anything. How can we stop pouring gasoline on the fire?
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Good morning. Welcome to the Morning Motivation brought to you by Public Square, the Public Square app and Patriot Gold Group. This week is talking about, the theme of it is loving your enemies and inspired by the real beginning of the primary season when DeSantis is getting in the race and next week Chris Christie and Mike Pence. But I just want to talk to myself about how to do this primary right. One reason I got so frustrated is I took things personally like no one was attacking me I don't know why I took everything personally so I need to knock that off. You can believe something is serious without taking yourself so seriously, Slater. But it's so easy to get angry and defensive and frustrated and annoyed. But then the Bible says, love your enemy, which means you can't get angry like that for no good real reason. There's a great matrix here from Charles Spurgeon on what to do when someone is a jerk to you about politics or anything really but I'll apply it to politics here. So there's four options. Good for evil is godlike. So when someone does evil to you and you respond with good that's godlike. Good for good is manlike. Anyone would do that. Someone's good to you, you're good back. Evil for good is devil-like. Evil for evil, what is that? It is beast-like. It is like the beast which kicks because it is kicked. Gores because it's gored and bites because it is bitten. I love that. I think that's great. So again, good for evil is god-like. Good for good is man-like. Evil for good is devil-like and evil for evil, beast-like. I think as it applies to politics, when we are wronged or attacked or whatever and then we wrong back or we're yelled at for being wrong about some political thing and respond with more yelling, that's responding to evil with more evil. It's beast-like. It's not having self-control. I want to respond God-like. Good for evil. That's God-like. What good does yelling do for anyone ever? Have you ever changed your mind after getting yelled at? Of course not. Spurgeon goes on in this sermon and he talks about how if there was a fire at the London Bridge, it would be a strange way of putting it out if the firemen lit another fire to it or pumped petroleum on it. He says, yet I've known some try to overcome the evil of a passionate temper in a man by becoming passionate themselves, rolling up another tar barrel to his fire and still making it burn more furiously than ever. This is not conquering evil, nor is evil ever going to be so conquered till water drowns the sea. A soft answer turns away wrath, but anger excites more anger and more sin. Behold how great a matter a little fire kindles when it comes to be heaped up with fuel and blown upon by furious winds. We don't need to be the fuel and the furious winds, do we? And there's just going to be countless examples of people throwing gasoline on fires every day in the next campaign season here. And again, back to the point of this week, throwing gas, like conservatives throwing gas on the fire taking place at the Republican headquarters. It doesn't make any sense. And one more thing I need to think about as well. This person I may be debating to or talking to, whatever, they're just as stubborn as I am. I had a road rage incident the other day. I'm very much not proud of it. My anger bubbled for far too long afterwards. I needed to close the circle much quicker. You know what I mean? Close the circle. The incident starts and I needed to be able to work through it much faster than I did. So here's what happened. I was leaving the hospital. I had my two youngest boys in the back, me and the two boys. I was leaving the hospital and I was at the stoplight about to turn on the road and this older gentleman comes up next to me in his car and he says, hey, you couldn't bother to wait to let me back out? I was like, sir, I have no idea what you're talking about. He goes, of course you don't. We were in the parking garage, I guess. I didn't see him. And then he calls me dense I said well why didn't you wait for me to back out I got I should be saying the same to you like what I don't and then he called me dense again and I'm angry now because I'm thinking oh you may man you know I had two screaming kids And that's why I had to go so quickly out of the car I genuinely didn't see him, but even if I did I deserved to back out first and It took me Maybe I could it was it four hours of four hours before I could think clearly and And I finally came to the realization again, very not proud of how long that took me, but came to the realization that we were both leaving the hospital. And he was alone in his car. So I don't know, he probably wasn't there getting great news either.
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I don't know.
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I don't know. But I wanted him to know what I was going through. I bet he was in a tough spot. And I'm sure if we talked, he would tell me what was going on. I'd be like, oh, sir, go ahead. You go first. If we talked on the way to the car, like we were in the elevator, and we're just, hey, what'd you do for it? No, my wife's sick. I'm like, oh, man, why don't you pull out first?" Of course I would, but we didn't talk, just yelled. So the point of this morning motivation today is I need to work on not taking things so personally. personally. And can we be no longer beast-like, but instead God-like and repay evil with good?