Why Do We Need God’s wisdom?

Sometimes people go through life without really knowing the impact that they make on those around them. They could be kind-hearted, giving and caring, and completely in tune with others’ moods, but they don’t always see what it is that makes a difference to someone else.

God’s wisdom revolutionizes our lives by showing us how we’ve impacted other people in ways we never would’ve imagined – sometimes for better, sometimes for worse. It also opens our eyes to the wisdom we possess within ourselves.

These insights are important because they help us learn how to be wise in everything we do and say, whether it’s on a personal level or towards an organization.

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Former Obama-era official calls Joe Biden a criminal, says he has evidence first family compromised by China Sunday, April 16, 2023 by: JD Heyes Tags: Barack Hussein Obama, Biden crime family, big government, bribery, business deals, China, corruption, crime, deception, deep state, fraud, Hunter Biden, Joe Biden, money laundering, Obama, Obama Administration, selling influence, traitors, treason, Ukraine, Vice President, Whistleblower, White House

(Natural News) The Biden family is facing allegations from a former Obama administration official who claims that when Joe Biden was vice president, he was involved in a “kickback scheme” related to his son Hunter Biden’s foreign business dealings, according to reports this week.

Mike McCormick, a former White House stenographer who served for 15 years, claimed on the Fox News show “Fox & Friends First” that he is willing to testify under oath before the federal grand jury investigating Biden’s son, Hunter Biden’s overseas business dealings. McCormick also accused the FBI of ignoring him, despite his willingness to provide testimony, Fox News reported.

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A sense of belonging

This is perhaps the most common and elusive effect: feeling like an outsider, shut out, with her nose pressed against the glass of a store everyone else seems to have access to. That feeling may coexist with a stable and emotionally nurturing marriage and partnership, close ties to children of her own, and a circle of friends. It’s like an overturned can of stain that seeps into and discolors all the good things in life.

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The things the unloved daughter longs for in adulthood

Again, these are broad generalizations, and not every unloved daughter will necessarily feel deprived of every single one. But the chances are good that if you were unloved in childhood by your mother, criticized or marginalized, made to feel less than or ignored, many of these deep-rooted longings may coexist with and contradict all manner of success and achievement. That’s the power of these early experiences; the ways in which they may continue to shape us aren’t necessarily rational and can be very counterintuitive.

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What may prompt an individual’s recognition

Women back into discovery more often than not. Sometimes it becomes clear in therapy, but usually she’s gone into therapy to explore her current unhappiness (e.g., failed relationships, difficulty connecting or achieving goals, and other ancillary problems), and the connection to childhood emerges; that said, many daughters have commented that they were in therapy for years without ever tracing the problems of the present back to their roots.

For some, caring relationships in adulthood highlight the abusive or withholding nature of their childhood treatment. Others come to the realization, because someone points it out to them. For some, becoming a mother shines a light. Some finally see when their mothers treat their children as they were treated or when, despite efforts to set boundaries and rules, their mothers continue to verbally abuse them.

And then there’s just readiness. A daughter sees because she’s finally ready to see, because some internal tipping point is reached. This sounds mystical, but as I explain in my book, Daughter Detox: Recovering from an Unloving Mother and Reclaiming Your Life, it is the slow pace of revelation.

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The barriers that prevent us from seeing clearly

While you may be conscious of how lousy your childhood treatment made you feel, chances are good that you cannot see its effect on you; most of the behaviors we adopt to get through are unconscious. Additionally, there are other forces at play that prevent you from recognition:

You’ve normalized your childhood experiences.

You like thinking that the past is the past, and you’re free.

You’re not ready to act or react to your childhood treatment.

You want to be like everyone else. And you are ashamed of your childhood.

You’re afraid your treatment was justified, and it’s all your fault.

More than anything, you want your mother to love you. Maybe she will. Soon?

Your alternating hope and denial keeps you stuck.

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7 Things an Unloved Daughter Longs for as an Adult 3. True self-confidence. Posted October 11, 2018 | Reviewed by Hara Estroff Marano

While there are meaningful differences in every unloved daughter’s story, there are nonetheless broad commonalities. Understanding them and seeing the role each plays in your own life can be the first of many steps towards healing.

Some of these are consciously perceived, though we may not put them in context and connect them to childhood experiences for years and years. Anecdotally at least — from my research and interviews over the last 20 years — recognition of how childhood experiences affect the present usually doesn’t begin until a woman is in her late 30s or 40s, and often later.

If you’ve had a difficult childhood and felt under the thumb of a controlling, combative, or narcissistic mother, young adulthood brings with it a sense of opportunity as you literally get out from under by moving. Alas, the reality is, chances are good that you’re not seeing how much emotional baggage accompanies you on the trip out. Why is recognition so slow?

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BREAKING: Officer says January 6 was a setup

https://twitter.com/wittycommittee/status/1628387680806481921?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1628387680806481921%7Ctwgr%5E0ad4106894139a40b0492a04fa72ce52410360c3%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.thegatewaypundit.com%2F2023%2F02%2Fnew-j6-footage-shows-officer-saying-they-set-us-up%2F

How to Have Wisdom from God According to the Bible

Photo by Vali S.

Wisdom is the ability to discern what’s right from what’s wrong. It is a gift that gives us the capability to make the right choice or decision. If knowledge is power, then wisdom is using that power the right way.

We can be educated or intelligent, but without wisdom, our education or intelligence may only be in vain. An intelligent person could earn more fame, money, and fortune, but a wise one could earn more friends, honor and God’s favor.

There is wisdom from people and there is also wisdom from God. The first may be packed with eloquence but less in substance, while the latter may not sound beautiful but full of power.

God’s wisdom can make one wise man more powerful than ten rulers in a city (see Ecclesiastes 7:19). It also preserves the life of its possessor (see Ecclesiastes 7:12).

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