Ya know what? You come across as attractive when you are not talking about your ex or others. But I think that for you, its a healing thing? Seems to be....That is my opinion however and yes I agree opinions are not factual
Hey...
I should be sleeping, but I'm obviously not.
Let me begin by sincerely thanking you for your comments about my ex because, when I first read them last night, they sincerely gave me pause. In other words, they made me realize that I can easily give the wrong impression to others as to why I'm saying or doing certain things, and that's not something that I'd ever want to be guilty of.
This is my third time through here ("Live4Him", "Live4Him2", and now "Live4Him3"), and I deactivated my first two accounts, and there's really no easy way that I know of to read my posts under my first two accounts without looking them up under specific keywords. I'm mentioning this because I'm truly not sure why I initially brought up my ex my first time through here, but I'm thinking (I could be mistaken) that I initially did so in order to "level the playing field", so to speak. In other words, I think (maybe I'm mistaken) that most, if not all of us, would agree that it's normally men who are painted in a negative light (and for good reasons) when it comes to failed marriages or relationships, but there are times when women are primarily to blame. This is not just one man's opinion, but the Bible actually has much to say along these lines, and here are but a couple of examples (I'm deliberately choosing verses which I haven't already cited here in the past):
"A virtuous woman is a crown to her husband: but she that makes ashamed is as rottenness in his bones." (Proverbs 12:4)
In context, the "woman" here is a wife in that "her husband" is referenced, and a wife can either be "a crown to her husband" or "as rottenness in his bones". I'm not about to elaborate on this greatly, but let's just say that a wife can have either a positive affect where her husband is concerned or a negative affect.
Again:
Matthew chapter 10
[
34] Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword.
[
35] For I am come to set a man at variance against his father, and the daughter against her mother, and the daughter in law against her mother in law.
[
36] And a man's foes shall be they of his own household.
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37] He that loveth father or mother more than me is not worthy of me: and he that loveth son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me.
[
38] And he that takes not his cross, and follows after me, is not worthy of me.
At first glance, what Jesus said here seemingly has nothing to do with husbands and wives. In other words, "a man's foes...of his own household" seems to be speaking solely about son/father, daughter/mother, and daughter-in-law/mother-in-law relationships that may become divided because of one party's allegiance to Christ.
However, Jesus was actually quoting from the prophet Micah here, and here is the fuller context:
Micah chapter 7
[
5] Trust not in a friend, put not confidence in a guide: keep the doors of your mouth from her that lies in your bosom.
[
6] For the son dishonors the father, the daughter rises up against her mother, the daughter in law against her mother in law; a man's enemies are the men of his own house.
Here, both "a friend" and "her that lies in your bosom" or a wife are mentioned in the same exact context of "a man's enemies" being those "of his own house".
Anyhow, my point is that, according to God's word, the problem is not always the man/husband, but sometimes it's the woman/wife, and that is why I'm thinking that I initially mentioned some of the things which transpired between my ex and me. Again, to level the playing field, so to speak, or to hopefully show that men aren't always the true culprits.
Along these same lines, I've mentioned quite a few things about that past relationship for the potential benefit of other men here. In other words, throughout my whole ordeal, as I've plainly testified before, I was regularly wrongly condemned, and I wanted to potentially give men some comfort or hope in case they may have endured some of the same types of things that I've had to endure. I know, from several different comments that at least one male poster here has made since I first joined, that there's at least one other man here who endured things similar to the types of things that I endured, and if my own testimony has brought any comfort to him or anybody else, then it's all been worth it.
Finally, and this is a BIGGIE, I've shared a lot of what I've shared so that people here don't wrongly assume that men are never the wronged party while condemning them on top of what they've already had to endure. As I've shared here before, whether anybody wants to acknowledge or admit it or not, Christ himself entered in a covenant with the nation of Israel which is repeatedly likened to a marriage covenant throughout scripture. That marital relationship was riddled with adultery, spiritually speaking, on Israel's part, and that marital relationship ultimately ended in divorce (for the 10 northern tribes of Israel). In other words, the husband (Christ) wasn't the guilty party, and therefore he wasn't truly worthy of anyone's scorn or condemnation.
Anyhow, my overall purpose in talking about these types of things has never been to "bash" my ex. As I've said many times before, she and I are quite amicable now, and I genuinely wish her no harm whatsoever. Instead, I regularly pray for her, and I fear greatly for her soul in that she has renounced both Christ and Christianity, and she is presently involved in all sorts of demonically-inspired "religions" while regularly taking Jesus' name in vain.
This also isn't some sort of "healing process" for me because, as God himself already knows (I'm not trying to convince any of you), that healing process is already complete...and it took YEARS to complete.
Ultimately, I personally have no regrets about my marriage.
That said and meant, I do have deep concerns about my ex's spiritual condition and also about how that whole ordeal potentially negatively affected/still affects my/our three children.
Anyhow, again, I thank you for your comments, and I hope that this helps you to understand just a little bit better as to where I'm coming from or my actual motives for sharing some of the things that I've shared here.
Have a blessed day in the Lord.