Quick Thought – Thursday, May 23, 2024: Driven By Emotions

Read

Proverbs 29:6-11

A fool gives full vent to his spirit,
but a wise man quietly holds it back.
Proverbs 29:11

Reflect

When I was a kid we lived outside of Sarasota, Fla., on a nine-acre farm. I was not a natural-born farm hand (to say the very least), but today I have some pretty fond memories of that place. One of the best memories was our dog, Sammy.

Technically, she was named Samantha B. Dog, and to this day we have no idea about her mix. The nearest we could figure out was that she was part German Shepherd, part Black Lab … and part wolf. Seriously. When she ran, she didn’t run like a typical dog – she loped like a wolf. But the most amazing thing was that without any real training, she became probably the best cattle dog we had ever seen.

If you’ve never seen a cattle dog at work, you’ve really missed something. One little dog (at least little compared to a one-ton cow) can push a small herd of cattle in the right direction. It’s incredible when you think that these massive cows are so afraid of the nip and bark of the dogs that they will go wherever the dogs are driving them. If the cows ever figured out that they were more powerful than the dogs, the jig would be up, and the dogs would be out of a job. But that never happens. The dogs use the nature of the cattle to follow the herd, and the herd almost always goes exactly where the dogs (with the guidance of the cowboys) push them.

That’s pretty much the way our emotions sometimes drive us. Sometimes you might hear someone say, “I have to be true to my emotions,” but to me that’s the equivalent of letting the cattle dog drive a herd. People who obey their emotions all of the time will often look pretty unstable, because our emotions are incredible liars. The Bible even equates that kind of behavior to foolishness when it says that, “A fool gives full vent to his spirit, but a wise man quietly holds it back.” (Proverbs 29:11) In modern terms, you might hear this called “Emotional Intelligence.” The Bible just calls it wisdom.

Don’t get me wrong – emotions are absolutely supposed to inform us. And emotions can be very genuine. Happiness. Sadness. Anger. Fear. Joy. Surprise. Disgust. These and more are an important part of our lives, but they need to be mastered so that they don’t begin to make our decisions for us. Today, pray for the wisdom to be able to manage your emotions whenever they feel like they want to run out of control.

Reflection copyright © 2024 Doug DeBolt.

Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version® (ESV®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

About Douglas Blaine

Capnpen is a writer who was a newspaper and magazine journalist in a previous life. A college journalism major, he now works as an English teacher, but gets his writing fix by blogging about a variety of topics, including politics, religion, movies and television. When he's not working or blogging, Capnpen spends time with his family, plays a little golf (badly) and loves to learn about virtually anything.
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