Bite the Bullet - I know, it's a phrase...one that I have been saying a lot lately. It means to decide to do something difficult that one has been putting off or hesitating over. It
is to endure a painful or otherwise unpleasant situation that seems
unavoidable. The phrase was first recorded by Rudyard Kipling in his
1891 novel, "The Light that Failed." Historically, it derives from the means by which a patient coped with the extreme pain of a surgical procedure without anesthetic
-by biting a bullet or a leather strap. The latter seems more feasible
to me, but the former makes for great story telling! In philosophy, bite
the bullet means to accept the unpleasant consequences of one's assumed beliefs...(Wikipedia) I know, that's deep! Sometimes our pain is really only as deep or excruciating as we imagine it to be. We think doing this thing, or having this conversation is just going to kill us...but that's only because we anticipate it. Queen Esther bit the bullet- finally summoning up the courage to go before her husband, King Xerxes, to plead on behalf of her people. She faced potential death for going without being called first. Esther's distress was so great that she asked all of the Jews in Susa to pray and fast for her for 3 days without eating or drinking. Then she said, "When this is done, I will go to the king, even though it is against the law. And if I perish, I perish." (Esther 4:16, NIV) Now, thousands of years later, we read and celebrate Esther's courage, and the triumph
There are times when God is requiring that we bite the bullet. The negative ways that we have assumed that things will turn out may be emotionally charged fabrications. Sometimes the only way we'll know is to take that bite!
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