Kay Harms

  • Home
  • About
    • About Kay
    • Privacy Policy
  • Blog
  • Books
  • Speaking
  • Contact

06/04/14

Overcome? Or an Overcomer?

Sweet sister, are you at the end…of your rope, of your wits, of your list of solutions? Does it seem that your problems have become so tangled and mangled that there is no way to unravel them? Maybe your troubles have been brewing for such a long period of time that you can’t even remember what life was like before they all began.

And you feel overcome.

Overcome with the enormity of the situation. Overcome with responsibility. Overcome with shame. Overcome with guilt. Overcome with remorse. Overcome with the dark shadows surrounding the relationship or situation. Overcome with the bleak future.

I know it may seem that you are in too deep to ever swim to the surface. How can you possibly get “on top of things” when they are weighing upon you, right?

Truthfully, when I’ve listened to some women describe the difficult situations and relationship problems they are in, I’ve wondered if there was any hope. It certainly didn’t seem like there was any solution, any hope.

But God’s Word assures us that instead of being overcome we can be overcomers. And let’s get this straight. We don’t just have to be survivors either. Victims survive, right? But overcomers are not victims; overcomers are victors. And don’t you want to be victorious?

Jesus came to earth, 
died and rose again 
so we could be victorious overcomers, 
not surviving victims.

You may be in a grand mess. I get that. But, while you may have to untangle the mess strand by tattered strand, you need to undertake that endeavor with the right attitude, the right mindset.

You need to think like an overcomer, not a victim. Here’s how:

  • Do not lose heart. Choose every day not to play the victim card. That means you stop blaming, you stop lamenting the past, and you start taking personal responsibility. I know, that’s hard. And it’s really uncomfortable. But it’s where healing begins. God will only redeem that which we release to Him through taking personal responsibility of our part. (2 Corinthians 4)
  • Lean hard on God. Confess your weakness, embrace your humanity, and acknowledge, through worship and submission, His great power and authority. Say it out loud. Say it many times in a day. “I am weak, but He is oh so strong!” (2 Corinthians 4)
  • Be a destroyer! A destroyer of all those negative, faulty and speculative thoughts you’ve been entertaining, that is. Take every thought that comes into your head straight to Christ and ask Him if you should be thinking on it. (2 Corinthians 10:5) For a while, if you truly practice this, it may seem that He’s not allowing you to think on much of anything! That’s because you may have made it a habit to think negatively and like a victim, and He isn’t going to allow that. Instead use Philippians 4:8 as your litmus test for appropriate thoughts. 
  • Overcome evil with good. It’s natural to want to return evil for evil. It’s natural to want to get what’s due to you, to put your foot down, to look out for yourself, to lash back, to demand that he or she change, to rationalize your own behavior, to point out the other person’s wrong behavior. But it’s godly (and more productive) to return good for evil. That means you give grace, speak kindly, forgive, look for the positive, give of yourself sacrificially, etc. This is hard. That’s why you’ll need the Holy Spirit to take over. But it’s the only way to be an overcomer. This one warrants printing out: 
Do not be overcome by evil,
but overcome evil with good.
(Romans 12:21)
You’re absolutely right, sweet sister, you may be in a mess that seemingly offers no way out. But you can choose to be a victim…of someone else’s mistakes or your own…or you can chose to be an overcomer. However, while the world will tell you that you “overcome” by insisting on your way, by getting out of the marriage, by walking away, or by forcing your will, you don’t. 
You overcome evil…with good.

I’m joining Holley Gerth and other bloggers today to offer you words of encouragement. You’ll find more encouraging posts here.


Every Wednesday I come alongside you with encouraging words for the path less traveled. You’ll find my other Walk with me Wednesday posts here.

1 Comment
Uncategorized

« The View from My Front Porch
The View from the Beginning »

Comments

  1. Valerie Sisco says

    June 4, 2014 at 7:18 pm

    Kay,
    How encouraging! I needed this today (stopping by from Holley's link-up)!

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

follow my trail

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
Meet Kay

Free E-book with Blog Subscription

Sign up to receive my blog posts by email and you can download my e-book Sit Under My Apple Tree for free! Make sure you confirm your subscription when you receive the email from MailChimp.

Search

Let’s Stay in Touch

Kay Harms

Copyright © 2025 Kay Harms · Novelty theme by Restored 316 · Site by Design by Insight

Copyright © 2025 · Novelty Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in