May 7, 2026

When You've Decided You're Not Ready to Let the Grudge Go

When You've Decided You're Not Ready to Let the Grudge Go

Most of us aren't confused about whether we're holding a grudge. We know. In this episode, discover what bitterness does to the people carrying it, and why letting go is an act of self-preservation.

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Most of us aren't confused about whether we're holding a grudge. We know. In this episode, discover what bitterness does to the people carrying it, and why letting go is an act of self-preservation.

Thomas Haberbush was a teacher in Saratoga Springs, New York. In the 1970s he received poor job reviews and eventually lost his position. That was roughly 30 years before the police showed up.

In 2003, at 72 years old, Thomas pleaded guilty to stalking and criminal mischief. He had spent the previous 2 years targeting 9 former school board members and supervisors, scattering roofing nails across their driveways and spattering paint on their garage doors. The police investigator said: "It's very bizarre to carry around a grudge for nearly 30 years."

Nobody sets out to spend 30 years feeding a grudge. Thomas probably told himself he'd move on. He probably thought about those supervisors less as the years passed. But somewhere in the back of his mind, he was still keeping score. And by the time he showed up with roofing nails, the people who had hurt him were retired and had likely moved on. The only one still paying every day was Thomas.

Bitterness keeps the wound open. The person who hurt you has already moved on.

Most of us aren't confused about whether we're holding a grudge. We know. We've just decided, for now, that we're entitled to it. The wrong happened, the person hasn't changed, and letting go feels like letting them off the hook. This episode takes that feeling seriously. And then it asks what carrying the grudge is doing to you.

Hebrews 12:15 uses 2 images worth slowing down for. The first is a root. Bitterness starts underground and grows before you notice it. By the time you do, it's already spreading into places you didn't expect. The second is corruption, a word that means to defile or contaminate. What starts between 2 people doesn't stay there. It comes out at the dinner table and in how you respond to people who remind you of the person who hurt you. It shows up as a distance from God you can't quite explain.

The bitterness you're carrying doesn't stay where you put it. It moves.

Through Thomas's story and Hebrews 12:15, this episode makes the case that letting go of a grudge is an act of self-preservation. The person who hurt you doesn't lose anything when you forgive them. You gain something back. That root doesn't have to keep growing. You can pull it up today, and you may need to pull it up again tomorrow, and that's how forgiveness tends to work.

BY THE TIME YOU FINISH LISTENING, YOU'LL DISCOVER:

  • Why bitterness spreads beyond the original wound and affects people who had nothing to do with what happened
  • What the 2 images in Hebrews 12:15 reveal about how a grudge grows and what it corrupts over time
  • One specific prayer you can bring to God today to start releasing what you've been holding

Letting go of a grudge is an act of self-preservation. The person who hurt you has already moved on.

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Track 1 00:00:00

Thomas Haberbush had been an elementary school

 

Track 1 00:00:03

teacher in Saratoga Springs, New York. In the 1970s, he received

 

Track 1 00:00:07

some poor job reviews from his supervisors, and eventually he

 

Track 1 00:00:11

lost his position. That was roughly 30 years before the

 

Track 1 00:00:15

police showed up. In 2003, at 72 years old, Thomas pleaded guilty

 

Track 1 00:00:20

to stalking and criminal mischief. He had spent the

 

Track 1 00:00:23

previous two years targeting nine former school board members,

 

Track 1 00:00:27

retired principals, and supervisors, people he'd held

 

Track 1 00:00:31

responsible for those bad reviews from three decades

 

Track 1 00:00:34

earlier. He had scattered roofing nails across their

 

Track 1 00:00:38

driveways and splattered paint on their garage doors, among

 

Track 1 00:00:42

other things. He made their lives miserable. The police

 

Track 1 00:00:46

investigator on the case said it plainly. It's very bizarre to

 

Track 1 00:00:49

carry around a grudge for nearly 30 years. We'll come back to

 

Track 1 00:00:53

what Thomas' story tells us. But

 

Track 1 00:00:57

first, welcome to Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. I'm

 

Track 1 00:01:01

Bart Leger. I sat across from people who were holding grudges

 

Track 1 00:01:05

that had been going on for years. Some knew it, others didn't. And

 

Track 1 00:01:09

what I've noticed in those conversations, the bitterness

 

Track 1 00:01:12

had a way of affecting everyone around him. Their marriages and

 

Track 1 00:01:17

friendships, and the way they related to their kids. Most of

 

Track 1 00:01:20

them were the last to see it. They were focused on the person

 

Track 1 00:01:24

who had wronged them. And they couldn't see what the anger was

 

Track 1 00:01:28

doing to everyone else. Let me say something you may already

 

Track 1 00:01:31

know. You're holding something you haven't let go of. You know

 

Track 1 00:01:35

you are. And part of you has decided you're entitled to it.

 

Track 1 00:01:39

At least for now. Because the wrong happened and the person

 

Track 1 00:01:42

hasn't changed. And the wrong may have been serious. But let's

 

Track 1 00:01:47

talk about carrying it for so long is doing to you. Here's

 

Track 1 00:01:51

what Hebrews 12.15 says. Look after each other so that none of

 

Track 1 00:01:56

you fails to receive the grace of God.

 

Track 1 00:02:02

grows up to trouble you, corrupting many. The writer uses

 

Track 1 00:02:06

two images worth paying attention to. The first is a

 

Track 1 00:02:09

root. Bitterness starts underground. Somewhere where you

 

Track 1 00:02:13

can't see it. And by the time you notice it, it's already been

 

Track 1 00:02:16

growing for a while. Roots don't stay contained. What they do is

 

Track 1 00:02:20

they spread. And they come up in places you weren't expecting

 

Track 1 00:02:23

them. The second is corruption. That word means to defile or

 

Track 1 00:02:28

contaminate. What starts as a wound between two people spreads.

 

Track 1 00:02:33

It comes out in how you treat your family at the dinner table.

 

Track 1 00:02:36

And how you respond to someone who reminds you of the person

 

Track 1 00:02:38

who hurt you. It shows up as a distance from God you can't

 

Track 1 00:02:43

explain. Because a person feeding bitterness has a harder

 

Track 1 00:02:46

time receiving grace. That's what the Hebrews' warning is

 

Track 1 00:02:49

about. The bitterness you're carrying doesn't stay where you

 

Track 1 00:02:53

put it. It moves and it grows. Now, let's get back to Thomas.

 

Track 1 00:02:57

Nobody sits down one morning and decides to spend 30 years

 

Track 1 00:03:01

feeding a grudge. Thomas didn't wake up in the 1970s and say he

 

Track 1 00:03:07

was going to let this eat him alive until he was 72. He

 

Track 1 00:03:11

probably told himself he'd move on. He probably thought about

 

Track 1 00:03:14

those supervisors less as the years went on. Maybe, maybe not.

 

Track 1 00:03:18

But somewhere in the back of his mind, he was still keeping score

 

Track 1 00:03:23

and still rehearsing the wrong. He was still holding the file

 

Track 1 00:03:28

open. And by the time he showed up with roofing nails, the

 

Track 1 00:03:32

people who had given him those reviews were retired. Some had

 

Track 1 00:03:36

probably forgotten he existed. The only one carrying the weight

 

Track 1 00:03:40

every day was Thomas. Bitterness keeps the wounds open. The

 

Track 1 00:03:44

person who hurt you has already moved on. I know, Thomas' story

 

Track 1 00:03:47

is extreme. But the pattern is the same for anyone who's been

 

Track 1 00:03:51

nursing a wound for years. You think you're punishing the

 

Track 1 00:03:54

person who hurt you. You're not. They've moved You're the one

 

Track 1 00:03:58

still paying. So here's what God is asking of you in this and why

 

Track 1 00:04:02

it matters. He's asking you to let it go. And the reason he's

 

Track 1 00:04:06

asking is the important part. He knows what carrying it is doing

 

Track 1 00:04:09

to you. Letting go of a grudge is an act of self-preservation.

 

Track 1 00:04:13

It's closing a wound that's been left open too long. The person

 

Track 1 00:04:17

who hurt you doesn't lose anything when you forgive them.

 

Track 1 00:04:20

You gain something back. That root doesn't have to keep

 

Track 1 00:04:24

growing. You can pull it out today. You may have to pull it

 

Track 1 00:04:27

up again tomorrow. Forgiveness tends to be a decision you make

 

Track 1 00:04:30

more than once before it sticks. But every time you make it, the

 

Track 1 00:04:34

root loses a little ground. Here's today's challenge. Name

 

Track 1 00:04:38

the thing you've been holding. Say it out loud, even if it's

 

Track 1 00:04:40

just to yourself. Then bring it to God and make the prayer

 

Track 1 00:04:44

specific. Tell him the name of the person and what they did.

 

Track 1 00:04:47

Tell him you're tired of carrying it and you're choosing

 

Track 1 00:04:49

to release it. You're releasing yourself from the weight of

 

Track 1 00:04:52

keeping score and leaving their accountability to God. Ask him

 

Track 1 00:04:57

to help you make that choice again when the feeling returns.

 

Track 1 00:05:00

Lord, you see the wounds we've been holding open longer than we

 

Track 1 00:05:03

should have. the people around us. Give us the courage to name

 

Track 1 00:05:08

the bitterness and the grace to let it go. Help us to choose it

 

Track 1 00:05:12

again tomorrow when the feeling comes back. And let us trust

 

Track 1 00:05:15

that releasing the score to you is the only way to stop paying

 

Track 1 00:05:19

it ourselves. In Jesus' name, amen. If this episode encouraged

 

Track 1 00:05:24

you today, would you share it with someone who might need to

 

Track 1 00:05:26

hear it? Just go to dailydevotionsforbusylives.com

 

Track 1 00:05:31

and copy the link. It only takes a second. Thanks for joining me

 

Track 1 00:05:36

on Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. Remember, letting go of a

 

Track 1 00:05:40

grudge is an act of self-preservation. The person

 

Track 1 00:05:43

who hurt you has probably already moved on. Come back next

 

Track 1 00:05:47

time for more encouragement to help you live grounded in God's

 

Track 1 00:05:50

truth. Until then, God bless and have a great day.