“Opposing circumstances create strength. Opposition gives us greater power of resistance. To overcome one barrier provides ability to overcome the next .” Peter Drucker
Friday, June 3, 2016
There is no earthly position that holds more weight or influence over the direction of people’s lives then love, and even more when it’s God’s love through you. It is powerful when considering that it believes all things, bears all things, hopes all things, endures all things and is never failing. On this, and on this alone will the world ever notice Christianity in a positive light. It will change the world because the change will be most obvious in us.
Thursday, June 2, 2016
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
The consequence of sin you didn’t plan on
Tuesday, May 31, 2016
Friday, May 27, 2016
Thursday, May 26, 2016
Bad attitudes impair good judgment
Bad attitudes lead to bad decisions; they can block any sense of reasonableness, and can even cause you to betray your own common sense. Let’s face it, a bad attitude is so powerful, it can take a seemingly mature adult and make them look absolutely foolish.
Bad attitudes have a profound impact on whatever you are doing. They can take a family outing and turn it into a nightmare. They can totally ruin a hobby or your favorite sport activity, and even your work performance can be devastated by a bad attitude. All this is simply what a bad attitude does to you. It’s far more devastating on what it does to your leadership as others observe you. Continual bad attitudes eventually damage your credibility.
If this is what a bad attitude can do, then the opposite must be true for good attitudes in that they strengthen your credibility by promoting loyalty, quality work, and cooperative behaviors. Everyone who serves in any leadership capacity is the example of not only acceptable behavior, but also expected behavior. Most leaders compromise their leadership strength through nothing more than bad attitudes towards people, the job, and situations.
The bottom line is this – attitude is always a choice. Maintaining a good attitude is very much like having your own quality control department. If it’s bad, throw it out. It it’s good, approve it for display.
Wednesday, May 25, 2016
We Are Not Entitled to the World’s Respect
A great interview of Don Carson by Desiring God on how the Christian should approach the current "culture wars." I especially like the emphasis that winning the argument is not the same as winning souls. Anger and fear expressed by Christians is the opposite response we should being living.
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
Right attitudes are personal energy producers
The need to protect your attitude
An attitude is a perception or a feeling that creates a path for your behavior to follow. In other words, change your attitude, and you can change your actions. Attitudes can actually shape the course of the future, and are even reflected in the right and wrong decisions that have made history.
Attitudes are contagious, and for this reason they can set the tone of a day, meeting, or relationship. Attitudes can spread from one person to another without the recipient even knowing it. If you struggle with a bad attitude, it can weaken the resolve of others to stay positive, leaving them vulnerable to the same bad attitude that controls you. I don’t know who said it, but it’s true: “A bad attitude is like a flat tire; you can’t go anywhere until you change it.”
Good attitudes must be cultivated in order to weed out self-centered, negative ones. You don’t simply stop a bad attitude; you must replace it with a good one. It starts the moment you go to bed, and must be put in practice when your feet hit the floor in the morning. Practice the good attitude, and this will become the stronger, more predictable response. A good attitude takes no energy, but is energy-producing. It opens doors of opportunities, makes us more teachable, and people will actually enjoy being around us.
All the days of the afflicted are evil, but the cheerful of heart has a continual feast. (Proverbs 15:15)
Monday, May 23, 2016
Thursday, May 19, 2016
It’s sin that seeks to expose you, not God!
Sin seeks to hide from the eyes of God, and it’s hiding place is in you
In J.R. Tolkiens’ great work, The Lord of the Rings, we find straightaway that the one ring to rule them all possessed a little-known secret: It wanted to be found. If Frodo’s journey was already laden with dangers beyond imagination, the desire of the ring made it all the more impossible. That ring presents a powerful picture of the true nature of sin. Sin wants to be found in you. It seeks to expose itself at the worst possible time. The larger the audience, the better timed sin plans to throw back the curtain and reveal itself.
This principle is seen in Numbers 32:23 - “...behold, you have sinned against the LORD, and be sure your sin will find you out.” I can remember as a young boy being told that God could expose my true sin nature at any time, and this became my erroneous view of the Fear of the Lord. While it is true, it is not accurate in relation to a believer’s relation with God. It is sin that exposes itself, and God’s love and grace which actually keeps it covered. Even when sin publicly hurt
s, it’s God’s grace which heals us. However, sin desires you to blame it all on God. Isn’t this what Adam ultimately did when he was confronted by God? “...The woman whom you gave to be with me, she gave me fruit of the tree, and I ate.” (Genesis 3:12)
Sin seeks to attack your thoughts, attitudes, relationships and most definitely your actions and use them as a piece of its machinery in resisting God. It once enslaved you with powers which were aimed to subjugate and separate you from God, and it never ceases in its attempts to pull you back into its slavery; and, if it can’t in reality, it will through deception.
It wants to manufacture you as a sin appliance; a cylinder in its engine; a generator of its influence to provide it with horse-power. Sin wants to make you into an implement of evil; an instrument to be played; a pot in which to store its vileness and a means to a dreadful end. If it can, it will use you as a weapon, and collectively use Christians as an arsenal of evil against anything righteous, and will take entire congregations and use them as power-plants or transformers for its wicked purposes. It will twist the life of a Christian to such a degree that in the end, we become driven by pride and anger which hardly represents Jesus Christ. Sin seeks to hide from the eyes of God, and it’s hiding place is in you.
This is not the right of sin against the Christian, but it is its plan. There is a way; a spiritually natural way to deal with sin when it seeks to find refuge in your body, and I’ll introduce it in my next blog post.
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
The early church thrived in a culture
far more godless than our own
The issue isn’t what we see in a godless world,
but rather what that godless world hopes to see in us.
As Christians, the culture that made us comfortable, and that we enjoyed has all but disappeared. It’s more important than ever that we commit ourselves to live holy and godly lives. Be encouraged however, for what is new for us, was the soil from which the early church grew and thrived. My novel, Polycarp - a destroyer of our gods, provides insight into how the early church lived, grew and became better followers of Christ because of the godlessness that surrounded them.
Here is an excerpt from a time Ignatius, a prominent pastor in Antioch, sent young Polycarp to help a church in a nearby town that had a very bad reputation.
“As I entered the gates of the old city, I was immediately struck by the grotesque paganism that dominated the city. It was an immoral scene I was not completely prepared to encounter...As I navigated my way through the crowds, I wondered what Ignatius was getting me into; ‘This mission would be better suited for a blind man,’ I muttered to myself. I rode straight on trying not to look to right or left. I was embarrassed and tried to ignore the gross comments and solicitations that both immoral women and men were making towards me. It was profoundly evil, and what is even odder is that I never felt as if they were talking to me, but rather were searching my soul, fishing for any sign or manifestation of secret lust...A wave of apprehension came over me, and I felt intimidated by the dominion of evil before me...’Be sober and watchful,’ I thought to myself. ‘I can hear the roaring lion as he prowls looking for a simpleton to devour.’ I didn’t want that to be me.”
Saturday, May 14, 2016
Where faith begins
This is an excerpt from my novel - Polycarp, a destroyer of our gods, where young Polycarp is being sent by his mentor, the Apostle John, to perform a difficult task where he would face life-altering decisions that would effect the rest of his life.
“A wave of nervousness came over me since I had no idea what he was talking about, or what he was going to compel me to do. ‘I guess it was a good thing,’ I thought to myself. ‘I’ve always had John or Timothy to lean on, but now I guess it’s time to lean on my Lord.’
I reflected on the great exhortation from the Proverbs of Solomon; ‘Be confident in the LORD with all your heart, and never rely on your limited discernment of life. Instead, in all your ways seek to discover his ways, and you will find his direction lying straight in front of you.’ (Proverbs 3:5-6). I must confess that while I loved that text, I didn’t fully understand it. I guess that is what makes faith, true faith. Faith begins where my ability cannot take me or my sight guide me."
Thursday, May 12, 2016
Let all you do be done in love (I Corinthians 16:14)
Love holds the position of God’s greatest command
(Love Him with all your heart - Matthew 22:37)
Love holds the position of God’s second greatest command
(Love your neighbor like you love yourself - Matthew 22:39)
Love holds the position for God’s most difficult command
(Love your enemy - Luke 6:27-35)
Love is the most important quality a believer in Christ can possess, for without it, you cannot be a follower of God (I John 3:16-18). Out of Divine love flow all other virtues of Godliness and Christlikeness.
God has filled you with His love. You are so indebted to God because of His love to you that He simply wishes you to pay any and everyone you meet a payment of His love in you (Romans 13:8). God’s love is no small aspect of Christian living. You should be giving away the love of God in you to everyone you meet!
God wants the world to see that you belong to Him. Christians have lost their mysteriousness” in the eyes of the world, because they do not put a strong value upon God’s love. Divinely-infused love in the life of a believer restores that mysteriousness. Love is God’s power unleashed in the lives of His children. it is the greatest virtue a Believer can possess!
“A Christian should at all times keep a strong guard against everything that tends to overthrow, or corrupt, or undermine a spirit of love. That which hinders love to men will hinder the exercise of love to God. If love is the sum of Christianity, surely those things which overthrow love are exceedingly unbecoming Christians. An envious Christian, a malicious Christian, a cold, hardhearted Christian is a great absurdity and contradiction. It is as if one should speak of dark brightness, or a false truth!” Jonathan Edwards
Wednesday, May 11, 2016
I'm not a poet by any stretch of the imagination, and every attempt yields more comic relief than heart-felt script. I can't even make it past, "Roses are red and violets are blue..." Nevertheless, I do appreciate the complexity, rhyme and deep thoughts conveyed in poetry. George Herbert, a seventeenth century British poet, is by far my favorite. Among all his writings, I find this poem most moving. It is the inspiration behind why I write, and desire to write so much more.
Secretary of Thy praise
By George Herbert (1593–1633)
O SACRED Providence, who from end to end
Strongly and sweetly movest! shall I write
And not of Thee, through whom my fingers bend
To hold my quill? shall they not do Thee right?
Of all the creatures both in sea and land
Only to man Thou hast made known Thy ways,
And put the pen alone into his hand,
And made him secretary of Thy praise.
Man is the world’s high priest: he doth present
The sacrifice for all; while they below
Unto the service mutter an assent,
Such as springs use that fall, and winds that blow.
He that to praise and laud Thee doth refrain
Doth not refrain unto himself alone,
But robs a thousand who would praise Thee fain,
And doth commit a world of sin in one.
Wherefore, most sacred Spirit, I here present
For me and all my fellows praise to Thee:
And just it is that I should pay the rent,
Because the benefit accrues to me.
Thou art in small things great, nor small in any,
Thy even praise can neither rise, nor fall.
Thou art in all things one, in each thing many:
For thou art infinite in one and all.
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