Showing posts with label guidance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guidance. Show all posts

Friday, April 13, 2012

Even today...

It may be today that you are required to do hard things and it may be that tomorrow you will face difficult challenges.
Never forget that you have been kept up till now and you will also be kept after.
Challenges come to all of us.
It is in responding to challenges that we grow, we mature and we build.
Without conflict, resolution would be a hollow and empty prospect.
Today is not only the end of something old...in fact, it could be that today is the beginning of everything new.

Have a great weekend!

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Never doubt influence...

“The one indispensable requirement for producing godly, mature Christians is godly, mature Christians.” 
~Kevin DeYoung

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

"Treat people as if they were what they ought to be and you help them become what they are capable of becoming."
~Goethe

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

"Oh God, be truly present in our lives and allow us to be truly present in the lives of others."

Sunday, February 19, 2012

So true...

"Lead us not into temptation. Just tell us where it is; we'll find it."
-Sam Levenson

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

"Older women teach..."

Two areas of my ministry have come together in a beautiful way in the last few days. 
I am teaching a class on Sunday nights on the Christian family and have spent the last two weeks discussing the roles of Christian wives and mothers.  I have found both studying for this class and the discussion it has generated to be enlightening and wonderfully beneficial.
In my personal, benevolent ministry, I have spent the last couple of days visiting widows in our community.  I have taken a small Christmas gift and spent some time talking with these ladies.  Ironically, most of these women attend the same place of worship here in town and it is not affiliated with the church of Christ that I grew up in.  In talking with these ladies, they shared freely the concerns they had about getting older, losing friends to death, the state of our country and a variety of other situations that they are each facing.  Some of these ladies have experienced the tragedy of losing children, troubled marriages, and, as widows, all have dealt with the grief of losing a husband. 
What amazes me about these women is that they, in different degrees, have learned to lean on God through all these experiences.  They each speak openly of daily Bible study and an involved prayer life.  Since many of them are members of the same congregation, they have learned to help carry one another through their troubling times.  One of these women had driven another to her cancer treatments on many occasions and others told of how they each had worked together to provide food and Christmas presents for several families in town.  These women are grappling with the problems of personal lonliness, wayward children, and the process of constantly growing older day by day.  My town will certainly miss these women when they are not longer a part of our community.
In seeing these precious women age with grace, I was brought back to the study I have been leading at Lebanon.  These women, and many others like them, have truly embraced their position in their families, churches, and communities.  Younger women (as well as men) would do well to imitate their examples.  The generation of which they are a part is quickly passing away and the ability to learn from these great matriarchs will soon be gone.  What the Bible teaches about the importance of learning from older generations cannot be over emphasized. 
May each of us take advantage of the opportunity we have to learn from our elders before they are gone and let us use the knowledge they have shared to be better people now and in our process of aging.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Is it just me?

Several times in my life I have given people advice to go in one direction, and then I have promptly turned and gone in the opposite.  Sometimes this advice was relational, sometimes behavioral, sometimes spiritual.  What is about human nature that makes us defy good judgment and common sense and invite disaster?  I think the answer to that question lies at the heart of who we are as people.  We are rebellious given our fallen state and it was rebellion that caused the situation to begin with.

Parents will tell you that often times the fastest way to get a child to do something is to forbid it.  Even as children, we want to know if we really will get punished; if we really will be injured and heartbroken.  I think back over the vast majority of sins I have committed in my life and, largely, they were intentional acts of disobedience.  One might argue that intent behind the thought, word or action has a large part in determining whether it is sinful at all.  Why do I choose evil when I know what the consequences will be?

Some might say because sin brings pleasure for a season and I think the Bible would agree with that.  After several run-ins with serious sin, however, it looks like we would be tired of the pain and emotional turmoil.  John Wesley taught the doctrine of Christian Perfection: that we can reach a point where we cease to sin or even desire sin.  How can this be?  I believe this point can only come when we have matured to a point to see sin for what it is: evil that separates us not only from God but from each other.  If we can fully realize that essential truth then we have a much great opportunity to look temptation in the face and refuse its offer.

I am still growing in that direction and I hope you are as well.  Let us press forward and onward toward the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Pray for study

This Thursday, Lord willing, I will be meeting with some Mormons to talk about the Scriptures.  This is my fourth or fifth meeting with LDS missionaries, but only my second with these two guys.  Our first meeting lasted over an hour and they seemed open to discussing some deeper issues.  Most of my encounters with LDS members in the past have led to mutual respect but no lasting results.  For some reason I feel that at least one of these young men may be different.

Please pray that I will have God's Spirit and God's words as I speak to these young men.  Imagine what great missionaries converted LDS members would make?!  We are slowly building up to some important questions and I hope that we will find common ground in the truth of God's word.

Thanks for all you do.
"God cannot lead you on the basis of information you do not have." —Ralph Winter