Monday, December 31, 2012

May GRACE BE WITH YOU


MaxLucado.com Weekday Email

Grace Happens

To discover Grace is to discover God’s utter devotion to you, His stubborn resolve to give you a healing, purging love.

The Bible tells us, “You did not save yourselves; it was a gift from God.” Does he stand high on a hill and bid you climb out of the valley? No. He bungees down and carries you out. Does he build a bridge and command you to cross it? No. He crosses the bridge and shoulders you over. This is the gift God gives. A grace that grants us the power to receive love and the power to give it. A grace that changes us and leads us to a life that is eternally altered.

All God wants from us is faith. Put your faith in God. And grow in God’s Grace. More verb than noun, more present tense than past tense, Grace didn’t just happen; it happens. May it happen to you!

“For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. Romans 6:23″

From GRACE

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

No Small Power


MaxLucado.com Weekday Email

Where there’s no assurance of salvation, there’s no peace. No peace means no joy. No joy results in fear-based lives. Is this the life God creates? No. Grace creates a confident soul. His love isn’t contingent on your own. Do you find such a promise hard to believe? In John 17:11 and verse 20, Jesus prays:

“Holy Father, keep them and care for them, all those you have given me, so that they will be united just as we are. I am praying not only for these disciples but also for all who will ever believe in me because of their testimony.”

Our faith will wane, our resolve waver, but we will not fall away. Jude 1 says, we are “kept by Jesus” and shielded by God’s power. And that is no small power! It’s the power of a living and ever-persistent Savior.

From GRACE


Thursday, December 20, 2012

He Called His Name Jesus


MaxLucado.com Weekday Email

Scripture says, “And Joseph took to him his wife, and did not know her till she had brought forth her firstborn Son. And he called His name Jesus! Matthew 1:24”

Joseph was literally willing to tank his reputation. And he did. He traded it in for a pregnant fiancĂ©e and an illegitimate son and made the big decision of discipleship. He placed God’s plan ahead of his own. Rather than make a name for himself, he made a home for Christ. And because he did, a great reward came his way. “And he called His name Jesus!”

Of all the saints, sinners, prodigals, and preachers who’ve spoken the name, Joseph—a blue-collar, small-town construction worker said it first. Joseph cradled the wrinkle-faced prince of heaven, and with an audience of angels and pigs, whispered, “Jesus—You’ll be called Jesus!”

From: Grace for the Moment

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

God Stakes His Claim


MaxLucado.com Weekday Email

I heard the announcement, “Your name is on the standby list!” Groan! The dreaded standby list. Possibility but no guarantee.

Oh, to be numbered among the confirmed! To have my own seat and departure time. How can you rest if you aren’t assured passage on the final flight home?

Many live with a deep-seated anxiety about eternity. They think they’re saved, but they still doubt, wondering, “Am I really saved?” Jesus promised a new life that could not be forfeited or terminated. He says “whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not be condemned.” God stakes his claim on us. Bridges are burned, and the transfer is accomplished. Ups and downs may mark our days, but they will never ban us from his kingdom. Jesus bottom-lines our lives with His grace!

“I tell you the truth, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has crossed over from death to life. John 5:24″

From GRACE

Monday, December 17, 2012

Your Identity


MaxLucado.com Weekday Email

Your identity isn’t in your possessions, talents, tattoos, kudos, or accomplishments. Nor are you defined by your divorce, deformity, debt or dumb choices. You are God’s child. You get to call him “Papa.”

According to Scripture, Ephesians 3:12 invites you to approach God with freedom and confidence. I John 4:9-11 promises that you will receive the blessings of his special love and provision. Romans 8:17 says you will inherit the riches of Christ and reign with him forever.

If God loves you, you must be worth loving. If he wants to have you in his kingdom, then you must be worth having. God’s grace invites you—no, requires you—to change your attitude about yourself and take sides with God against your feelings of rejection. Let these words cement in your heart a deep, satisfying, fear-quenching confidence that God will never let you go.

You belong to Him!

From GRACE

Watch episode 11 of GRACE on TBN - In the Grip of Grace


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Thursday, December 13, 2012

Chosen Children


MaxLucado.com Weekday Email

There’s something in you that God loves! Not just appreciates or approves—but loves. You cause God’s eyes to widen, his heart to beat faster. He loves you and accepts you.

Don’t we yearn to know this? God, do you know who I am? In the great scheme of things do I count for anything? So many messages tell us we don’t. We get laid off at work, turned away by the school. Everything from acne to Alzheimer’s leaves us feeling like the girl with no date to the prom. We react. We validate our existence with a flurry of activity. We do more, buy more, achieve more. Always, wrestling with the question, “Do I matter?”

All of grace, I believe, is God’s definitive reply. “Be blessed, my child. I accept you. I have adopted you into my family.” Adopted children are chosen children! Trust God’s love for you!

“But when the appropriate time had come, God sent out his Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, so that we may be adopted as sons with full rights. And because you are sons, God sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, who calls “Abba! Father! Galatians 4:4-6″

From GRACE




Wednesday, December 12, 2012

The Grace-given, Give Grace


MaxLucado.com

The grace-given—give grace! Is grace happening to you? Is there anyone in your life you refuse to forgive? If so, do you appreciate God’s forgiveness toward you? Do you resent God’s kindness to others? Do you grumble at God’s uneven compensation? How long has it been since your generosity stunned someone?

Since someone objected, “No, really, this is too generous?” If it’s been awhile reconsider God’s extravagant grace. Psalm 103:2-3 says, “Forget not all his benefits, who forgives all your iniquity.” Let grace unscrooge your heart. Like Peter encourages us in 2 Peter 3:18 to “Grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.”

When grace happens, generosity happens. Unsquashable, eye-popping, big-heartedness happens! You simply can’t contain it all. Let it bubble over. Let it spill out. Let it pour forth.

From GRACE

Monday, December 10, 2012

Amazing GRACE


MaxLucado.com Weekday Email


“Tis grace hath brought me safe thus far, and grace will lead me home.”

When John Newton penned this promise, he did so out of personal experience. His greatest test came the day he buried his wife, Mary. He’d loved her dearly and prayed his death would precede hers. But his prayer was not answered.

On the day Mary Newton died, John Newton found strength to preach a Sunday sermon. The next day he visited church members, and later he officiated at his wife’s funeral. He grieved but in his grief he found God’s provision. He later wrote, “The Bank of England is too poor to compensate for such a loss as mine. But the Lord, the all-sufficient God speaks, and it is done. Let those who know Him, and trust Him, be of good courage.”

My friend, disease, calamity, and trouble populate your world. But they don’t control it! Grace does.

“My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness. Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me.” 2 Corinthians 12:9

From GRACE


Friday, December 7, 2012

The Gladdest News of All


Grace is simply another word for God’s reservoir of strength and protection. Not occasionally or miserly but constantly and aggressively, wave upon wave. We barely regain our balance from one breaker, and then, bam, here comes another!

We dare to stake our hope on the gladdest news of all: if God permits the challenge, he will provide the grace to meet it. We never exhaust his supply. “Stop asking so much! My grace reservoir is running dry.” Heaven knows no such words. God has enough grace to solve every dilemma you face, wipe every tear that you cry, and answer every question you ask.

He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all. How will he not also graciously give us all things? (Romans 8:32).

Having given the supreme and costliest gift, how can he fail to lavish upon us all he has to give?

From GRACE
Max Lucado daily email

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

An Orman Never Gives Up

 

How Suze Orman triumphed over adversity, created an iconic personal brand and remains atop the personal-finance heap

 
When Suze Orman grew up on the rough-and-tumble South Side of Chicago, she drew strength from a family credo: “An Orman never gives up.”

In every phase of her life and career, Orman has personified true grit. Perseverance is the quality that, more than anything else, has enabled her to become the most successful personal-finance guru in America, build a multiplatform brand for herself and achieve the elusive quality of longevity.

Call Orman’s strength good old-fashioned tenacity or the will to win. Whatever you want to label that quality, it has enabled her to stay atop the heap when it comes to the multitudes of pundits who offer personal-finance advice to “the little guy” on Main Street. She has flourished as a dedicated entrepreneur, a popular figure on television and a thoroughly inspiring teacher to millions of her fans.

But Orman prefers to view her accomplishments in a way that doesn’t involve money or fame. She believes that she has achieved her success because she has an unflagging self-belief, and this gives her the inner strength to fend off her critics as well. Orman views the concept of success as something everyone can enjoy, regardless of bank account or status in society.

“Success comes when you can look in the mirror and you like what’s looking back,” Orman says. “You’re proud of what you’ve created. You’re proud of what you’re doing, even if it doesn’t give you a financial reward and nobody buys it. You’re proud of yourself.”

It’s hardly a coincidence that one of her biggest heroes is none other than Oprah Winfrey, whom Orman admires for her “tremendous sense of humanity.” Orman, with her strong but soothing style of communicating financial ideas, does for her fans’ financial needs what Winfrey offers people to make better choices about their relationships. Orman learned from the best, clearly, because she sometimes sounds just like Winfrey.

“True success is a smile,” Orman says philosophically. “It’s a smile in your heart because you feel like your life is complete. Then you’re successful. It’s not gauged by how much money you have. Look at Bernie Madoff. He was seriously considered a success by so many—even when he was hurting so many.”

If you think that Orman is little more than a trader in shopworn platitudes, you’d be selling her short and diminishing the acumen of her audience. By maintaining her credibility over the years and shrewdly diversifying her methods of communication, Suze has assembled a potent Orman Inc.

Her cable television program The Suze Orman Show has been one of CNBC’s highest-rated offerings of the decade. She has penned nine consecutive New York Times best-sellers, while writing, co-producing and hosting seven Public Broadcasting Service specials based on her popular books. The PBS shows have garnered two Emmys and are typically highly successful fundraising vehicles. Orman has become a fixture in popular culture as well. She has appeared as a guest on TV shows ranging from Piers Morgan’s prime-time chat show to Bill Maher’s popular program on HBO. In a sure sign that Orman has become an icon, Saturday Night Live has spoofed her five times, lampooning her cheerfulness and effervescence.

What the satirists—and many of her critics—miss, however, is the essence of what makes her so successful. Strangers swear by Orman’s advice, and not necessarily because she is the “smartest” financial expert on the tube. But she is the one they invariably turn to for counsel because they trust her to have their backs. They sense that she cares about them. They believe that Orman is more than a financial planner or a broker you go to see in an office. She is a loyal friend who appears in their living rooms. Orman is neither a Pollyanna nor a doomsayer. She is a pragmatist. She tells people the truth, what they need to hear but not always what they want to hear. In an era when flimflam artists abound, people respect Orman, and more important, they know that she is on their side.

I acquired an appreciation for this trait when I was about to leave Orman’s home after our two-hour conversation on a frigid day in January. She eyed me with genuine concern as I was packing up my stuff and putting on my gloves and scarf.

“Don’t you have a hat?” she asked me. “Are you going to be warm enough? I hope you don’t have far to go now.”

Intro to Suze Orman

You might say I got a class in Suze Orman 101 the Friday morning when I stopped by her spacious apartment in midtown Manhattan to find out what makes her tick.

When she is in New York, she lives in one of those buildings where, once upon a time, you’d have expected to find Holly Golightly hanging out, with its high ceilings, airplane-hangar lobby and location within spitting distance of Central Park.

It’s the kind of pad where the best of the best reside. Orman’s apartment building is not lavish or huge, mind you. But the neighborhood is where the cream of the city lives. As I waited in the lobby to be admitted to Orman’s sanctuary, I spied a well-coiffed real estate agent escorting a wealthy potential client through the lobby. “This looks like a nice building,” the impressed client said. “Oh, it is, it is,” the saleswoman gushed. I smiled politely, looking down at my black shoes that needed a shine, thinking, What am I doing here?

I doubt that Suze Orman ever has those kinds of thoughts anymore about herself. She knows exactly what she is doing and why and for whom. Orman has an absolute sense of belonging in her society. She moves easily and naturally from her highly popular TV show on CNBC to an appearance on The View.

In person, Orman is a lot like she is on the tube. She was intense but not intimidating. She exudes confidence and a sense of purpose. It would be hard to imagine Orman sitting around, channel-surfing. She doesn’t waste time. Every minute is accounted for.

She speaks animatedly. If you were transcribing her speech, you’d fight yourself to refrain from putting one word in every sentence in italics. She speaks quickly and can’t wait to get the next thought out of her mouth. Clearly, this woman, 60, has conviction in what she says, underlining how she has become the most popular and respected guru in the crowded personal-finance arena. Part cheerleader, part drill sergeant, Orman is a natural leader. She likes to have the responsibility of offering strangers advice—and she expects to be listened to.

Yet Orman is disarmingly unpretentious. “I don’t use a teleprompter,” she says in more of a statement-of-fact tone than a boast. “I’m simply me. Ninety-nine percent of the on-air talent… they are scripted. When I look at the camera, it’s a black hole. I have nothing prepared, no pre-arrangements. I don’t like to know what the questions are in advance. People can feel that I’m authentic.”

The importance she places on authenticity is why she doesn’t act like a multimillionaire and talk down to people. Her apartment is spacious, though anything but ostentatious, appearing quite comfortable and lived in, and certainly conducive to the needs of a cheerful workaholic. “I watch CNBC 24 hours a day,” Orman tells me with a laugh.

When I walk in, she directs me straight to the kitchen table, where I sip steaming-hot coffee and she enjoys a cup of tea. Orman dresses informally for comfort, wearing blue jeans.

I got a strong measure for Orman when she told me a story that underscores her philosophy of taking care of yourself and not relying on anybody else. Once, one of her fans told her that his daughter had run up thousands of dollars in debts and he was at his wits’ end on how to help the kid. He plaintively asked Orman whether he should bail her out of the jam or not.

NO!, Orman emphatically told the man. “Let her know what it’s like to fail! What makes you a big success is if you have experienced failure early in your life. If you could have little failures, little ones, they make you humble.”

Learning Self-Reliance

That kind of up-from-the-bootstraps self-reliance comes honestly to Orman. To look at her is to see a self-assured finance pro who enjoys life’s luxuries and mingles with the rich and famous around the world. But it wasn’t always like this, not by a long shot.

She pulled herself—by herself—out of a Chicago upbringing on the other side of the tracks. Her father “started out as a chicken-plucker” with an outfit called Michigan Poultry. “He’d kill it and pluck it—and you’d take it,” she recalls.

Eventually her father ran a 400-square-foot takeout shack called Chicken a Go-Go (yes, this was indeed the Swinging Sixties!). In a harrowing on-the-job fire, he suffered third-degree burns and soon contracted emphysema. Everyone in the family, including Orman’s mother and two brothers, worked at the restaurant already (Suze’s mom did so on the weekends; during the week she was a secretary). Now, young Suze was expected to chip in and do her part as well. “Mommy and Daddy were like, ‘How are we going to do this? Suze, you’re going to work.’ I was 13.” Orman started working as a counter girl at a delicatessen.

Her father’s example “gave me the courage to ‘go for it,’ ” Orman recalls. Despite his physical pain and struggles, she says, “My father got up every single morning and went to work. He told me: An Orman never gives up.”

Orman pauses for a moment to reflect on her dad. He never was able to attain the American dream. “He, essentially, in his mind, died a failure,” she says at last.

Orman grows thoughtful on the subject of her youth. It clearly has left emotional scars. She loves her parents and appreciates the work ethic they imparted to her. But it’s also just as clear that she relishes having transcended her humble roots on the South Side of Chicago.

“I drive by my old neighborhood,” she says. “And I can’t believe how far I’ve come.”

Only when she was an adult did Orman learn that her mother had been an Avon lady, on top of her other jobs, to help out.

When Orman asked her mother why she had taken on the Avon work, the answer was bracing: “Because I didn’t want your daddy to know he wasn’t bringing enough money in.” Did Orman’s father ever learn that his wife was working a third job? “Not to my knowledge” she says.

Those tough conditions hardened Orman, to a degree, and taught her a valuable lesson, which she clearly hasn’t forgotten. While she accepts that money can’t buy happiness, she recognizes the flip side of that coin. “A lack of money sure will make you miserable,”
Orman says.

“When you’re raised with a work ethic like my family’s, and watching your father, against all odds, going to work, you learn,” she says. “How bad do you want something? Rather than turning my back on the battlefield of problems, I became a warrior and walked into it.”

But not everyone would have adopted the warrior way growing up under those circumstances. I ask her why she was able to summon up the resolve to “never give up.”

It’s the only time I saw Orman flummoxed during our two-hour conversation. “I don’t know why,” she says soulfully. “To this day, I don’t know why.”

The Queen of Customer Service

Eventually, the 22-year-old Orman moved to Berkeley, Calif., where she became a waitress at the Buttercup Bakery. Always someone to benefit from every experience, she learned the rudiments of customer service in that modest job for seven years.

“I loved that job,” she says, smiling broadly. She regarded the customers as her friends, and before too long, they felt the same way about the cheerful waitress with the friendly Chicago accent. “They always walked away with a smile,” she says.

Orman’s mentor was an older waitress named Helen, who chain-smoked cigarettes and sported a beehive hairstyle. “I loved Helen more than life itself,” Orman says. When asked what made Helen so special to her, Orman doesn’t hesitate: “It was her kindness to people. She had joy in her eyes and in her heart.”

By the early 1980s, America was in the grip of stock market frenzy. Millions of investors became equity investors. Against this backdrop, Orman became intrigued by the machinations of Wall Street, too, and talked her way into a job as a broker in the Bay Area with Merrill Lynch (for the full story, including a hilarious description of her interview outfit, go to SUCCESS.com). Eventually, Orman gravitated to Prudential-Bache Securities before going out on her own.

When you get down to it, there’s no secret sauce to account for her success. She established the iconic Orman brand by working her tail off. Orman never had a master blueprint. She simply followed her interests and her convictions. Orman did whatever she could to help people. Like when she worked as a waitress, the key is to make people want to come back again and again.

Even three decades after entering the investment business, Orman continues to have a thirst for knowledge and information. It all adds up to helping her do a better job of reaching her audience.

Orman’s passion for trying to help people improve their lives keeps her excited and purposeful. She has a challenging job. The investment industry can change on a dime, as can the fragile state of investor psychology. Orman makes sense of it all. As she sees it, she has a calling and not merely a job. People overspend and they don’t save what they need, and Orman feels a sense of urgency to help them stop endangering themselves.

Sometimes, Though, Blinders Are Best

By following the watchwords of never giving up, she has always found the strength and determination to take risks, overcome long odds, lift herself off the canvas and, especially, block out the barbs of critics.

“The key to success is putting on blinders,” she says.

Orman has been dealing with critics for much of her career. She prefers not to think too much about them most of the time. She is either too busy or too happy to let them get her down, and she grudgingly accepts the fact that slights and put-downs must inevitably be a byproduct of becoming famous and successful.

Orman can be audacious and she exudes self-confidence. But she is not antagonistic, nor is she abusive or obnoxious. Some suspect that much of the criticism that gets hurled at her is based on professional jealousy. Some of Orman’s critics chalk up her fame to hype. It almost seems like they get their kicks from pulling at her cape because they know they can’t match her successes.

Orman has been roundly criticized for the prepaid debit card she unveiled early this year: “The Approved Card from Suze Orman”—and yes, the full title is printed across the top of the card’s purple plastic. People aren’t required to have a bank account to own one. They can purchase them just as they buy GreenDot’s or other companies’ prepaid Visa and MasterCards. Orman’s card doesn’t charge for every time it’s used as some of its competitors do. She is working with one of the major credit agencies to help her card owners build credit status over a period of 18 months. And she’s banking on the notion that the purchase fee for her card is merely $3, which is $1.95 less than the fee for GreenDot.

The New York Times asked of her fans: “Would they trust her advice, given that she was building a product to compete with the banks and credit cards that she often criticizes? The Times also chided Orman for mentioning the card twice in her column in O, The Oprah Winfrey Magazine, in what the writer suggested smacked of self-promotion.

“I did tell you I was not going to talk about the card on my CNBC show,” The Times quoted Orman as saying. “I will respect the editorial rules of CNBC. But of course, I am going to talk about this card anywhere and everywhere I can!”

“Suze’s ‘Approved’ card is an also-ran financial product that offers limited benefits to a small subset of the population,” Kathy Kristof wrote on CBS MoneyWatch. “Most people could do better—much better—elsewhere. The only reason the card is worth talking about is because Suze is the queen of hype, so high-profile and vehement about her financial advice that she’s inspired a series of Saturday Night Live spoofs.”

Orman says she tries to shrug off the flak. She sees the card as a continuation of the work she can do for her audience. “I’m so proud now of my prepaid card,” she says. “It only validates it more that I did the right thing because of how much negativity there is out there.”

When asked whether she thought some of the naysayers might be acting out of jealousy toward her, she fires back: “Not jealousy. But they do not have the foresight to create a new system…. People think, ‘Let someone else do it.’ They’re afraid they’ll create a controversy.”

Orman tries hard not to fall into the trap of letting her foes wipe the smile off her face. Her mantra is to keep your eye on the ball. In her case, this involves her quest to do and say things intended to arm investors with information.

“In life, it’s easier to do nothing and settle for the status quo,” Orman says. “You say, ‘I’m making enough money, and everything’s so easy now.’ It is not easy to go and try to forge new ground when that ground is already so firmly established.

“I could’ve made more money by saying, ‘buy this’ and ‘buy that,’” she continues, waving aside the critics. “You have never seen me on my own show, or on any website, selling a mug, a baseball cap with my name on it or a T-shirt saying, ‘You are approved!’ People want those things but they don’t need them. I am not about to create them just to make money. The Suze Orman brand is so far above that.”

Still, critics continue to rake her over the coals. She has gotten used to it, but it’s never easy to accept.

“I’ve always stood up to incredible criticism over my entire career,” she says. “Truth always remains when everything else disappears. I also have this belief to wish others well, no matter what they say about me. They can say anything they want about me. Success comes when you know what you’re doing and why you’re doing it.”


Cracks in the Armor

Journalists love to discover people who are on the way up and champion their causes. But once the media build them up, there is nothing left to do but to tear them down. It can be a maddening process when you are the one who is being ripped. No matter how strong you think you are, the pressure and stress can make you feel like fighting back sometimes. Orman is no different.

“In 1999, I wrote a book, The Courage to be Rich, and said the three internal obstacles to wealth are fear, shame and anger,” she says. “As I started to experience magazine writers writing 100 percent lies about me, I would get afraid. I was so ashamed about what they were writing… and then I said, ‘Oh my God!’ I was just setting myself for anger.

“Barbara Walters once said to me, ‘Suze, don’t read the newspapers!’ ” But Orman does. And as if the traditional print and broadcast media didn’t weigh in enough, celebrities like Orman have additional headaches in the digital age. “Now, it’s Twitter and Facebook, too,” she says.

Orman concedes that the pressure of facing a barrage of criticism does get to her on occasion: “I do make mistakes and go on attacks. A Gemini is very quick to act. I do respond sometimes in a way when I should not have responded. Whenever that happens, it’s a serious mistake that I learn from.”

Orman delivers this confession without a trace of anxiety. It’s as if she has accepted that she goofed, momentarily, and now it’s time for her to move on to the next challenge, and inevitably, to the next pack of bloggers or others who will try to knock her down. Orman doesn’t dwell for long on defeats or disappointments. Why should she? She knows inwardly that she has too much going on in her life—and much more important, too much to look forward to—to get bogged down by what someone looking for an argument wrote about her. She advises, “You have to live your life by following this quote: ‘The elephant keeps walking as the dogs keep barking.’ You have to know in your heart you’re doing what’s right in the bigger picture.”

Monday, December 3, 2012

Thriving Through the Holidays by Jim Rohn


    The holidays are upon us; a time of celebration and joy. I love the last days of November through the beginning of the New Year. The pure magic of the holidays is something that I anticipate and enjoy each and every year.
For some though, the holidays have lost the joy and excitement they at other times have had. The pace of life has grown so fast—much faster than those first holidays I remember in my life—that some people don’t enjoy the times they get to spend with their family and friends during what is supposed to be days filled with joy and peace.
Why is that? Probably a lot can be laid at the feet of how fast-paced our times are, but that isn’t all.
I believe our holiday times should be wonderful and filled with lasting and enjoyable moments and memories. So how can we ensure that we come out of the holidays in January with great memories of the past month? Here are six thoughts that will help you experience the holidays the way they were intended to be experienced:
Be Temperate
Holidays can be days of excess for many—too much food, too many cookies and treats. Too much chocolate, schedules that are too busy. One thing that will help you enjoy the holidays is to be temperate. Enjoy the food. Enjoy the treats. Enjoy the busy schedule of activities and parties. But also be disciplined enough to know when to hold back, when to say, “No.” When we go overboard we regret it and lose the opportunity to fully experience that moment. But when we enjoy a little and refrain from going too far, then we can enjoy all that little piece of time has to offer.

Lower Your Expectations
Much of the frustration people experience from the holidays is from setting their expectations too high. They expect too much from friends or family, and when they don’t get what they want, they get frustrated. They expect presents to be perfect and when they aren’t, they get frustrated or disappointed. Instead of having huge expectations this holiday season, just take it as it comes and enjoy what you can. And this brings me to my next point.
Enjoy What You Can and Ignore the Rest
This holiday season, go with an attitude of knowing that things will be what they will be. You can’t control other people or their actions. If a family member pushes the limits of your patience, ignore that and instead focus on how much you can enjoy the time you have with other family members. If things don’t go perfectly—which they won’t—then enjoy what you can and let the rest slide. You will feel a lot better about life if you can take all things a little easier.

Stay Out of Debt
Debt is a killer. It will steal your enjoyment of life. Be sure to stay within your financial boundaries this holiday season. The last thing you want is to start the New Year with a deeper burden financially. Know where you are financially and stay within those limits. You don’t have to impress anyone, just buy gifts that you can afford and express your feelings in the giving of the gift.

Take Time for Yourself
Be sure that, no matter how busy you get, you take time for yourself. Take time to read. Take a long bath if that relaxes you. Take a walk. Spend some time of quiet in front of a fire. Don’t rush through the holidays and sap all of your energy. Your mind and body need to be reenergized, so be sure to take time to do so.

Focus on Your Spiritual Life
Ultimately, no matter what tradition you come from, the holidays are historically days in which we focus on the spiritual. Men and women are created with a natural draw toward spiritual life. However, our culture today tends to stay away from a focus on the spiritual, and that has even crept into our holidays. Be sure to place an emphasis on building your spiritual life and growing in that area. This will help keep you grounded and able to deal with anything that may come your way.

Friends, this time of year is another chance to remember the important truths of life and to enjoy time with dear friends and family.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Live FORGIVEN


The Forgiveness of Christ

The dilemma was: “I know the Bible says I’m forgiven. But my conscience says I’m not!”

If this question hits home… If you haven’t accepted God’s forgiveness, you’re doomed to live in fear. And no pill or pep talk can set you at ease. Am I right? You may deaden the fear, but you can’t remove it. Only God’s grace can do that!

Have you accepted the forgiveness of Christ? If not, do it! The Bible says “if we confess our sins, God is faithful–not just to forgive us, but He cleanses us from all unrighteousness! I John 1:9″

Make it your simple prayer: Dear Father, I need forgiveness. I admit I’ve turned away from you. Forgive me, please. I place my soul in Your hands and I trust in your grace. Through Jesus, I pray. Amen.

Now! Live forgiven!

From Max on Life

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

He Makes a DIFFERENCE - Max Lucado


We get what sin is.  But, what we struggle with is how to make up for it?  

To put it simply—we’re not good enough!  If I lose my temper in traffic, can I make up for it by waving at the next four cars?  If I’m greedy one year, how many years should I be generous?

The truth is, I don’t know the answer to those questions. There’s no price list.  No rule sheet.   Is God some kind  of heavenly deal broker who sells packages of grace?  Is that the kind of God we have?  Is that the kind God we want?  Actually, God’s standard is much higher.

Romans 3:23 says, we fall short of the glory of God.  Way short!  We’re not good enough—but He is!  It’s Christ in us that makes the difference!

Friday, November 23, 2012

ASK....and it will be given


He’s the Real Deal

God’s not a love-‘em-and-leave-‘em kind of God! When I was 7, I ran away from home. I’d had it with my dad and his rules. With my clothes in a paper bag, I headed out. What do I need a father for? Well, I didn’t go far. When it came down to it, hunger won me over!

Did my dad know what I’d done—what I thought? I suspect he did—dads always seem to, don’t they? But you know—my dad called himself my father even when I didn’t call myself his son. His commitment to me was greater than my commitment to him.

You can count on God to be in your corner—no matter what–He cares!

Jesus said, “Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened. Matthew 7:7″

From Max On Life



Thursday, November 22, 2012

Joys of the Feast


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The Thanksgiving meal is over. My legs are propped up on the hearth. I have every intention of dozing off very soon. The turkey’s been attacked. The giblet gravy has been gobbled. The table is clear. The kids are napping. And the family’s content. Yesterday’s challenges in the trip getting here were lost in today’s joy.

That’s what Paul meant in 2nd Corinthians when he talked of our light and momentary troubles. God never said the journey would be easy, but He did say the arrival would be worthwhile. Remember this: God may not do what you want, but He will do what is right—and best. He is the Father of forward motion.

Trust Him. He will get you home. And the trials of the trip will be lost in the joys of the feast. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m a bit tired from the journey and it feels good to rest.

“For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. 2 Corinthians 4:17”

From In the Eye of the Storm



11.22.12.mp3
Thanksgiving Sale!

Nov 21, 2012 10:01 pm

“Give thanks to the LORD because he is good. His love continues forever. Psalm 136:1″

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Worship by Max Lucado:


 We hear a lot about “worship”—but what is it exactly? Worship is when you’re aware that what you’ve been given is far greater than what you can give. Worship is the awareness that were it not for God’s touch, you’d still be hobbling and hurting, bitter and broken. Worship is the “thank you” that refuses to be silenced.
Oh we’ve tried to make a science out of worship. We can’t do that any more than we can “sell love” or negotiate peace.” Worship is a voluntary act of gratitude offered by the saved to the Savior, by the healed to the Healer, and by the delivered to the Deliverer.
If you and I can go days without feeling an urge to say “thank you” to the One who saved, healed, and delivered us, then we’d do well to remember what He did!
“All this is for your benefit, so that the grace that is reaching more and more people may cause thanksgiving to overflow to the glory of God. 2 Corinthians 4:15”
From In the Eye of the Storm

Monday, November 19, 2012

Stay Close to the Vine


God says to you and me, “You can be fruitful, but I’m going to have to clip some diseased leaves.” Arrogance. Vain ambitions. Bad relationships. Dangerous opportunities. Revenge. Does God take this process lightly? I don’t think so. John 15:2 says, “He cuts off every branch of mine that does not produce fruit.”

So what are we to do? We branches on the vine– what is our response? An answer commonly given at this point is the imperative, “Bear fruit!” But is that the right response? If a branch is fruitless does it help if the gardener demands fruit? Please note, the branch cannot make fruit.

Jesus says, “remain in me. . .” Remain in my love. . . If any remain in me and I remain in them, they produce fruit. Our task? It’s clear. Stay close to the vine. Jesus said, “apart from Me, you can do nothing.” John 15:5

From A Gentle Thunder
Max Lucado


Sunday, November 18, 2012

Just BELIEVE


Suppose you give me a gift.  Let’s say you present me with a new tie.  I take it out of the box, examine it and say thank you, and then reach for my wallet.  “Now, how much do I owe you?” I ask.  You think I’m kidding.

“It’s a gift,” you say.  “You don’t need to pay me.”

“I understand,” I respond, but then show I don’t by asking, “Could I write you a check?”

In trying to buy your gift, I’ve degraded your grace.  I’ve robbed you of the joy of giving.  How often we rob God.  Have you considered what an insult it is to God when we try to pay him for his goodness?  Sly is the scheme of Satan.  He causes us to question grace, to earn it.  What is it God wants us to do?  Just believe.  Believe the One he sent.  And receive the gift he gives.

“The work of God is this: to believe in the one he has sent. John 6:29”

From A Gentle Thunder

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Develop the Three Traits of a Leader

John C. Maxwell is known around the world as an authority on leadership. Maxwell has more than 50 books on the topic and his organization has trained more than 2 million leaders worldwide. Whether it’s Barack Obama leading our nation, a quarterback trying to lead his team to the conference championship or a father trying to lead his family through these difficult economic times, Maxwell says there are three characteristics needed to become a successful leader.

1.     Consensus building: Abraham Lincoln was such a phenomenal leader because he understood the importance of consensus building and bringing together the people around him to help make up for his weaknesses. “The fallacy of leadership is thinking that if you can lead in one area you can lead in all areas, and you know all the answers.” Maxwell says. “This is simply not true. The new generation of leaders needs to be consensus builders by walking slowly through the crowd and valuing the opinions of others before making any decision.”

2.     Humility: “All great leaders are humble,” Maxwell says. “Instead of talking about their own accomplishments, leaders are looking to give the team the credit.”

3.     Risk taking: Leaders are not afraid to step out and say this is what needs to be done. Another of Maxwell’s favorite leaders was Winston Churchill, who stood alone against Parliament, maintaining Nazism’s threat to Europe when many people considered it a mere nuisance. “Churchill had the courage to go against the grain, against the trend, against the current,” Maxwell says. “He had the courage to do what he felt was right even in the midst of severe opposition.”
Read more about John C. Maxwell on SUCCESS.com

Friday, November 9, 2012

A NEW BIRTH


MaxLucado.com Weekday Email

God is often more patient with us than we are with ourselves. We assume if we fall, we aren’t born again. If we have the old desires, we must not be a new creation.

If you’re anxious please remember what Paul said in Philippians 1:6, “God began doing a good work in you, and I am sure he will continue it until it is finished when Jesus Christ comes again.”

In many ways your new birth is like your first. In your new birth God provides what you need; someone else feels the pain, and someone else does the work. And just as parents are patient with their newborn, so God is patient with you. But there’s one difference. The first time you had no choice about being born. This time you do.

The power is God’s. The effort is God’s. The pain is God’s. But the choice is yours.

From A Gentle Thunder


Thursday, November 8, 2012

GRACE by Max Lucado

Behold the fruit of grace: raised by God, saved by God, seated with God. Gifted, equipped and commissioned. Grace is the word God uses to describe his radical commitment to redeem and restore to himself a people with whom he will reign forever. Grace changes everything! We are spiritually alive. Heavenly positioned. Connected to God. A billboard of mercy. An honored child. This is the “aggressive forgiveness called grace” (Rom. 5:20 MSG).

Grace declares that God knew what he was doing when he made you and is dead serious about saving you for something out of this world. Grace goes where no government can. Grace speaks to the core questions: why are we here? Where are we headed? Does anyone care? Grace gets to the bottom of this thing called life.

Grace. This is the big message of the Christian hope, the unique idea we bring to the social conversation. Let’s major in this story. Let’s unleash our clearest thoughts on this question: How can we best articulate the greatest announcement in history? “And from his fullness we have all received, grace upon grace.” (John 1:16 ESV)

Let’s champion the cause of the pre-born. Let’s hold to deep-seated convictions about family and the practice of faith. But let’s begin and end with the highest of all hopes: “The grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men.” (Titus 2:11)

Monday, November 5, 2012

Who is your HERO?


MaxLucado.com Weekday Email


Behold a hero of the west. A thousand head of cattle pass behind him. He needs no one. He’s a cowboy. The American hero.

Behold a hero in the Bible: the shepherd. He too is rugged. Like the cowboy he makes his roof the stars and the pasture his home.

But that’s where the similarities end. The shepherd loves his sheep. The cowboy leads the cow to slaughter. The cowboy drives the cattle. The shepherd leads the sheep. The shepherd calls each sheep by name. Aren’t we glad Christ didn’t call Himself the Good Cowboy?

Psalm 100:3 says, “Know that the Lord is God. It is he who made us, and we are his; we are his people, the sheep of his pasture.”

We don’t need a cowboy to herd us. We need a shepherd. A shepherd to care for us and to guide us. And we have One. One who knows us by name.

From A Gentle Thunder

Keep praying for the USA…and exercise your privilege to vote!

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Tailor-Made


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Tailor-Made

Lucille Ball said the secret of staying young is to live honestly, eat slowly, and lie about your age. It’s hard to lie about the obvious. When you’re young you make a lot of faces in the mirror. When you’re old the mirror gets even.

Growing older. Aging. We laugh about it and we groan about it. We resist it, but we can’t stop it. And with the chuckles and wrinkles come some serious thoughts and questions about what happens when we die.

God is doing what any father would do. He’s providing a better place for us. A place to rest. A place He has prepared for us. Heaven isn’t mass-produced; it’s tailor-made. We must trust God. We must trust not only that He does what is best, but that He knows what’s ahead.

This world wears like a borrowed shirt. Heaven will fit like one tailor-made!

From A Gentle Thunder

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Love is All You'll Find

We know the love that God has for us, and we trust that love.
1John 4:16

Go to the beginning of every decision he has made and you'll find it. Go to the end of every story he has told and you'll see it. Love. No bitterness. No evil. No cruelty. Just love. flawless love. Passionate love. Vast and pure love. He is love. (passage from In the eye of the storm)

Monday, October 29, 2012

A Plate Of Experiences - Max Lucado

I have good plans for you, not plans to hurt you. Jeremiah 29:11

The next time your plate has more broccoli than apple pie, remember who prepared the meal. And next time your plate has a portion you find hard to swallow, talk to God about it. Jesus did.

Friday, October 26, 2012

So KIND to us


MaxLucado.com Weekday Email

Our Feet in His Hands

“Jesus poured water into a bowl and began to wash the disciples’ feet, drying them with the towel wrapped around Him.” (John 13:5)

We say, “No! Don’t wash their feet, Jesus. Tell them to wash Yours!” Do we object because we don’t want to see God washing feet? Or do we object because we don’t want to do the same?

Logic says, “Put up your fists.” Jesus says, “Fill up the basin.”
Logic says, “She doesn’t deserve it.” Jesus says, “You’re right, but you don’t, either.”

I don’t understand how God can be so kind to us, but he is. He kneels before us, takes our dirty feet in his hands, and washes them. Not from our dirt, but from our sins. And the cleansing isn’t just a gesture; it’s a necessity. We cannot cleanse our own filth. We cannot remove our own sin. Our feet must be in His hands.

Would you let him wash your feet today?

From A Gentle Thunder

Please continue to pray for the USA! 40 Days of Prayer



Thursday, October 25, 2012

Pray. Pray again. Pray more. Often. Pray Always.


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Jesus Prayed

Much of life is spent getting out of bed. Fixing lunches. Turning in assignments. Changing diapers. Paying bills. Routine. Regular. More struggle than strut.

You thought marriage was going to be a lifelong date? You thought having kids was going to be like baby-sitting? You thought the company who hired you wanted to hear all the ideas you had in college? Then you learned otherwise. The honeymoon ended.

But at the right time, God comes. In the right way, He appears. So don’t bail out. Don’t give up. He is too wise to forget you, too loving to hurt you. When you can’t see Him, trust Him.

So what does God do while we’re enduring the pain? Mark 6:46 says, “Jesus prayed.” He prayed for His disciples when they were in the storm. And when He heard their cries, He remained in prayer.

He’s praying a prayer right now that He Himself will answer at the right time.

“Jesus is able always to save those who come to God through him because he always lives, asking God to help them.” (Hebrews 7:24-25)

From A Gentle Thunder

Download and listen to Max’s 3-part interview on Family Life Today!

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Just Row


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Just Row

It’s one thing to suffer for doing wrong. Something else entirely to suffer for doing right. But it happens. And when the storm bursts, it washes away the naĂŻve assumption that if I do what is right, I will never suffer.

Just ask the faithful couple whose crib is empty. Just ask the business person whose honest work was rewarded with runaway inflation. Just ask the student who took a stand for the truth and got mocked.

And like the disciples in the boat, they wonder, “Why the storm, and where is Jesus?” (John 6:19)

It’s bad enough to be in the storm, but to be in the storm alone? So where does that leave us? It’s simple. We do what the disciples did. We row the boat. Oh there are moments of glamour, days of celebration. But we also have our share of baloney sandwiches. And to have the first we must endure the second. We row the boat.

“God will always give what is right to his people who cry to him night and day, and he will not be slow to answer them.” (Luke 18:7)

From A Gentle Thunder

Monday, October 22, 2012

Listen to HIM


MaxLucado.com Weekday Email

It’s Just Like Him
Think for a moment about your world. Remember that voice, that face, that event? Wasn’t there a time for you—maybe the birth of your child? The tears of the widower? The explosion of a sunset? The impassioned sermon? Wasn’t there a time when you heard God speak?

It isn’t the circumstance that matters; it’s God in the circumstance. It isn’t the words; it’s God speaking them. It wasn’t the mud that healed the eyes of the blind man; it was the finger of God in the mud. The cradle and the cross were as common as grass. What made them holy was the One laid upon them.

God speaks to us. He may use a sermon. He may inspire a conversation. He may speak through a song. He may even speak through this brief message. But, isn’t that just like Him? Oh, the lengths to which God will go to get our attention and win our affection! Listen to Him.

“Very truly I tell you, you will see heaven open, and the angels of God ascending and descending on the Son of Man.” (John 1:51)

From A Gentle Thunder

Monday, October 15, 2012

To Reach The Destination


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To Reach the Destination

Oct 14, 2012 10:01 pm
Today's MP3
In order to reach the destination, we have to say no to some requests! Can you imagine the chaos if a parent honored each request of a child during a trip? Can you imagine the chaos if God indulged each of ours? “No!” is a necessary word to take on a trip!

Scripture says, “For God has not destined us to the terrors of judgment but to the full attainment of salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ.” (I Thess. 5:9)

Note God’s destiny for your life: Salvation. God’s overarching desire is that you to reach that destiny. His itinerary includes stops that encourage your journey. He frowns on stops that deter you. When His sovereign plan and your earthly plan collide, a decision must be made. Who’s in charge of this journey?

If God must choose between your earthly satisfaction and your heavenly salvation, which do you hope He chooses?

From In the Eye of the Storm

Thursday, October 11, 2012

What do you hear?


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Listen to His Voice

There are a lot of lying voices that make “noise” in our world! You’ve heard them. They tell you to swap your integrity for a new sale. To barter your convictions for an easy deal. They whisper. They woo. They taunt. They flirt. They flatter.

“Go ahead, it’s okay.” “Just wait until tomorrow.” “Don’t worry, no one will know.”

The voices of the crowd! The world rams at your door. But Jesus taps at your door. Scripture says, “the sheep listen to His voice.” (John 10:2-4) The mark of a disciple of Jesus is the ability to hear the Master’s voice.

Which voice do you hear? Let me state something important. There’s never a time Jesus is not speaking. Never a place in which Jesus is not present. Never a room so dark, that the ever-present, ever-pursuing Jesus is not present.

Never! If we will but listen to His voice.

From In the Eye of the Storm

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Not Just Mercy, but Grace


-




We are poor, spiritually for sure; monetarily, perhaps.  We’ve buried our dreams, desires, and aspirations.  Like the mother with Lupus or the businessman in the unemployment line, we’re out of options.

Yet Christ approached us “while we were yet sinners!”  “Will you cover us?” we asked him, and Grace smiled.

Not just mercy, mind you, but grace.  Grace goes beyond mercy.  Mercy gave the prodigal son a second chance.  Grace threw him a party.  Mercy prompted the Samaritan to bandage the wounds of the victim.  Grace prompted him to leave his credit card as payment for the victim’s care. Mercy forgave the thief on the cross.  Grace escorted him into paradise.

Mercy pardons us.  Grace woos and weds us. Grace does this.  God does this.  Grace is God walking into your world with a sparkle in his eye and an offer that’s hard to resist!

“Because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy,  made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions—it is by grace you have been saved. Ephesians 2:4-5

From GRACE

If you missed “The God Who Stoops,” Episode 2 of GRACE on TBN, you can 
watch it online here:  www.itbn.org

Monday, September 24, 2012

The Seasons of Life, Part 2 by Jim Rohn


First, life and business are like the changing seasons. That's one of the best ways to illustrate life: it's like the seasons that change. Second, you cannot change the seasons, but you can change yourself.

Now with those two key phrases in mind, let's look at what I consider to be the first major lesson in life to learn, and that is how to handle the winters. They come regularly, right after autumn. Some are long, some are short, some are difficult, some are easy, but they always come right after autumn. That is never going to change.

There are all kinds of winters - the "winter" when you can't figure it out, the "winter" when everything seems to go haywire. There are economic winters, social winters and personal winters. Wintertime can bring disappointment, and disappointment is common to all of us. So you must learn how to handle the winters. You must learn how to handle difficulty; it always comes after opportunity. You must learn to handle recessions; they come right after expansions. That isn't going to change.The big question is what do you do about winters? You can't get rid of January simply by tearing it off the calendar. But here is what you can do: you can get stronger; you can get wiser; and you can get better. Remember that trio of words: stronger, wiser, better. The winters won't change, but you can.

Next is spring. Fortunately, following the turbulence of winter comes the season of activity and opportunity called springtime. It is the season for entering the fertile fields of life with seed, knowledge, commitment, and a determined effort.

However, the mere arrival of spring is no sign that things are going to look good in the fall. You must do something with the spring. In fact, everyone has to get good at one of two things: planting in the spring or begging in the fall. Take advantage of the day and the opportunities that spring can bring.

It is the promise of spring that as we sow, so shall we also reap. Faith further provides to us an irrevocable law decreed in heaven which assures that for every disciplined human effort we will receive a multiple reward. For each cup planted, a bushel reaped, for every good idea given to another, many shall be given to us in return. For every demonstrated act of faith, a multiplicity of the rewards; and for every act of love given, a life of love in return.

Just remember it is a natural characteristic of springtime to present itself ever so briefly, or to lull us into inactivity with its bounteous beauty. Do not pause too long to soak in the aroma of the blossoming flowers, lest you awaken to find springtime gone with your seed still in your sack. Get busy quickly on your springs, your opportunities. There are just a handful of springs that have been handed to each of us. Life is brief, even at its longest. Whatever you are going to do with your life, get at it. Don't just let the seasons pass by.

The third major lesson in life to learn; how to nourish and protect your crops all summer. Sure enough, as soon as you've planted, the busy bugs and noxious weeds are out to take things over. Here is the next bit of truth: they will take it, unless you prevent it.

There are two key phrases to consider with the third major lesson. The first is "all good will be attacked." Don't press me for a reason. I was not in on some of the early decisions, so I don't know why. I just know that it's true. Let reality be your best beginning. Every garden will be invaded. The second phrase is "all values must be defended." Social values, political values, friendship values, business values - all must be defended. Every garden must be tended all summer. If you don't develop this skill, you'll never wind up with anything of value.

But for those who make diligent efforts to plant, protect, and preserve there are not enough birds, bugs, or other obstacles to destroy all the efforts of last spring.

Now, the fourth and season is fall, the time of harvesting the fruits of our springtime labor. Fall also presents us with our fourth major lesson to learn in life, and that is to learn how to reap in the fall without apology if you have done well and without complaint if you have not.

For nothing is more exciting than a bounteous crop, and nothing more dreadful than a barren field in the fall. We must remember that in all areas of the human existence, what we put into this world, we get back from it. It is nature's way of evening the score. So regardless of the results, take full responsibility for your crop. One of the highest forms of human maturity is accepting full responsibility for our lives.

Which brings me back to the beginning of our discussion. We must remember that life is constantly recycling itself. Much of life is about the balancing of two opposites; like the positive and negative charge on a battery. Life's balancing of opposites totally surrounds our lives; man/woman, day/night, good/evil, life/death, water/land, summer/winter, recession/expansion, joy/sorrow, etc.

Yes, I believe we will have major changes, but I also believe we will continue to have just one winter, spring, summer and fall each year. Much of our success will lie in our ability and philosophy to plant in the springtime of opportunity. To weed and cultivate in the testing time of summer, to harvest without apology and/or complaint in the season of fall and to get stronger, wiser, better in the transition and learning times of winter.

Remember it is not what happens to you that determines your future; it is what you do about it.

So here's to a great, faith-filled and prosperous year.

Friday, September 21, 2012

So MANY hurts by Max Lucado


If hurts were hairs—we’d all look like grizzlies!

So many hurts. When teachers ignore your work, their neglect hurts. When your girlfriend drops you, when your husband abandons you, when the company fires you, it hurts. Rejection always does. People bring pain.

Sometimes deliberately. Sometimes randomly.

So where do you turn? Hitman.com? Jim Beam and friends? Pity Party Catering Service? Retaliation has its appeal. But Jesus has a better idea!

Grace is not blind. It sees the hurt full well. But Grace chooses to see God’s forgiveness even more. Hebrews 12:15 asks us to, “See to it that no one misses the grace of God and that no bitter root grows up to cause trouble and defile many.”

Where grace is lacking, bitterness abounds. Where grace abounds, forgiveness grows. Forgiveness may not happen all at once. But it can happen with you.

From GRACE

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Personal Responsibility

"You must take personal responsibility. You cannot change the circumstances, the seasons, or the wind, but you can change yourself. That is something you have charge of. You don't have charge of the constellations, but you do have charge of whether you read, develop new skills, and take new classes." -- Jim Rohn

Monday, September 17, 2012

Seasons Of Life - by Jim Rohn


Life is about constant, predictable patterns of change. For the six thousand years of recorded history, as humans have entered this world, received parental instruction, classroom instruction, and gathered the experience of life; many have set for themselves ambitious goals, and dreamed lofty dreams. As the wheel of life continues its constant turning, all human emotions appear, disappear, and appear once again.

A major challenge faced by us all is that we must learn to experience the changing of life's cycles without being changed by them; to make a constant and conscious effort to improve ourselves in the face of changing circumstances.

That is why I believe in the power and value of attitude. As I read, ponder and speculate about people, their deeds and their destiny, I become more deeply convinced that it is our natural destiny to grow, to succeed, to prosper, and to find happiness while we are here.

By our attitude, we decide to read, or not to read. By our attitude, we decide to try or give up. By our attitude, we blame ourselves for our failure, or we blame others. Our attitude determines whether we tell the truth or lie, act or procrastinate, advance or recede, and by our own attitude we and we alone actually decide whether to succeed or fail.

How incredibly unique that a God who would create the complex and immense universe would create the human race and give to those humans the free choice that would permit them to select their own achievement or their own destruction.

This strange, but all-knowing God gave to us a delicately balanced sphere called earth. On it, he placed the intelligent human who would either develop it or destroy it. How terribly fascinating that a God would leave both projects - earth as well as humans - unfinished! Across the rivers and streams he built no bridges; he left the pictures unpainted, the songs unsung, the books unwritten, and space unexplored. For the accomplishment of those things, God created the unfinished human who, within his heart and mind, had the capacity to do all these things and more, depending upon his own choice.

Attitude determines choice, and choice determines results. All that we are and all that we can become has indeed been left unto us. For as long as you continue to draw breath, you have the chance to complete the work in and for the earth and for yourself that God has begun for you. In the cycles and seasons of life, attitude is everything!The Seasons of Life, Part 1 by Jim Rohn

"It is the promise of spring that as we sow, so shall we also reap. Faith further provides to us an irrevocable law decreed in heaven which assures that for every disciplined human effort we will receive a multiple reward. For each cup planted, a bushel reaped, for every good idea given to another, many shall be given to us in return. For every demonstrated act of faith, a multiplicity of the rewards; and for every act of love given, a life of love in return." -- Jim Rohn

As I travel around the country and world lecturing, one of the most frequently asked questions is what do I expect to happen over the next 6-12 months and/or even years? Well, I'm no expert, but I can share with you my thoughts. Whether it is preparing for the next few months or the next several years, I still believe there are overriding principals that we should follow and be led by. So I'd like to devote today's message to my view of the period of history we're in now and how it relates to words I wrote over 20 years ago in my book, "The Seasons of Life". Forgive me in advance if I sound a bit philosophical, but as you know by now, I do believe your philosophy is critical to your life's success.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

What a God!

Lord God All-Powerful, who is like you? Lord, you are powerful and completely trustworthy. Psalm 89:8

Ponder the achievement of God.
He doesn't condone our sin, nor does he compromise his standard.

He doesn't ignore our rebellion, nor does he relax his demands.

Rather than dismiss our sin, he assumes our sin and, incredibly, sentences himself.

God's holiness is honored. Our sin is punished...and we are redeemed.

God does what we cannot do so we can be what we dare not DREAM: perfect before GOD.

Rather than dismiss our sin, Christ assumes our sin. What does this mean to you?

In The Grip of Grace

Friday, September 14, 2012

Are you involved in one of those things?


Dawn Andersen Funk
Tuesday at 7:53am ·Life is still very surreal to me. To think, a little over a year ago, we got involved in "one of those things" that made most of our friends and family chuckle and question. Even ourselves we had doubts, but we needed SOMETHING and adding another job just wasn't an option with how busy our kids are. So, yes, we went against the norm, we jumped out of the conformity box, and seized an opportunity that most, like ourselves at the time, really knew nothing about and even doubted would work. I remember telling Brett "if it can just get me off making cookies every night" then that's all I care about. My body simply could not go on, at 40 years old, making cookies every night, but we desperately needed that extra income. So here we are...a little over a year ago, and "that thing"...the one that others behind our backs I'm sure have made fun of us for...well and heck let's be honest even to our faces, has now not only brought me home from a career where I hadn't seen a raise in three years, but NOW MY HUSBAND, who officially gave his two week notice yesterday and is leaving corporate America to come home with me. In just a little over a year, still working regular jobs along the way, doing "this thing" part time, we have doubled our combined salaries. But you know what, it's not about the money, it's about the FREEDOM to design your days, to know that YOUR LIFE, YOUR INCOME is in YOU HANDS...not someone elses:) I'm so honored that TODAY, on 911, I get to share what just happened in our lives, because it is this FREEDOM that so many heroes from the past and still today fight for. It's also about living a life of PURPOSE and knowing that what you do makes such a big impact on other people's lives. If you are one of those people that has time debt away from your family or financial problems, know that there is "this thing" that can RESCUE you, just like it did us. I can't quit dreaming about what our life is going to be like when Brett comes home in two weeks, well I know the first week will be amazing as we relax on an all-expense trip to the Arizona Biltmore and ride in a hot air balloon for the first time, but after that to get our kids off to school together, to read and exercise, pour into our team , and maybe even pick golf back up...I just can't quit thinking about how amazing it's going to be...all because we said "yes" to my old friend from college who I trusted and got to work "doing one of those things!" God bless all of you and may you all find freedom and fortune in your lives)

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Native Genius

Finding someone's native genius is the key that unlocks discretionary effort. It propels people to go beyond what is required and offer their full intelligence. Finding people's genius begins by carefully observing them in action, looking for spikes of authentic enthusiasm and a natural flow of energy. As you watch someone in action, ask these questions;
1. What do they do better than anything else they do?
2. What do they do better than people around them?
3. What do they do without effort?
4. What do they do without being asked?
5. What do they do readily without being paid?

Multipliers by Liz Wiseman

Thursday, September 6, 2012

DREAM

Are you building yours or someone else's?

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Don't Panic

Next time you're disappointed, don't panic. Don't give up. Just be patient and let God remind you he's still in control. It ain't over till it's over.

The choice is panic or peace...

Let us hold firmly to the hope that we have confessed, because we can trust God to do what he promised.
Hebrews 10:23

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

STOP stressing yourself out


Sometimes, you are your own worst enemy when it comes to stress. Susan Fletcher, a practicing psychologist and stress management expert, teaches these valuable techniques to help alleviate stress in your life:

Don't read into things so much. "Sometimes a look is just a look and a dirty coffee cup is just a dirty coffee cup. It's not a passive-aggressive way to say you are not appreciated," Fletcher says. Don't make things bigger than they need to be—with people or work. Some people make a project bigger than it needs to be in an effort to increase their own value, but they are increasing their own stress as a result.

Learn how to transfer trust. "I really like Stephen M.R. Covey's stuff from his book Speed of Trust. He says people have to be able to trust before they feel it. Just like with your kids when you give them a little rope. And with someone who works for you, you have to let them fail because failure is feedback," Fletcher says. "Don't just say, 'It's easier to do myself.'"

Recognize when you are being inefficient. "People who are stressed get stuck answering e-mails for two hours at the expense of higher-value items that need to be taken care of," Fletcher says. "Don't get lost in inefficient behavior. Ask yourself, 'What's my ultimate outcome I want here and what do I need to get there?'"

Find an accountability partner to help you meet goals. "Choose a friend or a family member—probably not someone who lives with you because you don't want to muddy the waters. It has to be someone you will listen to but who will hold you accountable."

Say no sometimes. "You have to say no to things you might enjoy, but are not in line with where you are professionally or personally at the moment," Fletcher says. Then you can spend your time on what matters to you most.
Read more stress management tips from Susan Fletcher on SUCCESS.com.