Sometimes I wish it was just "that easy," to trust God with everything, and I am sure that is a struggle for a lot of us. Ok there are some things that are easier than others. Ill admit for me, it is absolutely easier for me to pray for others than it is to pray for myself. Its kind of ridiculous to think about it; I love trusting God to answer my prayers when it comes to others, and their situations, health, or whatever it is. But when it come down to trusting God with areas in my own life, I find myself avoiding that at all costs. I know that God has a plan for my life, and I am totally OK with following that plan. The problem is I have my own little plan, or my little "roadmap" tucked away for when things seem to get touchy or not so clear.
It is so easy to trust God in the good times, when things are just dandy, and every "t" is crossed, and every "i" is dotted. When we hit a rough patch, the hard times that come along in life, that is when I find myself falling back on what I have planned, what I have in mind. When God has a plan already mapped out for me. God sees the big picture, He actually painted the picture. I only have a limited view, as life goes on, I get view of a little bit more and more.
When storms come, why do we resort to our limited view maps. We need to stick with what the Painter has already planned. He know what is good for us, He wants to walk with us, and be our leader and our shepherd.
In order to become the effective leaders that God wants us to be in this world, we have to first learn to trust in him for our guidance, and protection through life. I encourage to join me in this, in working our way to letting go of the roadmaps that we tuck away for ourselves, and hold fast to the master plan that God has laid our for us.
Here is a song that puts it really well...
I would love to hear what you guys think! Leave a comment below!!!
Monday, May 10, 2010
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
How to Train Your Dragon: How to Hone Your Inner Viking
Traditions. They bind us to a way of life, that passes on from generation to generation. Yes, there are those minor traditions such as, when to open the Christmas presents, or who carves the turkey on Thanksgiving, but what about those traditions that are such a huge part of our lives that we don't even view them as traditions.
We all come form different backgrounds, and were all raised to believe different things. What if you were raised, with the purpose of fulfilling a certain role, or continuing a lifestyle that has been with your family for generations, and generations...but you find out that all this "tradition" and style of living is completely wrong!
This is the story of young, teenage Hiccup in the newly released movie: "How to Train Your Dragon."
Hiccup is a small stocky teenager growing up in a viking village, where he would be expected to grow up to kill, and fight off the dragons that are attacking the village. Hiccup is much smaller than most vikings and so, both his father, and other vikings have low expectations for him and his future.
Hiccup has a goal of shooting down the one dragon that no other viking has ever killed, or even seen. Hiccup shoots down the dragon, n the middle of the night, and nobody believes that he actually did it.
Hiccup, investigates the location of the dragon that he shot down, and finds out that he is incapable of killing a dragon. He sees in himself that he is different that the people of his village. He releases the dragon from the net that it was caught in, and moves forward to construct a device that allows him to fly again (with the help of Hiccups steering). Hiccup sees in this dragon, which he names Toothless, that he is a kind creature and that there is no reason to for his fellow villagers to be killing them. Hiccup is afraid to express this to the other vikings because he doesn't want them to kill this dragon that he rescued.
This story is a story of courage and of leadership. I encourage you to watch and grasp the lessons that are to be learned. Hiccup was raised his whole life to be a tough, killing, warrior, viking. He found it in himself that he was different, that he was set apart from the entire village that he grew up in. He saw something different in these dragons, because he took the time to get to know them. He in a way became one of them. He had the courage to step up and to proclaim to the village, at the expense of losing his fathers trust, to change the traditions of what the village had been built on.
At first he wan't accepted, but he fought through, and in the end, the village was better off, living in harmony with the dragons, than they were when they were in constant battle.
It's difficult to do the hard things. Our fears can get in the way of doing what we know is right. It gets even harder when the things we need to confront, are the things that are so close to home for us. They may be, things in our families, in or churches, and in our circle of friends. We need to look at what the Word of God says about the actions, and the attitudes that we have and see if there is a need for change. If change is necessary, then we have to act on it. Only by the strength og God will we accomplish these big, and difficult tasks, but it is possible.
Monday, April 12, 2010
Wanna do BIG things?
What is keeping us from doing the BIG things that God has planned for us? Is it fear, is it laziness, it ourselves? It's hard for us as humans to deny ourselves, and whatever we have planned for our lives. But God calls us to humility to deny ourselves, and follow the path that God has planned out for us.
Then Jesus said to his disciples, "If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me." Matthew 16:24In order to accomplish the big things that God has planned for us we must realize the small-ness that we are, and recognize the big-ness of our God! Sometimes we seem to get in the way of the things that God is trying to do in our lives because, we have not fully placed our trust in him. Honestly, this is something I still struggle with. I find myself to be a naturally independent person, most of the time avoiding dependence on others, including God. This doesn't make any logical sense. God, the Creator of the universe, has a unique plan for me, and a unique plan for you. Why do we think that we have a plan that can trump that. The God that raised Jesus from the dead is thinking of me!
I was reading this blog recently and the author put it like this:
If our reason for doing big things in life is not driven by our BIG God, then we will end up in a big mess instead. Know this - God wants us to do big things, things that can impact the world for His glory. But more often than not, we get too caught up in comparing ourselves with others that we end up, knowingly or unknowingly, being self-centred. As a result, our self-centredness blinds our spiritual eyes. We may not realize it but when we dwell in our self-centredness, we are in fact stealing God of His glory. The challenge then for all of us is to see beyond our self-centredness and to move instead towards the centre of His will.God made us uniquely different, each with different gifts.
Are we using them for His glory or are we comparing ourselves with
the world for our own personal gain?(At the Brink of Eternity)
Can you accept the challenge to deny yourself, and deny your plan for your life, and take up your cross, and walk downt he path that God has planned for your life?
If you can do this, then you will the BIG things that God has for you. You were created for a purpose, to accomplish amazing things for the glory of God. These steps are the ones that will change your life forever. I know they have changed mine!
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Monday, March 29, 2010
Profile: Clara Barton
“This conflict is one thing I’ve been waiting for.
I’m well and strong and young – young enough to go
to the front If I can’t be a soldier, I’ll help solders.”
-Clara Barton
Let's take a look back into the history of the United States, at a young women, who was shy, and introverted and not at all what some would picture as a leader. She took steps outside of her comfort zone, to overcome some of the barriers that were keeping her back from her full potential. This amazing story belongs to Clara Barton, founder of the American Red Cross.
"Clara Barton, a shy farm girl from Massachusetts, harnessed her iron will and devotion to human welfare to accomplish the good works which earned her world fame. Despite life-threatening conditions, she provided supplies and care to troops in the American Civil War and became known as "The Angel of the Battlefield." Almost singlehandedly she founded the American Red Cross, which has provided comfort in times of crisis since 1882. As the Detroit Free Press wrote of Barton shortly after her death in 1912, "She was perhaps the most perfect incarnation of mercy the modern world has known."
Clara Barton was born on Christmas day in 1821 in Oxford, Massachusetts. Her father, a farmer, had also been a soldier, and his tales of army lore instilled in his daughter a lifelong interest in military affairs.For two years, beginning when she was 11, Clara nursed her brother David, badly injured in an accident. Day and night she attended him, and the lessons learned were of much use to her later.
At age 15, as a way of combatting her shyness, Barton began a very successful 18-year period of teaching. In 1854, she moved to Washington, D.C., which she made her permanent home.
Her war service began in April of 1861, with the arrival in Washington of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment. That group had lost its baggage in battle, so Clara Barton energetically set about supplying their needs, tearing up old sheets for towels and handkerchiefs and cooking for the troops.
After the battle of Bull Run, she was struck by reports of woeful shortages of supplies in the field. With characteristic independence, she advertised for provisions in a newspaper and, when the public sent huge amounts, established a distributing agency.
In 1862 she got government permission to accompany the sick transports in any direction, for the purpose of aiding the ill and the wounded. Barton showed courage, endurance and resourcefulness on the battlefield and gave sympathetic aid to many. To her, each soldier was an individual and merited the best possible treatment.
For four years after the war, Clara Barton supervised a Federal search for missing soldiers. She also delivered lectures on her war experiences, which were well received. She met Susan B. Anthony and began a long association with the suffrage movement. She also became acquainted with Frederick Douglass and became an activist for black rights.
In 1869, Barton went to Europe for rest but soon found herself in the midst of the Franco-Prussian conflict. Willing to help, as always, she worked with the International Red Cross, distributing supplies in France and Germany. In 1873, she returned home with the Iron Cross of Merit from the German Emperor.
The United States had not been a party to the Geneva Convention of 1864, which made the International Red Cross possible. Clara Barton saw the need for the Red Cross in America and plunged into the task of creating it. She carried out this enterprise practically singlehandedly, educating the public through brochures and speeches and paying calls to cabinet heads and Congressmen. Her efforts were successful and in 1881 the National Society of the Red Cross was organized. John D. Rockefeller gave money to create a national headquarters in Washington, DC, located one block from the White House.
Clara Barton was its first president and for the next 23 years directed its relief activities. Ever dedicated to helping others, she went to Cuba with a cargo of supplies in 1898, though more than 70 years old. She also spent six weeks on the scene of the Galveston, Texas floods, at age 79. In 1904, at the age of 82, she resigned her post. The remaining years of her life were spent at Glen Echo, Maryland, just outside Washington. She died at the age of 91 in 1912, her body taken back to Oxford for burial.
Clara Barton was one of America's greatest heroines -- a true patriot and philanthropist who, when she saw a practical need, gave every ounce of her strength to address it."
http://www.nahc.org/nahc/val/columns/SC10-1.html
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Sunday, March 21, 2010
"Don't let people look down on you because you are young..."
“To the elders among you, I appeal as a fellow elder, a witness of Christ's sufferings and one who also will share in the glory to be revealed:”
-1 Peter 5:1
In this passage Peter is speaking to the leaders. How do we know what a leader is and even if we are a leader? What does it take to be leader? These are all valid questions, and we will dig into them by looking at Scripture and what the Bible has to say.
Something that a lot of people struggle with is the thought that they are too young to be a leader. Lets take a look at a story from the book of 1 Samuel 16.
In this chapter the Lord sends Samuel out to appoint the new king of Israel, which He has chosen. Samuel follows the Lord’s commands, and travels to go visit Jesse of Bethlehem because the Lord has chosen one of his sons to be the king. When Samuel arrives in Bethlehem, he invites Jesse and his sons to the sacrifice of the Lord, because it is there where the Lord said he was to anoint the one the He has chosen. Samuel had no idea, which son of Jesse was the appointed one, and he naturally assumed that the Lord had appointed Jesse’s son Eliab. Then the Lord said in verse 7:
“Do not consider his appearance or his height, for I have rejected him. The Lord does not look at the things that man looks at. Man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart.”
All of Jesse’s sons had passed and the Lord had rejected them all. Samuel asked Jesse if he had any more sons, and Jesse said, “There is still the youngest, but he is tending the sheep.” Samuel told Jesse to call for his son, and they would wait for him. When David arrived, the Lord said,
“Rise and anoint him; he is the one.”
Our society today has labeled a leader as having all of these credentials, and characteristics. You have to be outgoing, you must be good looking, you need to be intelligent. These are all things that the world is forcing on us in order to be an effective leader.
As we learn from this story, these credentials mean nothing. God tells us in verse 7:
“Do not consider his appearance or his height, for I have rejected him. The Lord does not look at the things that man looks at. Man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart.”
In order to be an effective leader, you don’t need to consider your appearance, or your age. God calls leaders by what is in their heart. In order to be an effective leader you do need to be hard working, intelligent, and other things, but if your heart isn’t right then its nothing.
Don’t let your age be a barrier in your effectiveness for the kingdom of God. God calls people of all shapes, sizes and ages. God called David the youngest in his family to be the king of Israel! What is God calling you to be?
“Don’t let anyone look down on you because you are young, but set an example for the believers in speech, in life, in love, in faith and in purity.”
-1 Timothy 4:12
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Monday, March 15, 2010
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
What is a Shepherd?
What is a shepherd?
The duties of a shepherd in an unenclosed country like Palestine were very onerous.
"In early morning he led forth the flock from the fold, marching at its head to the spot where they were to be pastured. Here he watched them all day, taking care that none of the sheep strayed, and if any for a time eluded his watch and wandered away from the rest, seeking diligently till he found and brought it back. In those lands sheep require to be supplied regularly with water, and the shepherd for this purpose has to guide them either to some running stream or to wells dug in the wilderness and furnished with troughs. At night he brought the flock home to the fold, counting them as they passed under the rod at the door to assure himself that none were missing. Nor did his labors always end with sunset. Often he had to guard the fold through the dark hours from the attack of wild beasts, or the wily attempts of the prowling thief.”
What an example of what it means to be a leader today. Just as shepherds were leaders of there flock, they were also servants. As we look deeper into the 1 Peter 5, we will see this illustration come alive!