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The Word For Life.

If we meet and you forget me, you have lost nothing:
but if you meet JESUS CHRIST and forget Him,
you have lost everything.

Found a Need and Filled It
Posted:Sep 19, 2008 4:17 am
Last Updated:May 23, 2024 8:0 am
6388 Views

"The idea seemed good to me; so I selected twelve of you, one man from each tribe." ‒ Deuteronomy 1:23

In July 1980, Judy Hall, a mother of two teenage daughters, found herself unemployed. Divorced and without a steady income, Judy wondered how she would possibly survive. She had no formal education or skills to fall back on.

At the time she was living in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and had been listening to me preach on the Hour of Power about how to be a possibility thinker. One of the principles that stuck with her was: "Open your mind to God and the ideas will flow; one of them will be the idea God means for you to grab hold of."

Judy believed what she heard. After a failed attempt at real estate, she decided she should take her daughters back to their place of birth ‒ Hawaii.

After returning to Hawaii, Judy wanted the comfort of a muumuu, the loose-fitting dress of the Islands, but also a garment that could be worn to non-Hawaiian events. All of the muumuu's she found were sold "off the rack," in one size, and had a similar Hawaiian print pattern which didn't really fit any social occasions that were not Hawaiian in tone and spirit.

Then she remembered one of the principles she'd heard me preach on: "Find a need and fill it." Judy saw a need and decided to fill it. She purchased some fabric in a "mainland" print and proceeded to make a muumuu for herself with a decorative border at the hem. She customized the fit so that it was comfortable but not so loose-fitting as to lose all sense of line and design. The final result was something very distinctive, something others took notice of, and something that proved to be the start of a very good business.

If a single, divorced mother of two , with no money and no special training, is able to invade a surplus market with a new product and a new concept and develop a super successful enterprise, then it's possible for you to create employment opportunities for yourself, too. Just remember: Tough times never last, but tough people do!

The most tragic waste is the waste of a good idea.

* * *
God, you are the originator of all good ideas. How often You've used those ideas to provide for me in my life. You are so good.

* * *
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LIVED UP TO HIS POTENTIAL
Posted:Sep 18, 2008 5:15 am
Last Updated:Sep 19, 2008 4:17 am
31602 Views

"'I am the God of your father Abraham. Do not be afraid, for I am with you; I will bless you.'" ‒
Genesis 26:24

Birt Duncan was a young black man who had grown up an orphan in Louisiana. He had lived in fourteen different foster homes before he drifted his way to Southern California. Our church was still meeting in a drive-in theater when I met him. It was obvious that the boy had a deep-seated inferiority complex, with which I tried to deal through counseling him.

One day he blurted out, "You have to remember that I'm black and that we're inferior. We're the products of slaves."

"That's not true," I said. "You are genetically superior."

"What do you mean?" he asked.

I replied, "You and every black person in the United States can trace his or her genealogy to Africa. You can take pride in your genetic roots. Why? Because you are the offspring of the survivors. The weakest died before they even left the jungle. Others died aboard ship and their bodies were thrown overboard. But those who survived were either: (1) intellectually superior and clever enough to survive; (2) they were physically superior, with unusual strength and stamina; or (3) they were emotionally superior ‒ they would not give up and die! Every black person in America is a genetic descendant of the toughest and the best bloodlines. And that's the kind of blood that you have."

Birt went on to earn his M.D. degree and become a doctor. He successfully achieved his potential, but first he had to believe that Tough times never last, but tough people do!

God believes in You and He can't be wrong.

* * *
Forgive me, Lord, for questioning my own sense of value. Because You created me, I have unlimited potential. Help me to make the most of what You've made me to be.
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Process Of Transformation
Posted:Sep 17, 2008 6:14 am
Last Updated:May 23, 2024 8:0 am
36324 Views

“And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord's glory, are being transformed into His likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.”‒
2 Corinthians 3:18

Wouldn't it be great if God would just send out some sort of supernatural bolt from the blue and in an instant completely remake our character? If you're old enough, you may remember the Ajax laundry detergent television commercials that featured the White Knight. He would come charging up on his shiny white and zap anyone who was dirty. A woman is waiting at a bus stop on a rainy day when a careless driver comes by and splashes mud all over her. The lady has somewhere important to go, but now she's covered with mud! What's she going to do? Never fear. The Ajax White Knight is here. Zap! He points his lance at her and she's as clean and fresh as can be!

Those were effective commercials, and I'm sure they sold a lot of soap for the Ajax Company. But that's not the way Ajax really works, and it's certainly not the way God works. He is willing and able to help you remove all of those troubling areas from your life but He wants you to be involved in the process. He wants you to grow and become stronger, and He'll help you do that. He'll even guide you through the process if you are willing to have Him do that.

At the same time, it's pretty much true that "no pain, no gain." Oftentimes it takes time for us to get to the point where we are ready to see those things in our character that need to change and if we want to see them removed from our character altogether, we have to approach the situation with earnestness.

I have seen men and women instantly transformed by God's power. I've seen men who were consumed with anger and hatred become instantly loving and open when they were confronted by the living God. I've seen people who seemed to be hopelessly addicted to drugs and alcohol set free in an instant. Yes, that sort of thing can and does happen. But such events are the exception rather than the rule, and to count on something like that is not wise. The rule is that God doesn't want to make changes for you ‒ He wants to do it with you!

Not until we quit resisting, fighting, denying, analyzing, or rationalizing are we ready to let God do His transformational work in our lives. So my question to you today is: Where are you in the "readiness" process?

Let God be the controller and life-changer in you and others.

* * *
Holy Spirit, show me where I am resisting, fighting, denying, or rationalizing my need for change. Give me eyes to see and a heart that is willing. Amen.

* * *
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Process Of Transformation
Posted:Sep 17, 2008 6:12 am
Last Updated:May 23, 2024 8:0 am
36084 Views

“And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord's glory, are being transformed into His likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.”‒ 2 Corinthians 3:18

Wouldn't it be great if God would just send out some sort of supernatural bolt from the blue and in an instant completely remake our character? If you're old enough, you may remember the Ajax laundry detergent television commercials that featured the White Knight. He would come charging up on his shiny white and zap anyone who was dirty. A woman is waiting at a bus stop on a rainy day when a careless driver comes by and splashes mud all over her. The lady has somewhere important to go, but now she's covered with mud! What's she going to do? Never fear. The Ajax White Knight is here. Zap! He points his lance at her and she's as clean and fresh as can be!

Those were effective commercials, and I'm sure they sold a lot of soap for the Ajax Company. But that's not the way Ajax really works, and it's certainly not the way God works. He is willing and able to help you remove all of those troubling areas from your life but He wants you to be involved in the process. He wants you to grow and become stronger, and He'll help you do that. He'll even guide you through the process if you are willing to have Him do that.

At the same time, it's pretty much true that "no pain, no gain." Oftentimes it takes time for us to get to the point where we are ready to see those things in our character that need to change and if we want to see them removed from our character altogether, we have to approach the situation with earnestness.

I have seen men and women instantly transformed by God's power. I've seen men who were consumed with anger and hatred become instantly loving and open when they were confronted by the living God. I've seen people who seemed to be hopelessly addicted to drugs and alcohol set free in an instant. Yes, that sort of thing can and does happen. But such events are the exception rather than the rule, and to count on something like that is not wise. The rule is that God doesn't want to make changes for you ‒ He wants to do it with you!

Not until we quit resisting, fighting, denying, analyzing, or rationalizing are we ready to let God do His transformational work in our lives. So my question to you today is: Where are you in the "readiness" process?

Let God be the controller and life-changer in you and others.

* * *
Holy Spirit, show me where I am resisting, fighting, denying, or rationalizing my need for change. Give me eyes to see and a heart that is willing. Amen.

* * *
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Overcame with Faith And optimism
Posted:Sep 16, 2008 5:59 am
Last Updated:May 23, 2024 8:0 am
36405 Views

"In spite of severe suffering, you welcomed the message with the joy given by the Holy Spirit." ‒ 1 Thessalonians 2:19

As I was writing my book Tough Times Never Last But Tough People Do, I received a beautiful letter from a person I had never met but whom I had admired from a distance ‒ Mary Martin. Her picture appeared on the cover of Life magazine six times. America loved her as Peter Pan, flying across the stage on Broadway, as Nellie Forbush in South Pacific, and as Maria Von Trapp in the original Broadway production of the Sound of Music.

I saw her as a positive, joyous, optimistic person. Yet I was completely unaware of the personal tragic paths she had walked quietly and faced prayerfully. Then an unexpected letter arrived from her. She told me how our television ministry had changed her life and said that she would like a chance to tell the world about it.

We met over lunch and she shared with me how the principles of possibility thinking had helped her accept the loss of her beloved husband, how she had lost her voice and thought she might never sing again, and how she had recently come out of the hospital following a car crash that had claimed one life and almost two others.

"I think the car accident was one of my toughest times," Mary told me. Without losing the twinkle in her eye, she continued, "But as you say, 'tough times never last, but tough people do.' And I'm a tough Texan, you know!"

What gives some persons the power to fight on after the loss of a precious loved one, after experiencing torturing physical pain day by day? There is no substitute for deep, abiding faith. If we hold on, we will win out! Unquestionably, profound faith and the beautiful providence of God produce a strong and unquenchable optimism. It's the spirit that heals diseases, redeems lives from destruction, and brings sunshine after the rain. Tough people have it. With faith and optimism they can weather the worst storms of life. They can rough out the toughest times. They come out on top.

Every adversity contains the seed of a glorious possibility.

* * *
Even in the midst of suffering, Lord, Your Spirit increases my faith and gives me joy. Thank you.

* * *
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AN EXPENSIVE GOSPEL
Posted:Sep 15, 2008 4:59 am
Last Updated:May 23, 2024 8:0 am
36481 Views

READ
Philippians 1:19-30

To you it has been granted on behalf of Christ, not only to believe in Him, but also to suffer for His sake. Philippians 1:29

On a teaching trip at a Bible institute in another country, my colleague and I were saddened to hear of legislation before the parliament that sought to outlaw the evangelical church. We shared our fears with our students that tough we had come to train a generation of pastors, we might insted witness a new wave of persecution. We then joined with the studentes in prayer and worship to God about the mastter.

After we concluded, one of the student said to me, " Thanks for being concerned for us, but don't worry. we've learned that it's not enough for us to preach the golpel or live for the gospel. It is necessary that we suffer for the gospel" His words were not flippant but honest. Living for Christ often exact a price.

Paul, writing from prison, said, To you it has been granted on behalf of Christ not only to believe in Him, but also to suffer for His sake" (Philippians 1:29). His statement is daly lived out by believers around the world who experience hardship and persecution for no greater crime than living openly for the Name of Jesus.
Let's pray God blessing and provision for our brothers and sisters in Christ who are payin an expensive price for embracing a salvation that is free.
O for a faith that will not shrink
Though pressed by many a foe.
That will not tremble on the brink
Os any early woe.

THOSE WHO LIVE FOR GOD CAN EXPECT TROUBLE IN THE WORLD
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Confession ..its Good For The Soul
Posted:Sep 12, 2008 2:58 am
Last Updated:May 23, 2024 8:0 am
36663 Views

"Then I let it all out; I said, 'I'll make a clean breast of my failures to God.' Suddenly the pressure was gone ‒ my guilt dissolved, my sin disappeared." ‒
Psalm 32:5 (MSG)

An acquaintance who's an associate pastor of a large church on the East Coast told of a man who came to his office one afternoon, desperate to talk to someone about a problem that was "eating away" at him. This young man ‒ in his early thirties ‒ had been in the community for only a few months but had already proven to be a dedicated and hard-working member of the church. He seemed to be one of those people who have it all together.

That's why my friend was so surprised when the young man admitted, with great pain in his voice, that he had embezzled several thousand dollars from his previous employer in another state. Because of his position with the company he had found it fairly easy to manipulate the books, and nobody had suspected a thing.

But he knew what he had done, and he was having a very difficult time trying to live with it. In fact, he couldn't live with it. The time had come for him to confess, even though it would mean the loss of his reputation and possibly a lengthy stay in jail, separated from his wife and two young .

He had considered the alternative ‒ continuing to struggle with the guilt that was consuming him ‒ and jail seemed to be the better option.

He had confessed his guilt to God on numerous occasions, but that wasn't enough. He knew that he had to confess to another human being, as well as to those he had wronged. He was enlisting his pastor's support as he underwent what was sure to be an unpleasant experience of confessing and then facing up to the consequences.

I would like to tell you that because he voluntarily turned himself in his former employer was quick to forgive him and that he got off with nothing more than a slap on the wrist. Not so. He wound up spending nearly a year in jail, and he spent years struggling to repay the thousands of dollars he stole. Nevertheless, the young man has never felt so good about himself, so optimistic about the future, or so full of joy about life in general. For him, the consequences of confession were quite severe ‒ but they weren't nearly as painful or as damaging as carrying around a two-ton load of unconfessed guilt.

Is there something this big in your life that you need to confess? Probably not. But we've all been guilty of wrongdoing from time to time. After all, we're only human and human beings make mistakes. When we do make mistakes, confession to God, ourselves, and others is tremendously important. I'll tell you why tomorrow.

Open confession is good for the soul. ‒ A Scottish Proverb

* * *
O God, I've been hiding something from You and others and it's been eating away at me. But You already know all about it. I'm here ‒ now ‒letting You know that I want to come clean. Free me from this sin and my guilt. Amen.

* * *
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Feeling Guilty?
Posted:Sep 11, 2008 5:12 am
Last Updated:Sep 11, 2008 9:07 am
36853 Views

"Godly sorrow brings repentance that leads to salvation and leaves no regret, but worldly sorrow brings death."
2 Corinthians 7:10

Feeling guilty can be a good thing ‒ if it doesn't get out of hand. Guilt can serve as a self-imposed guidance system to keep us from doing what we know we shouldn't do.

Imagine what society would be like if there were no such thing as guilt: people would be doing whatever they wanted, whenever they wanted to do it, without giving a single thought to how their actions would affect others. It doesn't take much imagination to picture how difficult it would be to live in a society like that.

But then, guilt is not always a good thing. It can be very destructive ‒ a load that is impossible to carry, a burden that can cause men and women to stagger far off the path they ought to follow.

The Bible speaks of "godly sorrow," which leads to repentance, and "ungodly sorrow," which leads to death. Guilt that is handled in the right way ‒ it is admitted and dealt with ‒ can be a corrective measure in a person's life, a catalyst spurring the guilty person on to greater strength and achievement. But guilt that is left unattended will fester like a splinter left in a finger and cause all kinds of problems. It is also likely to be the root of all sorts of aberrational behavior ‒ behavior that begins as an attempt to hide from guilt and the pain it causes.

Over the next couple of days we will take a closer look at guilt and see how confession offers us a way out of guilt into freedom and joy. Be sure to meet me here tomorrow, won't you?

Guilt attended spurs us on to better things. Guilt neglected becomes a spur in the hide of life.

* * *
Dear Heavenly Father, I can see in my life times when I've experienced both kinds of guilt described here. Help me see where I need to leverage my guilt to do right and to let go of false guilt that impairs my relationship with You. Amen.
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WHEN SILENCE IS GOLDEN
Posted:Sep 10, 2008 2:35 am
Last Updated:May 23, 2024 8:0 am
36669 Views

"Even when we are weighed down with troubles, it is for your comfort and salvation! For when we ourselves are comforted, we will certainly comfort you." ‒
2 Corinthians 1:6 (NLT)

Some time ago I was on a plane and overheard a stewardess say, "I've been out of this for a year. I'm just back on the job today."

As she pulled her cart up alongside my seat I said to her, "I'm curious. I heard you say that you've been gone for a year. I hope it's been a happy holiday."

Her eyes immediately filled with tears and she said, "No, not really. I lost my little boy."

"Oh my," I said, "I'm so sorry." I reached out to her and gave her a little hug. "What helped you get through your pain?" I asked.

She said, "So many people meant well, but what they said didn't help. They told me things like, 'God wanted your little baby, so He took him.' That didn't help ‒ it made me angry at God. Others said, 'Your little baby is now a bud in the bouquet of heaven.' That didn't help me, either. Maybe these things help some people, but they didn't help me."

I asked again, "What did help you?"

She said, "A couple I didn't really know well came to visit me. They told me they had lost a little boy. I had heard about their loss. It was tragic. But then they just sat there with me. They didn't say anything. They simply reached out and hugged me and we cried together. That did it for me. That's what helped the most."

Silence has a language all its own. It can help. It can heal. Next time someone you know is grieving a loss, do what this couple did for the young stewardess ‒ just be there. Be still. Let silence speak for itself.

To those caught in the grip of grief, say little and love much.

* * *
Lord God, how often You have brought others to comfort me in times of grief. It has often been their silence, not their counsel that has helped me most. Today may my presence, support, and silence comfort others in the same way I've been comforted.

* * *
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Forgiveness Bring Peace
Posted:Sep 9, 2008 6:12 am
Last Updated:Sep 10, 2008 2:35 am
36883 Views

"Happy is the person whose sins are forgiven, whose wrongs are pardoned."‒
Psalm 32:1

What happens when we hold our wrongdoing inside and don't confess it? Psalm 32:3-4 tells us: "When I kept things to myself, I felt weak deep inside me. I moaned all day long….My strength was gone as in the summer heat." Can you relate to these words of King David? I can.

But God is gracious and kind, loving and just, and as the Bible says, "If we confess our sins, He [God] is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness" (1 John 1:9).

Whatever you've done in your life, God knows all about it already. When you confess to Him, you're not telling Him anything that's going to make Him angry. He will be happy that you have not tried to hold back from Him, and you will find peace in the love and forgiveness He offers you.

How does God feel about sin? "If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us" 1 John 1.8. God knows that every one of us has fallen short of perfection in one way or another, and what makes Him angry is when we deny that fact ‒ not when we face up to it.

We gain the virtue of integrity by admitting our wrongdoing first to ourselves, then to God, and finally to other people. For those of us who have spent most of our lives building fences or wearing masks, working through this process is never easy. But it is essential if we want to find the happiness and peace we really desire.

So…are you ready to take the next step?

Sin saps. Confession calms. Forgiveness frees.

* * *
When I refuse to face up to my wrongdoing, Lord, I'm miserable inside. You are faithful and have promised to forgive my sins. Humbly I come to You and ask You to forgive me. Replace my guilt with Your peace.
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