Roaring River

The faith journey to love God profoundly and people passionately

Profit From Life's Losses

by John Chappelear, Author of “The Daily Six”

Ever notice everyone’s on a low fat diet after the heart attack?

Everyone has time for their kids after the divorce?

Everyone’s a financial genius after a bankruptcy?

As managers, supervisors and executives, we’re trained to judge our success on the size of our departments, budgets, sales, profits, bank accounts and the deals we make. When I had my own $50 million-a-year business, that’s what I thought, too. Being a successful CEO, I figured if I just worked hard enough, I’d wind up on top. Failure is something that happens to the other guys.

That’s when it happened to me. I lost everything. Everything I thought was important.

Money, power, prestige. Gone. My position as CEO? Gone, too.

Although I didn’t know it then, I had been given a gift, a “Gift of Desperation” that changed me, and my outlook for the better. In the end, it made me a more successful person, too.

We can all recognize a “Gift of Desperation”. It’s the “a-ha” that comes at the darkest of times. Speak with anyone who has had a life-changing experience, and they’ll tell you how much it has led them to appreciate each and every day. They have a higher sense of awareness and focus on living each day with joy.

Still need convincing? Look how people in the US pulled together after 9-11-01. People actually started talking, connecting--and not just friends and family, but strangers on the news or at the corner store. I had clients all over the country remarking something like this: “I never really appreciated just how important (blank) was, until now,” they’d say. The way that (blank) got filled in varied from person to person, and organization to organization, but suddenly I could tell they had begun to notice that there was more to life than profits and possessions. The horror of that experience became a gift to many who chose to see the lessons.

When I received my “Gift of Desperation” I began to notice, FINALLY, something was missing in my life. It wasn’t success that was missing. It was significance.

Most CEOs have the same symptoms I did: We have a gorgeous house, but are hardly around to enjoy it. We eat at private lunch clubs, but we’re still hungry inside. Our expensive watches can’t keep our time from slipping away.

We have kids, but we may never really appreciate them. I didn’t, either--until involuntary unemployment kept me home instead of frantic and at the office. “Pick me up, Daddy!” my three-year-old son kept saying. “It’s good for you.” Now how did he know that? But you know what, he was right.

Here I had been rushing, rushing, rushing--because I needed everything to be perfect. And then I would finally get back to my family and friends. I just needed to get all my ducks in a row. People, have you ever tried to get a duck in a row? I finally realized that I had to stop waiting for my life to get perfect to be happy.

Over time, the life I could never quite find seemed to fall right into my lap. In business, so often we’re taught to CYA. Well, I started my own version: Change Your Attitude.

Today I work with people and organizations that are trying to change their attitude and behavior. Many of them, facing their own periods of desperation, are wondering if they will ever recover. They will with a change of focus.

I’ve discovered that we can all change our lives dramatically for the better--and we can do it before the gift of desperation. It takes a new sense of focus, and it also takes acting on a few new thoughts:

  • Start each day with an awareness that you are here for a purpose other than to satisfy demands to add stuff to your life. I do this with a few morning minutes of meditation and prayer. Other people read a book or take a walk. After a while, you’ll find your own path to peace and self-awareness.
  • Make serving others a primary focus. Help someone in your office be more successful. Hold the door for someone. Start a mentoring program, be a big brother or sister, or call a local volunteering program.
  • Slow down. I was always so busy pushing for the next big break that sometimes I ran right past it. So take a few minutes to take a deep breath, step back and enjoy life a bit, and you’ll be surprised how many opportunities personally and professionally just show up.
  • Start now. You don’t have to remake your whole life overnight. Small changes when practiced consistently will create dramatic results. Remember, you’re choosing to act--before a "Gift of Desperation" is forced on you. Keep at it and soon you will look back and be amazed how far you’ve come, and so will your co-workers and loved ones. And while I may believe in deathbed conversions, acting ahead of time is a whole lot more satisfying.

There’s nothing magical about these actions. The results, however, from even small consistent actions can be phenomenal, because not only will you feel better about yourself, but often your professional life will take off, too.

One Christmas, a group of businesses in Alexandria, Va., got together and repaid money stolen from a Salvation Army. The cost per business was about $500, but the value to the community they served was a hundred times that amount. Managers and employees got out of their offices they began to see each other in a new light. They donated time and distributed toys. These actions began to create a lot of goodwill and press in the community. In the long run, I noticed how much their good works changed the companies involved. Morale went right through the roof. Productivity and profits went up as well. I know from experience this wasn’t a coincidence.

The action taken, willingness to help, and focus on service connected these companies, their employees, and the community in a way that far outweighed the financial costs.

In fact, smart companies are increasingly using corporate giving as a marketing tool. According to a study published in Business Week, two-thirds of consumers would switch to a product or retailer that supported a cause they believed in. Likewise, employees of companies that promote good causes are likely to feel a strong sense of loyalty to their employer.

It’s no secret that high-profile corporate ethics scandals have rocked the market and hurt companies large and small. In hard times, it’s only natural to turn first to reducing charitable contributions and employee benefits--and the newspapers are full of depressing stories of tragedy, cutbacks and givebacks.

Instead of following the crowd, think of the positive public attention you can get by increasing your community involvement and awareness. Downward economies don’t last forever, but the public’s memory of a good corporate citizen often does. Sometimes it doesn’t even take money, just the willingness to show up and help.

Positively motivated people will deliver to the bottom line faster than new technology and a slick mission statement, and nothing will motive people faster than feeling the company they work for sees them and their community as significant.

Change your own focus, and it’s likely you’ll also change the way your business works.

John Chappelear is an: author, motivational speaker, executive coach, and trainer. He is the founder of Changing the Focus, LLC, http://www.changingthefocus.com and author of “The Daily Six – Six Simple Steps to Find the Perfect Balance Between Prosperity and Purpose”. The book will be available after Nov. 3 at Amazon.com.

Posted by DaleGWolf on October 22, 2005 at 01:22 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Cox Group Update for Week 4

By Terry Cox

Thanks again to all for your participation Monday evening as we looked a little closer at patience (or lack thereof), truthfulness and forgiveness. It was good to have Roger and Debbie with us, thanks Karen for inviting them.

To recap our small group outreach projects....

Dale reports a total of 113 zip lok bags of goodies for kids and we know there still a few yet to come. I'm guessing 120 or more. That is awesome and I am overwhelmed at what God can do with a small group, or as Dale puts it in his blog "our little band meeting at Terry's house." We plan on delivering the balance of the zip lok bags of goodies at my house and any yet to come this week to the Polaxis warehouse this Saturday. You are welcome to come along, just let me know via email or phone.

Mark your calendars for Saturday February 18, 2006, that is tentatively the date of our Ronald McDonald House experience. Gayna and Tony will firm that up for us.

At the end of lesson 4 Pastor Rick challenged us to contact our church and find some practical way we can serve our church as a group. Since "our small band" is made up of families from several churches that presents a unique challenge and some opportunities for us.

One that Karen mentioned is that we consider doing something as a group for, or in the neighborhood. Think about that and let's discuss some ideas during week five. Maybe that could be sprucing up the neighborhood entrances or something like that, I see neighbors doing that, I just have never done it myself.

Another thing to ponder that Dale mentioned is what we might "do" after our 40 Days of Community study is over. Dale pointed out this study has motivated him and all of us to reach out and put our faith in action rather than just do bible study. Think about some practical ways we can do that as a group and bring your ideas with you next week. I have one or two in mind I can share as well.

While "doing the Word" is what we are called to do I don't want to minimize the importance of studying the Word of God, the bible. It is most important, it is how we learn to love and grow in our faith and serve and encourage others. Let me know if there is interest in a continuing neighborhood bible study. There are some great resources available so if you're interested let's talk about it.

Back to Pastor Rick's challenge, think about some ways you can serve your church. Find a real need and pull one or two or a group along, pray about it and tackle it. We'll find out more about Pastor Rick's challenge next week.

Finally, find someone this week that you can encourage and build up, which is our memory verse from 1 Thessalonians chapter 5. Maybe a co-worker, friend, family member or even a stranger. And a little later in the same chapter Paul tells us to "be joyful always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances. This is God's will for us in Christ Jesus." Read the whole chapter. I love the bible.

Posted by DaleGWolf on October 11, 2005 at 08:28 AM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Helping Each Other Grow

As usual, Pastor Lipsey got my mind running a mile a minute this morning. The most impactful line that spoke to me was "we are as close to God as we want to be." That's dangerous stuff. A bit like flying a metal kite during a lightning storm. All of a sudden, we're acting different. We begin shifting from selfish to selfless. Where's it all end when you realize that you truly are a friend of God?

Talking_at_water_cooler Why, the next thing you know, we won't be putting down all those people who make us crazy at work or in the neighborhood. They deserve what they get because they are control addicts hungry for power and make the rest of us feel bad about ourselves. It's only natural to talk bad about them at the water cooler. Pull them down from their lofty palaces and ... but then, why doesn't that feel good when you walk away from the water cooler knowing that you just sank even lower than the people you were putting down? You tried to make yourself look more important by taking someone else down lower than you ... but you walk away knowing you failed at pleasing God.

What else can we do to help others grow instead of pulling them down?

Help them by affirming their value to you. We all have value so they must be doing something that is of value. It's not as easy to show appreciation to those we find less lovable, but that's what we are called to do when we join a community of love. Loving the unlovable was the prime model that Jesus set for us all. He did it. Shouldn't we?

Pray for others to get the help they most need from God. Let them know you care about their happiness, their success. We must nurture one another. Prayer holds the power to change lives.

"I pray God who gives hope will fill you with much joy and peace while you trust in Him." Romans 15:13

"I pray you will always be eager to do right." Hebrews 13:21

"I pray that God will give you a spirit of wisdom and revelation." Ephesians 1:17

"I pray the Lord will guide you to be as loving as God and as patient as Christ." 2 Thessalonians 3:5

"I pray God ... may strengthen you with power through His Spirit." Ephesians 3:16

"May ... God develop maturity in you, so that you get along with each other as well as Jesus gets along with us all." Romans 15:5

Another way to help others is to take a good, hard, honest look at ourselves and admit our own failings. When we become humble it is easier to see the worth in others. We make mistakes. Others make mistakes. But we play the part ... we hide behind what we imagine others see us to be instead of facing our own weaknesses and limitations. By admitting our own failures, we end the masquerade of hiding ourselves from view. It sets us free to become better. It enables us now to reach out in a more meaningful and positive way to others.

We cannot be successful on our own. We need a community around us. But we have a responsibility to that community to help others grow while they help us grow.

"Encourage each other and build each other up." 1 Thessalonians 5:11

"Love one another with brotherly affection as members of one family." Romans 12:10

Posted by DaleGWolf on October 09, 2005 at 01:37 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Putting 40 Days of Community to Work in Our Neighborhood

Talk about leaving your comfort zone!

Those who know me know that new social events put me right on the edge of uneasy. But our small group decided to participate in Montgomery Community Church's collection of toys and hygiene products for the survivors of our recent hurricanes, and for the children in Nicaragua. Children who have lost all their favorite toys, and children who likely never had any to begin with.

Last Saturday, we dropped off 1-gallon empty zip-lok bags at homes in our residential area of 100 homes, and asked our neighbors to consider filling the bags with stuff for the kids. Yesterday, we went out and knocked on doors to collect the filled up bags.

It's not easy to do this. I hate rejection and was fearful that people would think we were intruding on them. And, yes, there were some who reacted just that way. But most were extremely generous. They thanked us for giving them the opportunity to help. Many filled more than one bag. Many of the bags were bursting open cause they were stuffed so full.

In the end, we collected 70 bags of toys for the kids, plus some neighbors gave us cartons of soap and toothpaste.

We felt incredibly good because we had successfully stretched ourselves.

Our next outreach will be to serve dinner at the Ronald McDonald Home for the families with gravely sick children at Children's Hospital.

I love this stuff!

Posted by DaleGWolf on October 09, 2005 at 08:27 AM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

40 Days Reading 16:
Commitment to Each Other

My Notes from Rick Warren:

God is committed to us and he expects us to be committed to Him, and then to each other. It's by God's design that we define our lives by our commitments: marriage, children, church, work, friends, neighborhood, school. Commitment goes beyond the routine get-togethers we have with one another. It transcends the superficial in a spirit of love and concern.

We need to love and support one another, no matter what. We need to extend this love to the unlovable. It is easy to love those in our various social groups, but going outside this circle to care for others who are in a different social or economic level than the one in which we live is a stretching process. We leave our comfort zones. We need to look outward into the world and help those in need. The Good Samaritan is the model.

"Let us agree to use all our energy in getting along with each other." Romans 14:19a

Key Question for Comment:

If you were to ask one of your good friends what, or who, they think you are committed to, how do you think they would answer?

Posted by DaleGWolf on October 09, 2005 at 08:12 AM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

40 Days Reading 15:
Admit Our Need for Each Other

My Notes from Rick Warren:

No man is an island. Even God was not happy alone.

We were meant to experience life together.

What great fun it is to travel to a new city with my family. Our first trip to London and Paris when our daughters were still in grade school was a wonderful time because we all shared the excitement of visiting together. The sharing of the experience is something we each still carry with us many years later. But when I travel to the same two cities alone on business, I just get in, get my business done and hurry home. I need my family with me to share the experience, otherwise it is just one more business trip; nothing exciting.

That is the way with life. To truly enjoy it, we do need each other. That is the strength of Christ's Body. Together we can do so much more, influence so many others, and find great joy in the sharing. Studying the Bible has always been more insightful in a small group because together we see so much more.

"Since we are all one body in Christ, we belong to each other and each of us needs all the others." Romans 12:5b

Key Question for Comment:

What might be keeping you from making a deeper commitment to your small group?

Posted by DaleGWolf on October 09, 2005 at 07:55 AM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

40 Days Reading 14:
Representing Jesus

My Notes from Rick Warren:

One of my favorite verses is 1 Peter 4:10-11 and it is central to this devotional reading from Rick Warren's book:

Each one should use whatever gift he has received to serve others, faithfully andministering God's grace in its various forms. If anyone speaks, he should do it as one speaking the very words of God. If anyone serves, he should do it with the strength God provides, so that in all things God may be praised through Jesus Christ. To him be the glory and the power for ever and ever. Amen.

Today Rick encourages us to represent Jesus. This is a high calling. Much of our culture displays an open hostility to our faith because they do not understand it. They latch onto anything they can to keep the word of God out of public view. They have a right to fear it because when people truly listen to the story of love so deep that it bonds us for life, then, yes, the Christian who spreads the good news becomes a big threat to non-belivers. That's because when we represent Jesus by the way we live and when we share our stories, it is hard not to seriously consider becoming a Christian.

"Whatever you do or say, let it be as a representative of the Lord Jesus." Colossians 3:17

Key Question for Comment:

How can you represent Jesus in your world today?

Posted by DaleGWolf on October 09, 2005 at 07:38 AM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Happiness Quantified?
Well, Maybe.

Something_to_shout_about A recent article in Reveries discusses happiness. Sadly, it missed the role of community love in the equation ... but at least the topic is surfacing with economists and business leaders.

Pastor Libsey has on several occasions noted in his sermons that the United States trails in happiness ratings, well behind some countries that are considerably less wealthy.

For me, happiness peaks when I know I am loving others and putting their needs ahead of mine. A strange sense of peace settles over me. It is a good feeling.

Why then don't I pursue this happiness and peace more deliberately in all I do?

Where does happiness come from for you?

happiness quantified

"Medieval peasants worked less than you do," read a T-shirt worn by one attendee at a meeting by some 400 representatives of about a dozen countries "to consider new ways to define and assess prosperity," as reported by Andrew C. Revkin in The New York Times.

The meeting, held at St. Francis Xavier University in Nova Scotia, was largely inspired by "the small Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan," kingdomofbhutan.com, whose king, Jigme Singye Wangchuck, decided in 1972 "to make his country's priority not its G.D.P. (gross domestic product) but its G.N.H., or gross national happiness."

The king's experiment -- which he, himself, describes as a "work in progress," apparently has inspired "a growing number of economists, social scientists, corporate leaders and bureaucrats ... to develop measurements that take into account not just the flow of money but also access to health care, free time with family, conservation of national resources and other non-economic factors."

The first challenge concerns how to define "
happiness" in the first place. John Ralston Saul, a "political philosopher" says its "a balance of individual and community interests." That is, more Lockian than Disneyan. Others suggest happiness is a relative concept. For example, "various studies show that beyond certain thresholds, roughly as annual per capita income passes $10,000 or $20,000, happiness does not keep up ... And some countries, studies found, were happier than they should be."

A 1995 report found that "Latin American countries ... registered far more subjective happiness than their economic status would suggest." Comments political scientist Ronald Ingelhart, who conducted the study: "Some types of societies clearly do a much better job of enhancing their people's sense of happiness and well-being than other ones, even apart from the somewhat obvious fact that it's better to be rich than to be poor."

The second challenge concerns how to measure "happiness." In Canada, a group of economists and social scientists is trying to develop an "
index of well-being -- an assessment of community health, living standards and people's division of time around work, family, voluntarism and other activities," which will later be integrated "with measurements of education, environmental quality, 'community vitality' and the responsiveness of government."

Great Britain is working on a similar index. In the United States there is a "growing interest in moving away from simply tracking indicators of poverty, for example, to looking more comprehensively at social conditions."

Observes political scientist Ronald Colman: "Measuring whether poverty is going up or down is different than measuring changes in the ability of a family to feed itself." Others, meanwhile, think the attempt to measure happiness is a non-starter. Says Venezeulan economist Frank Bracho: "The most important things in life are not prone to measurement -- like love."

Posted by DaleGWolf on October 04, 2005 at 09:36 AM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

Are You On Candid Camera?

Nanny_cam The kind of camera that comes first to mind is the one at dangerous intersections where it can capture drivers who run the red lights. Or the cameras at ATMs or at Train Stations where terrorists have been identified. You gotta be crazy to break the law in front of a camera. Or the Nanny Cams where parents can check up on unsuspecting baby sitters. If you suspected you were being watched on Nanny Cam, you'd be really careful to do everything right.

Imagine, then a camera in every room in your home where it would capture your selfish acts, your temper tantrums, you telling a lie, you abusing the kids, you drinking into drunkeness, you watching a porn channel on the computer, you hanging around with the wrong kind of friends. We hide things in our sense of privacy -- forgetting that God sees it all and even peers into our hearts where he can read our intentions, our pride, our arrogance, our insecurities.

Taylor_paul That was the picture in my head during Paul Taylor's sermon this morning. He continued the theme of 40 Days of Community by sharing four things that destroy relationships and four things that can fix relationships. What kinds of friends do you hang around with, he wondered. How would your life be different if you hung around with Jesus? No question we become more like our friends so if Jesus was our best friend, it stands to reason we'd be more loving of others around us.

Selfishness Destroys Relationships; Selflessness Builds Relationships -- James warned us that fights and quarrels come from the battle of desires within us. Apostle Paul admonishes us "to look out for one another's interests, not just for your own" so that "we won't feed the compulsions of selfishness. The cure: A little bit less of me and a little bit more of the people around me.

Pride Destroys Relationships; Humility Builds Relationships -- Pride results in stubborness and a refusal to admit when we are wrong. Our egos "Edge God Out" while humility brings Christ back into our lives. Hanging out with Jesus will instill the right and loving way of living.

Insecurity Destroys Relationships; Love Builds Relationships -- When we worry more about what other people think of us, we begin hiding our weaknesses so others cannot see into us. Some of these insecurities are so deep and personal that we outright fear rejection. It is not easy to reveal our humaness. Consider for a moment the videocam illustration that I started this article with.

Resentment Destroys Relationships; Forgiveness Builds Relationships -- In real life, we unfortunately will from time to time hurt other people and they will hurt us. But if we allow these experiences to harden our hearts, it builds into long-term resentment and anger ... we feel we need to get even but all we do is hurt ourselves. Jesus asked us to repair our relationships by forgiving. And He did it for all of us while hanging on the cross.

Posted by DaleGWolf on October 02, 2005 at 04:38 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

Think BIG and He Will Help

Think_big We met this past Monday at Terry's home. Two big AH-Ha's for me. First, God is hoping for for us to THINK BIG ... to take on a project beyond our normal resources and to rely on Him to provide what we need to do big things for Him. Second, God's Plan-A is to work through people like us to serve others in need; He has no Plan-B.

We talked at length about a service project we could tackle. First was to join the rest of Montgomery Community Church in a neighborhood collection for toys and hygiene and cleaning supplies to be sent for distribution by churches in the Gulf States to the Katrina/Rita victims.

Ronald_mcdonald_house Then someone suggested we go to the Ronald McDonald House near Children's Hospital and prepare a meal and conversation with the parents who have hospitalized children. Then another idea was to provide friendship and assistance to single moms in our neighborhood -- they have a tough life most every day.

Think_big_fish We debated for awhile on which project ... but thinking back on God's need for BIG IDEAS, we decided to do all three.

We were going to be a gold fish with shark fins!

Our plan was to partner with another small group in our residential area to split up the work of soliciting items for the Hurricane survivors ... that way we could each do 50-60 homes. But as it turned out, the other group had already selected their own project. Now we were looking at a project twice as big as we had imagined. This just feels right!

God works in ways we will never fathom.

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 30, 2005 at 03:55 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

40 Days Reading 13:
Give Practical Help

My Notes from Rick Warren:

Jesus provides the role model. First he stops and notices the people who are in need. Then He helps them and only then does He tell them His message. We are supposed to offer practical help to others; before we talk about love, we show it. The message is accepted when we first serve in love. If not, then the Body of Christ will amount only to a big mouth, with no arms and legs. Preach the Gospel and if necessary use words. Helping the Hurricane survivors. Mowing a lawn and bringing food for a shut-in. Caring for the sick or imprisoned. There are so many ways we can provide practical help to others.

"Little children, let us stop just saying we love people; let us really love them, and show it by our actions."  1 John 3:18

Key Question for Comment:

Click on the link to "comments" at the end of this article and you will get a window in which you can type your thoughts.

Who can you share the love of Christ with in a practical way today?

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 30, 2005 at 03:33 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

40 Days Reading 12:
Building Friendships

My Notes from Rick Warren:

One of my favorite songs we sing at church has the refrain: "I have a friend in God, I have a friend in God ... He calls me friend." What a good feeling that song imparts as we all realize that in all His awesomeness, God stoops to be our friend. That is the same feeling we can impart to others when we we become friends with them. When we're active in church, we can become isolated from unbelievers. But God places them in front of us as an opportunity to be friends with them and to share the love and peace of Jesus. We need to look for common ground with others ... the common ground is there if we are just open to see it. Rick Warren emphasizes three words: courtesy, frequency and authenticity.

"Be friendly with everyone. Don't be proud and feel that you are smarter than others. Make friends with ordinary people."  Romans 12:16

Key Question for Comment:

Do you have any meaningful friendships with nonbelievers?

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 30, 2005 at 03:15 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

40 Days Reading 11:
Show Acceptance

My Notes from Rick Warren:

For me, this reading builds on a comment in a previous reading that has been haunting me personally: We are to love the unlovable. It is certainly easier to love those that we like, or those that we already love. But going outside that circle is uncomfortable. But is surely is what Jesus did, and his apostles after Him. So we have our role model.

Rick points out that we should accept others the way Jesus accepts us. His love was unconditional. He even went out of his way to show acceptance for people that the majority found unlovable -- prostitutes, tax collectors and lepers to name a few. The common theme was that they were non-belivers. He looked beyond the sin to see that God created the unlovable and He died for them.

We show acceptance when we spend time with people and to help them simply see that they are important to God and to you. We need to get to know them and whatever they have done in the past is of no importance. We should help change people instead of condeming them.

"Reach out and welcome one another to God's glory. Jesus did it; now you do it!" Romans 15/7

Key Question for Comment:

Who is the last person in your life that you would expect to become a Christian? How could your acceptance of them build a bridge to Christ?

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 30, 2005 at 11:14 AM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

40 Days Reading 10: Offer Hospitality

My Notes from Rick Warren:

The Christian home is a miraculous place for hospitality, a place where we can center on Jesus' ministry to the impoverished, captive, blinded and oppressed world. When Christians open our homes for ministry we multiply geometrically what God can do in our world. At MCC, we have hundreds of homes ... if just 5 became places of mission and all the other thousands of churches each also found just 5 homes, soon there would be 10,000 places of refuge for needy children, aging and lonely elderly ... imagine then how transformed Cincinnati would be!

Hospitality brings a special attitude, one where we state through our actions that "what is mine is yours." Pride is tucked away. False pretensions melt away. We become welcoming in spirit. And a transformation comes over us as well as for those we invite in. Real service to others happens outside the walls of our churches.

"Open your homes to each other without complaining."  1 Peter 4:9

Key Question for Comment:

Have you had your neighbors into your home lately?

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 30, 2005 at 10:56 AM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

40 Days Reading 9: Using Our Small Group

My Notes from Rick Warren:

We trumps me. The power of small groups is that in partnership with Christ, we can do things no one would imagine could be done. I have watched a small group at my previous church save men from the mountain of alcoholism ... together we were able to move the mountain when nothing else tried by the individual worked. The question at the conclusion of Reading 8 was a show stopper for me: Will anybody be in heaven because of you? Whoa! There are good friends in my life who have not accepted the Good News. Each of them have their own reasons. I've talked with many of them, but never convinced even one to see the Light. As an individual, I seem powerless in this mission. But within a group, I can have more power and support.

Rick suggests four ways our small group can help reach to Christ: Pray together for the opportunity to talk about Jesus. Pray together that God will prepare the hearts of those we want to reach. Pray for God to soften our hearts so that we will love others enough that we will do anything to help them. Pray for innovation in our approaches ... that we might find ways to each individual heart that are personally relevant to that individual.

" ... you are working together and struggling side-by-side to get others to believe the good news." Philippians 1:27b

Key Question for Comments:

Which of your friends and family members can your small group begin praying for?

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 30, 2005 at 10:42 AM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

A 40-Days Challenge

God in Heaven, give me a deeper love for other people. In Christ' name. Amen.

We got a sound warning from Pastor Lipsey today. Don't go to lunch with him. Chris Combs did and he caught the Spirit of Christ so deeply that he left his job in Corporate America and joined the Montgomery Community Church staff as Director of Missions.

Chris announced how our small groups can demonstrate our love to the survivors of Katrina and Rita. We will each organize a neighborhood drive to collect toys, cleaning supplies and school supplies to be sent to the survivors.

A Bag Full of Bears and Lambs

Care_bears I know I have a bag of stuffed animals that our daughters played with back when they were little ... the bears and lambs are in mint condition waiting for a grandchild to play with them ... but now I know they were saved for an even more important goal ... to become the favorite toy for a little child in the Gulf who lost all her toys. I know exactly where these fluffy animals are headed!

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 25, 2005 at 01:24 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (2)

40 Days Reading 8: Being Intentional

My Notes from Rick Warren:

Love is a choice and a command. If we choose to obey and love, then love must be concerned about the destiny of others. We should be intentional in our love. While it may be easier to ignore non-believers, loving means stepping up to the challenge ... not being silent and letting that person continue through life without knowing the love of Christ. Intentional love brings with it a responsibility. How Christians act in the world matters because our behavior will be interpreted as a statement for or against Christ. When Christians act in an unloving, self-centered, or angry manner, the world has reason to reject Christ. Unlovable people and unbelieving people are put in our presence by God as an opportunity for sharing His love with them. We should not miss a single opportunity.

"Be wise in the way you act with people who are not believers, making the most of every opportunity." Colossians 4:5

Key Question for Comments:

Will anybody be in heaven because of you?

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 25, 2005 at 01:11 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

40 Days Reading 7:
Loving is Witnessing

My Notes from Rick Warren:

As Christians, we are marked people in the world. Other Christians watch us. Non-Christians watch us. This is good when we are loving because we witness to the world that God is all about love. It is bad when we fail, because non-believers point to the failure of Christians to practice what they preach. The best thing we can do to reach out in mission is to show a love that is strong; one that becomes contagious. The world prefers to see what we are against instead of what we stand for: love everyone. When we love, we prove that Jesus is the Truth.

"Your love for one another will prove to the world that you are my disciples." John 13:35

Key Question for Comments:

How loudly do your actions and the actions of your small group speak about the love of God?

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 24, 2005 at 01:33 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

40 Days Reading 6:
Practice for Eternity

My Notes from Rick Warren:

The greatest lesson in life is love. Pain, suffering, joy and peace are all used by God to transform us into loving people ... the kind of people who can reflect His love outward. This is for eternity. There should be a sense of urgency as we could run out of time before we begin loving others -- even those who seem unlovable. Loving must be a habit we practice continually. For our lifetimes, we must learn how to love as Christ loves us. If we are loving people, we will be the kinds of souls God wants surrounding Him in Heaven ... we can expect the reward.

"We are anxious that you keep right on living others as long as life lasts, so that you will get your full reward." Hebrews 6:11

Key Question for Comments:

How can you practice love more urgently, consistently and expectantly?

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 24, 2005 at 12:47 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

40 Days Reading 5:
Because We're a Family

My Notes from Rick Warren:

We long to belong. Love one another as brothers and sisters. Leads to a genuine Christian family, with a deep unwavering commitment to support one another. Within small groups we can learn to trust one another, accept one another and serve one another. Need to allow self to be vulnerable. Need to become role models. Need to learn the importance of biblical values and unlearn some of the wrong beliefs that we have acquired over the years.

"Love your Christian brothers and sisters." 1 Peter 2:17

Key Question for Comments:

What can you do to become more devoted to your church family?

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 23, 2005 at 11:21 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

Reading 4:
Because it Shows We're Saved

My Notes from Rick Warren:

Loving others is the evidence that we belong to God's family. We move from being selective about who we love to being free and unconditional with our love. First, believe. We are made for His purpose. We are not an accident. Second, know that Jesus is our Lord and Savior. We are forgiven. We will live in eternity. We have help in learning how to love.

"We know that we have passed from death to life because we love other believers." 1 John 3:14

Key Question for Comments:

If you were put on trial for your faith, and your expressions of love were the only evidence, what would the verdict be?

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 23, 2005 at 10:50 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

40 Days Reading 3:
Because it is How we Love God

My Notes from Rick Warren:

The people around us are important to God, so they should be equally important to us. Love is not what we think or say as much as it is about how much we give of ourselves. Do it extravagently. Have a Christ-sight. Anyone who listens to the Word but does act on the Word, does not understand love. God is constantly placing people right in front of you so you can have these opportunities to demonsrate love. You have no guarantee of tomorrow so if you want to express your love, do it now.

"People who don't love other believers, whom they have seen, can't love God, whom they have not seen." 1 John 4:20b

Key Questions for Comments:

What does the way you show love to others say about your love for God?

Who do you need to start spending more time with?

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 23, 2005 at 05:54 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

40 Days Reading 2:
Because God Commands It

My notes from Rick Warren:

God says we must decide to love one another, regardless of how we feel about someone else or how unlovable they may appear. If you love Jesus, you will obey his commands. He pushes the definition of love to a higher level -- where behavior and beliefs combine into godly action. Love is Christ on a cross. We must connect with each other to love each other. We each bring different perspectives and needs into any community. It is no longer just I who loves, but Christ who loves in me.

"A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another." John 13:34

Key Question for Comments:

How can you show the selfless love of Christ to an unlovable person in your life today?

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 23, 2005 at 05:27 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

40 Days Reading 1:
Because God Loves Us

My Notes from Rick Warren:

Life is about learning to love. Love is unnatural for us. It is human nature to think of ourselves first. We naturally do what is in our own best interest, often without any regard for how it affects others. Self-centeredness is the root of practically every problem -- both personally and globally. Real love is placing the needs of others before your own. It is making your problem, my problem. It is giving others what they need, not what they deserve.

"We love because God first loved us." 1 John 4:19

Key Question for Comments:

How comfortable are you with being in a 40 Days of Comunity small group?

Posted by DaleGWolf on September 23, 2005 at 05:21 PM in Forty Days of Community | Permalink | Comments (0)

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