It’s Not Over. The Best Is Yet To Come.

Christmas 2009 is already a memory. The gifts have been opened. Some need to be returned. Soon we’ll finish packing up the decorations and store them away. Some of us are making New Year resolutions — with high hopes we’ll keep them — and looking foward to 2010.

Christmas wouldn’t be the same without special movies like It’s A Wonderful Life. A more recent addition to our holidays is The Nativity Story. The message, production quality and acting are so good that it never fails to bring a tear to our eyes. If you haven’t seen it, don’t wait until next Christmas.

During this first decade of the new millenium, many of us saw Mel Gibson’s The Passion of Christ, which retold the story of the death of Jesus Christ on the cross.

I followed the early news reports when Mel Gibson first started production. He was attacked in the media by both Jews and Christians. Jews claimed the movie was anti-semitic and Christians said he took too many liberties with the story. When the movie was released, many Christians felt it was a dramatic but wonderful portrayal of Christ’s redemptive work on the Cross. But Mel Gibson’s personal failures were soon broadcast around the world, and he has gone through one problem after another ever since.

Mel Gibson pursued his dream. He produced a powerful movie about his Savior. He fought the fight, and then he fell. Like Abraham, Adam, David, Jacob, Moses, Peter, and other leaders in scripture, Mel Gibson has feet of clay that didn’t hold him up under the pressure of success.

The Best is Yet to Come
So, what does that mean for us? If we pursue our life-long dream and succeed, does that guarantee personal failure? Is this the Way, the Truth, and the Life that Jesus promised?

I don’t think so. If you do what God has put in your heart to do, and if you follow the purpose for which He has created you, you’re not going to automatically be knocked down a few notches. That doesn’t have to be the way our stories end.

Like Mel Gibson and the biblical leaders, I’ve made big mistakes and failed God and those I love. My own stupidity and sinfulness created my problems. The consequences of my lack of discipline and character have driven me to my knees many times. But by the grace of God, I’m going to keep getting back up and pursuing my dream.

How about you?
Will you believe that your “present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed” in you (Romans 8:18) and continue to press on in the new year?

This morning I received an email from Ian Dainty at B2BBusinessCoach.com. He featured a link to a short, inspiring video entitled Learning to Dance in the Rain, with some beautiful photography by Simple Truths. They offer lots of inspiring, free videos on their website.
 
I found the one by Robin Crow entitled Rock Solid Leadership to be very inspiring…

The free video Great Quotes from Great Leaders was also very good…

But my favorite video was The Nature of Success by Mac Anderson…

Keep getting back up to pursue your dream, and have a prosperous and happy New Year!

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Shovel-Ready Stimulus Not Trickling-Down to You?

The trillions of dollars in bank-bailouts, shovel-ready-stimulus-projects and cash-for-clunkers hasn’t been affecting a lot of our bank accounts. It eventually will, of course. Many of us won’t receive it, but we’ll definitely help pay for it.

When I traveled a few weeks ago on my motorcycle I saw consctuction workers laying asphalt in each state. It made me wonder what the impact would be in each community by a handful of hard-working men and women.

I hope, of course, that we will see a significant return on our investment. Like everyone, I want the economy to turn around. I want the federal government’s massive ”borrow-and-spend, tax-later” policy to have a positive, long-term effect. But I have a nagging feeling. The decisions and actions by our leaders seem a lot like what’s been done before — what got us into this economic trouble – except now we’re doing it on a much larger scale than ever before, so we could easily see much worse consequences than ever before.

Then what?
When the results of all this economic irresponsibility come home to roost, how will we fix it? If our economy is much more broken than the mess we’re currently trying to repair, what will we do as a nation? If other countries stop lending us money and won’t buy our most stable securities, and our government has taxed us beyond our tolerance level, where will leaders get the money they need to cover their spending addiction?

You’re right. They’ll print it. Lots of it. A repeat of the economic problems in Germany before World War II.

What will that look like?
Suppose for a minute that Christians intentionally practice Matthew 6:33 and “Seek first His kingdom and His righteousness” and they are blessed with contentment and financial resources — and become envied by others. Could Christians be hated by the masses like Jews were in Germany during the late 1930s and early 1940s?

Think for a moment how the media — and many political leaders — treated one woman of faith: Sarah Palin. What bothered them so much that they would direct such ignorant, biased, verbal attacks on her and her family?

Prejudice.
While our nation has been working hard to eliminate racial bias, we are replacing it with religious prejudice. We are tolerating all sorts of activities, behaviors, and beliefs – except for those of Christians.

As this New Year and New Decade approach, we face many uncertainties. I hope Christian leaders in govenment, education, business, and at home will make a resolution to follow Jesus like never before. Believe Him. Trust His words and act on them. Know in their hearts that He will reward those who diligently seek Him.

Here’s my New Year’s resolution for 2010: Stop worrying, and believe Him.
“Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more important than food, and the body more important than clothes? Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to his life?
“And why do you worry about clothes? See how the lilies of the field grow. They do not labor or spin. Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these. If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today and tomorrow is thrown into the fire, will he not much more clothe you, O you of little faith? So do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.”     – Matthew 6:25-33

What’s your resolution?

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Will The New Christian Spokeman Please Stand Up?

Who would you pick to be the new voice for Christianity?

As this decade comes to a close I am reminded of some great Christian leaders who have passed on. Bill Bright (Campus Crusade), Ted Engstrom (YFC and World Vision), Jerry Falwell (Moral Majority), Carl F. H. Henry (Christianity Today), D. James Kennedy (Coral Ridge Ministries), Stephen Olford (Preacher), Pope John Paul II, Mother Teresa, Adrian Rogers (Minister), and just this week, Oral Roberts.

A few of the aging Christian leaders who seem to be losing their influence, but haven’t yet left the scene, include names like James Dobson (Focus on the Family), Billy Graham (Evangelist), Pat Robertson (CBN), and Robert Schuller (Crystal Cathedral). Most of these leaders are seldom heard from anymore in mainstream media.

Newer names such as Franklin Graham (Samaritan’s Purse), TD Jakes (Potter’s House), Joel Osteen (Lakewood Church), and Rick Warren (Saddleback Church) each continue to generate millions of dollars in donations and product sales like the generation before them. But they don’t seem to be making much impact on society — and like the older generation, these leaders also have little influence through mainstream media.

The “Most Admired” man according to Gallup’s 2008 survey was Barack Obama at 32 percent. Billy Graham and Pope Benedict were the only two Christian ministry leaders who made it on the top-ten list. (And they were way behind Obama, with only two percent each.) None of the younger Christian leaders even made the list.

Hillary Clinton was the “Most Admired” woman at 20 percent. Not a single woman in Christian ministry made the top-ten list. (Sarah Palin followed Hillary with 11 percent, along with Ellen DeGeneres, Oprah, and Angelina Jolie.) Again, no Christian leaders outside of politics.

There are a few voices that have captured audiences. FOXNews has Glenn Beck, a Mormon, and Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity, both good Catholic boys. And conservative Rush Limbaugh still has lots of radio listeners.

But who will God tap to speak with Christian conviction and relevance to the current generation?

Will the new “Christian voice” succumb to the gospel of the politically correct? Will their message be merely about socialism, climate change and the melting polar ice cap? Or will they speak the truth from God’s word? Will they address our sin and selfishness, God’s redemptive work through Jesus Christ on the Cross, and His willingness to help us overcome our sinful life? And if they preach the gospel, how will they get their message to the masses?

Carrying this torch is a God-sized task. I’m grateful He’s given us a roadmap. One that will help leaders of all organizations be more effective: the Bible.

Here’s some advice from Proverbs 16 by one of the wisest leaders of all time:
All a man’s ways seem innocent to him, but motives are weighed by the LORD .
The LORD detests all the proud of heart. Be sure of this: They will not go unpunished.
When a man’s ways are pleasing to the LORD, he makes even his enemies live at peace with him.
Better a little with righteousness than much gain with injustice.
How much better to get wisdom than gold, to choose understanding rather than silver!
Pride goes before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall.
The wise in heart are called discerning, and pleasant words promote instruction.
A wise man’s heart guides his mouth, and his lips promote instruction.
Pleasant words are a honeycomb, sweet to the soul and healing to the bones.
A scoundrel plots evil, and his speech is like a scorching fire.
A perverse man stirs up dissension, and a gossip separates close friends.
Better a patient man than a warrior, a man who controls his temper than one who takes a city.

Here’s my paraphrase of Solomon’s words:
Carefully examine your motives. God has.
If you’re too proud, you will fall. Count on it.
If you do what you’re supposed to, the way you’re supposed to, you’ll win.
It’s not about the money. Less really is more.
Figuring out how to do the right thing is more satisfying than making money.
When you know you’re right, duck.
When you say the right thing the right way, they’ll want to hear more.
It’s not about winning an argument, it’s about winning a heart and mind.
Keep cool under stress and your impact will be much greater.

Of course, it’s easier to paraphrase Solomon’s advice than to actually live it…

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Hopes Torn Apart, Dreams Turned to Shame

Over a year ago I tried to launch a local business magazine. I failed. Lord knows it wasn’t the first failure in my life. But that didn’t make it much easier.

Of course I agreed with friends and peers who said the economy was to blame. Even my employees were kind when I let them go. But I couldn’t kid myself. I knew I had failed. The plan was flawed. And my timing was terrible.

Soon after I announced early last fall that I was launching this new magazine, I watched the economy drop through the floor. Established local businesses folded, one after another. Car dealerships closed their doors. Restaurants shut down. Builders stopped construction. Leaders laid off employees, and everyone wondered if and when things would turn around.

For a good part of a year I met with about a dozen other business owners each month and listened to them talk about the hard times they were going through. I watched a gentleman during one of our meetings try to hide the tears that filled his eyes as he described his desperate situation. After many years of business success, he simply didn’t have a solution for his dilemma. And his story was echoed with similar stories by other leaders in the room.

Most of these business owners were younger than I am, so I tried to encourage them. I told them our nation had been through many recessions before, and I had lived through several. I spoke optimistically about my new venture, boldly trusting God was in the midst of it, and success was going to come… for all of us… the economy was going to turn around… But it didn’t.

For some of us the experiences over the past year were  new. Regardless, most of us would like to forget these lessons and move on. But there was one experience that I want to hold on to — a powerful story of second chances by a special lady. Her name is Susan Boyle.

I know you’ve heard her story. But did you understand the words to the song she sang that first night on Britain’s Got Talent? While you watch the original event again, take a moment to read what she chose to sing:

       I dreamed a dream in time gone by,
       When hope was high and life worth living.
       I dreamed that love would never die,
       I dreamed that God would be forgiving.
       Then I was young and unafraid,
       When dreams were made and used and wasted.
       There was no ransom to be paid,
       No song unsung, no wine untasted.

       But the tigers come at night,
       With their voices soft as thunder,
       As they tear your hopes apart,
       As they turn your dream to shame.

       And still I dream He’ll come to me,
       That we will live our lives together,

       But there are dreams that cannot be,
       And there are storms we cannot weather!

       I had a dream my life would be
       So different from this hell I’m living,
       So different now from what it seemed…
       Now life has killed the dream I dreamed.

Sounds pretty depressing doesn’t it? “Dreams that cannot be… storms we cannot weather… this hell I’m living… life has killed the dream….”

I wonder how many people feel this way right now. How many could sing that song with tears in their eyes… Laid-off workers, owners of failed businesses, contractors, salespeople — men and women who have successfully done the same thing for years — but now are out of work and wondering what lies ahead.

I don’t have a magic answer. But when my wife repeated Romans 15:13 to me after I folded my business and was feeling down one day, it totally changed my outlook:

       Now may the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing,
      
that you may abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.

Our God is the God of hope. He can fill us with all joy and peace. And when He does, you will abound in hope.

So that’s my prayer for you: that God will fill you with joy and peace throughout this holiday season, and as a result, your hope will abound for the new year. And I pray that you won’t listen to those “voices” in the night that “tear your hope apart … and turn your dream to shame.”

Oh, and if it’s any encouragement, that 48-year-old unemployed charity worker (and dreamer), Susan Boyle, recently released a new CD. Last I heard it had sold over 700,000 copies in the first two weeks. And it set a record for best-selling debut album in England and the most pre-ordered CD ever on Amazon.com.

So keep on dreaming. A new year is coming. And God will be with you through it.

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