29 June 2011

Value-Adding Spiritual People

Galatians 6:1 
“Brothers and sisters, if someone is caught in a sin, you who are spiritual should restore that person gently.”


Spiritual people can add significant value to a business or a sporting club. Being “spiritual” will not necessarily help someone achieve more billable hours or kick more goals, but there is a task spiritual people are uniquely placed to do. A task that serves the whole organisation.

Sooner or later, someone is going to get caught doing the wrong thing. In every club, someone will eventually cheat; in every business someone will steal; in every school someone will lie … you get the picture. And when that happens there is a crisis. What will the leader do?

Option one: Fire, expel, dismiss, abandon!
Option two: Restore, gently!

Spiritual people are uniquely equipped to work away at option two. This is not soft work. Done well it takes courage and insight. It takes a gentle attitude, a heap of patience and a strong constitution. This is work the followers of Jesus are charged to do, both in the church and in the community. And God's Spirit helps them do the job.

Restoring instead of “exiting” can be a profitable strategy. It won't work in every situation but when it does there are numerous gains. If a good staff member can be re-engaged it may save a business heaps of time and money. If an excellent player can be reclaimed it may achieve some goals on the field and boost morale in the change rooms.

This is work worth attempting, so consider the following:

If you are a boss: Find the spiritual people in your team and give them this assignment. Set clear parameters, negotiate timelines and seek outcomes. Don’t side-line spiritual people in the work place, put them to work.

If you are a spiritual person: Involve yourself in this work. While formal support from your coach or boss would be beneficial it is not essential. You can be a restorer without wearing a “Chaplain” badge.

It doesn’t always work. Some people caught in a sin just don’t want to be restored. Some individuals are too proud and some contexts are too rigid. But when it does work everyone wins. 

Beware of the pseudo-spiritual people who are not much help at all. You can usually pick them. They: (1) are overly keen to do this work for you, (2) have a lot of rules they want to impose, (3) speak more gobbledygook then sense and (4) are not usually in it for the long haul.

Restoring people is slow and imprecise work. Some people respond to gentle spiritual guidance, others do not. But everyone deserves a second change. And the followers of Jesus, filled with his Spirit, are well placed to help make it happen in the marketplace as well as the church.

Questions
  • What resources might a spiritual person draw upon to do this work? What challenges might they face?
  • What concerns might a "boss" have?
  • What are the gains of restoring people caught in a sin?


27 June 2011

The Limits of Positive Thinking

Deuteronomy 29:19
“A person … invokes a blessing on himself and therefore thinks, ‘I will be safe, even though I persist in going my own way.’ This will bring disaster …”


A blessing from yourself to yourself is rubbish!

You cannot bless yourself and then live the way you want to. If your blessing is only an echo it is empty, even dangerous.

Imagine this. You teeter at the edge of a cliff about to jump to your certain death but first you shout across the valley: “You are mighty, you are strong, jump and live”. Then you wait for the echo. If you believe that echo, you will die. Blessing yourself is just like that.

Positive thinking can be a great thing but it has significant (and severe) limits. On the up side, it can build your self esteem, grow your capacity and improve your productivity. It is wise to be positive. But, you can’t use a positive attitude to defy God.

A blessing from beyond, on the other hand, is magnificent!

God wants to bless you! He can speak hope and promise over your life. His intentions for you are good. He is love.

God’s blessings have requirements. He wants us to live right. But these ethics concern the “gravity” of wrong living which we cannot defy by simply blessing ourselves. Positive thinkers who jump off cliffs have the same odds as pessimists! God wants to help us negotiate “cliffs” and his commands are a part of his blessing.

God speaks his blessing often. His voice is gentle and quiet. He tells the truth. As you read the bible, listen for his word of grace to you. Stop believing all the echoes of the age. Stop blessing yourself and become attentive for God.

Listen to this. “The Lord has declared this day that you are his people, his treasured possession … he has declared that he will set you in praise, fame and honour …” (Deut. 26:18-19). These are God’s words of covenant promise to all who follow and obey.

Here is a blessing you can trust. It is not an echo. Receive it, obey God and jump boldly into your life.

Questions
  • What words of blessing have most encouraged you?
  • Where do you turn for blessing?
  • Please leave a comment.



25 June 2011

How to Get Up When You're Down

2 Corinthians 4:8-9 
“We are hard pressed on every side, but not crushed; perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not abandoned; struck down, but not destroyed.”


Paul's courageous faith is an inspiration and his words provide a model. Here is a simple plan for gaining perspective when your world is collapsing. I have used these three steps on several occasions. It helped me greatly.

1. Make a list of what is BAD. Don’t cover up. Just admit that things are really hard. You may want to write your list down.

I sometimes find the act of dumping everything into a list is itself therapeutic. If for no other reason because I can see “why” I am feeling burdened or sad or immobilised.

Here is Paul’s list: “We are: hard pressed on every side, perplexed, persecuted and struck down.”

My list is usually longer and more specific than Paul’s. I detail the things that are getting me down. I once ran the list out to three pages. Then I grouped the items to make the next step a little more manageable.

2. Pair the list with what is WORSE. This is clever Pauline wisdom. “Yes, it is bad, but it is not THAT bad.”

Consider again Paul’s list, this time the evils he has not yet experienced: “But we are NOT: crushed, in despair, abandoned or destroyed!”

For each dreadful item on your list match it with a “but not”. This helps us get perspective. We often say “Oh, it could be worse”. Paul takes that a step further and reminds himself with specific examples just how true that old claim is. When you stop to think about how far you could fall, where you have landed may not look so bad.

3. Look forward to what is BETTER. Paul goes on to name things that are really exciting. Having looked at what is worse than his current situation he now looks at what is far better (2 Cor. 4:14-18).

He contemplates: resurrection (God is planning to raise you up with Jesus), inward renewal (unlike outward wasting away), eternal glory (not to be compared with momentary troubles) and fixing our eyes on what is unseen.This is a good start and you can add to it.

This prescription is simple but powerful. Try it, it can rescue your day!

If you have fallen, get up and run again. This amazing video of Heather Dorniden who did just that is sure to encourage you:

If the video does not load, copy this link into your browser: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V-xuJeQ04Bw


20 June 2011

How to Sustain Sensational Leadership

Deuteronomy 17:15-20 
“Be sure to appoint over you the King the Lord your God chooses … then he and his descendents will reign a long time over his Kingdom in Israel.”


Installing a leader is risky business. Leaders can build-up or mess-up an enterprise. We really want to get the right person (or be the right person). And if we get the right leader, we really want to keep them healthy.

We want God’s choice of leader. Deut. 17:14-20 is leadership gold. It contains three brilliant prescriptions for sustaining leadership effectiveness.

1. Lead from among the people.
The greatest danger in leadership is to think you are better than those you lead. You aren’t. A leader is an ordinary person in a unique position. That uniqueness can corrupt a leader. Be careful!

Be a brother or a sister to those you lead. Whether you are appointed from within or recruited from the outside you need to remember that a “foreigner” can’t lead well. Find your common ground quickly.

Q: Where do leaders stand?
A: Leaders stand wherever necessary.

Sometimes leaders stand at the front giving direction and sometimes at the back caring for strays. Leaders will stand in the middle of the crowd teaching and demonstrating. They will climb a tree above the crowd and peer into the distance trying to understand “where to next”. They will stand close to people listening and discerning and apart from people gaining perspective and praying. A leader may even lay down his life for the many.

As the leader, please, don’t consider yourself “better”. Stand where you are needed and lead from among the people.

2. Put limits on your accumulation.
A leader who get’s rich off the people is in trouble. He can be blessed. She can be loved by her people. But a leader must not burden the people with vanity and greed.

Don’t ask the people to do special favours for you that are not in the interest of those you lead (like going back to Egypt to get more horses 17:16). Don’t let your heart be led astray by what you can get.

Beware of the triple temptation: Power, Sex and Money! Deut. 17 specifically mentions all three: the King’s horses, harems and personal treasury. Make sure there are good systems in place to help keep you accountable as a leader.

John Wesley is a good model for us. He limited his living standards to his very early income levels. As he earned more money he practiced greater generosity rather than changing his living habits. Impressive!

3. Internalise Godly values.
Know what matters most. Have deep spiritual values. Write them out. Keep them with you.

The King in Israel was instructed to write out a personal copy of “this law”, probably referring to the Pentateuch. He was then challenged to internalise it and to revere God in his leadership (Deut. 17:18-20).

As a leader you are under a higher authority. You may answer to a Boss or a Board but above that you answer to the deep rooted values of your Creator. Leaders who understand this and build systems of value compliance into their routines, will be able to sustain long-term healthy leadership.

A final word…
To leaders: Make these three commitments to your people. Ask your people to help you keep them. Plan to be in leadership for a long time. Plan to stay healthy.

To followers: Make these three requests of your leaders. Help your leaders live them out. Help your leaders succeed. Speak the truth in love and obey your leaders with joy. 

Questions
  • How do you support your leaders practically?
  • What accountability structures are in place for your leaders?
  • Please leave a comment.


18 June 2011

Who is Welcome, Really ?

Rom 14:13 
"Let us therefore no longer pass judgement on one another, but resolve
instead never to put a stumbling-block or hindrance in the way of another."

This post is by my friend and GUEST BLOGGER: Dr. Melissa Stebbins, Chemist, Bible Student, Wife, Mother.

Paul spends a fair amount of his word count railing against the Jews for putting burdens on Gentile Christians. Itʼs not hard to feel some sympathy for the Jews though. They were used to being culturally separate, had their own customs and then they are suddenly having to eat and share their lives with people who are different. People who didnʼt share the kind of common heritage that makes living in community a little bit easier.

Now, letʼs move that situation into a modern day context. Many of us have certain expectations of what a Christian looks like. Are we prepared to welcome into the church family people who arenʼt like us? If we do, that might mean thereʼs going to be people who come and tell dirty jokes, leave their cigarette butts at the door, swear, raise their hands when singing, keep their hands in their pockets, talk too much, talk too loudly, fall asleep in the sermon, maybe they smell funny, read the KJV, read The Message, leave the dirty dishes, want the music loud, donʼt want music at all, talk about things that make you uncomfortable, donʼt talk at all, put their feet on the furniture, stay all night, turn up late,argue, bicker, barrack for Carlton ...

I must admit Iʼm selfish. I donʼt like being uncomfortable, itʼs easier to be around people that are like me, that conform to the same social norms, that are interested in similar things. At the same time Iʼd hate to be the person who put a stumbling block in the way of someone knowing Jesus, in fact I want to be the person who kicks the needless stumbling blocks out of the way.

Some things to remember:
  • No one needs to clean themselves up before they sit down at the table.
  • Weʼre not called to make people like us, but to make people like Jesus - many of our differences are just not that important.
  • Jesus' priorities are different to ours - we need to be aware that sometimes what we think is best is really just a reflection of our own interests.
  • We may need to give up something that we personally value to serve the interests of others.
  • We need each other - each part of the body has a part to play.

Questions
  • Have you put a stumbling block in the way of someone following Jesus? If so is there anyway you could make that right?
  • How can you make others feel more welcome?

Visit Melissa's Blog: Remember to Breathe. Thanks for the Guest Post!


16 June 2011

Am I Doing Enough for the Poor?

Deuteronomy 15:11 
“There will always be poor people in the land. Therefore I command you to be open-handed towards your brothers and toward the poor and needy in your land.”


I am committed to serving the poor! But am I doing enough? The very question can make me feel guilty. The need is huge and sometimes I just switch off. Neither response is helpful.

God is deeply concerned about the poor and verses like Duet. 15:11 challenge me to get this right. So today I did some practical planning.

Evaluate.
I wrote out seven questions to help me self evaluate. They may help you as well.

When did I last …
  1. feel compassion for the poor?
  2. pray about poverty?
  3. give to alleviate poverty (money, time, skill)?
  4. speak out about poverty (to a friend, a group, a politician )?
  5. learn something new about poverty?
  6. shop ethically?
  7. visit or live with the poor (locally or internationally)?
Then I answered each question this way.
  • Recently enough. Go to the next question.
  • Too long ago. Stop and plan the appropriate action, then go to the next question.

The goal was not to make myself feel guilty, but to figure out what I needed do. I discovered three areas that needed a plan. How about you?

Act.
Here are a handful of ideas to help you make plans for each of the seven questions. Please leave comments with your additional ideas below.
  • Change the background picture on your computer or phone to an image that will help you think and pray about poverty. Not necessarily a guilt-image but something that moves you.
  • Write out a prayer for the poor. Revisit it from time to time.
  • Search “poverty” on YouTube and give yourself a 30min education
  • Read Tim Costello’s book: "Another Way to Love".
  • Visit Make Poverty History or the Micah Challenge and read up. Then write to a politician.
  • Speak out about poverty on your Facebook or Twitter account.
  • Attend a church that cares about the poor.
  • Give to your church, a mission group or an agency that you trust.
  • Walk the City streets with extra cash. Be prepared and ask God to show you how to give it away.
  • Loan money to micro-enterprises in the developing world. I do this through Kiva.org
  • Get the Ethical Shopping App for your phone. (And don’t consider these shopping choices a hardship. See: Deut. 15:18)
  • Serve in a soup kitchen or food program
  • Take an awareness trip to a needy part of the world. Live among the poor.

Beyond Guilt.
Today I read my Bible and realised, “No” I am not doing enough for the poor. But I am refusing to switch off or to just feel guilty. Today I took some simple actions. My plans are not big enough to amaze anyone, but I am doing a little more than yesterday and that is good.

Questions
  • Which of the seven questions is most challenging for you? And where are you doing really well?
  • What questions would you like to add to this self-evaluation?
  • Can you add some actions to the list?
  • Please leave a comment

A short video. "What is Poverty?"

(If video does not load copy & paste this link in your browser: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GL-8HPdBroc)



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13 June 2011

Is It Time to Quit?

1 Corinthians 16:8-9
“I will stay on at Ephesus until Pentecost, because a great door for effective work has opened to me, and there are many who oppose me.”


Is it time to quit? Have you put in enough at this job or on this project? How do you know?

Each person’s situation is unique, but Paul’s experience may help you. Before you write that resignation letter run these two tests.

The Opposition Test
Take Paul's second comment first. He is staying on in this strategic City because, in his words: “so many oppose me”. That may surprise you. He reads the opposition as a measure of his call. It gives him courage not angst.

Paul knows that he on to something really important and that is why he is being persecuted. The contest is evidence for the significance of his work.

Before you quit, take stock of your opposition. Is it the very reason you are in this role? Could it be that the opposition is a measure of your calling? If there is lots of contest around your work it may mean that you are more important than you realised. It could be a reason to stay.

The Opportunity Test
Paul talks about “a great door for effective work” that has opened “to ME”. His door is specific. It usually is. If you quit, what door closes? How are you uniquely positioned to do some good? Yes, it may be hard and costly. There may be opposition. But is there a path, a window, a crack of hope that only YOU can access? Is that why you are in this role right now?

The opportunity test looks for the door that is presently open, and is only open to you. If you walk away, what opportunity disappears, perhaps forever?

Before you quit, take the 2 OPPs Test: assess your Opposition and Opportunity. Then decide, and having made your choice, give it all you have.

Questions
  • Did you ever quit something and then regret it?
  • When is opposition a signal to leave and not to stay?
  • Please leave a comment




11 June 2011

Glory To God! Too Much Like Hard Work?

1 Corinthians 10:31
Whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God.

This post is by my friend and GUEST BLOGGER: Jonathan Stark, Senior Pastor of Wodonga Baptist Church.

Surely Paul didn’t have work in mind when he said that did he?

At 15 years old I applied for a job at a furniture factory. It was a job for over the holidays and my motive was singular – money. I rode my bike in the early morning cold and, over the next two months, I earned every cent I received, and for the amount of work I did I was grossly underpaid! I can remember getting yelled at by my foreman “This is not a convent kid, get to work!” I felt constantly pressured and intimidated, I longed for the knock off bell to ring and couldn’t wait to get home, and a day before the big free Christmas party they sacked all the school aged employees! At that time I remember thinking, “If this is what work is like, I don’t know whether I’ll be able to endure it FOR THE REST OF MY LIFE!”

To me a life of hard work was almost unbearable! I wasn’t sure whether the pay was worth all the pain. I would have agreed back then with Oscar Wilde who said, “Work is the refuge of people who have nothing better to do.” What comes into your mind when I say the word – WORK? Probably not bringing God glory.

But Paul did say, “whatever you do,” and work, being something that takes up about a third of our time and often two thirds of our waking hours, is certainly part of Paul’s ‘whatever’. So how can we bring glory to God in our work? There are so many ways but surprisingly, working diligently is one of the main ways to glorify God.

5 ways to glorify God in our work by working diligently.
  1. Work with all your heart Paul writes to slaves and says “Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters” (Col 3:23). If slaves were urged to give their all for God’s glory, how much more should we! He urged Timothy to work in such a way that he could stand before God as one approved, a worker who would not need to be ashamed (2 Tim 2:15). This brings glory to God when we work in a way that pleases him.
  2. Learn from the ants. Wise old Solomon in Proverbs 6:6-8 asks us to get out to our local national park, find an ant hill, squat down low and observe! What we’ll find is that those ants work hard even though they don’t have a boss telling them what to do. They gather food in the present time so that they’ll have plenty in the future, tougher times. Ants encourage us to be self-motivated in working hard for the future.
  3. Refuse to make excuses about why we cannot work. Don’t be like the lazy person who imagined all kinds of dangers awaiting him on the way to work, “There’s a lion in the road!” (Prov. 26:13). Really? Much better to make a decision that you won’t let excuses stop you. “I’m too tired, too hot, too cold,” or “I might get hurt in the traffic,” are just excuses. No more excuses! Overcome them at all costs.
  4. Fight laziness head on. The sluggard lies in bed like a door that turns on its hinges (Prov 26:14). Don’t be like the sluggard. She is attached to her bed like a hinge to a door. Get to bed early and get up when the alarm goes off. Do what you promised yourself you would do when you went to bed. If you get up out of the wrong side of the bed at least you got up! But better still, get back in and get out the other side instead!
  5. Use what you’ve got not what you wish you had. Many people wish they were in a better job, yet while they wish and complain, they miss opportunities to do amazing things in the very job they have been given. So, ‘whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might’ (Eccl. 9:10a). Kick super goals in the job you have. Exceed expectations and opportunities will open up for you. It is true that ‘all hard work brings a profit” (Prov. 14:23). Remember that the only time success comes before work is in the dictionary.

You could have literally thousands of days ahead of you where you will be engaged in some kind of work. Imagine what a decision to work diligently for the glory of God would do to the rest of your working life! So get to work!

Questions
  • What advice would you give someone who is finding their job too much like hard work?
  • Can you share any ways you have overcome work avoidance to become diligent?

Warning: watching this could lead to laziness and bring back some long repressed memories from the 80s!


Visit Jonathan's Blog: "Thrive in Christ". Thanks for the guest post Jono!


07 June 2011

Explode Your Spiritual Growth with Two Words

1 Cor. 4:16 
Paul the Apostle: “I urge you to imitate me.”


Here is a powerful phrase. Every believer should use it. “Imitate me!” We should all have understudies as we follow Jesus. This simple idea will do more to grow you spiritually than any other activity.

When someone is watching and learning from you, it changes how you live – ask any parent. I invite people to “imitate” me because it is good for them, but even better for me. We both grow.

Every Christian can mentor someone! Let me tell you how.

Should you walk up to someone and say: “Hey, imitate me!” Probably not. But you could try some variations.

Synonyms:
  • Let’s meet to read our bibles and talk about what we learn?
  • Sit with me in worship, then I’ll drive you home and we can chat about the service.
  • Would you like me to teach you to pray?
  • Can I show you how to lead a bible study?
  • Join my group and lead with me, you can take on the leadership when I am on holiday in three months time.
  • Let’s catch-up for coffee and I’ll tell you what I have learned about confession and forgiveness.
  • Have you ever fasted? I could share my experience and we could do it together.
  • I remember when my kids were young, it is a hard stage. Would you like to catch-up and talk about parenting?
  • Could we meet weekly and pray together as you grow in your new faith?

You get the point. Learning occurs where there is an opportunity to see and do. This is how children acquire language (and much more!). It is how Trades are taught. And it is how people learn to follow Jesus.

Offer yourself. Find a new Christian or a young believer and get along side them. Offer yourself as a “pattern” for their emerging walk of faith. Don’t worry that you are not good enough. No one is! Just do your best and you will be surprised how you start to do better when you are being “watched”.

Tell your Pastor, youth leader or children’s ministry leader that you are available to be “imitated”. Refer to 1 Cor. 4:16 first so you don’t freak them out. It seems risky to say: “Imitate me”. But if you think about this it is the very best way (perhaps the only way) of discipling the next generation. Offer yourself as a mentor.

We fear this a little. We worry about looking proud or failing the people we mentor. But there is huge power in saying: “I’ll give it a go and try to set a pattern for you. Come along side me and do what I am learning to do. We’ll grow together”. God will help you. He will give you grace.

Have a mentor yourself. Who are you learning from? Who is your Paul? The act of being mentored will help you to mentor another person. If you're a recent believer and you have never been mentored, ask a Christian whom you respect to read this post and take up the challenge with you.

There are dangers. Mentoring has an element of power that can be abused. The goal is not cloning. We want to help others grow, not churn out little copies of ourselves. Give people a pattern not a prescription. Point them to Jesus. Pray for them. Let them grow free.

If you make yourself available to others as a guide and example it will explode your spiritual growth. Teachers are the real learners. Get involved in someone else’s spiritual growth, it will bless your socks off!

Questions
  • Are you mentoring anyone? If not what would it take for you to start?
  • What are your greatest fears and worries about mentoring?
  • Please leave a comment



03 June 2011

Exercise Faith and Walk Off the Map

2 Corinthians 5:7
“We live by faith, not by sight.”


Everyone needs a little faith. Without it there would be no bold adventures, no budding romances, no novel inventions and no surprise successes. Life is made exciting by following the occasional “hunch”. Knowing when to engage intuition is a crucial life skill.

Followers of Jesus take this further. As a Christian I declare that God is with me and that his Spirit leads me. So I claim to have more than vague hunches. I believe in a connection with my Creator that unfolds day by day like a long conversation between friends. This relationship governs my life. It is a walk of faith and much of it is off the map.

Living by Sight
The problem with “by-sight” living is that it uses the wrong instrument to guide life. The most important “data” can not be “seen”. It’s like using a map of the London Tube to plan a trip to Mars. A good starting place if you need to get out of London first, but too little information thereafter. Sight is not enough to live by.

I can’t see the future. I don’t know other people’s true motives. The full impact of my next action is really a mystery. While I try to do what is right I can’t possibly process all the variables. Sight is limited!

A friend of mine is visually impaired. In low light situations he may lean on my arm for part of the way. It is like loaning him my “perception” for a few steps. Everyone is in my friend's shoes, metaphorically. Our sight is not enough. We need to lean on someone.

Living by Faith
It takes courage to live beyond sight. It takes guts to let faith led you off the map. But the opportunities are great and the trip is exciting. Faith expands life.

Extra Dimensions. There is so much more to life than what we observe. There is more in length (eternity) and more in depth (spirituality). Living by faith, means factoring these extra dimensions into my thoughts and actions. I can’t see a “new earth” beyond the grave but I can act out my expectation. I can’t see the Spirit of God in the room, but I can live by the conviction that he is present (2 Cor. 5:1-10, Gal. 5:16-26).

Greater Hope. “Faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see” (Heb. 11:1). I hope for the end of human trafficking and the eradication of extreme poverty in my life time. Closer to home, I hope for joy in my friend’s lives and improved well-being in the City where I live. I have some very personal hopes and dreams as well. Faith stirs my confidence in all these dreams. It gives me assurance to live by them and not by what I actually see.

Divine Friendship. In Eden, Adam walked with God each day. They talked together. That is the pattern for living and every man and woman of God has done the same thing up to today. Living by faith is walking humbly with God, following close behind Jesus and staying in step with the Spirit (Micah 6:8, Mk. 1:17, Gal 5:25).

Added boldness. People of faith don't need to stay on the map. They can venture into uncharted regions, do unheard of things and remake history. Because they experience extra dimensions of life, possess greater hope and have a deep friendship with the Triune God; they can afford to live big, brave, barrier-busting lives. Even if they don't think they can.

Don’t confuse faith and foolishness. Don’t think that “sight” is unimportant. If you can get the facts do so. If you can measure it, survey it, calculate and question it, then get the data. BUT, when all the data is in, don’t stop there. Exercise faith and walk off the map.

Questions
  • What are you facing in your life that "sight" can’t help you with?
  • When did you last walk off the map? How do you live by faith?
  • Leave a comment

My favourite “sermon” on faith by Indiana Jones:

If video does not load copy and paste the link into your browser: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kqpevshcdww