Make UP Your Mind!

A made-up mind doesn’t need to include ‘feeling it’ (e. g., your right decision to be/say/do or not to be/say/do something), though a healthy emotional experience can help fire your passion. What’s more important, however, is engaging (God and) the incredible (providential goodness and) power of (His Will, coupled with) your will, AKA (godly) resolve.

Circle the Enemy…and Shout Him Out!

“Gratitude is thanking God after He does it. Faith is thanking God before He does it. As we imagine unborn tomorrows, we have to recognize that everything is created twice. The first creation is spiritual. Prayer is the way we write history before it happens. It’s the difference between letting things happen and making things happen. How God answers our prayers is up to Him. But we need to pray through till the breakthrough (regardless)!

“In August, 1996, I felt prompted to pray a perimeter around Capitol Hill. I was reading Joshua 1:3: “I will give you every place where you set your foot.” I felt like God wanted me to stake claim to that promise, so I prayed a 4.7-mile circle around the Hill. Two decades later, we ‘own’ six properties on that prayer circle with a combined value of more than $75 million. Did I mention that we own them debt-free?! ONLY GOD could do this!! There is NO WAY I could have orchestrated that many miracles. (Incidentally) I didn’t think of it as a grand gesture at the time, but that’s exactly what it was.

“The gates of Jericho were securely barred because of the Israelites. No one went out and no one came in. Then the LORD said to Joshua, ‘See, I have delivered Jericho into your hands.’ Joshua 6:1,2.

“Did you catch the verb tense? It should be future tense: ‘I will deliver.’ It hadn’t happened yet, right? So why is it past tense: ‘I have delivered’? Because every miracle happens twice! The breakthrough always happens in the spiritual realm first. Then—and only then—does it manifest itself in the physical realm. God had already delivered Jericho in the spiritual realm; all the Israelites had to do was keep circling (the city walls) for seven days.

“Before feeding the five thousand, Jesus asked Philip a question:’Where are we to buy bread, so that all these people may eat?’ Do you really think Jesus was asking Philip to GPS the nearest Panera Bread? Me neither! Jesus was ‘kneading’ him (play on words intended!). How do we know this? Because Scripture says, ‘He well knew what He was about to do.’

“Take a deep breath! God’s got this! God wants us to get where Hewants us to go more than we (even) want to get there, and He’s ‘awfully’ good at getting us there.

“There is one catch, of course: none of us know how long it will take! As my friend, T. L. Rogers said, ‘It would be a lot easier if God told us how long.’ One of the most poignant questions in Psalms is this one: ‘how long, O LORD?’ We’re like little children in the back seat of a car putting this question on repeat-mode: ‘Are we there yet?’ (Perhaps) God’s answer is a lot like ours, as parents: ‘One minute less than the last time you asked.

From Mark Batterson’s book, Win the Day, pages 151-152, under the sub-heading, Seven Circles.

No Sales on True Success

Remember Emil Zatopek, the greatest runner of all time? While turning his life-story into a movie script, I analyzed his running ‘rituals’ (AKA habits). Emil Zapotek was ordinary in ‘every’ way. He measured five foot seven on tiptoes and weighed 145 pounds, soaking wet! He possessed little natural talent, and his running style was hopelessly unorthodox. Sportswriters said he ran like a man “who had been stabbed in the heart,” “a man who had scorpions in his shoes,” “a man who was wrestling an octopus on a conveyor belt”! That didn’t keep “the Czech Locomotive” from doing what (I believe) will never be done again.

Emil Zatopek won triple golds in the 1952 Helsinki Olympics, setting Olympic records in the 5,000 meter, 10,000 meter and (26.2 mile) marathon. From 1949 to 1951, he won 69 consecutive races. That may be more impressive than UCLA’s 88 game winning streak (as it was single-handed…or is that -footed?)! And he would end his career (of 18 years of competition) 18 world records (do the math and that’s an average of one per year)!

How did Emil do what he did? His 1951 military file highlighted one defining characteristic: ‘doggedness’. Many runners were faster than Emil-but no one trained longer or harder or smarter. He never stopped setting stretch goals, always trying to beat his past, personal best. He took pride in his accomplishments but he also made an admission: “Whoever surpasses my training will also break my records.

While on sentry duty, Emil would run in place in combat boots for hours. embodied kaizen. During training runs, he would wear a gas mask to deprive himself of oxygen. He often carried his wife, Dana, on his back or pulled her through the snow on a sled. He may not have invented interval training-but he certainly re-invented it! And Emil ran so hard for so long that he passed out on the track more than once! “You cannot jump to the second floor from the pavement,” he said. “Step by step, though, a man will come to the fifth floor.

At this point, you might be wondering why so few people have heard of Emil Zatopek. In November 1969, he was sent to the uranium mines for courageously resisting Soviet occupation (in Czechosloavkia)  “I have already got to know the workld from on high,” he said. “Now I am getting to know it from down below.” Emil would spend the next 5 years doing forced (slave) labor.

The Communist regime did all they could to erase Emil Zatopek’s name from history. His name was removed from the stadium in his hometown of Kopfivnice. His athletic accomplishments were deleted from textbooks. They tried to bury him 150 meters below ground in a uranium mine but Emil’s legacy outlasted the Soviet Union itself! His athletic achievements merit the silver screen (indeed). Even more, his uncompromising character deserves to be celebrated (by everyone).

We love success stories like his. The sacrifices that made them possible—not so much! We want success without sacrifice, but it doesn’t work that way. At the heart of every success story is someone who was willing to make sacrifices that no one else was willing to make. Success will not be shortchanged, and it never goes on sale.

One of the hardest pills to swallow in the Gospels is this one: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow Me.” The best decision you can make for yourself is to make a decision against yourself. It’s discipling yourself to do the right things day-in and day-out, week-in and week-out, year-in and year-out. If you pay the price, the payoff will be far greater than the sacrifices you made. Mark Batterson, Win the Day, ppg 123-125.

Trust + Thank > Plan + Evaluate

“Rejoice and be thankful! As you walk with Me through this day, practice trusting and thanking Me all along the way. Trust is the channel through which My Peace flows into you. Thankfulness lifts you up above your circumstances. I do My greatest works through people with grateful, trusting hearts. Rather than planning and evaluating, practice trusting and thanking Me continually. This is a paradigm shift that will revolutionize your life.” Sarah Young, Jesus Calling, pg. 85.

Integritous = Oneness

“Healthy, effective leadership stems from who we are, not just what we do. (The Book of) Micah teaches us that a leader’s spiritual life must transform his or her social ethics and approach to leadership. Integrity means ‘oneness,’ the opposite of hypocrisy. One compartment of our life cannot contradict another.” John Maxwell Micah commentary, in his NKJV Leadership Bible, pg. 1088.

Celebrate!

So Far, So God.

“After the Israelites pulled off an upset victory over the Philistines, the prophet Samuel built an altar and named it Ebenezer, signifying that the Lord had helped them up to that point. The altar was a way of saying to the people, “The God who did it before can do it again.”

“We all need Ebenezer’s. Reminders that the God who got us here will get us there. That the God who did this will do that. An Ebenezer is a way of recognizing and celebrating the success God has given us along the way in pursuing our dream.

“After our church built our coffeehouse on Capitol Hill, we decided to name it Ebenezers. We were afraid that some people would associate it with Ebenezer Scrooge but it was a risk worth taking. There were so many miracles in the process of purchasing, re-zoning, and building our coffeehouse that we wanted to name it what it was.

“On our coffee shirt sleeves at Ebenezer’s, there is a a Scripture reference that looks like a SKU code—1SAM712. There are also initials, SFSG. The initials stand for So Far So God.

“In every dream journey, there are Ebenezer moments. You’ve got to celebrate those milestones by building altars. Then you’ve got to surround yourself with those life symbols so you don’t forget what God wants you to remember.

“I don’t believe that our greatest shortcoming is not feeling bad enough about what we’ve done wrong, I think our greatest shortcoming is not feeling god enough about what God has done right. When we under-celebrate, we fall short of the glory of God.

“One of the commands in the Old /testament Law is a seven-day celebration (Leviticus 23:39-43). Question: when was the last tine you celebrated anything for seven days? God challenged the Israelites to celebrate longer, to celebrate better. That’s like a command to eat cupcakes!       

“And God didn’t just mandate weeklong celebrations. He also commanded a yearlong honeymoon for newlyweds (Deuteronomy 24:5). Hubba-hubba!

“We need to celebrate more.

We need to celebrate better.

Why? Because thus far the Lord has helped us.

What God-given victories can you celebrate in the course of chasing your God-given objective so far?” Mark Batterson, in Chase the Lion (italics added by me).