Discouragement or Joy?

This morning I am really discouraged.  I feel like a failure.  Everything seems to be a brick wall.  So, I have choices to make.  I need some hope, some joy, some answers.  Where do I turn? 

I can go to whatever the people around me say is the “popular” choice.  The radio station is touting the 2 “beers of the day”.  The ads say I can have a great time at the club.  There are all kinds of “escapes” within my reach. 

But I want a REAL solution.  Not a crutch, but something that I know will give me long lasting relief. 

Well, I can’t see that this morning.  But I’m going to give what I’ve always known to be true a chance – one more time. 

The Bible says, “You fill me with joy in your presence, with eternal pleasures at your right hand.”  God is the strength of my life and my portion forever.  Even though I am the one who constantly gets myself in these situations, I find that there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. 

Praise God, whose mercies are new every morning!

Does God Exist?

A man went to a barbershop to have his hair cut and his beard trimmed. As  the barber began to work, they began to have a good  conversation.

They talked about so many things and various subjects.

 

 

When they eventually touched on the subject of God, the  barber said: ‘I don’t believe that God exists.’   

 

‘Why do you say that?’ asked the customer.

‘Well, you just have to go out in the street to realize that God doesn’t exist.

 

Tell me, if God exists, would there be so many sick people? Would there be abandoned children?

 

If God existed, there would be neither

suffering nor pain.

 

I can’t imagine a loving God who would allow all of these things.’

 

The customer thought for a moment, but didn’t respond because he didn’t want to start an argument.

 

The barber finished his job and the customer left the  shop.  

 

Just after he left the barbershop, he saw a man in the street with long, stringy, dirty hair and an  untrimmed   beard.

 

He looked dirty and unkempt.The customer turned back and entered the barbershop again and he said to the barber:

 

‘You know what? Barbers do not exist.’   

 

‘How can you say that?’ asked the surprised barber. ‘I am here, and I am a barber. And I just worked on you!’

 

‘No!’ the customer exclaimed. ‘Barbers don’t exist because if they did, there would be no people with dirty long hair and untrimmed beards, like that man outside.’

 

 Ah, but barbers DO exist! That’s what happens when  people do not come to me.’

 

‘Exactly!’ affirmed the customer. ‘That’s the point! God, too, DOES exist! That’s what happens when people do not go to Him and don’t

look to Him for help.    

 

That’s why there’s so much pain and suffering in the world.’

How To Build Trust

Trust is to an organization what oil is to a car engine. It keeps the moving parts from seizing up and stopping forward motion.

But trust is not something you can take for granted. It takes months—sometimes years—to build. Unfortunately, you can lose it overnight.

Some people seem to have a knack for building trust. When they speak, others take them at their word. When they are absent, people speak well of them. Even when they make a mistake, people give them the benefit of the doubt.

Others are just the opposite. People distrust what they say. They are suspicious of their motives. They interpret every comment, every e-mail, and every action as one more reason the person cannot be trusted.

Years ago, I had such a person reporting to me. Justin started out well. He had come to our company with an impressive resume. People assumed he was competent. But over time, he single-handedly destroyed his own reputation.

He didn’t keep his word. He was always late to meetings. He didn’t follow-through on his commitments. Worse, he never owned up to any of it. He always tried to “spin” the facts in his favor. From his perspective, the other party simply misunderstood what he had said or circumstances beyond his control kept him from keeping his commitments.

Unfortunately, I put up with Justin’s behavior longer than I should have. No one trusted him. First, his peers began to complain. Then his direct reports (risking his wrath) started coming to me and complaining. Even my own boss didn’t trust Justin. I was the last man standing.

I finally woke up and realized that others were beginning to doubt my ability as a manager. I was hoping to turn him around. I had even coached him on specific behaviors. But he just didn’t seem to “get it.” So, I took a deep breath and fired him. The only one surprised was Justin. Everyone else patted me on the back and, I’m sure, wondered what took me so long.

But things shouldn’t have deteriorated to this point. Justin could have been salvaged if only he had owned what was happening. He could have taken specific steps—steps I had encouraged him to take—to rebuild trust with his direct reports and colleagues.

If you are in a situation where you need to build trust—or even rebuild it—here are four specific steps you can take. These will work with your employees, your colleagues, your customers, your vendors—or even your spouse.

  1. Keep your word. This is where      it starts. People have to learn that they can count on you to deliver on      your promises. If you commit to following up on something, do it. No      excuses. If you can’t do it, proactively let the other person know.

For example, “Terri, last week I told you that I would get back to you with a proposal. However, I am waiting for a bid to come through from an outside vendor. It looks like that might add a week to my schedule.” People are usually very forgiving if you take the initiative to communicate. However, if they have to chase you down, you lose points. Your reputation will take a hit.

Also, be prompt to meetings. Tardiness also erodes trust. Sometimes, circumstances beyond your control prevent this, but you can’t allow it to become a habit. And, if you are late, apologize. Show some empathy and explain briefly why you were late.

  1. Tell the truth. This is harder      than it sounds. Most of us like to think of ourselves as truth-tellers.      But it’s easy to round the numbers up, spin the facts, or conveniently      leave out the evidence that doesn’t support our position.

But if we are going to build trust, then we have to commit ourselves to telling the truth—even when it is difficult or embarrassing. People are more forgiving than you think. (Witness all the celebrities who have publicly blown it, apologized, and received a pass.) They don’t expect you to be perfect. However, they do expect you to acknowledge your mistakes and to come clean when you screw up.

Sam Moore, my predecessor as the CEO of Thomas Nelson used to say, “Tell me the good, the bad, and the ugly.” Whenever I needed a decision from him, I would give him both sides of the argument. I refused to withhold relevant information. I didn’t exaggerate. I always rounded down.

Then I would make my recommendation and tell him why. Over time, this built trust. He didn’t have to ask someone else to get the other side of the story. As a result, I usually received his approval on the spot.

  1. Be transparent. People will not      trust you unless you learn to share yourself, warts and all. You have to      take a risk and be vulnerable. This creates rapport and rapport builds      trust.

However—and be warned!—you can’t use this as a gimic or a technique. If you do, people will see it as manipulation. Instead, you have to be authentic.

The reason this builds trust is because you are demonstrating trust. You are taking the initiative to go first. In essence, you are saying, “Look, I trust you. I am taking off my mask and showing you my true self. Some of it isn’t very pretty. But I am willing to take that risk, believing you will still accept me.”

In my experience, this kind of self-revelation almost always gives the other person the courage to take off their mask, too. And that builds trust. The relationship is deepened. It goes to a new level.

  1. Give without any      strings attached. Nothing builds trust like love. What does love have to      do with the workplace? As Tim Sanders points out in Love Is the Killer App,      everything.

You have to be willing to share your knowledge, your contacts, and your compassion—without expecting anything in return. The more you take the initiative to give, the more it builds trust.

Giving lets others know that you know it’s not “all about you.” From this, people learn that they can trust you, because you have their best interests at heart. You aren’t merely looking out for yourself. You’re taking care of them, too.

But, like being transparent, you have to be careful how you give. Otherwise, it will be perceived as manipulation. You have to make sure your motives are pure. You can’t expect something in return.

Trust can always be rebuilt. Granted, in some situations, it can take years. It takes doing the right things over a long period of time. But in most cases, it won’t take that long. Relationships can be turned around quickly if you own the problem and take the steps I’ve outlined above.

By Michael Hyatt, CEO of Thomas Nelson Publishers

The Movement Continues

The belief of French philosopher Voltaire: The Bible and Christianity would pass within a hundred years. He died in 1778. The movement continues.

The pronouncement of Friedrich Nietzsche in 1882: “God is dead.” The dawn of science, he believed, would be the doom of faith. Science has dawned; the movement continues.

The way a Communist dictionary defined the Bible: “It is a collection of fantastic legends without any scientific support.” Communism is diminishing; the movement continues.

The discovery made by every person who has tried to bury the faith: The same as the one made by those who tried to bury its Founder: He won’t stay in the tomb.

The facts. The movement has never been stronger. Over one billion Catholics and nearly as many Protestants.

The question. How do we explain it? Jesus was a backwater peasant. He never wrote a book, never held an office. He never journeyed more than two hundred miles from his hometown. Friends left him. One betrayed him. Those he helped forgot him. Prior to his death they abandoned him. But after his death they couldn’t resist him. What made the difference?

The answer. His death and resurrection.
For when he died, so did your sin.
And when he rose, so did your hope.
For when he rose, your grave was changed from a final residence to temporary housing.

The reason he did it. The face in your mirror.

The verdict after two millenniums. Herod was right: there is room for only one King.

By Max Lucado, in “He Chose The Nails”

Beer

The headline article on front page of the Clarion Ledger this morning is that 70 new options of beer will now be available in Mississippi.   I just want to ask you, what are your thoughts?  Does alcohol have anything to do with a person’s walk with Christ?  Are more options a good thing, a bad thing, or neutral for you personally?  What about for the state of Mississippi?  What about for the culture that we live in and around?  I will share my thoughts soon – but I want to get a feel for what others think about this issue. If it even is an issue. 

Today

What is really important today? 

I have a major “to-do” list.  For today.  And then one for this week.  And then one for 30 days out, 90 days out, and a year out.  That’s too many!  But needed. 

But what is important today is what points me to, and keeps me in line with, what GOD wants for me.  Not what I want to do, or what I think I should do (leaning on my own understanding).  It is purpose driven, based on what GOD’S purpose for me is. 

So the most important list for me today contains one thing. 

One…

Listen. 

Trust and obey.

For there’s no other way.

To be happy in Jesus. 

I need to listen, understand, obey, and act it out.  I need to discern in between all the things flying at me left and right. 

I need to get still and uncluttered.  But if I can’t, I just need to listen to the whisper in amongst the noise. 

Simple to understand; hard to do. 

But if I listen, He will lead me supernaturally in ways I cannot understand.  He leadeth me, O blessed thought!