Skip to main content

Posts

“You’ll grow into your new name.”

A thought by Craig Groeschel from his book, Altar Ego: Becoming Who God Says You Are (p. 23). Zondervan. Kindle Edition. (Click on the title to go to Amazon.com to buy the book.) I know, I know.   You may have been given a new title and you have problems believing what it says you are. Craig says, “Shortly after joining my church staff at the tender age of twenty-two, I passed a lady in our office. She smiled broadly and said, ‘Hi, Pastor Craig,’ and kept on walking. Pastor Craig? Are you kidding me? I don’t deserve to be called ‘Pastor’ anything! “Uncomfortable with this title, I found my boss, Nick, and told him that I wasn’t ready to be called Pastor yet. I didn’t know enough. Wasn’t good enough. And still had way too much to learn. Pastor Nick burst out laughing, put his hand on my shoulder in a fatherly manner, and said, ‘Pastor Craig, I remember feeling just like you. Don’t worry. You’ll grow into your new name.’” Craig goes on, “Those words helped change my li

“No matter what you have or haven’t done, God’s power is big enough to change you.”

A thought by Craig Groeschel from his book, Altar Ego: Becoming Who God Says You Are (p. 19). Zondervan. Kindle Edition. (Click on the title to go to Amazon.com to buy the book.) I know, there are things about each one of us that we each one have problems with.   Now I’m not asking you to write me and tell me what yours is, no I’m not.   I can’t change it for you but God can and he wants to do it.   Craig says, “There is no sin too great for God’s grace. There is no habit too big for his healing. There is no label too strong for his love. Let me say it again because I want you to believe this: God’s power is bigger than your past. “And his power is rooted in his love for you. He knows who you really are no matter what others label you — or what you label yourself. What’s true about you now doesn’t have to be true about you later. The goal is not to reinvent yourself by striving to be some perfect person but to allow God to do an extreme makeover by uncovering your true s

“People tend to be too choosy about who they help and who they encourage.”

A thought by John C. Maxwell (2017-03-07) from his book, Encouragement Changes Everything: Bless and Be Blessed (Kindle Location 487). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition. (Click on the title to go to Amazon.com to buy the book.) I get that.   It is so easy to be so choosy, isn’t it? John says, “People tend to be too choosy about who they help and who they encourage. They look for people like themselves. And some people even believe that they should help only individuals who believe what they believe and think as they do. That’s not the way it should be.” He goes on, “Years ago I came across a piece about someone who fell into a pit and couldn’t get out—and how others treated that person: “A  subjective person came along and said, ‘I feel for you down there.’ An objective person came along and said, ‘Well, it’s logical that someone would fall down there.’ A Pharisee said, ‘Only bad people fall into pits.’ A mathematician calculated how the individual fell into the pit