What Are Your Strengths?

Reading The Way of the Warrior, by Erwin McManus, I am struck by something he says about loving God.

In his chapter titled, The Warrior Finds Honor in Service, he notes that as we read Jesus’ words about loving God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength, we seldom consider what that last word means – our strength.

Then he makes a great suggestion:

Maybe a good exercise would be to sit down and make a list of all your strengths. After all, you can’t take mastery over what you are unaware of. Your intellectual capacity is a strength. Your physical health is a strength. Your emotional intelligence is a strength. Your ability to influence others is a strength. Your ability to create wealth is a strength. Your resilience and determination are strengths.

-McManus in The Way of the Warrior, p. 62.

So I am asking myself, how am I loving God with my strengths? How are you loving God with…

  • Your intellectual capacity
  • Your physical health
  • Your emotional intelligence
  • Your ability to influence others
  • Your ability to create wealth
  • Your resilience and determination
  • Your…

Those strengths are gifts from God. And if we are loving him with heart, soul, mind, and strength, those strengths will increase – for God’s glory.

30Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’ - Jesus in Mark 12:30 (NIV2011)

People At War…

I just read this in the intro to Erwin McManus’ book, The Way of the Warrior: An Ancient Path to Inner Peace.

When we look around at the turmoil of this world, our hearts full of fire, it may help to look inside and see if our hearts are any different.

If my heart is no different than the angry world before me, maybe the place I should start is with myself.

Proverbs 4:23 (NIV2011) 23Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it.

Social Media Platforms

Social Media Platforms are puzzling at times… and therefore, unreliable.

A year or so ago, Facebook removed our access to our page for a few days. The platform never explained why.

Last night, Instagram locked us out of our Instagram page for at least the next 24 hours.

They said they wanted us to verify our account. Experience indicates they may take a while to get back to us.

Because things like this are outside of our control and because we communicate with our church body online, be certain that you have signed up to receive alerts here at the pastor’s blog. It’s very unlikely we’ll ever lose access here.

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Sunday Sermon Prep…

Preparing this week’s sermon I keep noting that anything can be an idol:
Success, respect, money, personal freedom, your career, being known, your family, your country, power, your heritage, your rights, your political heroes, your sports team, your job…

And any of them can be addictive – causing you to sacrifice what’s really important for what’s, in the face of eternity, trivial and even destructive.

We tend to think of idols as statues that people might bow down to or kiss. Sometimes we think of them as ugly – particularly if they are from cultures unfamiliar to us. We tend to think we would recognize them right away and stay clear from them.

from pixabay – stunning free images & royalty free stock

But idols are much trickier than we may think – and much more commonplace.

In my study, I came upon this quote from Andy Crouch. I’d read Crouch’s Playing God, some years ago. It’s a great book.

In modern, secular societies perhaps the clearest example of idolatry is the pattern we call addiction. Addictions begin with essentially good, created stuff; even the chemicals that become addictive drugs are part of God’s good creation and often have beneficial uses in the right context. But in the throes of addiction, we invest that created stuff with transcendent expectations.

It begins to hold out the promise of becoming like a god. The most powerfully addictive substances, like crystal meth, are the ones that can deliver the most dramatic sensations of godlike freedom, confidence and abundance—in other words, power. A behavior like gambling promises to give us a sense of mastery over the random forces of nature and the ability to bring something out of nothing, to create wealth without having to work. Pornography promises intimacy without risk, commitment and the limitations of our often awkward and vulnerable bodies.

Taken from Playing God: Redeeming the Gift of Power by Andy Crouch. Copyright (c) 2013 p.56 by Andy Crouch. Published by InterVarsity Press, Downers Grove, IL. www.ivpress.com

While you may not think of your idol as addictive, you might chuckle as you hear yourself saying, “It’s not an addiction. I can stop any time. I’ve stopped dozens of times!”

If it is an addiction, then it’s all the more dangerous, for you know the destructiveness of addictions to us personally and to our relationships.

As you prepare for Sunday morning at Curwensville Alliance, you might want to ask God to show you what idols you may be dealing with.