“POSITIVE” ENCOURAGEMENT for IGNORANCE—or—“NEGATIVE” FACTS for TRUTH

What is your goal?

What are the means to your goal?

What resources do you turn to for strength?

 

If it makes you money, do it.

It if makes you happy, buy it.

If it makes you happy, go for it.

If he makes you happy, marry him.

If it makes you feel good, listen to it.

If it guarantees your retirement, secure it.

“. . . much stuff laid up for many years.  Eat, drink, and be merry.”

 

“But God said, ‘You fool’ . . .”

 

No wonder people say Christians and the alternate media are ‘negative.’

But there remains a nagging word at the end of the title—TRUTH.

The goal of happiness directs you on a path with only positive and encouraging influences.  Result—Ignorance.

The goal of reality directs you on a path with facts that may be very uncomfortable.  Result—Truth.

 

So, what is your goal?

So, what are you watching and listening to for encouragement?

So, what is your source for information—for the facts?

So, are you getting the truth—and basing your life on it?

 

You can count on

afrtalk.net

onenewsnow.com

SET FREE BY THE FIRE—NOT YET, BUT SOON

“It’s the economy, stupid.”

Really?

Political policy?

Voter strategy?

How’s that working for you, America, the past decade?

Are you better off than a few years ago, with that emphasis?

How’s that working for you, church?

Has your influence on the culture expanded?

Prosperity, abundance, apathy, dependence, disaster . . . in America?

 

“Set free by the fire” sounds un-American, in our life experience.

We’ve come to expect a high standard of living as a birthright in this country.  And the church has bought into materialism to the point of ineffective—blending in with the economics of the world.

This is not typical—not in history—not in the church.

“Some through the water, some through the flood;

Some through the fire, but all through the blood;

Some through great sorrow, but God gives a song

In the night seasons, and all the day long.”

At this point I hear no one warning Christians to stop putting their money into the future of this world.  It is finally becoming obvious how shaky and uncertain that may be.  Actually, Jesus told us (and it’s written down in everybody’s Bible) to not lay up treasures on earth, where “moth and rust corrupt, and where thieves break in and steal.”

How quickly His words can become true, after we ignore them for decades, thinking we have beat the system (the system that He warned us would fail).  “Moth, Rust, Thieves”—recession, collapse, crooks, dictators.

We have bought into the repeat of history, thinking we know better, thinking we have insured everything, thinking we have guaranteed income for the rest of our lives if we just get the right advice and make the right investments.

“But God said, ‘You fool.'”

And American Christians say, “I don’t want to hear that.  Shut up.”

God’s response will be clear soon enough.

Some Christians will be set free from financial bondage to this world, through “fire” that burns away everything that is not invested directly in the kingdom of God.

Some Christians, and many who claim Christianity, will fall away from faith when they see their “stuff” burned up.

SET FREE—from your stuff—your treasure and your heart in heaven

or

BURNED UP—with your stuff—your treasure and your heart on earth

EVER BEEN ‘TO STUPID AND BACK’?

‘TO STUPID’ is quick and easy.

‘BACK’ is slow and hard.

Better to avoid ‘STUPID’ in the first place.

Worse to go ‘BACK TO STUPID.’

Been There—Done That.

Don’t Do It.

There are answers—wherever you are.

I can help.

I can help you.

I found the answer.

The Answer found me.

Tell me where you are today.

“. . . IN MY POWER . . .”

“I will do everything in my power as commander-in-chief of the United States of America to keep everyone in this great country safe from the truth.”     —–BHOB*

 

*Barack Hussein OBama—Say BHHHOB aloud and it sounds like the warning for Christians in the 2008 election: “Beware of sheep’s clothing.”

(more accurate to say ‘commander-in-sheik’)

DEDICATED TO MY CHILDREN AND THEIR FAMILIES

“Be Strong, and of Good Courage;

For the Lord Your God Is With You Wherever You Go.”

 

You must choose to invite Him to go with you wherever you go.

JUST DON’T CALL IT MARRIAGE

Attempts to legalize any kind of gay union involve two things:

—Forcing a Fantasy

—Fear of the Facts

Joining two people of the same sex and calling it marriage doesn’t work—it won’t work—it can’t work.

Gay union doesn’t do what marriage does.

Gay union does bad things that marriage does not do.

When marriage and family fail, bad things happen.

When anything replaces marriage and family, worse things happen.

In the vacuum without complete marriage and complete family, everyone suffers.

 

GIVE IT – – – OR LEAVE IT

If you don’t give it now, you will leave it all soon enough.

Most people have it backwards:

Leave a lot of loot.  Pile it up, stash it away, save it for someday—and die.  Then who gets it?  And what does it do to them?

Leave a lot of loot,

OR

Leave a legacy.

Legacy is not measured in dollars or houses or land.  It is Character—what’s there before and what’s left after all the rest is stripped away.

Legacy is what people would say you did for them when no one knew.

Give it all now, because you will leave it all soon.

MARRIAGE COUNSELING MYTH—

“You wouldn’t go to a doctor to cure your illness if he has the same illness and couldn’t cure it in himself.”

“Don’t go to anyone for marriage counseling if he couldn’t save his own marriage.”

 

Myths—both of them.

 

Instead, the people most effective in helping others are often those who have been through the same fire themselves, even the fire of falling into sin or the fallout from the fire of another’s sin.

FINANCIAL STRATEGY—RISK—NO RISK

All financial strategies have risks, including no strategy.  If you have no  plan and do nothing, you can still lose everything.

So, risk is universal.  It can’t be avoided, only moderated.

Is there any financial strategy then, that has no risk?

Yes, only if you give away 100%.

TRY HARDER—TRY SMARTER—TRY WISER—HOW?

FIRST—TRY HARDER—Just work harder, longer, more.  Most Americans are in this group.  Times are tough.  Times are uncertain.  Hold onto what you’ve got.  If you have a job, do anything to keep it.  If you have to, get a second job.  Sacrifice (even your dreams) to put food on the table and pay bills.  Hope things get better.  Don’t waste your limited time and energy to think about things you can’t do anything about anyway.

SECOND—TRY SMARTER—Work smarter, not harder.  Pick the best advisor and learn how to beat the system.  Get a job that is recession-proof.  Make only guaranteed investments.  Learn from others’ mistakes.  Play your cards right, and you don’t have to sacrifice.  Believe in yourself.  Be confident.  Don’t share all your secrets, and you’ll come out ahead.

THIRD—TRY WISER—Wiser is usually confused with working harder and working smarter and believing in yourself.  Truth is, wiser includes working hard and working smart, but not depending on yourself for success.  “Wiser” is not even a common word these days because it suggests principles from outside ourselves.  It implies learning something from older people—people that younger folks may not consider successful.

This calls for another paragraph.  In America we’ve gone for half a century of progress, mostly smooth sailing, and a universally accepted formula:  get a good job, get good stuff, get good insurance, get a good retirement, it’s yours because you earned it, enjoy it because you deserve it.

There have been very few glitches to this pattern for most people, until now.  We hear that the current economic policies are unsustainable, yet individuals seem to have few choices for fundamental change.  If the whole system blows, we’ll just deal with it then.  In the meantime, we try harder and think we’re trying smarter.

So, where does this leave trying wiser?

If we took time to stop, sit, and listen to older people who learned contentment apart from the current focus on finance, we would be better prepared for the days ahead.  The greatest challenge for older people is finding anyone who will appreciate their wisdom, receive it, and apply it.

If you find a person who has learned to live out “Godliness with contentment,” do everything you can to build a relationship with that person and spend a lot of time with him/her.

If you find a person who can honestly say, “Having food and clothing, let us be content,” choose to let that person influence you.

Greater speed does not contribute to wisdom.

Hard work may contribute to wisdom.

Smart does not equal wise.

“Fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.”