Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Hear … for no one else has ears to hear …


"Hear, O Lord, and be merciful to me! O Lord, be my helper!” Ps 30:10 (ESV)

Hear me, O Lord, for I refused to hear.
Be merciful to me, O Lord, for I am unworthy.
Be my helper, O Lord, for I am helpless.
Hear me, O Lord, for no one else has ears to hear my need.
Be merciful to me, O Lord, for no one else has mercy to meet my need.
Be my helper, O Lord, for no one has help for my need.
O Lord, You alone heard my need in the voices that
betrayed You,
lied about You,
denied You,
condemned You,
mocked You
and cried out for remembrance of me in Your kingdom.
O Lord, You alone met my need as You suffered mercilessly at the hands of man and the wrath of God.
O Lord, You alone helped me in my need as the Father answered Your prayer that I be forgiven by making all that I am
Yours to deal with – for me,
Yours to answer – for me,
Yours to make right – for me,
and Yours to save – for me.
You hear O Lord, and now I hear the words of eternal life (Jn 6:68).
You are merciful O Lord, and now I am saved from my end in sin (Nh 9:31).
You help me O Lord, and now in the shadow of Your wing, I sing for joy (Ps. 63:7).

The Lord has heard my plea; the Lord accepts my prayer. Ps 6:9 (ESV)

- pmwl 

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

My inner arena in which the desires of my flesh are set against the desires of the Spirit…


To you, O Lord, I lift up my soul. Ps 25:1 (ESV)

My soul! My soul!
My inner battleground where the war between my sinful nature and my new nature in Christ is waged.
My inner battlefield where the law of my members wages its war against the law of mind, taking me captive to the sin that lives within my members (Rm 7:23)
My inner arena in which the desires of my flesh are set against the desires of the Spirit and the desires of the Spirit are set against those of my flesh so that I am unable to do as I want (Gal 5:17-18).
My inner place where the paradox of being a sinner and a saint lives in almost unbearable unresolved tension and conflict.
My soul, my wretched soul, who will rescue you from me, from my conflict, from my sin?
He who has become my soul!
He who has become my life!
He who has become my forgiveness in the midst of my guilt.
He who has become my peace in the conflicts of my soul.
He who has become my joy in my defeats and despair.
He who on His Cross entered every war, every battle within me so that He might take both me and my losses to Himself.
He who, having fought all my battles and won every war, now gives to me His soul and with it, the safety and security of His victory.
He who promises never to leave me, nor forsake me or my soul.
He, who having begun this good work in me, will bring it to completion for me and my soul at His coming again.
My Lord! My Lord! Precious anchor for my soul (Hb 6:19), to You I lift up, to You I give the keeping of my soul and me.

The Lord is good to those who wait for him, to the soul who seeks him.   Lm 3:25 (ESV)

- pmwl

Monday, February 18, 2013

And there where I am … there is only one to help me.


Be not far from me, for trouble is near, and there is none to help.   Ps 22:11 (ESV)

Lord, O Lord be not far from me, for in all my sin, I turn far from You, I have gone far from You.
And there to where I have turned in sin, trouble is near,
And there to where my sin has taken me, my sin has overtaken me.
And there where I am in sin, there is no one to help me.
And there where I am in sin, I am bound in my sin, and helpless in my sin.
And there where I am in sin, there is where the Savior has come.
And there He comes nearer to me than my trouble.
And there He has comes between me and my trouble.
And there with my trouble there is none to help Him.
And there with none to help Him, He put me far from my trouble.
And now I find, that be I here or there,
it is where the Savior is near, the Savior helps me, and the Savior always saves me.

God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Ps 46:1 (ESV) 

- pmwl

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Only the damned know they are forsaken


My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?    Ps 22:1 (ESV)

Who has not felt and sensed what these words speak. In all that they may have seen and experienced, hasn't everyone at one time or another believed themselves forsaken. How often do circumstances and sensations overwhelm me and all seems to provide the clearest of evidence that God has forsaken me.
Yet in all that I may experience, in all that I may feel or sense, I cannot truthfully speak these words while I am yet on this side of the grave.
Was I not conceived and born in sin, 
isn’t my reason still tainted by sin, 
aren’t all my senses still tainted by sin, 
and am I not still a sinner through I be redeemed?
With the answer to each of these being yes, all that I do experience, I experience in darkness, the deep darkness of sin. Thus I cannot know myself truly forsaken.
Only the damned know themselves forsaken. 
And in the darkness, the deep darkness of sin, there is one who stands with me, one who stands in my place, one who stands for me.
He has entered into my darkness, my deepest darkness to be damned for me, to cry out for me, to finish for me all possibility of God ever forsaking me.  
He is the Son of God and He has become a light for me that my darkness can never overcome (Jn 1:5 & 9).
He is Jesus Christ and He has come into the world to save me, a sinner (1 Tm 1:15).
He is God my Savior and He will never leave me nor forsake me (Hb 13:5).

Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless his holy name!
Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits, who forgives all your iniquity, who heals all your diseases, who redeems your life from the pit, who crowns you with steadfast love and mercy,
who satisfies you with good so that your youth is renewed like the eagle’s.
Ps 103:1-5 (ESV)

- pmwl 

Saturday, February 16, 2013

A new and clean heart within my sinful heart


O Lord, you hear the desire of the afflicted; you will strengthen their heart; you will incline your ear …  Psalms 10:17 (ESV)

Note what the Lord hears in prayer, “the desire of the afflicted.” Notice that the Lord listens far more than to the words offered up in prayer. He listens deeper than merely the words of the mouth, He listens to the heart for it is out of the heart that all things proceed. Even in the midst of all the evil that spews for from our hearts, our Lord has ears to hear the desire of humble heart.
A new and clean heart within my sinful heart;
  • a humble and clean heart that lives and believes as the Lord Himself created in me through His Word and His Spirit;
  • a humble heart that finds no worthiness in me to call Him Lord or call upon Him as my Lord, yet calls because He has made Himself my Lord;
  • a humble heart that sets me before the mighty Lord as I really am, because as the Lord, He freely welcomes and saves me from all that I am so that I may be His own;
  • a humble heart that looks to the Lord alone to save me from my sinful heart, my sins and the sins of others that press me on every side;
  • a humble heart that, though I be burdened by the woe that is upon me for I am a man of unclean lips, still looks to the Lord of Hosts who meets me in my woe on the Cross to save me;
  • a humble heart that calls only on the name of Lord to be saved and strengthened;
  • a humble heart that rejoices in God my Savior who loves to fill to overflowing, all that I have emptied;
  • a humble heart that rejoices in God my Savior who loves to make straight all that I have bent;
  • a humble heart that rejoices in God my Savior who loves to completely take away every burden laid upon me by myself or others;
  • a humble heart of faith, out of which come righteous desires and words that the Lord always hears and answers.

A humble heart of faith, that though it be ever so small, ever so tiny, is still the holy temple of the Holy Spirit who keeps me in the true faith through Jesus Christ the Lord. 
Have mercy Lord, and hear my prayer.  

The Lord bless you and keep you!

- pmwl 

Friday, February 15, 2013

The Lord loves to take the place of the poor


O Lord, you hear the desire of the afflicted; you will strengthen their heart; you will incline your ear to do justice to the fatherless and the oppressed, so that man who is of the earth may strike terror no more.  Psalms 10:17-18 (ESV)

What a glorious reversal from the way of the world, the way of even my own sinful nature. The Lord, who is righteous and dwells on high, descends to the place of the afflicted, the place of the fatherless, the place of the oppressed, the place of the terrified, the place of the wrong, the place of sin.
Such are the places our Lord’s love is drawn, such are the places our Lord in His love cannot be kept from, such are the places our Lord has come to live that by His love each might be exchanged for the place He has prepared.
So great is His love that
He came to be afflicted so that in His affliction you are comforted.
He was made fatherless so that in Him you have the heavenly Abba Father as your father (Rm 8:15).
He was oppressed so that in Him you are lifted up on eagle’s wings (Is 40:31, Ps 103:5).
He was terrified so that in Him you have the peace that surpasses all understanding (Ph 4:7).
He became wrong so that in Him you are made right and righteous before God (Ep 4:24).
He became sin so that in Him the curse of your sin is destroyed in God’s forgiveness (Ga 3:13).
He became what we are so that in Him, in Christ Jesus, you are a new creation, the old has gone and the new has come (Heb 2:14, 2Co 5:17).
Yes, though the Lord is on high, He always regards the lowly (Ps 138:6).
Surely the LORD is, and shall always be, to you as Isaiah speaks of Him: “You have been a stronghold to the poor, a stronghold to the needy in his distress, a shelter from the storm and a shade from the heat.” (Is 25:4).

The peace of the Lord be yours always.

- pmwl

Thursday, February 14, 2013

A nothing of a prayer that prays for all things


Be gracious to me, O Lord!  Psalms 9:13 (ESV)

Such simple words, such a seemingly small thing to ask, yet these few words ask that nothing less than all that is Jesus Christ be given to me.
In these few words the living God is petitioned to fulfill every one of His promises to me.
This short prayer is a petition for the absolute heights, depths and breadth of God’s love to be given to me.
This mustard size prayer pleads for the Lord to move the mountain of my sin from me here to the Christ there.
This seemingly nothing of a prayer prays that the Lord provide me with everything.
This unworthy prayer prayed according to the worthiness of the Lord to answered it for me.

If you would know whether all that this prayer asks is answered – look to the manger of Christ, look to the life of Christ, look to the cross of Christ, look to the death of Christ, look to the resurrection of Christ from the dead, and if you would find the answer to this little prayer in your life, look to your baptism in you were united by the grace of God the answer – Jesus Christ.

The grace of God be with you all. Amen.  

- pmwl


Wednesday, February 13, 2013

He is able to read the text of our tears


“Depart from me, all you workers of evil, for the Lord has heard the sound of my weeping.” 
Psalms 6:8

Who are these workers of evil? It is all those that are turned away from God, be it the Devil or the unbelieving sinner. St. Paul, an apostle no less, says that the works of evil that kept rising up and taking him captive, was sin that still lived in him. Our weeping over them, over what they do to us, over what they lead us to do to other, or what others have done to us -is the call of our heart, not our mouth and this the Lord alone hears, understands and responds in His loving mercy and forgiveness.
In what language does weeping convey its meaning? It is the language of the heart and it is universal. Weeping is the honest conversation of sorrow. Mankind never fully understands this conversation, whether it be the weeping of others or ourselves. And even if we could understand weeping’s conversation, we are powerless to answer it.
Yet, there is one who understands the conversation, the petitions of our weeping: “the LORD has heard the sound of my weeping.” He who wept, is intimately fluent in the language of weeping and responds in mercy.
What blessed comfort is this in our sorrows, that our Lord hears the honest pleas of our weeping with the ears of mercy.
What easing of our sorrows that He is able to read the texts of our tears.
Each of our tears is an eloquent orator putting before the Lord the truthfulness of our sorrow and all that we are in our sorrow. Putting before Him our helplessness, and He who made Himself helpless for us on the Cross, responds with nothing less than the heaven sent help of God's forgiveness that gives us the victory over all our sorrows and their cause.
Even in our weeping, when words fail us, we can say with all confidence: “In my distress I called upon the LORD; to my God I cried for help. From His temple He heard my voice, and my cry to Him reached His ears.” Psalms 18:6
Gracious Lord, I give You thanks that when evil arises within me or without, You have the ears to hear words of my prayer and the words of my weeping. Let your mercies bear me up through my sorrows and my struggles, “because You, O Lord, are good and forgiving, abounding in steadfast love to all who call upon You.” Psalm 86:5

The peace of the Lord be with you always.

 -pmwl

Friday, February 1, 2013

THE BURDENS OF A PASTOR


I offer the following as an encouragement to a dear brother pastor I had the privilege to visit with today. A pastor like many, whose love for those he serves weighs heavy on him.    -pmwl

"Some things, even though openly known, ought to be tolerated for a time. That is, when circumstances afford no suitable opportunity for openly correcting them. For sores by being cut at the wrong time are the worse enflamed; and, if medical treatments suit not the time, it is clear that they lose their medicinal function. But, while a fitting time for the correction of those in one’s charge is being sought, the patience of the church leader is exercised under the very weight of their offenses.
Therefore, it is well said by the psalmist, “Sinners have built upon my back” (Psalm 129:3 LXX). For on the back we support burdens; and therefore he complains that sinners had built upon his back, as if to say plainly; those whom I am unable to correct I carry as a burden laid upon me. (Gregory the Great, c. 540-604).
PRAYER:
God our Father, Lord Jesus Christ, send Your grace and peace. Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, comfort us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort others who are in trouble with the comfort we ourselves have received from You. Amen. (2 Corinthians 1:2-4)"

from A Daily Prayer Catechism THE LORD WILL ANSWER CPH 2004 p,. 135

Friday, January 11, 2013

THE FIVE GREATEST PREDICTORS OF STUDENT SUCCESS


The following is an excerpt from Tim Elmore's monthly newsletter. 
Elmore is an expert on understanding the challenges youth face and the even greater challenges of parents. This is an insightful piece for any parent and youth to read together.  - pmwl. 

THE FIVE GREATEST PREDICTORS OF STUDENT SUCCESS

Educators have focused on helping students through transitions for years now. You know what I mean, don’t you? Transitions like…

  • From elementary school to middle school…
  • From middle school to high school…
  • From high school to college…
  • From college to career (or in some cases, back to their parent’s basement).
Far too often, we’ve focused on predictors such as Grade Point Average or SAT scores. We figure if a kid is smart—they’ll stay in school and continue to be engaged in class. It made sense to us.
Today we’re realizing those are not the most significant categories to measure.
student-success
According to First Year Experience programs and our work with over 6,000 schools and organizations worldwide, we have reduced the list of highest predictors of student success (meaning engagement, excellent performance and satisfaction) to what we call the “Big Five.”  The “Big Five” are quite simple. When a student experiences these five realities they are most likely to graduate and excel in life:
1. Getting connected to the right people.
For years the National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE) has confirmed the importance of close, accountable relationships in student success. We continue to find that students who fail to graduate or succeed in school are ones who fail to engage with others outside of class or don’t get involved with activities involving new people. They get stuck and then don’t have a support system to make them want to continue. They also have no accountability strong enough to prevent them from quitting. Research shows that when students get connected to solid people (peers or mentors) they tend to stick with commitments and follow through. The Federal Mentoring Council shares one study of the Big Brothers Big Sisters program found students with mentors earning higher grades than similar students without mentors. A 2007 study discovered that kids in a mentoring relationship at school did better work in class, finished more assigned work, and improved overall in academics—especially in science and in written and oral communication. After graduation, “employees who have had mentors typically earn thousands more than employees who haven't.” Those people act as “guardrails” preventing youth from shifting or drifting from their course.
History indicates that people intuitively understood the importance of connectedness with accountability, but we have migrated into a more individualistic lifestyle in recent times. Today we have connectedness (often on Facebook) without accountability. Victor Hugo was a brilliant writer, but very distracted. It took him seventeen years to finish Les Miserables. His solution? He asked his servant to take his clothes while he was sleeping. This forced him to stay in his room…and write. This guardrail enabled him to finish Les Miserables—and the world has benefited greatly. Today, students need these guardrails.
2. Possessing adaptability and resilience.
There is a growing body of research in the last decade suggesting that adults have created a fragile population of children. Because parents or teachers have not demanded they overcome adversity or we’ve not leveled consequences to their behavior, kids often become brittle young adults, unable to cope with the demands of life. You can imagine a student like this has trouble with transitions and the hardship of adapting to new situations. Let me illustrate this drift:
-- In 2006, 60% of students moved back home after finishing college. In 2010. In 2010, that number had risen to 80%. It’s more than a bad economy. They’re not career-ready.
– Condoleezza Rice and Joel Klein report three out of four teens aren’t even fit to serve in the military due to obesity, failure to graduate high school or their criminal records.
– The MacArthur Foundation funded a research project that said for many kids, the transition into adulthood doesn’t occur until 34 years of age.
I don’t believe this stall in students is because they’re unintelligent or bad kids. I believe we’ve failed to prepare them to cope with demands. We somehow felt that self-esteem meant we should affirm them consistently and prevent them from falling or failing. Sadly, this has had the opposite effect. We have risked too little, we have rescued too quickly and we have raved to easily about our kids—and now they find it hard to navigate transitions. Adaptability and resilience are priceless possessions that predict success far more than good grades and high SAT scores.
3. Developing high emotional intelligence.
You know this already. Forty years ago, educators frequently believed that the kid with the highest IQ would do the best, and later become the most successful. Now, it appears it’s more about EQ than IQ. If a student has high self-awareness, self-management, social awareness and relationship management, they’re more likely to graduate, excel and become a leader. It’s more about life skills and soft skills than memorizing lectures and taking exams. The concept of emotional intelligence has proven to be so influential, that it’s now inculcated the planning of educators. For example, policy makers in one state are using school programs to cultivate emotional intelligence and social intelligence in order to prevent crime, increase mental health, deepen student engagement and lower unemployment. In Georgia and Nebraska, we’ve begun working with the department of education to create curriculum that will spark conversations about these soft skills to not only increase graduation rates but make kids employable when they do graduate.
Quite frankly, the reason emotional intelligence has become such a large factor in student success is that kids today struggle more with mental health issues than they did forty years ago. This, in turn, leads to poor performance and high dropout rates. Research in education and psychology now shows the benefits of Social Emotional Learning (SEL) programs for children as young as preschoolers. Public awareness is catching up to the research. A New York Times editorial reviewed key research findings, saying, “...social and emotional learning programs significantly improve students' academic performance.” Additional studies also show emotional intelligence is strongly linked to staying in school, avoiding risk behaviors, and improving health, happiness, and life success.
4. Targeting a clear outcome.
This one should be obvious. Whenever a student enters school (high school or college) with a clear goal, they are more likely to stay engaged and finish well. I believe it’s the primary difference between school and sports…or for that matter: work and sports. We love sports in America because it’s often the one place where the goal is clear. Every football field has an end zone; every basketball court has a rim and backboard. We know what the score is and it energizes us. For many, both school and work represent places where we endure the drudgery and eventually disengage.
A university study conducted on “peace of mind” sought to find the greatest factors that contributed to people’s stability. The top five they discovered were:
  1. Refusing to live in the past.
  2. The absence of suspicion, resentment and regret.
  3. Not wasting time and energy fighting conditions you cannot change.
  4. Refusing to indulge in self-pity.
  5. Forcing yourself to get involved with a major goal in your current world.
When author Dan Pink researched what motivates both students and adults at the highest level, he concluded it could be summarized in three elements:
1. Autonomy – The student worked at their pace and created their future.
2. Mastery – The student believed they were growing and improving.
3. Purpose – The student worked on a goal they felt was meaningful.
5. Making good decisions.
This one is almost predictable. The students who succeed make right decisions in and out of class. These are decisions that determine their moral compass, their discretionary time, their study habits, their predisposition to cheat, their outside work and how they deal with setbacks and stress. All of these can be pivotal in determining whether a kid succeeds or surrenders. Like us, students must keep a clear objective in mind. May I illustrate?
The team who created the popular game Angry Birds spent eight years and almost all their money on more than fifty games before their big success occurred. By 2012, Pinterest was among the fastest-growing websites ever, but it had struggled for some time. In CEO Ben Silbermann’s words, it had “catastrophically small numbers” for a year. He said “if he had listened to popular startup advice he probably would have quit.”
James Dyson went through 5,126 prototypes before arriving at his “revolutionary vacuum cleaner.” We all know Thomas Edison failed 10,000 times at inventing the light bulb. The popular company Groupon nearly went out of business—but went on to a “meteoric rise.” And do you know where WD-40’s name came from? It literally means “Water Displacement—40th Attempt.” Somebody kept a clear goal in mind. So must students.
Tim Elmore ON LEADING THE NEXT GENERATION

TIM ELMORE TIMELMORE@GROWINGLEADERS.COM