Thursday, October 16, 2008

A Little Spunk Needed

A Little Spunk Needed, by Rob Frazier


I was walking through the Atlanta airport, CNN blaring in the background, headlines screaming from the news stands stocked with magazines covered with glum faces, all the news is bad, bad, bad. You can't help but worry and wonder what the future will hold, what your retirement will be like, what will be left over when all the dust settles.

Then I saw her. She was about 8 years old and a darling little girl.
She was with her mother and father and older brother. She was also on crutches. Her legs barely made a ripple in her little jeans, obviously withered and weak from some chromosome that came unraveled while she was being knitted in the womb. She was happy, and swung her legs in a strong rhythmic motion with her crutches to keep pace with her parents and brother. She was in every way a typical 8 year-old except for her withered extremities.

I thought that no matter where the stock market ends up, or how the economy falls or rises, she will still be crippled. She will grow up in a world where a pair of shorts will be a cause for people to stare.
She'll feel left out as other kids run and play at school, and she will struggle to find a formal dress for the Homecoming dance that will accommodate her braced legs and crutches.

It's too early to fold, and we're made of better stuff!

No matter if my 401(k) recovers or not, she will always -- always -- be crippled. Her parents may lose their job, I might lose mine, but she will never lose her infirmity. We may all weather this storm with nothing more than a few fallen limbs in the yard, but her limbs will never be whole.

It made me a little angry that we have been focused on what we lost, not what we have. I remember Sam Walton, after the 1987 crash, when he said that even after watching Wal-Mart stock fall by a third, he still had the same number of shirts on the shelves as he did the day before.
That is the kind of thinking, the kind of investing, and the kind of courage we need now. The losses are paper losses. The value is still there in the companies the stocks represent. If we will each keep our head in this mess, we'll work through this.

That really is what the little girl does. She marches through the airport like she had every right to be there, withered legs and all. No sympathy, no melancholy, just the spirit and spunk to deal with the hand she was dealt. We need to take a deep breath and get ready to play the game. It's too early to fold, and we're made of better stuff -- the same kind of stuff of which that little girl is made.

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(c) 2008 Rob Frazier

Friday, October 3, 2008

In Over Your Head

Here's a post from the LifeChurch.tv blog by Brian Kruckentberg, aka “Kruck,” is the LifeChurch.tv Mesa Campus Pastor in Arizona. Enjoy his insights…

Give me one hundred preachers who fear nothing but sin and desire nothing but God, and I care not a straw whether they be clergymen or laymen; such alone will shake the gates of hell and set up the kingdom of heaven on earth. God does nothing but in answer to prayer. — John Wesley

In the past, I’ve talked about the importance of prayer and sometimes it didn’t really come from a deep conviction within me. But, lately God is showing me just how much I need Him and how I must rely on Him through prayer. I’m learning that the only way to allow God to truly use you is to be in over your head. From Abraham, to Moses, to David, to Ester, to Paul, we see time and time again God showing His power through men and women who earnestly sought God to accomplish what they could never do on their own. As the Campus Pastor in Phoenix, I’ve come to clearly see that I cannot do what needs to be done. There are too many people to meet with, too many to encourage, too many hurting, too many to mentor … you get the point. I can’t, but God working through me can. It is a humble feeling to know that I’m in over my head and that God is filling in the gaps and using our staff to accomplish some amazing things. I am scared, yet excited, after coming face to face with the fact that I can’t do it without God. I feel completely inadequate yet incredibly energized at the same time.

I don’t know where all of you are in your journey with Jesus but I do know this: God wants to do something through you that is much bigger than you and you cannot do it … without Him. If you are not there already, get in over your head and let God take over. It is a cool place to be. I love it.