Saturday, December 13, 2008

Clear Conscience


Having a clear conscience means there is "no one alive that I have ever wronged, offended, or hurt in any way that I have not gone back to and sought to make it right with both God and the individual." It is not sufficient merely to seek God's forgiveness when others have been affected by your sin.
Repentance has been defined as "returning to the point of departure." To return to the point of departure from God's standards is to retrace your steps and seek to mend relationships that have been damaged by asking for forgiveness for your improper conduct, speech, and attitudes.
Additionally, in order to have a clear conscience, it may be necessary to make restitution for your previous actions. You cannot be right with God and at odds with man.
A clear conscience is essential to a revived life. Memorize Acts 24:16 to help you remember this principle.

Insight from the Word:

Matthew 5:23-24 "If you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go. First be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift."

Acts 24:16 "I always take pains to have a clear conscience toward both God and men."

1 Timothy 1:5 "The aim of our charge is love that issues from a pure heart and a good conscience and a sincere faith."

1 Peter 3:15-16 "In your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you; yet do it with gentleness and respect, having a good conscience, so that, when you are slandered, those who revile your good behavior in Christ may be put to shame."

Below is a link to dealing with the above mentioned topic. Please take a listen; it may change your life.

http://www.lifeaction.org/infuse-podcast/2008/8/19/dealing-offenses-toward-others/
© Life Action Ministries: Revival Review--Keys to Continued Revival

Friday, December 5, 2008

El Salvador Trip

















We have returned home from a week long mission’s trip with the team to El Salvador. It was an awesome experience with our entire team (25 total). We ministered at a local church the first Sunday, we did painting and maintenance work at the Shalom Children’s Home (http://www.harvesting.org/) and did kids club activities in the afternoon, and we worked in a local village drilling a fresh water well and teaching hygiene to the people that lived there (http://www.water.cc/).
I believe that not only did the trip allow us to serve those in the village as well as in the children’s home, but to serve each other in a way that we had not experienced before. The perspective that was gained as well as being in that environment with the team will allow us to have an intimacy that we have not had previous. It was a time for us as a team to bond together, serve together, and come along side one another in a way, in a place, and in an environment that many had never been. The kids at the children’s home captivated the team member’s hearts that were there. The drill/hygiene team was able to get into the village and spend time with those whose environment is radically different than anything that we would be used to, and experience a joy from those who appeared to have nothing on the surface but who where rich to the core. The perspective that all of us gained will be a blessing and a challenge for all of us as we get ready to come back together in January. Many of us will miss the relationships that have begun with those in El Salvador (The Savior) and may prompt several of us to make a return trip in the future, to continue the work that was begun there.
I am excited to see how God uses this trip in order to prepare us for road life together once again in January. What a blessing it has been.
Pictures of the trip can be found at the links below:
http://picasaweb.google.com/ben.slenk/ElSalvadorDrillSiteAndHygiene#

http://picasaweb.google.com/ben.slenk/ElSalvadorShalomChildrenSHome#

http://picasaweb.google.com/ben.slenk/ElSalvadorPainting#

Raising a Generation of Wimps

Are We Raising a Nation of Wimps?
http://www.albertmohler.com/ (from his book “Culture Shift” Engaging Current Issues with Timeless Truth)

To be honest, I look at the magazine Psychology Today as something of a trade journal for the therapeutic culture. The magazine spins out seemingly endless cover stories on how to be happy, self-actualized, and successful, but its worldview is light years from classical Bible-based Christianity. Nevertheless, this magazine is really on to something with its recent article, "A Nation of Wimps," written by Hara Estroff Marano. This article is must reading for every parent.
Marano begins her article with a portrait of cushioned childhood. "Maybe it's the cyclist in the park, trim under his sleek metallic blue helmet, cruising along the dirt path . . . at three miles an hour. On his tricycle." From there, Marano moves to cite the "all-rubber-cushioned surface where kids use to skin their knees," and the fact that the kids aren't even allowed to play alone. Their mommies and daddies are playing with them, making sure that the little darlings don't experience even the slightest scrape, scratch, or scare. "Few take it half-easy on the perimeter benches, as parents used to do," Marano explains, "letting the kids figure things out for themselves."
To the contrary, today's parents are now spending a great deal of their time doing little more than protecting their children from life. Marano describes this as "the wholly sanitized childhood, without skinned knees or the occasional C in history." The result of all this? Our kids are growing up to be pampered wimps who are incapable of assuming adult responsibility and have no idea how to handle the routine challenges of life.
David Elkind, a prominent child psychologist, counters, "Kids need to feel badly sometimes. We learn through experience and we learn through bad experiences. Through failure we learn how to cope."
That seems to be a foreign concept to many of today's parents. Coddled by a generation of Baby Boomers, today's parents have turned into hyper-protectors. Kids are not allowed to play, because they might get hurt. In today's highly competitive environment, kids have to excel at everything, even if parents have to actually do the work or negotiate an assisted success. The routine play of childhood--even the pointless chatter, nonsense, and aimless play of children--is now considered wasted time or worse. "Messing up" is simply out of style, Marano explains. "Although error and experimentation are the true mothers of success, parents are taking pains to remove failure from the equation."
"Whether we want to or not, we're on our way to creating a nation of wimps," Marano warns. She fast-forwards to college and university campuses, where "the fragility factor" is now most clearly evident. As she explains, "It's where intellectual and developmental tracks converge as the emotional training wheels come off. By all accounts, psychological distress is rampant on college campuses."
This statement is easily verified by observing the reports issued by academic institutions. Psychological distress--sometimes evident in the mild form of anxiety and, in other cases, in binge drinking, self-mutilation, and even suicide--are now major concerns of college administrators.
As Steven Hyman, Harvard University's provost and former director of the National Institute of Mental Health lamented, the problem "is interfering with the core mission of the university."
What is the source of this problem? Observers are zeroing in on parental pampering as the most critical factor behind this pattern of student "disconnect." Smothered by parental attention and decision-making during childhood and adolescence, these young people arrive on the college campus without the ability to make their own decisions, live with their choices, learn from their experiences, and grapple with the issues of adult life.
But the academic issues do not show up only on college campuses. Today's kids must be successful, at least in the view of their insistent parents. Even in pre-kindergarten programs, parents now show up with a list of special demands, insisting that their child must be treated with special care. Inevitably, these are often transformed into diagnoses of learning disabilities that will require special instructional accommodations. If this trend is not reversed, virtually all students will be diagnosed with some form of learning disability and the entire classroom experience will break down.
Marano blames this on parental "hyperconcern."
John Portman, Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Virginia, suggests that American parents "expect their children to be perfect--the smartest, fastest, most charming people in the universe. And if they can't get their children to prove it on their own, they'll turn to doctors to make their kids into the people the parents want to believe their kids are." Inevitably, what the parents are actually doing is "showing kids how to work the system for their own benefit."
By the time these kids get to college, some parents are just getting warmed up. "Talk to a college president or administrator," Marano advises, "and you're almost certainly bound to hear tales of the parents who call at 2 a.m. to protest Brandon's C in economics because it's going to damage his shot at grad school."
The article goes on to cite the experience of psychologist Robert Epstein of the University of California San Diego. When Epstein announced to his class that he "expected them to work hard and would hold them to high standards," he received an outraged response from a parent--using his official judicial stationery--accusing the professor of mistreating the young.
Epstein, himself a former editor-in-chief of Psychology Today, later filed a complaint with the California Commission on Judicial Misconduct, and the judge was censured by that body for abusing his office. Nevertheless, this is just one more incident in what is becoming a normal experience on too many campuses.
How special are today's students? Well, according to their report cards and diplomas, they are very special. The problem of "grade inflation" now means that, in terms of an actual measure of academic excellence, grades are now virtually useless. On some campuses, the average grade is approaching an A. Lawrence Summers, Harvard University's embattled president, discovered when he assumed the university's presidency in 2001 that 94 percent of the college's graduates were receiving graduating honors. Peter Stearns of George Mason University argues that grade inflation "is the institutional response to parental anxiety about school demands on children." As Marano expands, "It is a pure index of emotional over-investment in a child's success."
In an interesting twist, Marano focuses on one particular technology that betrays the inability of today's children to establish their own identity and responsible decision-making--the cell phone. "Even in college--or perhaps especially at college--students are typically in contact with their parents several times a day, reporting every flicker of experience," Marano observes.
When parents play along with this dependency, they "infantalize" their children, "keeping them in a permanent state of dependency." Life is lived in an endless present tense, with no need to frame long-term decisions, make plans, or engage in sustained inter-personal conversations.
Who is at fault here? Marano presents this situation as rooted in bad parenting and the unwillingness of parents to allow their children to fail. Undoubtedly, this is part of the problem. Today's parents often see their children as little trophies to be polished. Many see life as a competitive game, and they are determined to do whatever it takes to get their children on top--even if it means cutting corners, changing the rules, and even writing little Johnny's term papers.
No doubt, Marano was on to something here. As one college student lamented to his counselor, "I wish my parents had some hobby other than me."
David Anderegg, a professor at Bennington College, warns that parents must not try to protect their children from life. "If you have an infant and the baby has gas, burping the baby is being a good parent," she explains. "But when you have a 10-year-old who has metaphoric gas, you don't have to burp him. You have to let him sit with it, try to figure out what to do about it. He then learns to tolerate moderate amounts of difficulty, and it's not the end of the world."
Christian parents can fall into this same game, pushing our children as if worldly markers of success are to be our greatest goals and hallmarks of achievement. We must push our children toward excellence, but define excellence in biblical terms consistent with the Christian Gospel. Our concern should be that our children are raised in the nurture and admonition of the Lord, and are pointed to God's purpose for their life. A life spent in self-sacrificial service, on the mission field, or devoted to the cause of the Gospel will not win the plaudits of the world.
Marano's article should serve to warn us all that we must not protect our children from the process of growing up into adulthood. While we are charged to protect our children from evil, and to guard them from harm, we are not to shield them from reality. As our children grow older, they should demonstrate an increasing maturity that allows them to deal with the problems of life--not to run from them.
Beyond this, we must expand our concern to the young people as well as their parents. Without doubt, hyperattentive parents who coddle their children are part of the problem. Nevertheless, we also face the reality of a generation that seems, in all too many cases, unwilling to grow up, assume responsibility, and become genuine adults.
Hara Estroff Marano's article is a bracing alert addressed to today's generation of parents. This article demands our attention, even as Christians will want to press its arguments further. Let's be thankful for the lessons learned from skinned knees, routine disappointments, and hard work. Otherwise, we too will be raising a generation of wimps.




Tired of Being Tired


Taken from "Spirit of Revival" magazine.

If there is one term that describes the state of affairs in the lives of people today, it is overload. The mere mention of the word triggers a groan within us. Overload reminds us of the weight of everyday life. We are overwhelmed, overworked, overcommitted, overanxious, overmatched, and overextended. Our tanks are on empty, and we’re running on fumes.
Have you ever been in a health club and seen someone sprinting on a treadmill? That’s the mental picture that comes to mind. We’re running as fast as we can to keep from falling off the back, and we desperately need to stop that relentless machine and take a breather. But we can’t seem to find a button that will turn the thing off.
So we keep running. For weeks. Months. Maybe years. And we are running with a huge pack on our backs, full of all the important things in our lives. Things like family, career, and personal goals.
The trouble is that all of the running is beginning to catch up with us. We’re worn out. Exhausted. Even the wisest, healthiest, and most capable among us feel it. There is a collective sense that our personal worlds are spinning out of control, and we despair of ever gaining the upper hand.

See Why We Run
What has brought us to such a state? Why are we living at a pace that we know is too fast? It really comes down to the fact that we have believed three lies about living.

Lie #1: “You can have it all.” No, you can’t! But even if you could, where would you put it? What would you do with it?
Solomon spent his life accumulating everything he could possibly get his hands on. (You can read a personal account of his quest in the first two chapters of Ecclesiastes.) He had homes that would have made it into Architectural Digest. He owned breathtaking vineyards and beautiful wineries. He kept stables of thoroughbred horses. He had wives—seven hundred, to be precise—along with three hundred concubines.
King Solomon really did have it all (1 Kings 10:23). He managed to pull it off. And when he got there, he realized he had been deceived. Having it all simply wasn’t worth the effort. He was left with a handful of ashes:
All that my eyes desired I did not refuse them. I did not withhold my heart from any pleasure, for my heart was pleased because of all my labor and this was my reward for all my labor. . . . So I hated life, for the work which had been done under the sun was grievous to me; because everything is futility and striving after wind (Ecclesiastes 2:10, 17). Solomon acquired it all and was still deeply disappointed. After reading his assessment, you may be ready to take a couple of days off!

Lie #2: “You can do it all.” We know instinctively that there’s no way we can do it all. But a quick review of our crowded daily schedules might make an outside observer think we believe otherwise. The frantic pace of our lives is now on display even with our elementary school children.
It is not uncommon for one child to have the following commitments: school (at least eight hours, five days a week), homework (an average of two to three hours per night), piano lessons plus daily practice time, karate lessons, soccer team (one game per week plus five practices). That would be an average schedule for an average American child.
When you multiply that kind of schedule by several family members, it’s easy to see how life starts reeling out of control. The pace multiplies exponentially. When is there time to have dinner together at home? When is there time to take a walk together around the neighborhood? There is no time left for relationships.

Lie #3: “You deserve it all.” If you deserve it all, you are of course going to work 24/7 to make sure you get it. And tragically, when you begin to believe you deserve it all, you will run over anyone that gets in your way.
We’ve been reading too many true-life stories of top executives who drove their companies into bankruptcy while stockpiling millions away for themselves. They showed utter disregard for the shareholders and employees who were financially wiped out in the process. We despise this kind of self-centered behavior; yet the problem also exists closer to home.
For years I have observed a number of men who have left their wives and abandoned their children in pursuit of having it all. I’ve seen the same epidemic spread to more and more women as well. I’ve seen fine Christian men and women become cold and callous toward their families.
What happened? They were living at a breakneck pace. There was very little time for each other or for nurturing their relationship with the Lord. It was go-go-go from early in the morning until late at night. And when their lives got so busy that they had no time for God or His Word, they became vulnerable.
The wrong pace can lead to wrong decisions. Pace is not just a scheduling issue. For the Christian, it’s a life issue.

Deficit Living
Overload is a symptom of deficit living. Overloaded people live in deficit—emotional, relational, or spiritual. When our checking accounts are overdrawn, we experience an adrenal rush that pushes us to find a way to immediately cover that shortfall. But where do you find a surplus when you’re completely out of money?
It’s also possible to get overdrawn in life. We get overdrawn in our marriages, overdrawn with our kids, and disconnected from God. We run out of currency—the emotional and relational “cash” that it takes to live well.
The good news is that God has provided what is needed for life and godliness—an unlimited line of credit in his Word and by his Spirit. But most believers are attempting to live out of the change in our own pockets rather than drawing on God’s resources.
God created us. He designed us with a longing for happiness and love. The problem is that we have searched for satisfaction outside of God’s good and gracious plan.
In Matthew 11:28-30, Jesus invited us to overcome overload—not by reading the latest bestselling book or attending a dynamic seminar—but by coming to Him:
Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light.

Jesus knew how to live . . . and we don’t. That’s why we’re overloaded. And that’s why Jesus said, “Come to Me.” The very first step in overcoming overload is coming to Him, embracing Him as the sovereign God, and learning from Him.