Friday 19 April 2013

8 fears caused by the fear of Man

Is this a major struggle we have as a...Robin Hughes

Is this a major struggle we have as a Community?
Fear of Man

Idolatry. When we care about what man thinks more than what God thinks, we turn people into idols that we worship—seeking to please them in order to earn their approval or respect.

Ineffectiveness. When we fear man we neglect God’s calling for us and we lose focus on executing the tasks in front of us because we’re too preoccupied with what others are thinking.

Lack of love. When we’re overly concerned with “getting it right,” we turn people into projects to accomplish. We withhold our compassion and grow reserved and calculating in our pursuit of people.

Fakeness. If you’re overly motivated by the opinions of others, you won’t act like yourself. You’ll be a chameleon, adapting yourself to any situation for the sole purpose of fitting in.

Apathy. Fear man and you’ll quit taking risks because of the potential for embarrassment in failure. If an endeavor is unlikely to succeed, you’ll never take the chance. In other words, you’ll never do much of anything.

Dishonesty. It’s tough to speak truth into someone’s life because the truth can be painful. If we fear somebody’s response, however, necessary words will remain unsaid because we care more about ourselves (being liked) than we do about the person (seeing Jesus work in their life). This negligence always creates more long-term damage than the hurt it avoids in the present.

Isolation. Fear of man won’t let you delegate anything because others might not do a good job (or they might do a better job), which could reflect poorly on your performance and reputation. Fear of man compels you to control everything—even if that means going it alone.

Decision Paralysis. When we live out of fear rather than out of the convictions God has given us, we spin in circles unable to move forward.

http://theresurgence.com/2010/06/08/8-snares-set-by-fear-of-man

Also what can we do about this?

+++


Fear Yourself
Fear Yourself (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Enhanced by Zemanta

Training for the kingdom

Part of the responsibility of the ecclesia, Stephen DeMarco thinks, is to facilitate everyone to grow in their various talents and part of that is to give them responsibilities and see how they do and then mentor them.

Its rather like the three servants who were given 10, 5, and 1 talents to invest for their master. Part of the growing is preaching and reaching new disciples. part is the growing of the brethrens' talents, and so on. If we are inhibiting good growth then we are putting a stumbling block in front of them. Then we will like the servant who buried his one talent.
Enhanced by Zemanta

En Soma: One Body

En Soma: Cleveland

Young Adult Unity Summit Do you pray for unity? Do you think it is a vital part of our faith?
 Do you want to become active in bridging gaps between ecclesias?
 Are you a brother or sister between the ages of 18 and 30?

 If you answered yes to these questions, Cleveland is the place to be this spring! En Soma ("One Body," from 1 Corinthians 10:17) is a weekend summit for young adults within the Christadelphian/CGAF community who want to promote unity within the Body of Christ.
English: folio 150 recto of the codex, with th...
English: folio 150 recto of the codex, with the beginning of the 1. Epistle to the Corrinthians (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


When: May 17-19, 2013 Where: Church Of The Blessed Hope, 7450 Wilson Mills Road, Chesterland, OH 44026

Speakers: Bre. Kyle Tucker, John Mannell, Scott Tennant, and Alan Guist

Friday evening’s activities will begin at 7 pm. After pizza, devotion, and social time, participants will be directed to their host families’ homes. Study sessions will take place on Saturday, after which we will enjoy dinner and devotion. We plan to conclude with lunch following the Sunday morning worship service. Information and registration can be found at ensoma.weebly.com.

 Please register by May 1. Contact Sis. Livi Jones at livijones@ymail.com with any questions.
We hope to see you this May for an uplifting and productive weekend!
Enhanced by Zemanta

Thursday 18 April 2013

Control and change





“You cannot control what happens to you,
but you can control your attitude toward what happens to you,
and in that,
you will be mastering change rather than allowing it to master you.”
Brian Tracy


"The key to success is to focus our conscious mind on things we desire not things we fear."
Brian Tracy

"Every great success is an accumulation of thousands of ordinary efforts that no one sees or appreciates."
Brian Tracy


You have within you, right now, everything you...
You have within you, right now, everything you need to deal with whatever the world can throw at you. -Brian Tracy (Photo credit: deeplifequotes)

+++

Enhanced by Zemanta

Perspectives on the Formation of the Book of the Twelve

PFBT
Rainer Albertz, James D. Nogalski, and Jakob Wöhrle wrote "Perspectives on the Formation of the Book of the Twelve" wanting to show unity of the twelve Minor Prophets as one, complete Book of the Twelve. 

Matthew V. Moss of Durham University had a look at the book and reviews this latest compilation of essays intended to further the discussion of potential theories for how these twelve documents were stitched together into a unified book.
With few exceptions, the twenty-four essays that make up Perspectives adopt redaction criticism’s presuppositions and assume the reader’s familiarity with that methodology. As such, the intended readership of Perspectives is, in this author’s estimation, other established scholars interested in the formation and textual history of the BT as well as postgraduate students who already possess some familiarity with both redaction criticism and the previous debates on the unity of the BT.
As Sweeney explains it, “Analysis of the Book of the Twelve must begin with the synchronic task of assessing the final forms of the versional texts in question, e.g., the Septuagint, Masoretic, and other relevant forms, to address the diachronic question of their respective socio-religious, socio-political, and historical settings. Only then may work turn to the diachronic process of reconstructing the literary growth that led to those textual forms (23).” From this point and moving forward Sweeney is concerned with the different sequence of the first six of the twelve prophets as found in the Septuagint over and against that found in the Masoretic Text. Obviously, having Joel read in light of Micah provides a very different synchronic reading than one where Micah is read in light of Joel. Thus, different theological and socio-political circumstances are diachronically examined to explain the different sequences and their literary effects.

Please do find the review: Rainer Albertz, James D. Nogalski, and Jakob Wöhrle, Eds. Perspectives on the Formation of the Book of the Twelve: Methodological Foundations – Redactional Processes – Historical Insights. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2012. ISBN 9783110283341. 

+++


The Nash Papyrus (2nd century BC) contains a p...
The Nash Papyrus (2nd century BC) contains a portion of a pre-Masoretic Text, specifically the Ten Commandments and the Shema Yisrael prayer. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Enhanced by Zemanta