Monday, January 3, 2011

How it Looks in 2011

30, 30, 30.

At times, Its been tough. I've realized how hard this sucker is! I want to get back into it as I have faded off in December. Here we go!

For Jesus' fame,
JK

Sunday, November 28, 2010

43 Days and still going....

This has been one of the very best challenges I have ever participated in.
God has taught me a lot about myself and about Him too!
I have never exercised that many days in a row in my whole life!! SERIOUSLY!:)
But, do I ever feel great! I have decided that I am going to continue to commit to this challenge for the next 30 days and the next and the next...
At the beginning of this year I felt that God was pushing me to learn how to persevere. I am
the kind of person who is full of excitement at the beginning of anything new, but then my
interest and enthusiasm begins to fade rather quickly and then I move on to something different.
With this 30 day challenge that James suggested, I thought this might be the very thing that I could do to practice persevering...with many prayers and lots of determination, it has worked well!!!
Being in His Word regularly and reading lots of worthwhile books are also a part of this challenge and doing this has filled me with many thrilling moments of worship, learning, conviction and enjoyment.
Please join me on the next leg of my journey!
Karen

Monday, November 1, 2010

Thumbs Up


Reporting in on the 30 Challenge:

I've had a decent string of successful mornings. One big miss in there, but can't linger on it!

This morning I spent half my extra 30 minutes struggling to do basic tasks without the use of my left thumb. You don't appreciate ol' Lefty until you lose the use of him.

Here's some homework: Take a large sharp knife and accidentally injure your thumb. Spend half of your 30 minutes chillin' with Jesus giving him thanks for the gift of dual-thumbs.

Seriously though, this one small injury made me think about my own fragility. At any time I could get in an accident, get a disease or be otherwise incapacitated. Every day of life is a gift!



Monday, October 18, 2010

Taking advantage of the quiet time

I remember someone saying that U.S. Marines get more done before 9am than most people do in a full day. There is some bravado in this, but there are reasons why the concept makes sense. For me, on days when I have to show up for work early, I'll look at the clock after a couple of hours and wow, I've accomplished a ton and the day is really just starting.

I think it's because:
  1. Most other people aren't around to bother you (via email, phone call, drop-in)
  2. In the early morning, it's very quiet. You wake in the dark, and it's silent outside. There's no traffic. No stimulation and no stress.
  3. In this period of quietness you have time to think, not just react. And thinking often means you plan, and if you follow a plan for the day instead of just bouncing around multi-tasking, you can get a lot accomplished.
I think the above just lays the groundwork for prioritizing to fit in the 'big rocks' that often get missed: Prayer or reading of scripture, exercise, or talking with your spouse over breakfast.

Me, I'm starting slowly and hope to build it up. My goal is to be getting up at 6am on a consistent basis, but I'm not a natural morning person and I seem to go to bed late. Therefore I'm starting out by consistently getting up at 7am.

Pete

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Salt & Light

I read Matthew 5:13-16 this morning. It says this:

"You are the salt of the earth. But if the salt loses its saltiness, how can it be made salty again? It is no longer good for anything, expect to be thrown out and trampled by men. You are the light of the world. A city on a hill cannot be hidden. Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl. Instead they put it on its stand, and it gives light to everyone in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven."

A few things that stood out to me:

1. The culture around Jesus at the time when he said this used salt for EVERYTHING. It preserved and helped things last longer. Jesus says we are salt. But interestingly, he says were salt of the earth. That's why global missions are so key.
2. If we are salt and our saltiness is our good deeds based on the last verse, than we CAN be made salty again...
3. "If salt looses its saltiness, it is no good for anything"...what I think Jesus is saying is: if we as the salt of the world are not doing our job, we are as good as garbage.
4. If you turned off all the lights right now and went into a dark closet with a flash light, this verse comes alive.
5. When Jesus says, "you" he isn't just talking to individuals, rather he is more talking to the community.
6. If my church, Lincoln Road Chapel, was truely a city on a hill and light to Waterloo, Ontario, I ask myself this: would the crime rate increase if we all left?
7. You can judge a person's faith by their good deeds scripture says. Jesus calls us to go out with good deeds. Are we doing our job?

Thanks for reading.

The 30 Challenge continues for me. Day 3.

For Jesus' fame,
JK