Hope, Leadership

What Only a Leader Can See

No Comments 21 December 2009

Scripture
And His disciples asked Him, “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he would be born blind?” Jesus answered, “It was neither that this man sinned, nor his parents; but it was so that the works of God might be displayed in him. John 9:2-3

Observation
A non-leader sees things as they are. A leader sees things as they can be. The disciples could only diagnose the blind man’s problem. Jesus, on the other hand, could prophesy a miracle.

Jesus was more than optimistic. Optimism is never enough to make an overcoming leader because positivity is not weatherproof. Storms will come that will melt optimism. Something deeper with resources out of reach needs to feed the hope of a leader.

This is why successful leaders must be spiritual people. They can see not just what is happening on the surface but also what God is doing under the surface. Viewing problems must be a devotional experience, where the leader presents to God the condition and waits for insight to see what God can do.

Application
“Some men see things as they are and ask why I dream things that never were and ask why not.” Those words of Robert Kennedy could have been spoken by Jesus and need to be lived by me today.

Prayer
Father, help me to see under the surface to detect what you are doing. I believe Lord! Amen.

Hope

Hopeful

No Comments 22 July 2009

Scripture
So be truly glad. There is wonderful joy ahead, even though you have to endure many trials for a little while. 1 Peter 1:6

Observation
I heard a preacher say last Sunday that no where in scripture are we called to have faith “for” something. Instead, our faith throughout scripture is to be “in” God, or Christ, or his word. Hope, however, is what we have “for” something yet to come. Out of hope our faith comes strong.

The greatest day of my life is yet to be. That is the language of hope. A life lived in joyous expectation of some better thing to come is what hope is about. That hope is grounded firm in Jesus, risen from the dead and coming again. Hope is solid and secure.

Application
I hope for better things. I don’t need to have those better things defined or explained. It is enough that Jesus has gone before me. He will cause all things to work together for my good. That sense of impending joy is enough. Hope is enough for me.

Prayer
Father, bring my hope into focus. There have been many times that you’ve spoken into my heart about some anticipated good that has come about. Continue to keep hope fresh in my life. I do not want to miss what you have yet to do for me. Amen.

Encouragement, Hope, Overcoming, Peace, Troubles

Where Does Hope Come From?

No Comments 03 June 2009

Press the arrow to listen to Natalie Grant’s song, “Our Hope Endures” while reading where hope comes from.

Scripture

Now may the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that you will abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit. Romans 15:13

Observation

Where does hope come from? Hope is a fresh scent of good things God is cooking up for us. It is the sun that makes us get out of bed in the morning. It is a song in our mind that wakes us up in the night. Hope is what keeps us looking long after the posse went back home. Hope is what keeps us praying longer than is reasonable.  Hope is not a superfulous, expendable extra in life like the cherry on a sundae. Hope is mission critical.  In the toughest conditions, hope is what makes the difference between those who survive and those who do not

We need hope. But where does hope come from? Thankfully hope does not come from us, but from God. Hope somehow doesn’t feel hopeful when we have to talk ourselves into it. But when hope comes from heaven it enables us to believe more than we could ever do so on our own. Hope is a gift from God that keeps us walking forward when the road runs out.

How do we get new hope? Romans 15:13 is full of exciting possibilities of hope. God’s last name is apparently “hope”. With hope come the children of “joy” and “peace”. Hope can get out of control as it abounds in tough places. Hope is power that comes from the Holy Spirit, a power that others do not have to rise above their circumstances. Hope is totally of God. There is only one word in Romans 15:13 that is up to us as human beings. Our responsibility is “believing”. If we will use faith then God will give us hope.

Application

If I will believe, God will give me more hope. No matter how discouraging the circumstances, there is always something we can believe for, no matter how small. We as Christ followers are to be defined by what we are believing for. We are to live from “faith to faith”. We should be believing for something. Though my nose may be bruised from the crush of doors slammed in my face, yet I will continue to believe. In that resolute faith I will have more hope.

Prayer

Father, today you see what I’m believing for. I pray that you would shovel hope into my life. I need this power of anticipation that the Holy Spirit can give to me. Amen.

Hope

Where Anything is Possible

No Comments 02 March 2009

Press the arrow to listen to Hillsong Church sing “I Believe” as you read today’s devotion about possibilities.

Scripture
Jesus said, “If? There are no ‘ifs’ among believers. Anything can happen.” Mark 9:23 (The Message)

Observation
Heaven is allergic to doubt, for God lives in a place where everything is possible. This extreme divine permission is quite impossible for us to imagine, for we live in a world where so many things can’t happen. But in heaven, anything is a possibility.

I imagine the presence of God to be a joyful sphere, with bright smiles and joyful anticipation. Our critical earthly eye would call the people there simplistic. But in heaven they are only realists.  Gravity, entropy, sickness, debt, defeat, shame and all the rest do not enter anyone’s mind. Instead, each worshipper is captivated with the Creator and his endless possibilities.   The angels and saints stand on tip toe to see what God will do next.

When we pray in the name of Jesus, we poke our head out of the smog of our world and through the clouds of heaven to enter a realm of possibility. Bringing the word “can’t” into heaven, is like tracking mud into the house. Leave doubt out-of-doors. Impossibilities have no place where God dwells. Only possibilities are at home there. It is not that everything will happen. That is childish. Rather, it is that anything can happen.

Application
If I am to pray prayers that do not bring an allergic reaction from Jesus, then I must live with a sense of suspenseful anticipation at the possibilities that swirl around the throne of God. I don’t have to cling to all of the human fears when I am with the Lord. I’m free to live with open-handed expectation.  Everything may not happen, but anything can.

Prayer
Father, I have a number of impossibilities that I’ve been faithfully bringing into your presence. I’m not going to stop doing that. But what I will stop doing is trying to out guess how you are going to solve them. Instead, I want to rest my bones weary with gravity, entropy, sickness, debt and all the rest and live in the freedom of possibilities and anticipation. Everything many not happen, but anything can. Amen.

Endurance, Hope

Hope is Unreasonable

No Comments 30 November 2007

Scripture

Even when there was no reason for hope, Abraham kept hoping—believing that he would become the father of many nations. For God had said to him, “That’s how many descendants you will have!” And Abraham’s faith did not weaken, even though, at about 100 years of age, he figured his body was as good as dead—and so was Sarah’s womb.

Abraham never wavered in believing God’s promise. In fact, his faith grew stronger, and in this he brought glory to God. He was fully convinced that God is able to do whatever he promises. And because of Abraham’s faith, God counted him as righteous. Romans 4:18-22

Observation
I have not been cold for 21 years. Since 1986 I’ve lived where palm trees grow. Sure I’ve worn a sweater, but I’m finding these days cold of another kind. When I run in the morning the scouring brush of Jack Frost rubs my lungs raw. I don’t like it, but I keep push on.

Disappointment is like the onset of cold weather. At first there are shivers but there comes a point if one pushes beyond where the body spasms cease and one can go on. Cold is inevitable but shivering is a choice, at least I’m trying to tell myself that these days of outrunning frostbite.

When disappointment comes hope happens. Hope only grows when I make choice to hold on longer than is expected. Only in the windy fields far from home do I have any chance of discovering how much God believes in my future.

Abraham was unreasonable which was exactly what God wanted of him. There was no reason for hope, but in hope he held on. Hope is unreasonable but on the other side of the answer it makes perfect sense.

Application
I know that hope has its consequences so I want to be an unreasonable man. “God is able to do whatever he promises.”  That sounds unreasonable enough.

Prayer
Father, today, fuel me with hope so I can persist long enough in vulnerable places so miracles can happen.  Amen.

Hope, Thanks, Words

Background Noise

No Comments 22 November 2007

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Today is Thanksgiving Day, so here’s a journal from my archives. It comes from November 2001, just after 9/11.

Thankful,

Phil

When Thomas Edison turned the crank of the first phonograph, stunned people for the first time in history heard the sound of their own voices. The poor heard music designed for kings. Those who had never met a President heard him from one of the wax records. The voice of an opera singer or the laughter of a comedian could be played whenever, wherever a person desired.

But as remarkable as Edison’s contraption was, some of the most famous artists of his day would not condescend to allow their music to be recorded by such a crude instrument. The reason why—the Edison phonograph produced almost as much background noise as it did recorded sound.

The wind up motor that drove the turntable ground like a meat grinder—grrrrrrr. And the diamond needle scratching across the cylinder hissed like a leaking tire—hssssss.

Today we have iPods that produce pure sound. But in the early days along with the sound of the music came the grrrrrrr of the motor and the hssssss of the needle.

The other morning our family was getting up for Sunday church. Sunday starts at 4.30am for the McCallum’s. Levi has to be at his lighting ministry by 6.00am, Laurel at the children’s ministry by 6.30am, as well as Leslie and I for 7.00am. As they piled in the car there was a lot of grrrrrrr and hssssss in the background. (In case you’re thinking I’m the one who drags the kids out of bed at 4.30am, it was actually their idea to serve in these ministries.)

It was then that I remembered the old Edison phonograph that I have stored back in Australia. I told the kids what I just wrote for you to read. Then I added, “Our lives are producing something far more important than music. We are playing our testimony of Jesus in the work that we do for him. We may be doing the work for him, but are we adding background noise of grumbling and complaining. People may see a little bit of Jesus in us, but in the background they hear a lot of grrrrrrr and hssssss as well.”

Something must have been absorbed into their souls, because before long I heard laughter from the back seat. We may have even sung a song as we drove through the pre-dawn darkness. There is nothing like an MP3 rendition of our service for Jesus with no background hiss, just pure sound.

“And whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.” Colossians 3:17

This has been a tough year for the United States. I read on one church sign the topic of this week’s sermon, “What’s Left of Thanksgiving?” I detected a sound of grrrrr and hssss in the background.

With the attack on the twin towers and the present state of war on terrorism it is a time many Americans are huddling close together to count their blessings.

We’ll be sharing Thanksgiving with a number of families including the Lockwood family. Glen has just returned from New York where he was the second in charge for the American Red Cross’ operations at Ground Zero in Manhattan.

Coming from the centre of the disaster one would think there would be much background noise of complaint to serve in such a disaster. But in talking with Glen shortly after he returned I didn’t hear a single scratch. Glen spoke in hushed tones of thankful awe that he had been allowed to participate in the disaster relief. He told of his sense of regret to leave and the sense of responsibility he left behind.

If Glen could serve at Ground Zero “in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him” then it must be possible to reproduce the life of Jesus without interference whatever our condition might be.

I hope you have a happy Thanksgiving, not just in name only but in practice. Try it, you’ll be amazed how good it makes you feel. Most of all the Lord will enjoy it and others will thank you as well.

Hope, Miracles

Things Can Change

No Comments 20 October 2007

yuma-state-prison-inside-cell.jpg

Scripture

The night before Peter was to be placed on trial, he was asleep, fastened with two chains between two soldiers. Others stood guard at the prison gate. Suddenly, there was a bright light in the cell, and an angel of the Lord stood before Peter. The angel struck him on the side to awaken him and said, “Quick! Get up!” And the chains fell off his wrists. Then the angel told him, “Get dressed and put on your sandals.” And he did. “Now put on your coat and follow me,” the angel ordered. Acts 12:7-8

Observation

Your life is not a closed system. Doors can open. Things can change. Though you are trapped on the inside God is bounding on the outside. Nothing can stop him from bursting in.

Rusty words are strewn through Peter’s prison story: “chains”, “cell”, and “gate”. Each is a cast iron weight suffocating hope. The jail door of disappointment can slam on our expectations. We think life is a closed system. We can’t get out of prison because prison has crept into us.

It took awhile for Christians in this story to wake up to what God was doing. Peter had to be poked by an angel. A minimum-wage housemaid didn’t even recognize a miracle standing at her front door. I’m sure glad that Peter and Rhoda are in this story. They make me feel more at ease with a God who can pop up in the most unlikely places. If Peter and Rhoda were startled and sluggish then I will not be disappointed by my own drowsy response when the Lord slips through locked doors to save me.

The comforting picture in this story is the split second before the miracle. CEO Peter was snuggled up with his pillow snoozing away. There is something profound in this picture of Peter getting a good 40 winks before his court trial. His slumber proved his faith in Jesus’ promise given just a few months before that Peter would not die until he was an old man. Peter slept because he knew that he had many days yet to live.

Application:

We need to learn to rest in our confinement, not always looking for a way out, and instead to go to sleep knowing that nothing can lock God out. Sure we can stand on God’s promises but it doesn’t hurt to sleep on them too.

What was the promise God made last to you? Is that your comfort? Do you think of your life like a terrarium, all sealed with no way in? Do you hear the footsteps of God outside your door? These are questions I ask myself. I think I hear someone knocking. Excuse me while I answer my door.

Prayer

Father, I know you are out there. I’m listening for your knock. Amen.

I'm Phil McCallum, a husband, father and most of all one of the people Jesus loves. I'm privileged to serve Evergreen Community Church in Bothell, Washington as Senior Pastor where people love enough to believe "it's all about relationships." In 1982 I made a vow to read God's word daily and apply it to life. Each day I write out my reflections. Some days I post those on my blog. It's a little personal but it's my hope it will stir you to go deeper still. Learn how I do my devotions. These are my thoughts and not necessarily those of the ministry I serve. By the way check out the computer study Bible Glo. I highly recommend it.

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