The PF Women Team at our Annual Team Retreat ~ 2018 Today on Seth Godin's blog, he said: It's tempting to decide to make a profit first, then invest in training, people, facilities, promotion, customer service and most of all, doing important work. In general, though, it goes the other way. Yes, it does. If you are waiting to make a profit before you do these things, in my experience you're not going to make a profit. So many organizations, ministries and churches are struggling with financial issues. I know your pain. As anyone who follows our story knows, our ministry was in a ton of debt four years ago when I came on as director. Since that time, we've gotten out of debt and turned a profit every year. God has done amazing things through out team, for which we give Him the glory! I find that what Seth is saying here is absolutely true, with one disclaimer. For Christian leaders, spiritual disciplines must always be first. Before we started inve
A doctor has to deliver terrible news -- a patient has died, a surgery didn't go as well as expected. Someone who has been practicing medicine for two years accepts the news and delivers it differently than someone who has been a doctor for 23 years.
I'm at the 23 year mark in ministry and I now accept, process and deliver information differently than I used to.
Almost nothing surprises me anymore, and rarely does something catch me off guard. I have a love/hate relationship with this reality. I don't feel things in quite the same way I used to, and have what I call emotional nerve damage. Like most if not all others who have done this for a long time, there are parts of me that are numb.
Sometimes when people tell me disappointing things I just stare into space and say, "okay, thanks for letting me know" and almost robotically move on to the next task at hand. It's really almost like an out of body experience some days. I'm convinced it's not all bad. I've found ways to make it work for me. One of the most challenging things for me is staying sensitive to the spirit of God, while growing exceedingly desensitized to other things that used to slay me for weeks, or sometimes months.
I want to stay so sensitive to Jesus that when He speaks to me, I can be reduced to a pile of tears or burst into a dance of joy spontaneously, while at the same time remaining undaunted by difficult things that sometimes come with the territory. It's very hard to be sensitive and not sensitive at the same time but I think these days I'm doing rather well.
The Bible says that it's impossible for offenses not to come. We should expect them but not pick them up or harmonize with them. The Bible says that tribulation and hardship will come. We should expect it but not fear it or allow it to stop us.
Being extremely sensitive to God but desensitized to other things is an interesting place to be but a good one because some stuff just used to knock me down is now just a blip on my screen, and some days it's not even blip-worthy.
I'm at the 23 year mark in ministry and I now accept, process and deliver information differently than I used to.
Almost nothing surprises me anymore, and rarely does something catch me off guard. I have a love/hate relationship with this reality. I don't feel things in quite the same way I used to, and have what I call emotional nerve damage. Like most if not all others who have done this for a long time, there are parts of me that are numb.
Sometimes when people tell me disappointing things I just stare into space and say, "okay, thanks for letting me know" and almost robotically move on to the next task at hand. It's really almost like an out of body experience some days. I'm convinced it's not all bad. I've found ways to make it work for me. One of the most challenging things for me is staying sensitive to the spirit of God, while growing exceedingly desensitized to other things that used to slay me for weeks, or sometimes months.
I want to stay so sensitive to Jesus that when He speaks to me, I can be reduced to a pile of tears or burst into a dance of joy spontaneously, while at the same time remaining undaunted by difficult things that sometimes come with the territory. It's very hard to be sensitive and not sensitive at the same time but I think these days I'm doing rather well.
The Bible says that it's impossible for offenses not to come. We should expect them but not pick them up or harmonize with them. The Bible says that tribulation and hardship will come. We should expect it but not fear it or allow it to stop us.
Being extremely sensitive to God but desensitized to other things is an interesting place to be but a good one because some stuff just used to knock me down is now just a blip on my screen, and some days it's not even blip-worthy.
Comments
Having taught bible studies, and gone to so many of them, I don't get the same number of "ah" moments anymore. In fact, I get hardly any now. It's hard to stay fresh when you've heard it all before. It's still the Truth, but the difference is that now I need God more because He is the one who will open my eyes. He is the one who will keep it all fresh.