Saturday, 21 November 2015

HEARTPRINTS SUNDAY SPECIAL {22nd November, 2015}

HEARTPRINTS SUNDAY SPECIAL {22nd November, 2015}

A FAITHFUL GOD 
Psalm 91 is a Psalm about God's faithfulness. In this psalm we read that God is our refuge, He is our fortress, He saves is always the same. How have you experienced God's faithfulness throughout your life? Take time today to remember His faithfulness and how it has delivered you through the various stages of life. Thank God for His faithfulness and take comfort in knowing He will always be there for you
us, and He protects us. This Psalm boils down to one simple fact: God is always faithful no matter the circumstances. He is there when times are good and when times are not so good. He is even there when you don't feel like He is. Everybody's journey in life is different as they grow in Christ, but God's faithfulnes


Tuesday, 17 November 2015

MID-WEEK SPECIAL {18th November, 2015}


THE HOLYSPIRIT AND TECHNOLOGY
The Computer system is one of the amazing inventions of our current world and it has proven to be invaluable in our daily operations and activities. The Computer system has amazing capacity/potentials to process information (although input determines output – garbage in, garbage out). All that capacity will not see the light of day without power supply.

While the computer system is inanimate, we have a lot of lessons that can be learnt from its composition and operation. We have enough sense to connect our appliances and devices to power source and even recharge them often.

We constantly check our battery level and some of us go to the extent of doubling the battery capacity of our devices. As it applies to most of us, we spend fortunes to ensure that we are connected to (at least) one power source; we get power banks, UPS, Inverters etc. – all these underscore our need for constant power supply.

Acknowledging our composition and knowing who we are will enable us to discover and fulfil our purpose – we are spirits who live in earth-suits (known as bodies). Irrespective of the beauty and condition of your hardware, you know quite well that your software matters more! We respond (almost automatically) to requests informing us to upgrade our software for optimal performance; do we attempt to do same to our spirit? You gain sustenance and nourishment from your source; fishes get theirs from water, birds get theirs from the air and plants from the soil. These creatures know that a violation of the connection principle means danger, humans should take a cue to them and get wisdom!

To start with,
Ø  Have you checked your battery (spiritual) level today?
Ø  Do you have your charger (Bible) close to you?
Ø  Are you close to uninterrupted power supply (Holy Spirit)?
Ø  Is your software (prayer life) running on the latest version?
Ø  When was the last time you checked your system for virus?

Jesus said… “without me, you can do nothing”, make sure you are connected to your source and you will be nourished so that you can flourish.

Watch out for the concluding part or contact HeartPrints Planet

Saturday, 14 November 2015

RELATIONSHIP 101 PART 4

7.  What Is My Most Important Relationship?
We're currently in the third section of Maxwell's "Relationships 101", which covers the growth and development of relationships.

"Succeed at home, and all other relationships become easier".

Maxwell opens with some depressing statistics about the failure rates for families in the USA.  A related statistic in the UK when I lived there in 1994/1995 was that the divorce rate was decreasing - apparently good news, until further investigation showed that in fact the reason was that with increasing numbers of people living together rather than getting married, the dissolution of their relationships were not being reported as "divorce statistics"!  I suspect the SA statistics are not a lot better.  A postgraduate student of ours told me that at her boarding school, she was the only student in the hostel whose parents were still living together.

Maxwell argues for a holistic view of success that doesn't focus purely on work or career as the yardstick. Furthermore, he argues, success in one's home life can be an aid to success in other areas of one's life: "Building and maintaining strong families benefit us in every way, including in helping us become successful".  He quotes Nick Stinnet (a "family-life expert"): "When you have a strong family life, you receive the message that you are loved, cared for and important.  The positive intake of love, affection, and respect... gives you inner resources to deal with life more successfully".
Maxwell tells how, early in their marriage, he and his wife Margaret dealt with the fact that he would be travelling a lot by making a commitment that Margaret (and their children) would join him whenever possible, even if it was difficult to afford to do so.  The result is that they have a wonderful collection of family memories of time spent in wide range of exotic locations (even "on safari in South Africa"!).  He makes the point that he doesn't want his family to think of him as a great leader, author or speaker, but as a great father/husband.  (This reminds me of Stephen Covey's perspective-gaining exercise of visualising one's own funeral and what people would say in their eulogies).

STEPS TO BUILDING A STRONG FAMILY

Maxwell makes the point that building a strong family requires a lot of hard work, and offers the following six guidelines.

1) Express Appreciation for Each Other

The home is often seen as a place to "blow off steam" after a day of having to be polite and friendly to clients, colleagues, students, etc.  Rather, "[t]o build a strong family, you have to make your home a supportive environment".

2) Structure Your Lives to Spend Time Together

With today's busy lifestyles, the home is often the place where paths amy occasionally cross (Maxwell describes it as being like a major highway intersection where family members shoot in and out in various different directions).  Making time to spend with family members may require some creative thinking. Maxwell gives the example of how he used to drive his children to school in the morning so that he could spend some time with them.  When scheduling his activities for the month ahead (as part of his regular organisational routine), the first entries in his diary are for family events: birthdays, his children's sporting events, joint outings and dinners.  Once these are in place, he fits his work schedule around them.  "I've found that if I don't strategically structure my life to spend time with my family, it won't happen".

3) Deal with Crisis in a Positive Way

All families will have difficulties and differences.  What makes the difference between a success and a failure is how the problems are handled.  Maxwell quotes M. Scott Peck, who points out that dealing with such problems make us better people: "Problems call forth our courage and wisdom... we grow mentally and spiritually... It is through the pain of confronting and resolving problems that we learn".

Maxwell offers a number of practical strategies for dealing with family problems:

a) Attack the problem, never the person. b) Get all the facts.
c) List all the options (this may seem very business-like, but why should one's family problems be tackled with less rigour than professional ones?).

d) Choose the best solution (and make people the priority in deciding on what is "best").

e) Look for the positives in the problem.  As the quote from Peck above points out, at the least we should be able to grow through facing problems.

f) Never withhold love.  While one may be upset, frustrated, even angry, one should strive to love unconditionally.

4) Communicate Continually

Maxwell quotes an American study that showed that the average married couple spends about 37 minutes a week in "meaningful communication".  He contrasts this with the daily television-viewing time, and draws the conclusion that it is no surprise that families are failing at unprecedented rates.  Again, good communication requires effort.  Maxwell offers the following practical ideas:

a) Develop platforms for communication.  This is related to point 2 above: be creative in setting aside time for communication.  For example, make a lunch appointment with your spouse, drive your children to school or sports, take family walks together.

b) Control communication killers.  Beware of the television, the internet and the telephone - all of these can become major distractions.  One family I know doesn't own a television, and spending time with them is a real pleasure.

c) Encourage honesty and transparency in conversation.  Encourage family members to share their thoughts and feelings, but be careful not to be critical.

d) Adopt a positive communication style.  Analyse the way in which you communicate with your family (is it dictatorial, detached, judgmental?).  Aim for a cooperative approach.

5) Share the Same Values

This applies particularly to one's interaction with one's children (hopefully you didn't marry someone with very different values!).  Maxwell quotes an academic who points out that popular entertainment, advertising media and educational systems are in the business of pushing their values onto children, but that some modern parenting theories believe that parents shouldn't do so!  Maxwell quotes a study of single-parent families that showed that children in those that enforced standards (even if the standards were not "positive") did better than those from homes where standards and values were not transmitted strongly.

Stephen Covey has written an entire book on this subject (The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Families).  One of the suggested exercises is for the family to develop a "mission statement", which clearly sets out the things that the family considers important.  Some friends of mine have done this, involving their young daughter in the process, and have it to be a very beneficial exercise.  Maxwell makes the point that one must be prepared to model and demonstrate the values for the rest of the family (particularly the children) if necessary.  Inconsistencies between "talk" and "walk" are probably most easily spotted by family members!

6) Build Your Marriage

Many authors and teachers dealing with strengthening families have made the point that children get enormous security from a strong, loving relationship between their parents.  Josh McDowell: "The greatest thing a father can do for his children is to love their mother".

Again, this requires effort and determination.  "A common missing ingredient in many marriages is dedication to make things work.  marriages may start because of love, but they finish because of commitment".

Maxwell closes the chapter by bring us back to the point that success in marriage is a good foundation for success in life.  He quotes Pat Riley (a successful American basketball coach): "Sustain a family life for a long period of time and you can sustain success for a long period of time.  First things first.  If your life is in order you can do whatever you want".

"For most people, a good family helps you know your purpose and develop your potential, and it helps you enjoy the journey along the way with an intensity that isn't possible otherwise".


Some things to think about:

Do you agree that success in the family can help build success in other areas of your life?  Can you think of examples, or counter-examples?

What creative ways can you come up with to make time for your family, and for good communication with them?



8.  How Can I Serve and Lead People at the Same Time?
This is the eighth and final chapter of John Maxwell's "Relationships 101". "You've got to love your people more than your position".
Maxwell opens this chapter with an anecdote about Norman Schwarzkopf, when he was leading a battalion in the Vietnam war.  He had been assigned to the First Battalion of the Sixth Infantry, who had such a bad reputation that they were known as the "worst of the sixth"!  He turned the battalion around to the point where they were entrusted with a tough assignment to the Batangan Peninsula (Schwarzkopf described it as “a horrible, malignant place").  It had been the site of many battles and was riddled with minefields and booby traps.  Schwarzkopf instituted all possible measures to minimise casualties and made a point of flying in his personal helicopter to pick up any soldier who was wounded.

On one of these trips, while rescuing the injured soldier another man stepped on a landmine, and everyone suddenly realised that they were in the middle of a minefield.  The second soldier was rolling around on the ground and Schwarzkopf realised that someone had to get to him to prevent him from detonating another mine.  Schwarzkopf wrote, "I started through the minefield, one slow step at a time, staring at the ground, looking for telltale bumps or little prongs sticking up from the dirt.  My knees were shaking so hard that each time I took a step, I had to grab my leg and steady it with both hands before I could take another... It seemed like a thousand years before I reached the kid."

Schwarzkopf managed to calm the soldier and his life was saved.  Maxwell comments that his actions could be described as "heroism, courage or even foolhardiness", but that ultimately it was an attitude of servanthood: Schwarzkopf's leadership was demonstrated through his willingness to serve the soldier in need.

This story underlines the fact that servanthood is not something that is demonstrated in or called for from only those "at the bottom of the hierarchy", but is an attitude that is needed at all levels in an organisation. In fact, the converse is often true - we've all met people in relatively menial positions, who have appalling attitudes towards the people that they deal with: government/municipal workers who could not care less about the people in the queues in front of them, rude waiters in restaurants or shop assistants, etc.  It is
almost as easy to detect someone with a true servant's heart as it is to detect the lack of it.  "The best leaders desire to serve others, not themselves".

Maxwell lists five qualities of servant leadership:

1) Putting Others Ahead of One's Own Agenda

A servant leader will put others first, ahead of their own desires.

2) Possessing the Confidence to Serve

Insecurity in a leader often leads to a positional view of leadership ("I'm the boss, so you'll do what I say"), which is opposed to the principle of servant leadership.

3) Initiating Service to Others

People are sometimes forced to serve others, or will leap in in an emergency, but a mark of a servant's heart is when someone initiates an act of service for someone else.  "Great leaders see the need, seize the opportunity, and serve without expecting anything in return".

4) Lack of Position-Consciousness

"Servant leaders don't focus on rank or position".  Schwarzkopf's stepping out into the minefield is a good illustration of this: many other military leaders would have ordered someone else to rescue the wounded soldier.

5) Motivation by Love

Concern for others, rather than a manipulative spirit or desire for self-promotion should be the motivation of any leader.

HOW TO BECOME A SERVANT

Maxwell then lists some practical steps that one can take in order to develop as a servant leader.

1) Perform small acts

Don't expect to start by jumping into a minefield!  Start small by looking for opportunities to help others in small ways.  Start close to home before trying to save the world.

2) Learn to walk slowly through the crowd

This is a skill that Maxwell learned from his father.  When at a large function or in a crowd, take time to interact with people and really connect with them.  Find out what concerns them.  If necessary, make notes
After the function, and follow up on the issues that you have uncovered.

3) Move into action

"Begin serving with your body, and your heart will eventually catch up"!  Volunteer to assist a charity, or help in a community programme.

Wanting to be served, rather than to serve, is likely to lead a leader into trouble.  Maxwell quotes Albert
Schweitzer: "The ones... who will be really happy are those who have sought and found how to serve".

And a closing quote from Maxwell himself:

"If you want to be successful on the highest level, be willing to serve on the lowest.  That's the best way to build relationships".


Some things to think about:
Can you think of any leaders who have demonstrated servant leadership?  What do you admire about them? Maxwell: "Where is your heart when it comes to serving others?  Do you desire to become a leader for the
perks and benefits?  Or are you motivated by a desire to help others?"