Tools of Effective Legacy: a Relationship with God
The fifth and most important “tool” is a genuine relationship with God, both as an individual and as a family.
Writing about our relationship with God is extremely difficult. So let’s start with what it is not.
It is not:
- About attending church
- About giving money
- About being” good “
- About being religious
- About being condemning, condescending, or arrogant about one’s faith
- About religious activity, service, or lifestyle
What it is about could take up several pages .
But we’ll start with the following:
- Knowing and understanding God’s Word–the Bible and reading and meditating on it regularly.
- Understanding and having a genuine salvation/saving relationship with God by faith in Christ.
- Being a person who prays on a regular basis, who has two-way conversations with God.
- Being a person who’s quick to repent, be humble, and truly make things right, admitting it when you are wrong.
- Being a person who’s willing to serve others, even at your own expense.
- Living an obedient life, not out of obligation, but out of thankfulness and deep gratitude for all God has done for you.
- Allowing God’s full expression in your thoughts, deeds, words, motivation, attitude, resources, and so much more.
- Being a person who puts her walk with God as the number one priority in life, through prayer, Bible study, praise, worship, sharing my faith, serving my church and community and all fellow humans.
- Obeying God in the small stuff, being sensitive to details and doing the right thing even when no one is looking….even when it hurts.
- Relaxing, taking deep breaths, simply appreciating the life and the love God has given you, realizing you cannot add to this love. You can only respond to it by living in the moment, and being the obedient son/daughter He’s asked that you to be.
- Utilizing the gifts and the resources He’s given you in the way that He leads you.
- Having a heart attitude and disposition that seeks to glorify God in every aspect of life.
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How God uses our pain and challenges to create passion and possibility. Fieldbrook CA Community Church September 2008.fieldbrook92808
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Prayer of St. Francis of Assisi
Lord, make me an instrument of Your peace.
Where there is hatred, let me sow love;
Where there is injury, pardon;
Where there is doubt, faith;
Where there is despair, hope;
Where there is darkness, light;
And where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master,
Grant that I may not so much seek
To be consoled as to console;
To be understood as to understand;
To be loved as to love;
For it is in giving that we receive;
It is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
And it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
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Scott sharing at a little country church in the summer. Returning to God and what makes that relationship real, vital, relevant, and compelling.Fieldbrook-church_30007cropped
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Gabriel’s Story
This is a true story of our beloved son, Gabriel.
It all started with the ultrasound at Mad River Community Hospital. The ultrasound revealed the possibility of Down syndrome. Gabe had a 1 in 3 chance of having Down .
That question haunted us until Gabe’s birth.
My wife Joni was assigned a month’s bed rest and then gave birth to a mostly-healthy
baby boy. They were then flown overnight to UC Davis Medical Center in
Sacramento, where Gabriel was to have surgery to correct an intestinal blockage. After the surgery, both mother and son were fine!
The two dollar question was, did Gabriel have Down syndrome?
Meeting with the doctor, she assured us that he did have Down syndrome…and that we had less than one year left in our marriage. Her point was that parents of special needs kids have marital challenges. She was not very delicate. What a great nugget to drop on a couple in a vulnerable time!
The proceeding questions, heartbreak, prayer, and walks around the UC Davis campus crying out to God will always be etched in my memory.
I decided to dedicate Gabriel (and our raising him) to the Lord, and trust that, although he
would never be a football hero or a brain surgeon, his life would be both personally fulfilling and enriching to those around him. We were ready to move on and raise our son no matter!
The shame, embarrassment, and guilt that parents of children with special needs
children share is one of life’s dirty little secrets. Although not
rational, logical, or reasonable, these feelings are very tangible.
The feelings of sadness and gloom often come at unexpected and strange times.
Perception is reality. The pain is real.
The times of denial, reality hitting home, and the Costco gawkers staring at our Gabe, only serve to remind us at times of our frustration, pain, and anguish.
Every so often, the reality check of Gabriel’s special needs of
autism and Down syndrome come crashing in on us. Gabe’s episodes of dysfunction or meltdowns pull us out of our times of denial, where we have to admit, acknowledge, and again decide to go forward as parents.
We have learned to be honest with our feelings and with reality. We’ve chosen to redeem gain from all the pain as a couple and as a family to love regardless of “return on investment”.
· Some of the lessons learned include:
1. There is no one-time fix.
2. This is a long-term issue, challenge, battle, and journey requiring a long term mentality and approach.
3. A positive mental attitude and my positive confessions are not enough to get me through.
4. There is no “Bible bullet “or quick fix that is adequate to address my pain.
5. Whereas Gabriel may have retardation of his intellect, there is none of the spirit.
6. His worth has very little to do with his intellect or ability to contribute to society.
7. Societal worth is indeed a relativistic concept.
8. We’ve learned to give without expecting anything in return
The lessons learned have to do with my deciding to have the right perspective, attitude, actions, and behaviors.
The decision to love unconditionally is mine alone.
This unconditional love, stemming from the decision to love Gabriel, has transferred some of my pain into a long term perspective which is surprising, refreshing, and very interesting. He has taught us many lessons.
I’m learning to love freely regardless of the payback.
I’m learning to value all people.
I know that everyone has special needs.
Some of us just hide them better!
This unconditional love is a decision that begins in the seat of my will.
I must decide daily how and whom we will love.
My commitment as a father begins with loving my son and resourcing him
in every way to maximize his potential. I also need to maximize my
potential to love, accept, understand, and help Gabriel where
possible. My commitment is also to help my family to love Gabriel, to
be patient with him, and to see past his challenges to his many positive attributes.
My Mission Statement is this: “To personally and practically love, accept, and
go forward in raising my son to his fullest potential with God’s help”.
As I do this, I know that Gabriel has the potential to teach us to look for the things in life that are truly important. May I be as good a student as he is a teacher.
Tags: , , birth, Costcoinvestment, Down syndrome, God, Jesus, long-term issue, mad River community Hospital, marital challenges, personal fulfillment, prayer, retardation, Scott Hammond, UC Davis medical center, Unconditional love
Law or grace?
That is the question…
How do you deal with your children and those around you when you’re angry, frustrated, tired, and burned out?…
Do you…
- YELL and raise your voice ?
- Play the martyr and do the silent treatment?
- Cuss and swear and scream?
- Dole out corporal punishment in the name of training ,control, and authority…
In other words, how to we use our authority?
When I talk about fathering, I think of how God the Father deals with me. And then I realize his kindness, patience, and love and see how short I fall as I deal with others…
God doesn’t always use a stick to beat us when we make mistakes… so why are we as fathers so quick to undress and apply the stick of punishment to those around us, especially our kids.
It’s okay to be angry, and it’s okay to not like injustice, disobedience, immaturity, and some of the zany things kids do in their selfishness.
But what gives you and me the right when we are tired and frustrated to dole out law in the spirit of anger. Our Lord never modeled that type of authoritarianism. He did everything in love, including correction, chastisement, teaching, and encouragement.
You and I as men need to relearn authority. We need to not get caught up in the disciplinarian model and playing the heavy, which is so common in our society. We need to learn the authority of Jesus, based in love, patience, kindness, gentleness, goodness, and self-control.
We need to relearn the father heart of God, and how that applies to our leadership and authority over those for whom we have responsibility. We must be intentional and incremental in learning this model, as it will transform our parenting, and indeed, our lives.
So, the next time you’re faced with someone’s shortcomings, or your own, for that matter, what’s going to be different?
Will it be grace or law?
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YOUR walk with God…
Remember that your walk with God is the key for life’s fulfillment, purpose, and satisfaction.
Nothing else in life can replace a solid walk with God.
Your walk with him is the core priority in life, because life without God is empty indeed.
The following components are vital to a daily walk with God…
1. The salvation experience… to really get saved and converted and become a genuine believer in Christ.
2. Get baptized… the outward expression of an inward decision.
3. Get into the Bible… read and devour it daily, making it a habit to renew your mind.
4. Get in prayer… make time daily to pour out your heart to God. And
don’t forget the moment by moment walk of life as well. Keeping a
prayer journal is also a great idea.
5. Get into fellowship… Church, home groups, and just being with Christians is a great idea for your walk with God.
6. Get serving… look for service opportunities and ways to employ your God-given gifts, talents, strengths, and skills.
7. Get after seeking God… spend time alone, quietly waiting on God and
seeking his face in prayer and in stillness and quietness.
9. Get witnessing… share your faith and your testimony and the Gospel with others as God directs.
10. Get sanctified… rid yourself and turn away from habits, relationships
and practices you know to be offensive to God and a violation of
Scripture.
11. Get worshiping… learn to have a tremendous heart of
worship toward God and a thankfulness that expresses itself in music
and every other form of worship. Learn to be thankful and expressive.
12. Get learning from problems and suffering… learn to grow and to see
God’s hand in hardship, trials, difficulties, and personal
disappointments.
Walking with God is a relationship first and foremost. It is not
mechanical, there is no formula, and it must be natural and from your
heart.
In order to get to know the Lord, it takes time and intent; there is no microwave Christianity.
We must learn to grow up in Christ and become more like Him. That is why
a walk with him should be our first priority, when we first rise in the
morning and when we go to bed at night.