Search this site
IRONSTRIKES
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Beliefs
  • Formation
  • For Women
  • Meetings & Events

Ten Principles for successful fathering

2/19/2014

0 Comments

 
Picture
While practices help us learn the how's of successful fatherhood, principles provide the framework for our fathering. Principles are the underlying philosophy, the way we think about our important role. And we way we think and feel about fatherhood frames our behavior, our responses and our attitudes.

The Emotional Bank Account. Dr. Stephen Covey, one of the professors in my graduate school program many years ago and now one of the most influential leadership gurus in the world, taught me the principle of the Emotional Bank Account before I was ever a father. The basics of the emotional bank account involve making deposits of trust and faith in the lives of our children. The emotional bank account is about communication, love, loyalty and integrity.

The Most Important Gift is Time. We can give our children things that money can buy: video games, iPod's, designer clothes and the hottest mountain bike. But nothing substitutes for our time and attention. Every father struggles with keeping work, self and family in balance; some seem to be able to strike that balance and avoid challenges like workaholism. We have also found that not all time is equal. There is a difference between quality time and quantity time. But my experience suggests that it is tough to have quality time without enough quantity.

Teaching Responsibility. Fathers are in a unique position in a child's life to teach responsibility and the value of work. We teach it by example by keeping our commitments, by putting family first and by enduring hard times. We also teach by giving children stewardship and demanding accountability, whether it is with chores, school work or other aspects of their young lives. Helping children learn to be responsible as children and later as adults is among our most critical roles.

Use your Golden Sword. Family relationship expert Gary Smalley teaches the analogy of the two swords. The silver sword reflects our positional power, of the power we use in our workday world. The golden sword is the sword of personal power, that works best at home. Trying to use positional power with the children is dangerous and often has unintended negative results. But using the gold sword of personal power, described with words like "warmth, sensitivity, dependability, determination, genuine compassion, affection, and caring" has great application at home. So take off the silver sword and strap on the golden sword when you walk through the front door at home.

Walk the Talk. A father who is a "Do as I say, not as I do" kind of dad will never have the respect of his children, or anyone else for that matter. Walking the talk--being what you want your children to be--is a symbol of integrity. But it requires personal discipline and sacrifice. Being a man of principle and living congruently with those principles is an essential element of successful fatherhood.

Consistency. Fathers are best when their approach is predictable and consistent. Children get a strong message when fathers are firm and solid in their approach. Being a "marshmallow" with your children is easier, but it hurts them in the long run. Being fair and consistent in discipline is important. When a father makes a rule, it should be enforced. Limits that are set and then moved are not limits at all, with either a child or with a parent.

High Expectations. Successful fathers set high but realistic expectations for themselves and for their children. And then they work together to achieve those expectations. They read together so that they learn how to learn. They work together to achieve important ends. And they celebrate their accomplishments and learn from their mistakes.

Expressions of Love. Fathers who have great relationships with their children have learned to express love in meaningful ways. They tailor their expressions to the way each child receives love. They are gentle but firm even when disciplining, and then show afterward an increase in love. They find little ways to express love, and they do it every day when the kids are living at home.

Mutual Respect. When a father shows respect for his children and others, they are more likely to respect him. Keeping expectations clear, being even handed and level headed, and respecting children's self-worth all help breed an atmosphere of mutual respect. And when a father respects their child's mother, regardless of whether they are married or divorced, children learn to respect him more completely.

Making Values Count. It is not enough for a father to teach behavior; successful fathers also teach values. They have a rich spiritual life (however they define that) and connect to nature and timeless values. They respect womanhood, they are honest, the live by standards of moral integrity. Great fathers help pass on these values to their children rather than leaving them valueless in a world where values seem to shift with the sands of time.



This post was written by Wayne Parker.  The original post can be found here:  http://fatherhood.about.com/od/succeedingasafather/a/principles.htm?nl=1


BE HOLY.
BE A MAN.

0 Comments

What to do when you don't like the one you love

1/8/2014

1 Comment

 
Picture
Through the adventure of making a life together, I’m thankful it is not uncommon to sometimes feel a little lost, tired or even exasperated by the path.  Ten years ago, when I married, I remember thinking “That won’t be us…that doesn’t have to be us.”  In my naiveté, I thought true love was a protective force that could keep us immune from common relationship struggles.  I have come to realize that being an exception is not a mark of more passionate or powerful love.  Love becomes powerful and passionate as we embrace the common struggles, learning to survive and wrestle through them.  There is more love in the act of perseverance than avoidance. Being lucky is not the same as being loyal.

Relationships are sometimes credited as good or strong because there is the absence of hardship.  However, there is a difference between living in a way that is tidy versus in a way that is steadfast.  Sacrifice forges love and challenges every cheap imitation of love within us to measure up.  In this way, I have found my marriage to be humbling and confrontational to my methods of self-preservation. And frankly, I have always hated that, before becoming deeply grateful for the way this sacrament has been a means of grace and growing up, too.  I am learning to trust in the process of covenanting.  There have been seasons of our marriage where we weren’t sure we were going to make it, days when I didn’t want to make it anymore and recovery felt hopelessly illusive.  This article is written with those seasons in mind and for the couples that like us, have felt the anguish and heartache of being in it.

When you’re questioning love because you no longer like the person you’ve chosen to spend the rest of your life with, well, that’s a bit of an awkward place.  I remember emotionally-charged thoughts running through my mind, “I can’t stand you…we are a mistake…you are the enemy of my soul.”  I harbored feelings of nauseating disgust and total annoyance, met by equally endearing bitterness from my spouse.  Was there a way back to love when you take offense at the mere presence or personality of your beloved?  We were disillusioned, exhausted and frustrated.  Attempts to work things out fell flat and seemed futile.  Friends would divorce and it made us wonder what was worth saving about our dilapidated marriage.  I felt as though I had become the worst version of myself.

When I would feel stuck, insecure or claustrophobic, I would start moving further away from the relationship, as if I was somehow going to find myself if I could be more on my own.  Perhaps that’s what I tried to convince myself of to justify the distance.  I would invest myself into the places where my presence was being praised and yielding higher returns of appreciation such as work, ministry, various hobbies and friendships.  He would do the same and our lives would run merely parallel without much actual connection.  It seemed to be better than outright fighting but I think we were just sinking deeper into the quicksand.

We didn’t know what to do or how to fix things.  We just knew we needed something to change because we were both dying.  We felt like our marriage was killing us.  And that became the turning point. Our marriage was killing us, we did need a change and finally admitting that we didn’t know what to do opened us up to consider more options.  That was terrifying to recognize but it also brought just enough relief from the oppression for hope to spark again, too.  We let others help us make space for hard, honest dialogue about what we were each going through.  The process was painful and full of mistakes. We were learning to stop fighting one another to fight for every piece of ground to regain for our marriage, most of which we had to build over again, in a new, different and healthy way.  But it was new through redemption.  It was still us, still our life and circumstances.  First surrendered then re-shaped and reclaimed, like restoring some discarded, dysfunctional treasure becoming repurposed.  We were experiencing a beginning again.  It came at a price though, letting go and saying goodbye to many of the ways we had become familiar with.  Here were some of the lifelines that helped us make the journey back to one another:

We had to get honest and open.   We had felt on our own because despite how many couples go through this, no one really knows how to talk about it.  There came a point though, when I didn’t care who found out how messed up we were.  We were committed to figure out how to get better and that meant being authentic through whatever it took.   That wasn’t permission to be mean, it just meant healing was going to require us to be brave and gracious.

We leaned into the relationship.  When we were leaning out, it was an escape from facing issues that were upsetting, unresolved or embarrassing.  We find our most true self in relationship to one another, not outside of it.  I’m a seemingly wonderful person when no one is close enough to activate how selfish I can be.  Intimacy leads me to work on vulnerability and sensitivity where I can discover what it takes to be truly humble, sacrificial and loving, too.  Our goal wasn’t so much to get back to who we were before but to move forward into who we could be and what we could have together in our marriage.

We each did self-care.  We had been relying on the other to meet too many of our own needs that we weren’t taking responsibility for ourselves.  That kind of pressure wasn’t fair and only resulted in disappointment.  We made more space for each of the ways we found rejuvenation.  We honored what the individual needed to be healthier and our relational health improved too.

We built up our network of resources.  Our resiliency progressed when we had more to draw from.  We sought out couples who were more experienced, read good books to increase what we could learn, made more enjoyable memories and sought professional help.  Not everything worked but our context grew and we learned from all of it.

We found ways to celebrate.  We went on adventures and dates and caught ourselves laughing together again. We played.  We simplified.  We found an “us” we had lost.  We became alive when we celebrated and so we started changing it from a rare luxury to a frequent reminder of the joy we found in being together. By holding onto these anchors, they helped us hold each other again.  We saw affection and tenderness grow.  These are elements more fragile and responsive than I knew.  I’m challenged to cherish my spouse more.  I deeply value the lessons but there is no formula.  Even as I write this today, I believe there’s no guarantee we’ll make it.  But I don’t put stock in a guarantee anymore anyway.  We’re going to keep living out our vows, discovering the depths and challenges of what that looks like for today and tomorrow and the day after that.  So, I write this for me too, with hope that I’ll return to these truths if I find myself again at the threshold of a season that no longer needs to scare me.  



We all have parts of our path that we don’t like going through.  You may feel lost but know that you are not gone.  There is a way back, it just may require a little trailblazing.  Journey well, fellow travelers.


This post was written by Seedbed blogger, Kelly Grace.  For the original post, go to:  http://seedbed.com/feed/journey-back-longer-like-one-love/


BE HOLY.
BE A MAN.



1 Comment

Allowing child molesters into church

10/17/2013

6 Comments

 
Picture
Yesterday, we noted three important factors to consider in regard to those who have a history of molesting children:
1.     As a church we have a responsibility to protect those who cannot protect themselves.  Children are very vulnerable.
2.     Statistically, people who commit sexual crimes are rarely truly rehabilitated.
3.     People who commit sexual crimes are very good at making you think that they are rehabilitated when they really aren’t.  


I have been professionally counseling men for 30+ years.  Many of them for their sexual behavior and many of them appeared to be sincerely Christian men.  Yet there have been some that have convinced me that they were totally innocent, that the charges were trumped up and that they were unjustly charged.  However, upon further investigation, I found out that they were lying thru their teeth.  


My experience has taught me a few things about safeguards.  Let me share them with you:

First of all, most churches do this but I have run across some that don't:  Every person who works in the church nursery, teaches children's Sunday School/Vacation Bible School, and/or is a Church Camp counselor, needs to sign an agreement to have his* background checked by the local authorities and the FBI.  In fact, anyone who has repeated contact with children in any capacity in regard to a church function needs to have a background check.  If you have someone who is working with children and didn't divulge his background, then that person needs to be confronted and the pastor needs to understand why the person felt a need to hide such information.  This could very well be a legal as well as moral and spiritual issue.  

Yet, a person who is truly desirous to fellowship in a church where there are children present, will talk to the pastor about his past before attending church.  It would be advisable for the pastor to let the person know that the board will be informed of his past and that safeguards will be in place.  Here are some recommended safeguards:

1.  The person will sit up front, to the side, in the congregation.  That way the only people he can see are the people on the stage.  Also, it keeps him in full visibility of the congregation and pastor.
2.  Several men will be appointed to keep an eye on the person.  If he gets up to leave for any reason, he will be accompanied by at least one other man.
3.  He will never enter the bathroom alone.  In fact, it is advisable that the church appoint individuals to make rounds in the church bathrooms and other private/secluded areas of the church before, during and after the service from the time the church is unlocked until it is locked again.
4.  He does not need to attend services when children will be up front on the stage for extended periods of time.  If he is there, he needs to excuse himself until the children are not up front, or he should just go home.
5.  He needs to be active in the Men's Ministry of the church and be accountable to that group of men.
6.  He needs to meet with the pastor regularly for counsel, feedback and accountability.
7.  He should never be allowed to work with children, in any capacity.

8.  He should not be Facebook friends, or any other social media including texting with any minors in the church.

So, it is possible to allow a person with a criminal history of sexually abusing children to worship and fellowship in the church but he must be transparent and be willing to follow the recommended safeguards.  If he cannot, then the church can go to where he is and fellowship with him at his home or a neutral location.  

Or the obvious.....  If you really want to minister to these individuals, consider a service that is for adults only...  No minors allowed... Spaced far enough from the other service so that there is time to come and go without interacting with minors.

We don't need to write off these men, they need to grow spiritually as well.  And you know, it will decrease child molestation in the long run too...  

*The word "his" will be used throughout.  The majority of those who sexually offend are males but that does not mean that the church should give an automatic pass to women.  Women need to have background checks as well.


BE HOLY.
BE A MAN.

6 Comments

Building Character

8/3/2013

0 Comments

 
Picture
God is aching for you to be one with Him, that He might use you.  He wants to give you a voice in His kingdom.  He wants to show you his power.

So when He defines His terms of sexual purity, don’t say, “God can’t possibly mean that!” because He does.  Christ is looking to see where you can be trustworthy – capable of handling more for His Kingdom.  Jesus says, “So if you have not been trustworthy in handling worldly wealth, who will trust you with true riches?”

If you aren’t trustworthy in handling fleshly passions, how can you be trusted to handle things of great value?    Jesus said that if you were faithful in the little things, He would entrust you with bigger things.  In this, God isn’t primarily referring to what He’s called you to do in His kingdom.  He’s primarily concerned with what He’s called you to be in your character.

Maybe you’ve asked God to reveal His will for your life, but how are you doing with that “little” part of His will that He has already revealed to you?

Excerpted from Every Young Man’s Battle – pages 80-81



BE HOLY.
BE A MAN.


0 Comments

Boundaries

8/1/2013

0 Comments

 
Picture



In a specific sense, predetermined boundaries may include deciding to take actions such as these:

- Blocking the pay-per-view option at the hotel front desk

- Refusing to make low-blow putdowns during marital disagreements

- Saying “no” when asked to do things on weekends that don’t involve the whole family

- Never being alone with a woman who is not your wife

- Turning the channel when there’s gratuitous skin on the tube

- Refusing to keep self-destructive secrets from your wife

- Never making a significant financial or family decision without first consulting your wife

When we deal with these issues ahead of time, we create the lanes in which we can freely allow our spiritual energies to work.  We are counting the cost of what it will take to build a solid spiritual life; we are adjusting our expectations to match the reality of being God’s man.

Excerpted from Every Man, God’s Man (page 198)

BE HOLY.
BE A MAN.


0 Comments

Holding Apple responsible for pornograpy

7/26/2013

0 Comments

 
Picture
Chris Sevier, a 36-year-old man from Tennessee, got so addicted to porn videos that his wife took his children and left him. Now he has sued Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), saying the Cupertino, Calif.-based company failed to install any filter in its devices to prevent his affliction.

In a 50-page complaint, Sevier calls Apple a “silent poisoner” responsible for the proliferation of “arousal addiction, sex trafficking, prostitution, and countless numbers of destroyed lives.” Sevier is seeking damages from Apple, but said he will drop the lawsuit if Apple agrees to sell devices with a “safe mode.”

Sevier claims that his addiction started when he “accidentally” replaced the “a-c-e” in Facebook with a “u-c-k.” Sevier said this F***book site “appealed to his biological sensibilities as a male,” and he started to prefer the images on the screen to his own wife.

“His wife abducted his son and disappeared, which was a subsequent consequence of Apple’s decision to sell its computers not on ‘safe mode,’” Sevier argued, adding that until he got the MacBook, he had never seen porn of any kind or been to a strip club or sex shop. “The Plaintiff became depressed and despondent, unable to work as a result of observing porn on his MacBook and the impact it caused.”

The lengthy description also blames Apple for helping to put old-fashioned sex shops out of business, ignoring the irony of several thousand other words describing the destructive effect porn has on people and societies. Sevier also compared porn, at various points, to cigarettes, weapons, alcohol and cocaine.

Sevier even took some time to remember the good ol' days of America in the 1950s, before things like the Internet and the ACLU created homosexuality, sex trafficking and prostitution. Apple, apparently, is responsible for turning people away from “the unquenchable reality that God is real.”

“Man has a spiritual side to him,” Sevier said. “Porn poisons the spiritual side of man.”

Perhaps the strangest part of the lawsuit comes at the very beginning, where Sevier includes a YouTube link to an edit of Zedd’s “Shave It Up” he made with his electronic music project, Ghost Wars. Sevier said the edit, called “The Demise of Guys,” a reference to a Phillip Zimbardo book, summarizes the facts of the lawsuit. Sevier even requested that Apple employ Zimbardo, a Stanford psychologist, to write the notice consumers are required to read in order to remove the porn filter.

This post was written by Ryan Neal.  For the original post with comments, go to:  http://www.ibtimes.com/apple-sued-porn-addiction-man-says-macbook-cost-his-marriage-kids-1345831#


0 Comments

Affair proofing your marriage

6/13/2013

0 Comments

 
Picture
We've spent the last two days discussing how affairs happen and the fallout to having an affair.  Today, we will make a few pointers about fighting the temptation to stray from our marriages and families:

1.  Build the marriage relationship - Communication is the key here.  Staying in touch with each other's feelings, pressures and tensions will keep you focused on where your relationship needs work.  Caring enough to meet these mutual needs in your marriage will help make your relationship a meaningful one in which to be involved.  This kind of communication takes time.  Make time for each other.

2.  The affair process.  Read thru again the 12-step affair process.  Then read it with your spouse.  Come to mutual agreements about how to relate to the opposite sex.  The most important idea to remember is that all sin starts in the mind.  If we control it there, it cannot grow.  Turn your sexual fantasies toward your marriage.  Control your thoughts.  Pray for good dreams.  God will help you manage this sexual dimension in your life.

3.  Walk with God together.  Be regular in fellowship with Christians.  Be regular in worship.  Be regular in your devotional life.  Pray together as a couple.  Go to meetings for men at your church.  Men need to have a place where they can discuss openly and honestly with other men about the tensions and problems they encounter in life.  Find a place of ministry in your church.  Talk to your pastor, let him know your weaknesses and have him pray for you.  

4.  Count the cost.  It helps us to keep our heads in the real world if we think about the consequences of infidelity.  Think about how quickly your credibility and Christian witness would be compromised.  Don't think temptation will never happen to you.  No one is immune.  Think about the fact that sin grieves our Lord.  Think about how much it would hurt your wife, kids, parents, and in-laws.  Even though thinking of the consequences of our sin can help us resist temptation, we are only truly moral in a biblical sense when we refuse to sin primarily out of our love for God.

Our goal in developing moral character is to get to the place where we act faithfully and consistently simply because to do otherwise would bring harm to the person and cause of the God we love.

Only a real and lasting love for God will guard and buttress our fight against the enemy.  

This information is taken from TEMPTATIONS MEN FACE

BE HOLY.
BE A MAN.


0 Comments

My sins aren't as bad as yours

5/30/2013

2 Comments

 
Picture
A temptation on the road to reverence is to stop and gawk at the wrecks in other people’s lives. Maybe it makes us feel better that while we may be struggling with one thing or another at least we’re not like that. Jesus tells a story of two men who go to the temple to pray. One was a gawker—that appears to be the audience Jesus intends this particular story to teach.

To some who were confident of their own righteousness and looked down on everyone else, Jesus told this parable: “Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. The Pharisee stood by himself and prayed: ‘God, I thank you that I am not like other people—robbers, evildoers, adulterers—or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week and give a tenth of all I get.’ But the tax collector stood at a distance. He would not even look up to heaven, but beat his breast and said, ‘God, have mercy on me, a sinner.’ I tell you that this man, rather than the other, went home justified before God. For all those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted” (Luke 18:9-14, NIV).

Other people’s sins are much easier to confess than our own. Other people’s brokenness is much easier to mock than our own. But God seems to be seeking something other than “holiness police.”  God loves those who, rather than sizing up the difference between themselves and other “more sinful” people, instead bow low in recognition of their own unworthiness compared to Holy God. The road to reverence is paved with humility.

Prayer Position

Notice the position of the two men in prayer. The Pharisee stands on his own two feet proud of his goodness but the tax collector “would not even look up to heaven.” One was confident in his righteousness and the other knew God was good and he was not. The tax collector trusted God enough, or at least was desperate enough, to cry out for mercy. Which one does Jesus say went home forgiven?

God desires honesty. God wants truth. “If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness. If we claim we have not sinned, we make him out to be a liar and his word is not in us” (1 John 1:8-12, NIV).

The Same Boat

We’re all in the same boat. We’ve all sinned. We’ve all fallen short of the glory of God. None of us are all we were created to be, but yet somehow we have the audacity to condemn others while seeking pardon for ourselves. Or do we think we are without sin? We sing, “Amazing Grace how sweet the sound that saved a wretch like me,” but then try to claim it exclusively. Saved a wretch like me, not a wretch like you, you’re the wrong kind of wretch.

None of this is intended to say that sin is not serious. It is. It is deadly. It separates us from Holy God. But God is greater than our sin. God is also greater than our neighbor’s sin. Remember what Jesus told Nicodemus?  “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him” (John 3:16-17). While we need to take sin seriously we must take God even more seriously.

Love the Sinner, Hate the Sin?

Sometimes Christians are seen as hateful when we point out the sins of others. But we claim this is not true. We “love the sinner and hate the sin.” I’m sure I’ve said that myself. But just this week I saw a quote by singer and humorist Mark Lowry with some important words to consider. They are helpful as we wrestle with sin and grace and how to live reverently. Mark said, “Love the sinner, hate the sin? How about: Love the sinner, hate your own sin! I don’t have time to hate your sin. There are too many of you! Hating my sin is a full-time job. How about you hate your sin, I’ll hate my sin and let’s just love each other!”

But too many of us are like the Pharisee in the story. We thank God we are not like those… fill in your blank here. Those drunks, those adulterers, those gays, those right wingers, those liberals, those “whatever we are not” people whose sins we want to highlight rather than allow the light of Christ to work in us. It is irreverent to do what God does not, to rank the sins of others as worse than our own. Since we are all in the same boat maybe we shouldn’t be so eager to see it sink.

Mercy Triumphs

James challenges us: “If you really keep the royal law found in Scripture, ‘Love your neighbor as yourself’, you are doing right. But if you show favoritism, you sin and are convicted by the law as lawbreakers.  For whoever keeps the whole law and yet stumbles at just one point is guilty of breaking all of it. For he who said, ‘You shall not commit adultery’, also said, ‘You shall not murder.’ If you do not commit adultery but do commit murder, you have become a lawbreaker. Speak and act as those who are going to be judged by the law that gives freedom, because judgment without mercy will be shown to anyone who has not been merciful. Mercy triumphs over judgment” (James 2:8-13, NIV).

It’s stunning to consider we have broken the entire law. All of it! How in the world can we then turn around and point a condemning finger at others when their sin is ours as well? But if our guilt is stunning, this is more so. God has mercy on us. God casts our sin as far as the east is from the west. Through Jesus Christ we find not only pardon for our sin but power to become all we were created to be. Our response to God is worship. The appropriate response to others is mercy and love.

A Journey of Grace

Though we journey toward reverence we’re not there yet. We couldn’t have even started on our own. It’s all about grace. Grace, grace, grace: grace to draw us, grace to forgive us and grace to make us as we should be.

One thing I know is that gawking slows us down. Sometimes it even causes us to wreck. Let’s keep our eyes on the road.

This excerpt is from the book, Irreverent: Finding Our Way Home. Order the book here or the Kindle edition here.

This post is taken from Seedbed, provided by Rev John Leece.  For the original post with comments, go to:  http://seedbed.com/feed/noticing-other-peoples-sins/

BE HOLY.
BE A MAN.


2 Comments

Having a terrific marriage

3/14/2013

0 Comments

 
Picture
This diagram is taken from the Domestic Abuse Intervention Project.  It is often called The Duluth Model.  Even though it is not blatantly from a Christian or other faith tradition, it offers much for how men, in particular Christian men, should view marriage.  I encourage you to download the pdf for this diagram.  Just click on the wheel and you will receive that file.

A messed up marriage is based on power and control.  However, if you notice, a marvelous marriage is one of equality and respect.  A Christian man will have a marriage that involves these eight factors:

1.  Non-threatening behavior - your wife is comfortable in expressing herself
2.  Respect - valuing your wife's opinion and being emotionally affirming
3.  Trust & support - supporting your wife's goals
4.  Honesty & accountability - communicating openly and truthfully to your wife
5.  Responsible parenting - sharing parental responsibility
6.  Shared responsibility - making family decisions together
7.  Economic partnership - making financial decisions together
8.  Negotiation & fairness - seeking mutually satisfactory compromises

What does the Bible say about marriage?
 - Marriage should be honored
 - God instituted and blessed marriage
 - A man who loves his wife loves himself
 - There is no fear in love
 - If we love one another, God lives in us and His love is made complete in us
 - Love is patient and kind

So, how does your marriage stack up to what the Bible says?
Do you honor your marriage?
Do you present a marital atmosphere of love and respect?
Are you patient and kind?

BE HOLY.
BE A MAN.


0 Comments

Temptation:  Practical Advice

2/23/2013

0 Comments

 
Picture
There is an important principle in handling temptation.   Did you know that many times, you can resist temptation?  God tells us to submit to Him and then when we resist temptation, it will flee.

Resistance can be a matter of remembering this acronym:
                     HALTSS
                                                          
H - are you HUNGRY?  If your stomach is rumbling, if you feel weak from not having eaten for a while and you find yourself entertaining ungodly thoughts, go get something to eat.  The renewed energy will give you strength to think clearer.  If it's healthy food, you will feel even better than devouring a whole pizza.

A - are you ANGRY?  Harboring anger makes you susceptible to temptation.  I'm not saying anger is always bad.  But dwelling on angry feelings and not letting go of things puts you in a precarious position where its easier to say yes to temptation.

L - are you LONELY?  Being lonely causes a man to do stupid things.  If you find yourself doing things you need not do because you're chasing away loneliness, then find a good male friend and spend some time together praying for each other.  In this modern society, you will have a number of friends immediately available by Facebook, cell phone, texting, and/or email .  

T - are you TIRED?  When you're tired, your resistance to temptation is greatly weakened.  If you find yourself tempted to do something sinful, just go to bed.  Get some sleep.

S - are you SICK?  Take some medication to improve your symptoms.  It will increase your resistance to the bug of temptation.

S - are you SAD?  Find a good male friend and spend some time praying for each other.  Remember that the joy of the LORD is your strength.  

This is the principle to handling temptation:  submit to God and remember HALTSS  

You can't use the excuse, "I just couldn't help myself, after all I'm only human."   

God gave you a brain, you're not stupid.  
You're not an animal that just reacts.  


You can HALTSS temptation...

BE HOLY.
BE A MAN.


This posted was adapted from an article in the Grapevine in 1971


0 Comments
<<Previous

    Rules for commenting:

    1.  Be respectful  
    2.  Refer to rule #1

    All comments may not be approved.

    Note that many identifying details about individuals in these posts are not accurate.  Their identity is protected, except for those individuals who are being honored or are public figures.

    RSS Feed

    Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner

    Categories

    All
    Abortion
    Abraham
    Abstinence
    Abuse
    Accountability
    Adam
    Adam Yauch
    Addictions
    Admiration
    Adultery
    Affair
    Amos
    Angels
    Anger
    Anniversary
    Anoint
    Anonymous
    Anxiety
    Atheism
    Avoidant
    Bad Boy
    Battle
    Beastie Boys
    Beautiful
    Bestiality
    Betrayal
    Bird
    Blame
    Bobby Petrino
    Bondage
    Book Review
    Brian Head Welch
    Brothel
    B.T. Roberts
    Camping
    Cancer
    Challenge
    Change
    Chaotic
    Character
    Children
    Choice
    Christmas
    Church
    Church Camp
    Closed Door
    Compulsions
    Confession
    Confident
    Control
    Courage
    Covenant
    Creator
    Crown
    Crucifixion
    Darkness
    Death
    Deception
    Decision
    Demons
    Depression
    Detachment
    Devotions
    Dez Bryant
    Differences
    Dilemma
    Dirty
    Discipleship
    Disgusting
    Divorce
    Domestic Violence
    Domination
    Doubt
    Dreams
    Dr Hart8bb80a7b00
    Dwayne Allen
    Dysfunction
    Easter
    Eden
    Ego
    Eleazar
    Elitism
    Empty
    Envy
    Ephesians
    Equality
    Erectile Dysfunction
    Esau
    Eternity
    Euthanasia
    Evil
    Exhibitionism
    Eyes
    Facebook
    Faithfulness
    Fantasy
    Fasting
    Father
    Favorites
    Fear
    Fellatio
    Fighting
    Fishing
    Flashing
    Flattery
    Flesh
    Force
    Forgiveness
    Gentleman
    Girls Gone Wild
    G.K. Chesteron
    Goals
    God
    Good Friday
    Grace
    Gratitude
    Greek
    Guard
    Guilt
    Heart
    Heaven
    Hebrew
    Hell
    Henri Nouwen
    Histrionic
    Hogging
    Holiness
    Hollow
    Honesty
    Honor
    Hope
    Humility
    Humor
    Ichabod
    Idols
    Impurity
    Individuality
    Input
    Insane Clown Posse
    Integrity
    Intent
    Intimacy
    Isaac
    Islam
    Jack Schaap
    Jamaica
    Jealousy
    Jimmy Needham
    Job
    Joy
    J.R.R. Tolkien
    Judgmentalism
    Justice
    Kindness
    King David
    Kittens
    Komboloib7e292a311
    Korn
    Larry Norman
    Leave It To Beaver
    Lies
    Light
    Listening
    Loneliness
    Love
    Lust
    Lying
    Macho
    Manners
    Marriage
    Masculinity
    Masturbation
    Maturity
    Mca
    Meditation
    Messianic
    Meticulous
    Mighty
    Missions
    Money
    Monogamy
    Moses
    Motivations
    Movies
    Music
    Normal
    Obedience
    Obscenity
    Open Door
    Parenting
    Passiveaggressive2ed940c88b
    Pastor
    Path
    Perfection
    Personality Disorders
    P.O.D.
    Politics
    Pornography
    Pornograpy
    Power
    Practical
    Prayer
    Predator
    Prejudice
    Premature Ejaculaton
    Preparation
    Pride
    Problems
    Promises
    Protection
    Providence
    Purity
    Quechua
    Quiz
    Racism
    Regret
    Religious
    Repentance
    Reputation
    Research
    Respect
    Responsibility
    Rest
    Resurrection
    Revival
    Righteousness
    Robots
    Roughhousing
    Routine
    Rules
    Rut
    Sabbath
    Sacrifice
    Sadism
    Salvation
    Sanctification
    Satisfaction
    Selfishness
    Self Love
    Self-love
    Service
    Sex
    Sexism
    Sexuality
    Sexual Response
    Sexual Response
    Shame
    Sin
    Singing
    Snobbery
    Soldier
    Sovereignty
    Stalking
    Stephen Hawking
    Step-parenting
    Strong
    Success
    Succubus
    Suicide
    Swearing
    Sword
    Teenagers
    Temper
    Temptation
    Tenth Ave North
    Testing
    Theology
    Thinking
    Thomas Cogswell Upham
    Tim Tebow
    Tournament Male
    Tradition
    Trafficking
    Trapped
    Trauma
    Triggers
    Trust
    Truth
    U2
    Uncle Buddy
    Unity
    Violence
    Virtue
    Vulnerability
    Warrior
    Watchman Nee
    Waywardness
    What Is A Man
    Women
    Worry
    Worship
    Wussification
    Year In Review
    Zombies

    Archives

    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    June 2012
    May 2012
    April 2012
    March 2012
    February 2012
    January 2012

IRONSTRIKES

Men Forging Men