Labels are on everything. They're on clothing, furniture, food packages, medicine, cars, and buildings. Just about everything we encounter has a label of some form. At one level labels are a good thing. They identify things for us. They tells us where we are or what we are buying or eating or wearing or the proficiency of the person performing surgery on our body. So, labels can be good.
Labels can also be bad, especially when it comes to labeling people. Sometimes labels can be added with little to no substantive reason. They exist because someone attached it and for whatever reason, it stuck. Consider the example in John 9:1-3 with Jesus' encounter with the blind man and his ensuing conversation with his disciples, As he went along, he saw a man blind from birth. His disciples asked him, “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?” "Neither this man nor his parents sinned,” said Jesus, “but this happened so that the works of God might be displayed in him." The disciples jumped to a wrong conclusion based upon wrong presupposition. They assumed the worst.
Some labels come as a result of truth, others come as a result of error. Paul instructs Timothy "Don’t let anyone look down on you because you are young, but set an example for the believers in speech, in conduct, in love, in faith and in purity." (1 Tim 4:12) In other words, "don't let someone label you incorrectly." Being a leader has side effects. One of the side effects of leading others, is that people will label you. Good or bad, like it or not, it will happen. You can't change the fact that others will label you. What you can change is how they label you.
How would someone label you? Is that label accurate? Is that a label you should embrace or reject? If it's not accurate or desired, what must you do to change it?
"We need to be seeking out truth. Leaders must not be afraid of truth." Henry Cloud
Monday, November 14, 2011
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
What's your passion?
Passion is a word that has frequently been used to indicate something more than romantic endeavors. This other kind of passion has more to do with obsession, fervor, or zeal. We
can be passionate about many things in life: family, friends, or the taste of a
perfectly smoked rack of ribs. Passion can be positive or negative. But there
is one defining factor about passion, whether for people or things: it’s
consuming.
The Bible states, in John 2:17, that Jesus’ passion for his
Father’s House consumed him. In this text, Jesus is enraged that the Temple had
been turned into a “den of thieves.” In spite of the fact that the Temple was
misused by the greedy, led by leaders who were, “white washed tombs full of
dead men’s bones,” Jesus never lost his passion. He looked beyond what was
wrong with the system and saw what was right with it. He didn’t allow the
abuses, power mongering, and political games that were common practice within
the religious system to set aside God’s purpose for his Temple. Jesus was
passionate.
What about you? What are you passionate about? What consumes
your thoughts, emotions, and dreams? What is the thing that fills you up like
nothing else?
Are you spending a significant amount of time doing what you
are most passionate about? If not, why not? What is one thing you can do to spend more time in your area of passion?
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