Saturday, June 14, 2014

TRUST From – “Lessons Offered to My Kids”

Trust – it is one of the greatest offerings anyone can afford you.  It is a foundation stone in very relationship. As you navigate through life, you will most likely discover that it is one of the more complicated aspects of life.  The reason is simple – 

trust involves relationship and 
all relationships are based on trust.

People trust based upon their belief. Whether they want to admit it or not, people always live their life by their belief. In other words, their actions are the clearest indicator of what they believe.  God’s greatest desire of us is to believe…so much so that He made it the foundation for our salvation. 

John 3:16 “…that he who believes in Him should not perish 
but have everlasting life.”

People relate to people based upon their belief. As a result, people trust you based upon their belief. That belief can be fostered and affected in different ways. Circumstances where a person’s trust is violated affects how that 
person believes you or anyone else can be trusted. Even if they choose 
to trust, there will usually be misgivings and fear that eventually, 
the trust they offer you will be violated “just like last time.”

How a person was raised can affect their ability to trust you. If they were taught, “this is how people are”, they will measure your actions based upon that teaching. You become stereotyped, making it difficult to truly be received at face value.

There is another trust issue that is likely the most powerful. 
People by nature measure you based upon their lives, not just their experiences. Proverbs 23:7 offers that “For as he thinks in his heart, so is he. ‘Eat and drink!’ he says to you, but his heart is not with you.” What a person carries in his heart dictates his belief – about himself, about 
God and about you.

If a person is by nature a “taker”, he will eventually question what you are after in the relationship. If a person is a manipulator, your actions will be measured as manipulation. If a person plays “mind games”, your words will begin to look to them as a mind game.  In short, a person will measure your actions based on how they will act in a given situation.

Jesus identified with this in Luke 6:37-38 when He said, “Judge not, and you shall not be judged. Condemn not, and you shall not be condemned. Forgive, and you will be forgiven. Give, and it will be given to you: good measure, pressed down, shaken together, and running over shall men give into your bosom. For with the same measure that you use, it will be 
measured back to you.”

The common teaching is “Judge not, and you shall not be judged…” meaning that if you judge someone, sooner or later someone will judge you. Actually, God is trying to communicate that because He has forgiven us, refused to condemn us and loved us when He had reason to judge and destroy us, we should be that way toward others. His words in Luke immediately prior to this say, “Be merciful, just as your Father is also merciful.”

But perhaps the greatest key is found in the last phrase, 

“For with the same measure that you use, 
it will be measured back to you.”  

This is where the point is made. People tend to measure each other based upon the measuring cup they use in their own actions. The default position is to expect others to do it the way they would do it. You will find yours is the same.

There is great pain in trust – particularly if you choose to trust in the manner in which I have tried to teach you. My default is to give people the benefit of the doubt – to take them at face value and hope for authenticity. It is what we are taught…

Philippians 4:8 “Finally, brethren, whatever things are true, whatever things are noble, whatever things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of good report, if there is any virtue and if there is anything praiseworthy—meditate on these things.”

You have probably already realized that though you offer these things toward others, it is not going to be reciprocated. Therein is the pain -you trust wholeheartedly only to have your trustworthiness questioned. When it occurs, you find yourself constantly having to prove and reprove yourself. It is painful and wearisome.

Still, the other option is to trust as the world does – to measure trust based on the proof of that trust.  One of my heroes, President Ronald Reagan offered during the breakdown of the cold war, “Trust, but verify.” This is sound advice in dealing with atomic missiles (and other things). It sets a precedent for relationships. People who are ready to lob missiles at you need to be barricaded from your life. They are a danger to you and a threat to your future.

But not everyone is an enemy. Most are just caught in their own measure of life. For them, you are better to trust as God does.  Thank Him every day that He does not extend Reagan’s “Trust but verify” logic into your life.  

God chooses to trust you when He has verified that you are going to completely ignore His heart. 

He trusts you enough to let you “pull away” from His presence, 
even when it means allowing you to create a breach 
in the relationship.

People you trust will love you. They will also fail you. Don’t let that be your life measure. Be authentic if no one else is willing to be, for God is. Trust as God trusts. And in times when those around you fail you remember: He does not fail you.


© 2014 – All Rights Reserved

RESPECT From - “Lessons Offered to My Kids.”

These days, it seems that respect comes at a premium.  There is a difference between those who act respectful towards you and those who truly respect you.  This is a principle I have labored to instill into the minds of my children. Life is full of people who will “do and say the right thing”. However, if you look long enough, you will soon discover what they really believe.  After all, actions speak louder than words.  Even if you are a master at measuring your words, the Bible offers a great truth concerning what you say. Matthew 12:34 teaches us that “out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks.”

Sooner or later, if your respect you demonstrate toward another person is not real, it will come out.  
There is a mindset that has found root in this generation. It was 
fostered on the premise, “I don’t mind you not respecting someone. I mind you doing it out loud.”  I have heard that offered in school settings, from mentors to their protégés, even from employers to employees.  It has lessened the notion of respect to an action offered rather than a sentiment felt. You can see the results in everything from customer service to employer employee relations. 
You can especially see it in our schools – 
particularly in middle school ages when 
such ideas are being fostered.

Honor and respect are different.  There are people for whom I have little respect. Yet, because of their position, I choose to demonstrate honor toward them.  In other words, respect is still in motion, but it is tied to the position or office that person holds.

Respect is important.  I work diligently to find a reason to respect those around me, even when their opinions and beliefs may run contrary to mine.  I also work diligently to be respectable. After all, 
respect is something that is earned.  
Where I run into problems is in dealing with someone who is disrespectful. Or worse, that one who is seemingly respectful on the outside but in reality has very little respect for you.

I caution my children regarding such people. They are the ones who can bring damage.  They are the ones not to trust. Their false respect is about themselves. Consider: if they really do not respect you and their respect comes out of some sort of requirement, what is in it for them.  What do they need from you that would cause them to feign respect? They are the takers!  They try to increase the value of their own lives by lessening the value of yours.

Such people should lose access to you. They do not believe in you. They are not really for you. Ergo, they are ultimately against you. If they tolerate you for their own end, they are not deserving of the benefit received 
by being around you.

Jesus Himself gave little time to Pharisees. Because they had no respect for Him, there was little He could offer their lives anyway.  He set His focus on those who were intent on pursuing something better.

Learn the lesson. Beware of those who feign respect.  Limit access to anyone who has little or no respect for you.  Their intent is to grow by tearing you down. More importantly, never BE that person. You are givers not takers. Look for the real value in people and find ways to foster the good in that value.  Give honor to whom honor is due and find ways to genuinely respect the good that God has placed in people.

-Dad


© 2014 Timothy Byler - All Rights Reserved

Blogging Again

Hey All,

This is just to let you know that I am returning to the blog after a hiatus.

It's good to be back.

T

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Overcoming



Life is full of trials. That sounds like a cliché but it is true.  I am a sanguine personality and usually an upbeat, “the glass is half full” sort of person. Yet, once in a while, I get hit with the unexpected storm.

Last week, I encountered such a storm.  On the eve of my daughter’s graduation from high school, I had an allergy attack that developed into a serious sinus infection. That infection was followed by a list of incidents that led to severe damage to my ears.

Pressure led to breakage, blood pouring from my left ear. Infection increased. Vertigo set in. Prior to not being able to hear anything, I began hearing things in my left ear in a different tone than I was hearing from my right, which means everyone had two voices – sort of like a robot. Every musical note was heard as two separate notes at the same time.  Then the sound just went away.  A new sound took its place in the form of tinnitus. I currently
have seven distinguishable tones ringing loudly 
inside my head at all times. It is torturous.

For a musician, a pilot and a pastor and coach, your ears are everything. To lose your ability to hear (and walk more than three feet without drifting into a wall) is vital. The physical pain was intense, but not as intense as the emotional trauma that was occurring. The urge to
give into fear was overwhelming. 

I began to shut down, physically and emotionally.

I spent most of the last week and a half in bed.  I tried to work on my computer but the combination of Vicodin, fear, self-pity and that infernal ringing in my head made those efforts futile. Add to the mix that I am engaged in a continuing education course which requires a weekly class via conference call – which did not go well for me either and I ended up measuring life in terms of failure.  The glass is NOT half full! In fact, the bottom of the glass is clearly visible.  I actually hit that moment at the tail end of my class on Tuesday.  

I should mention here that my wife has been an absolute angel through all of this and has been a source of phenomenal strength.  One of her greatest gifts is in knowing just what to say, and more importantly, what NOT to say. She sat quietly with me and held my arm. In a few moments gently reminded me that God not only gifted me but created specific purpose in my life. She reminded me that He was aware of not only my situation, but the solution that would be required to provide for the fulfillment of that purpose.

I made a decision to shake off the feelings I was harboring and refocus.  Within a couple of minutes, the phone rang.  It was an old friend who called for the purpose of helping me book a prophetic worship conference in his area. He explained the need in the area for the unique ministry God has allowed us to bring, and the importance of the timing of that conference.  Fifteen minutes after hanging up the phone (and feeling MUCH better) my phone alerted me to a text message, which included an invitation to speak at a men’s conference. It was followed by a facebook communication inviting me to minister at multiple churches on an upcoming trip to Dominican Republic and an 
hour later, confirmation of yet another conference in Mexico.

As my condition deteriorated, I basically began to avoid the telephone and the computer. I was working on my travel schedule but even laid that down in frustration. As I refocused, God met me in a unique way – both in the timing of scheduling and confirmation of meetings and more so in the encouragement offered by my wife and by my friend on the phone call.

When adversity strikes, it strikes hard. The worst kind of adversity finds a way to hit you at the core of all you do.

The fundamental key in overcoming adversity is to remember who you are and to focus on your faith in God and on your purpose.

Can I hear the way I need to yet, No, but I am confident that I will. Can I do what I have to do to fulfill my purpose? Yes. I am as determined to do so as God is to provide the mechanism to make it possible. The only thing to stop me is to quit – something I cannot and will not do. There is no victory without a battle and I am determined to emerge from this victorious. 

I AM OVERCOMING!

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Success and Purpose

Success demands singleness of purpose. I believe that it was Vince Lombardi who said that.  And it is true. Success does require singleness of purpose.  Though your actions touch different aspects of your life, when those actions share a common purpose, they can work together to bring success in every area of your life.

I have often used diet as an example.  People are constantly dieting - looking for a way to shed unwanted pounds.  Fad diets gain huge popularity because of quick (if short lived) results.  Even people who reach for a more sensible, disciplined diet often tend to find themselves on the wrong end of that diet before it is over. 



I have noticed that the ones who have been able to find a more permanent change in their life through dieting, do so because their purpose for dieting is different than the purpose others share.  Their initial results may stay the same, but the end results prove to also be purpose driven.

For instance, many people diet because they want to feel better.  The problem is, once you feel better, you want to feel other things. You want to again experience the joy you remember from the sensational foods you ate, which gave you cause to diet in the first place.  "A little won't hurt." Unfortunately and too often, little becomes much in the hands of the dieter!



Others diet for health reasons.  The doctor says, "if you do not lose weight, you will have a heart attack." That launches people on diets. However, as the initial fear subsides, the desire to regulate one's self into that sort of restriction is short lived. Once the imminent heart attack misses you, 
it is easy to forget the words of the doctor.

Those who I have met who have found the best success in their diet, were not really focused on dieting.  They were not even focused on losing weight.  


They were focused on bringing specific changes
to their lifestyle.  

They established goals in their life, ranging from "I want to run a marathon" to "I want to walk my granddaughter down the aisle." Their weight loss and hence, their diet was not the goal.  It was simply a tool used to accomplish greater purpose.  The diet was successful because they were reaching to achieve success in other areas.

While dieting for an achievement goal such as running a marathon is great, think about how much more powerful the achievement when you tie this process to the fulfillment of a life purpose.  I have a friend who fought back type II diabetes.  He adjusted his diet, exercise and lifestyle and gained control over his blood sugar issue. His goal - respond to the call God placed on his life for the mission field.  He knew that as a diabetic, he could not be an effective missionary in a place where he could not fulfill his purpose in a land where medicine and healthcare were scarce.  His singleness of purpose brought success, not only to his mission, but to his health.  It brought success to longevity of life to be shared with his wife and children.  The discipline necessary to accomplish his health goal spurred discipline in other area of his life, which brought greater success to his spiritual walk, his finances and his leadership of others.


When you can discover and embrace the purpose God places in your life, you can then tie your dreams and goals to that purpose.  When you do, the empowerment God offers for the fulfillment of that purpose begins to affect every other area of your life.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Capacity and Capability



Man has been created with amazing capabilities. Throughout history, the things that man has been able to accomplish seemingly break the barriers of natural thought.  Man said, “I will fly” and found a way to do so. Man developed ways of combating disease at levels so miniscule as not to be able to be seen with a naked eye. Man has discovered breakthroughs in nano-technology, building things at cellular levels. He is built with a fundamental capacity to create. Man also has capacity to acquire and retain knowledge. He has the ability to process that knowledge in a way that leads to discovery and invention. It is this gift embedded in the heart and mind of man that allows him to accomplish. 

Ironically, it is this same gift (his capacity to attain, and process knowledge) that can also incapacitate man.  As a creative being, man has the potential to see the best of any circumstance.  He also has the ability to see the worst.  Your mind is designed to paint a creative picture of the future. It then has an uncanny knack of traveling in the direction of that painting.  In short, you go in the direction you look.

A number of years ago, I was traveling through the Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas Metroplex. A driver who picked me up at DFW airport gave me one of the scariest rides I have ever been on.  4:30 p.m. is not the happiest
commute time for this region and traffic is fast and heavy.
 This driver insisted on talking to me and, as I was sitting
in the back of the car, kept turning her head to speak.
Every time she turned her head she changed lanes,
oblivious to the traffic. She steered into the
direction she faced.  By nature
it is what we do.

There is an old adage that  
the thing you fear the most comes upon you.  
There is some reality to this in that when you program yourself to expect certain circumstances, you unconsciously begin to create the environment for those circumstances to occur.  For instance, you carry the fear that someone is not going to like or trust you. You contemplate that thought and build upon it until it becomes real in your mind. Soon, every word and action spoken by that individual begins to register in your mind as happening in the way you fear.  Your reaction feeds the process until the situation actually does materialize.  You steer in the direction you look.

For this reason, it is important to pay attention to how you process information.  You need to gain knowledge. You also need to have a true and objective perspective on the knowledge you have. Some people are “glass half full” people. Others are “glass half empty” people. While we mark this up to personality, God doesn’t. He instructs us to be careful in how we choose to view life.  We are supposed to see the glass half full.

Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things. Philippians 4:8

This is not saying “paint a rosy picture, however false it may be, and all will be well”. God instructs us to be honest and true – but positively so – or to put it another way, embrace that truth in the best and most positive light.  If something is wrong, focus on the solution that will bring right out of that situation.

It works with relationships, employment, personal development – every aspect of your life. It can make the difference in whether or not you live life at your fullest potential or always choose to avoid the road not taken.  Do not let your mind keep you from being all God created you to be. Bring every thought into captivity and hold onto your knowledge of God, how He created you and how He established you with purpose. How you choose to think will make a huge difference in the outcome of your life.  

Remember what Henry Ford said:
“Whether you think you can or think you can’t, you’re right.”

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Time That Moves Faster



Time is moving faster and faster.  I looked up today and realized we are already through the first week in February.  How did that happen? It makes me consider the writing found from the prophet Joel:

“Be glad then you children of Zion, and rejoice in the Lord your Go; for He has given you the former rain faithfully, and He will cause the rain to come down for you – the former rain, and the latter in the first month.” Joel 2:23

The Bible has many references to times and seasons and even offers that there is wisdom to be found in the counsel of those who are discerners of times and seasons.

There are two things you often here.

Time is Money and Knowledge is Power. 

Without even applying biblical application to this it is easy to consider that as knowledge increases; that knowledge infused into time allows for greater productivity. The more productive your time, the more value can be drawn from it. Add to that that the bible tells us that wisdom is the principal thing and instructs us to get wisdom, knowledge and understanding, and learn to steward time correctly. It all adds up to a greater measure of productivity in our lives.

Time is moving faster because life is moving faster. But that also means that the advancement of God’s Kingdom happens faster.

There is great encouragement to be found in Isaiah:

“The sun shall no longer be your light by day, nor for brightness shall the moon give light to you; but the Lord will be an everlasting light, and your God your glory.”

“Your sun shall no longer go down nor shall your moon withdraw itself; for the Lord will be your everlasting light, and the days of your mourning will be ended.”

“Also, your people shall all be righteous; they shall inherit the land forever, the branch of My planting, the work of My hands, that I may be glorified.”

"A little one shall become a thousand, and a small one a strong nation. I the Lord will hasten it in its time.”   Isaiah 60:19-22

Added to natural knowledge is our knowledge of the Holy One. As our intimacy with and knowledge of God increases, the light He offers is what becomes our brightness and sustains us. Our time becomes measured by our relationship with him rather than by the simple turning of night and day. Our mourning wanes because we find ever increasing life in Him.  He hastens this advancement of our lives in His time.

As we increase in our relationship with Him, His rain comes to us in abundance. Our seasons take on different dimension and seemingly run together. Back to the reference in Joel: Our threshing floors become full of wheat (the bread) and our vats overflow with wine (the blood). I other words, our relationship with Him grows stronger and steadfast. Further, God then establishes the restoration of that which the locusts have eaten. This is representative of that which the mindset of our world and situations have devoured in our lives. As we grow in Him, that devouring dissipates and new life begins to grow.

I am developing an appreciation for the faster momentum. For me it is an indication that we are moving in a positive direction. And, I am looking forward to seeing what the former and latter rain combined will produce!