Monday, May 30, 2022

The Right Strength

 ©️2022 Dr. Timothy Byler - All Rights Reserved

“How many times have you entered a project or engaged in a mission that seems as though it simply isn’t going to occur?” That is a depth charge question. A depth charge question is an open ended one, designed to be dropped into the waters wherein you are swirling, and when you make contact with it, it explodes and randomly exposes areas of weakness.


Often when people talk about vision and purpose, they put their best foot forward. They tend to hide the vulnerabilities. Strength beckons unto strength the way that deeps calls into deep. And face it: we like everyone to see that we are strong and have it all together, so we put our best foot forward. That is not how we sharpen one another. The benefit of being relatable in leadership is that when someone has a weakness in an area, someone else who has a strength can serve to help that individual “shore up” that

area of vulnerability. That is Biblical, by the way.


One of the greatest hindrances to progress is found in operating in the wrong strength. Sometimes the tool we use is simply not strong enough. But often, the tool is way too much for the task. By example, years ago I was playing a concert when I broke a string on my guitar. The strings are held at the bridge (the base) of the guitar by a simple plastic peg shoved into the wood. For some reason, I could not get that plastic peg to budge! There is a tool designed to work the peg free but of course, in the moment that I needed it, I managed to leave it on my work table where I had restrung the guitar the day before. In desperation, I looked and found a pair of pliers. GREAT! That will do the trick. It did. The plastic pin responded immediately and released its grip on my broken string. The plastic pin also cracked under the pressure and when I went to install the new string, the pin was now useless. I used the wrong tool and applied the wrong strength. 


There is an old eastern saying: “Don’t use a cannon to kill a mosquito.” Another example is a moment from a favorite television series, “NCIS”. Special Agent Tony DiNozzo was working with his boss, Special Agent Gibbs, on a murder investigation in a Marine unit. Tony made a statement that the “the problem with the unit was a lack of discipline.” Gibbs replied, “Or too much.” Applying too much strength is often more detrimental than not applying enough. I’ve broken lug nuts off of vehicles. I’ve scorched clothing that I was ironing by applying too much heat when I didn’t get the desired results. Each effort created more and in some cases, permanent damage. I didn’t need more strength. I needed more patience. 

Things have to happen in God’s timing. 






As I write this, I am looking out over a newly planted field in central Pennsylvania. For me this is day four. On day one, it was just freshly harrowed dirt - or so it seemed. The next morning, I looked up and there were tiny sprouts with one little leaf reaching out of the dirt. Nothing seemed to change over the next two days and ai was reminded of how patient s farmer must be in waiting for his crop to strengthen. It is in a very vulnerable stage. Birds, critters (farm term), and weather can all play a devastating role in the outcome of that harvest. This morning, on day four, I looked out and there was a green hue to the landscape. I put on my glasses and looked out and the field had come alive! It was growing all along. It just needed time. And, it needed the farmer to recognize that the timing that God placed into the seed had to be fulfilled as it was designed - in God’s strength.


Recently my friend John Amato made this observation about Abraham in the Bible. Abraham had a revelation of what God had promised and even instructed. He was to raise up a nation. That is a tall order, particularly when that started with birthing a son. Abraham was an old man who was married to an old, barren woman. They both wanted to please God and to fulfill purpose, but they could not bring themselves to find the right strength. Instead they operated in the wrong strength - their own strength. Sarah sent her handmaiden to Abraham, who impregnated her. She birthed a son named Ishmael. This is not how God had defined what was to happen. They were trying to do His will but they operated in their own strength. It was the wrong strength. To see how overpowering the wrong strength can be, one only has to look at the conflict between the descendants of these two sons THOUSANDS of years later. 


God continued his plan. Sarah became pregnant and gave birth to Isaac, just as God promised. But using the wrong strength created long term damage to the outcome.


Isaac was a product of God’s grace. Ishmael was a product of self effort.


For the believer, applying the right strength is always a lesson in God’s grace. Too often, we try to “make things happen”. We try to get the field to grow, as if the seed listens to our words. We have a responsibility to plant. And we have the responsibility to nurture, water, and protect the field. The one thing we cannot do is force the seed to do what it can only do by God’s design. Anything else is operating in your own strength. 


I have seen preachers do it in a service - trying to persuade people to respond, rather than allowing God to prick their hearts. I have seen politicians and governmental leaders of nations manipulate and “spin” the minds of people into an agenda that erupts and ultimately results in their own long term destruction. I have seen spouses, parents, kids, etc. try to force their way through relationships, often leaving a path of destruction that looks as though a tornado and come through.


In moving toward purpose, the biggest thing to remember is that God’s strength is greater - not just stronger - but better proportioned for the task. He always has the right tool for the right job! If you can remember that - and remember how much He loves you and believe in you, you can rest in the knowledge that He who started a work in you will be faithful to complete it in you. And you can know that the same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, and He will quicken (sharpen, stimulate, brighten, and burn more brightly - hone for the task) you!


Be patient. Apply the right amount of strength - God’s strength. At let your field grow and produce a harvest! In due season you will reap if you do not let yourself grow weary!


FORWARD!

Tuesday, May 17, 2022

Think Different

 ©️2022 Dr. Timothy Byler - All Rights Reserved

“Think Different.” This phrase became the advertisement slogan of Apple Computer Inc. in 1997. It was interesting that instead of considering what could happen if a person would expand their mind with a broader path of thought, some people attacked this major corporation’s new slogan as a grammatical error.


Thirty second grammar lesson: “Think differently would be correct if it follows the typical grammatical path of an adverb (think) being followed by an adjective (differently). However, the word different can be used as an adverb or an adjective. By example, consider this quote that was attributed to  Aman Jassal - “Read different to think differently; [the] world is already into [a] rat race.” 

(Dr. Albert P. Rayan - New Indian Express, ©️2016)


The argument caused me to think (see what I did there?). How often, when presented with something that challenges your current way of thinking, do you default to what you know, rather than allowing it for the moment to expand what you know. I am an “ol’ skool” guy. I like percolated coffee, 60’s cars, 70’s sitcoms, 80’s music, and movies from all of those eras. It is hard for me to think that the things I loved in the 90’s are now thirty years old! It is also hard for me to think that things I have always known have changed as technology, 

knowledge, and…well the world has changed. 


I will offer this by example. In the 80’s and 90’s, I worked in the automotive and transportation industry. One constant that we knew then was that if a person was replacing two tires on their car, we would instruct them to put the new tires on the front of the car - the wheels that would steer the car. It made sense. You wanted the car to be able to turn, and while you want traction from the drive wheels, you do not want the drive wheels to over-control the steering wheels. With the advent of front-wheel-drive, the rule stayed the same through the 90’s. Now, the drive tires and steering tires are on the same front wheels. 

The back tires just go along for the ride. 


One day the rules changed. The new recommendation was to put the new tires on the BACK of the car, leaving the older, more worn tires on the front of the car. That made NO sense to me. In fact, it flew in the face of everything I have been taught in the field! Upon further reflection, it did NOT oppose what I had learned on the race track, or in snowy and icy conditions. In those conditions, if you start to break traction, your natural tendency is to let off the accelerator. This was actually taught as practice in rear wheel drive cars. The back wheels decelerate, drawing the front of the car back into a modicum of control. Feather the throttle. Turn into the skid. Survive, recover and drive through it. However, in a front-wheel-drive car, if you let off of the accelerator, the FRONT wheels slow down. The back of the car does NOT! When that happens, the back of the car slides around and you go into a spin. In a front-wheel-drive car, instead of letting off, you continue to accelerate a little. The front tires keep traction and pull the rest of the car back into submission. During those years, people avoided buying front wheel drive cars because of this issue. In fact, I spent time on a skid pad with purchasers for law enforcement vehicles, trying to recover the sales contract we were about to lose because their department wrecked about a half dozen of their new Ford Taurus Interceptors in a couple of weeks. (I won BTW!)


All of this knowledge did not stop me from arguing with the person who wanted to put the two new tires I was purchasing for a friend’s vehicle on the BACK of his front-wheel-drive car. Regardless of my experience, my train of thought was stuck in what I had previously been taught and even personally recommended. Then, she (Great! some young girl is gonna educate ME about cars!) began to explain that in a skid, the back of the car will come around and spin you but if the tires with the best traction are on the trailing wheels, you have a far better chance of controlling the skid! I let my real life experiences catch up with what I was hearing and 

when I did - when I thought “different”, she was RIGHT!!! (AARRRGGHH!!!)


Steve Jobs thought different. There are certain foundational business truths. There are also certain scientific and technological truths. Both simply are what they are. Yet, Apple suffered calamity when its leaders reach beyond those bare foundational business truths to attach other “adopted” foundational truths. It led to Jobs being fired from his own company… and the systemic failure of that company. To survive, they had to bring the “different”. They had to bring back Steve Jobs. To be a leading company, not only in technology but an entity that has created a culture and a lifestyle required everyone to think different. If you can learn to do that, you can have a distinct advantage over those who are around you. And, you can shape not only what you are doing, but also impact everything that is touched by that which you are doing.


Think Different! It will not stop you from holding onto your foundational beliefs. In fact, we call them foundational beliefs for a reason. The things that are truly foundational remain so. It is only the things that are counted as foundational that really aren’t that are subject to revision. Thinking different will challenge you to reassess what you call foundational until you pare it back to what is truly foundational in God. THAT is when you truly become empowered by what He has afforded you. It is often the things that we attach to those foundational truths that hinder us the most! Jesus kept that message in front of everyone - 

especially disciples and Pharisees. 


The next time you are afforded the opportunity to have your opinion challenged, consider the challenge. You probably are not wrong in certain aspects. But, you may have missed something pertinent that would greatly alter the equation. The ability to look more broadly at something will likely reveal things that you already know, yet have never considered. It may even reveal something you simply never knew!


Remember, when God wants to help you grow, He will likely put someone in your path who will challenge you to THINK DIFFERENT!

Monday, May 9, 2022

The Heart Wins

 The Heart Wins - Dr. Timothy Byler

(c) 2022 - Timothy Byler - All Rights Reserved


The measure of success is hidden in one’s daily routine. This is a powerful truth. I recently attended my nephew’s college graduation ceremony. John Maxwell was the keynote speaker. In his challenge to the graduating students, he talked about “the do” and “the did”. He often encounters people who say to him, “I want to do what you do.” His response to them is always, “Are you willing to do what I did? In order to do what I do, you will most likely have to do what I did.” He drove the point home and it went something like this:


“If you want the “DO”, you have to do the “DID”. If you won’t do the “DID”, you will never get to do the “DO”. 

If you try to do the “DO” without doing the “DID”, you won’t be able to do the “DO”. 

And, you will wind up in deep DOO-DOO!


The daily routine - it will make or break you. Investing one dedicated hour per day will offer a compound interest on what you are wanting to accomplish. But in reality, it will offer you compound interest on who you are. Maxwell drove home his main point. (It’s cool when your batter can hit two grand slam home-runs in the same ball game.)


“Work on the inside more than you work on the outside. Who you are inside 

is what brings the real value to who you are on the outside.”


You are comprised of three elements - spirit, soul, and body. Your spirit is the “pneuma” - the breath of God that gives you life and your direct connection with Him. Your body is the physical form that functions here on the Earth. Your soul is the connector. It is our mind, our will, our intellect, and our emotions. It is the part that makes you, you. It is the inside. And, it is the place where victory really happens.


All of the training in the world cannot make up for what drives you from the inside.


A confluence of events: 


In the recent Kentucky Derby, there was a bit of an upset. With 80-1 odds, long shot horse, Rich Strike won with an astounding victory.


As I said, the odds were 80-1 against any hope of this champion becoming, well a champion.  He did not have the best starting position. He was not the biggest horse. He was not the “best” horse. (He was a $30,000 horse competing against multi-million dollar horses.) 


There was a confluence of events that led to Rich Strike’s victorious run. First, Rich Strike was trained by Eric Reed, a horse trainer who has before this moment, never trained a derby winner. In fact, before this horse, Eric Reed never even had a horse in the Kentucky Derby! Second, The owners walked through a devastating personal recovery. A few years ago, they suffered a terrible barn fire and lost 23 of their prize horses. Sonny Leon rode Rich Strike to victory. This was the first time he ever rode in a derby. Prior to the Kentucky Derby, Rich Strike had seven career starts. He had three shows and one win that happened at Churchill Downs.


Rich Strike, Reed, and Leon were up against,seemingly insurmountable odds. In fact, the only reason they got to race is that another horse, Ethereal Road, scratched from the race.


The confluence? Tragedy, recovery, a fresh approach, diligent training, and a break merged into one created opportunity. Each of those events fed into the heart of those who were involved. That confluence of events led each of the players in this story to a place that created in their hearts a champion. 


And the race goes to: THE ONE WITH THE MOST HEART!


The Book of Proverbs instructs us about the heart. 


“Guard your heart above all else, for it determines the course of your life.”

Proverbs 4:23 NLT


Another translation adds clarity. “From your heart flows ALL of the issues of life.”


Training is important. Diligence and discipline is important. Gaining wisdom and knowledge is important. But hidden within the daily routine that builds strength, muscle, knowledge, and wisdom, there also has to be a diligence toward guarding your heart. It protects you when adversity tries to dismantle your dream. It protects you when well meaning voices try to dissuade you from reaching for your dream. And, in the moments when it looks as though all odds are against you, that bigger, better horses, with bigger financial backers and better training are standing at the gate with you, it helps you remember what is inside - what God has placed inside of you. The heart wins!




Monday, April 25, 2022

Breaking Negativity

Dr. Timothy Byler

© 2022 Timothy Byler - All rights reserved


The greatest battlefield you will ever encounter and the most valuable piece of land for which you will ever fight is the one square foot of real estate between your ears. Every battle is won or lost in the mind.


You are a spirit being just as you are a natural being. As such, there are things you battle in the flesh (I.e., that piece of cake or the doughnut that beckons you to feast upon their deliciousness). There are also battles in the spirit. Many do not know how to even recognize these battles because of the insight necessary to see them. In reality, these battles are usually connected and at some level, both are present simultaneously. Every spiritual battle will manifest itself in the physical realm - with temptation, frustration, or worse - fear. The playing field for those battles doesn’t usually stay to the physical side or the spiritual side. They tend to cross into the neutral zone - the mind.


You are a three part being, consisting of spirit, soul, and body. Your soul is your mind, your will, your intellect, and your emotion. The soul is where battles are fought and won. It is for this reason that negativity becomes one of the tools of the enemy. It is a subtle tool. It is often wielded from without. Someone says something to you to pull you down or to distract you. They criticize and judge, and do so in a way that will cause you to begin to question your own validity. While not always easily fought, that sort of attack is frontal and usually recognizable. You see it coming and the battle becomes one of “how do I keep myself from giving in to it?” You know deep down exactly what it is and yet, your mind somehow finds a way to validate it.


The best way to fight that sort of negativity is to hold to truth. You must remember what God has made clear concerning HIS belief in YOU! Yeah, I said that correctly. We know we believe in God. We don’t always remember that part of faith is in knowing how much He believes in us… 

so much so that He paid a premium to protect His investment!


When the negative things come at you, you have to remain focused. Focus on your vision, on your purpose, and even on your dream. The negativity is designed to take you off your game and to get you to second guess yourself. It will cause you to shift your footing, slip, slow your momentum, or even lose your way. 


That isn’t the biggest danger of negativity. The biggest danger of negativity is that after it comes from the outside, it starts working FROM the inside. Inside negativity justifies us. It validates us when we feel disrespected or devalued. It is perhaps the only weapon that can be used to penetrate you, make you feel rearmed, and continue to damage you, even as you work to wield it.


In Romans 12:17, Paul instructs us to “never repay anyone with evil for evil, but to respect what is right in the sight of everyone.” He goes on to tell us that “if possible - as much as it depends on you, be at peace with all men.” For a long time, my initial thought always gravitated to “Well, I tried but he isn’t making it possible!” That sort of misses the point.


Paul warns us against letting the negativity of others eat at us from the inside. Consider: if negative people around you need to come to peace before you can find YOUR peace, your peace is now subject to them. It is no longer simply dependent on God. THAT is control. That is the place where others obtain the ability to control you. And in that moment, they have not stolen the control. Rather, you have released the high ground. You let them get you.


The carnal weapon against the negativity of others is YOUR negativity. It is highly dangerous - even toxic! When you return the negativity of others with your own negativity, you relinquish your ability to be effective in the spiritual battle. You ignore your spiritual armament.  You become entrenched in a carnal battle. You will even become skilled at it and win battle after battle - never realizing that in reality, you are losing the war! 


In Matthew 16, Jesus explained this carefully. The context of His words is often missed. “For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world and forfeits his soul?” This has been pushed specifically to how we “accomplish” in life in order to go to Heaven. But if you read through all of it, Jesus was teaching about the soul battle - the spiritual mind vs. the carnal mind. Just prior to what He said, Jesus identified the difference between seeing things spiritually and seeing things carnally. He commended Peter on his ability to see who Jesus was through spiritual eyes rather than the eyes of man, and instructed the disciples that the very foundation upon which the church would be built was that ability to see into Heaven in order to operate successfully in the Earth. A moment later, when Jesus begin to share the negative circumstances He was about to face, Peter’s defenses rose. He valiantly pledged to defend Jesus against those who would try to destroy Him but Jesus rebuked Him, saying, “Get behind Me Satan…you are not setting your mind of a God’s interests but on man’s.”


Breaking negativity starts from the inside out. 


The negativity of others will always be present. There will always be an enemy who will try to discourage you, disparage you, or destroy you. That negativity cannot stop who you are. Nor can it stop the divine purpose for which you have been appointed! YOUR willingness to pick up the weapon of negativity CAN hinder your divine purpose and stop you from being who God has designed you to be.


GUARD YOURSELF! BREAK NEGATIVITY! Limit yourself from spending time and energy with negative people. You don’t have to love them less. You may have to love them from further away. It isn’t that they will bring you down. They will feed your own toxic negativity. Second, guard yourself against being negative. Do not yield to the temptation to be negative. You are gifted with a pass to the High Road. Take it! It is a better ride. Third, draw closer to God! Praise is the best weapon against negativity. Thank God for the purpose He has written for you and for the battle that He fights on your behalf. Thank Him for the strategy to win the war, not just survive the battle.


STAY POSITIVE!


FORWARD!

Wednesday, April 13, 2022

New Seasons

Dr. Timothy Byler

April 13, 2022


CLEAR!!! 


Hit it again.  CLEAR!!!


It has been six years since there was even a trace of life in this blog. Life changed. It moved on and the seeming effectiveness of my efforts here had waned. Or perhaps I convinced myself of that in a fervor of ADHD boredom and simply licensed myself to move on to something new.


Much has happened in that six year window. Children married. The church we pastored went through a tremendous growth spurt. We purchased a facility to house our training center. 


And… I got hit by lightning!


A lot of things happen when you experience a lightning strike. One would think that one’s life would flash in front of their eyes. Mine did not. One second, I was standing in the backyard in the rain, wearing nothing but a worn out pair of running shorts and earnestly coaxing my dog to  respond to the call of nature. The next second, there was a CRACK! and a sound like someone was crinkling the sort of cellophane wrapper one finds enveloping a gift basket of fruit.


My next conscious moment was me, laying on the ground in a puddle of water with my dog pawing at my shoulder in an attempt to awaken me. I believe that I am safe in saying that I am the only person who’s dog “laid hands” on him and was brought back to consciousness!


That lightning strike was not the beginning of a turn for me. Rather, it was just another shot in a war declared by an enemy intent on stopping what was already birthing in me. In the months surrounding that night, we suffered some major personal losses, revamped our ministry, navigated our way through a very complex multi million dollar purchase, and did so while being thrust headlong into a world wide pandemic. 


My last blog was July 4, 2016. In August of that year, I drew a line in the sand. I made a personal decision that something had to change - completely… totally…


I told God exactly that. It has been said, 


 “If you want to hear God laugh, tell Him your plans.” 


I am not certain He was laughing. More likely He was saying, “Well… now it begins.”


If things didn’t change, I wasn’t going to make it. In that year, it felt that everything I valued came under fire. Scripture talks about “that which can be shaken will be shaken”. It is easy to preach. It is not so easy to live through. We had been displaced from our home during that time, due to a flood caused by a failure of a fifteen dollar valve in a toilet. The week that the restoration of our home was complete, Hurricane Matthew unleashed on our South Georgia community and brought with it a tornado that picked up five of our neighbors pine trees and dropped them on our house. We recovered. We got through it. We found the daylight. And I got hit by lightning!


Not all trouble is trouble. That is a phrase offered to me by my dearest brother, Dana Gammill. It is a phrase that was frequently uttered by his legendary father, Herchell. It is the phrase that got me through. It turns out, there is more than one way to renovate a home! When we purchased this one, we loved the space. We loved the property. We DID NOT love the house. To say that it was dated was an understatement. The inside was circa 1975 with a few walls adorned with some less than interesting 1980’s era wallpaper. And… it did not have a porch.


One flood and one tornado later - and $170,000 in restoration repairs - and the home is finally… home. The renovations we never could have afforded were afforded for us - all brought on by the calamity of trouble. And, I was learning a lesson. Like Paul, when faced with a shipwreck, you can consider what it means to drown, or you can hold onto the knowledge that God actually WILL complete what He begins in you. You just have to wash up on the correct island!


All of this seemingly random musing actually has a point. If I had known on the front end what I and my family were going to face as we embraced the call to move forward, I don’t know that I would have been so eager to take the step. It is easy to talk about faith that moves mountains. It is less so when you are standing there as the mountain looms over you with a foreboding shadow. Yet, we are not called to live in the shadows. We are called to shine light into the darkness.


For some of you reading this, your last season has been a shadow season. Most of us have suffered tremendous losses. Family and friends who succumbed to a dreaded virus, positions of employment shifted or eliminated, business owners finding themselves at a loss to even find employees, the list goes on.


Psalm 30:5 teaches us that “weeping may last through the night, but joy comes with the morning.” 

The rest of what David wrote is not simply a testimony of how God will pull you through. It is also a testimony 

of how David chose to respond to the knowledge that God DOES pull us through.


Today, with this post, I activated the defibrillator. It is time, not only to hear my heartbeat, but to listen to how closely it’s rhythm aligns with the heartbeat of the Master! Sometimes the night can last six years but look up! The Sun is on the horizon!


 Dr. T


Monday, July 4, 2016

The World's Greatest Quarterbacks

Recently a friend asked, "Who is the greatest NFL football quarterback in history?" His answer brought a paradigm shift in my thinking.

His pick for all time great NFL/QB offered the following statistics:

He was the second pick of first round draft his beginning year.

His team had nine losing seasons, breaking .500 once - the only time during his career that they finished higher than 3rd in their division.

During his 13 year career, he was sacked 340 times. Members of some opposing team actually "took it easy" on him and reporters offered that he should have gone down many more times than that, but his "swiftness in the face of no protection often saved him."

His record as a starter was 35-100-3: the worst for a quarterback with at least 100 starts.

None of his teams ever won a Super Bowl or even made the playoffs.

Yet: leading his team to a 7-9 record in 1978, UPI named him Player of the Year and later, UPI and Sporting News named him All NFC.

He was selected to the Pro Bowl in 1978-79.

He had 125 touchdowns in 3,642 passes; 2,011 of which were completed for a career total of 23,911 yards. Additionally, he rushed 2,197 yards for 18 touchdowns. At his retirement, this ranked him 17th in NFL history. And, while the New Orleans Saints do not officially retire a number, they have never reissued a number 8 to another player.

If you are a football fan, by now you have figured out that the quarterback is Archie Manning.

You may be wondering, "Why would you pick a guy who ranked 17th, who never won a Super Bowl or even a playoff?"

The answer is simple.

Your success cannot always be measured by the numbers. If you have the best arm in the league, it is still only as effective as the guys catching the ball. If you have the fastest reflexes, they are still subject to those who are supposed to defend you against the guys coming to take you down.

If you execute the play flawlessly, you are still subject to the coach who established which plays are available to be run.

In short, your "stats" are in the hands of - and at the mercy of - many others around you.

However, what is in YOU is not! In spite of being on failing teams, Archie Manning still made player of the year and was chosen twice for the Pro Bowl. He had the respect of his colleagues and his fans for a job well done against insurmountable odds.

What made him the best? Legacy. What Archie Manning had inside of him that caused him to fight his good fight was passed down to two sons: Peyton and Eli Manning. Both brothers carried their father's determination, life lessons and legacy into their own NFL careers. Both sons have two Super Bowl rings each to show for it.

Without an Archie Manning, there would be no Payton nor  Eli Manning and football in the last decade would have missed a tremendous gift.

Success is not measured by stats. It is measured by what you put in - by how much you leave out on the field.

This sounds like a story about Archie Manning but in reality, it is about another of the greatest men in the world.

My Dad, Dr. Philip Byler, was an Archie Manning. When he was ordained into ministry, he was like a first round draft pick. Where most of his peers would see a couple of ministers sign and witness their ordinations, my father had about 100 men stand with him and sign his.

He was a "rising star" within his church denomination. Pioneering his first church, he worked with a mobile home company to develop and build a modular church building - a pattern that would be followed by church plants throughout the denomination for the next decade and beyond.

Dad found himself swimming in the headwaters of what would be known as the "Charismatic Movement", leading people to a deep and sincere power filled relationship with the Holy Spirit. He prayed for people and saw many miracles. His stance on healing prayer caused him to face the rejection of those who had a year before, seen him as the future. Yet, undaunted he pursued what God showed him - even at great personal cost.

He served in the wings of great men and movements. We led worship for National Leadership Conferences with leaders that later launched People of Destiny He was in the head waters of the Discipleship Movement. When some of the founding leaders of that movement crossed lines which led to abuse of power, without showing dishonor to those leaders, God allowed Dad to be a voice of reason and healing to many who had suffered damage.

Dad broke cultural barriers in the cities and communities of all of the churches he served or pioneered, settling racial and cultural tensions by choosing not to be "multi-cultural" but instead opting to lead his congregations to be "kingdom-cultural".

With the advent of the 90's revivals - the Toronto's, Brownsville's and Cornfield's - Dad's ministry saw many similar manifestations. He saw a man with no eyes see through an empty eye socket. He saw barren women find healing that allowed them to have children. He saw cancers disappear, holes in hearts sealed up, and even once in Maryland, saw a man raised from the dead during one of his Sunday services. He was doing as Jamie Buckingham used to say: "He was blooming where he was planted."

Serving near Annapolis Naval Academy and later Fort Stewart, Georgia, heh ministered to lives and families of Sailors, Marines, Coastguardsmen and later Army as they faced two wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Then, there was a new movement - the New Apostolic Reformation. Dad took a manuscript he started in the 1980's - a manuscript that was a doctorate level of education from the school of hard knocks - a document that reflected on all of the lessons learned along the path of ministry orchestrated for him by God - and he turned it into a book: "The Changing Church and the Unchanging Kingdom". The year it was released, C. Peter Wagner, then President of the International Coalition of Apostles held that book up during the International Conference and stated, "This should be required reading for every person in this room. This is a textbook of what the Apostolic Movement is supposed to be." It was a powerful moment, and having lived out what was printed in that book, I was so proud of my Dad and that what he had lived and written so clearly identified with what God was doing.

On a train ride through India, a dear friend, Moses Choudarry said to me concerning my father, "He has been in the headwaters of every movement God in which has placed him. He is a forerunner and because of that, people do not understand him. He sees what they cannot yet see and as a result, they cannot relate to him. Too late do such people realize the blessing such a man is to their lives."

That is his record. Those are his stats. Through the years, many of the players he trusted let defenders through the line and he got sacked. Some of those players even did so intentionally, and relished seeing him hit the ground. Yet every time, Dad got back up, grabbed the ball and called the play. He did not build a single mega church. Yet to this day, Pastors in the cities where he "bloomed" know his name and attribute his leadership to those who served under him who now make a vast difference in their organizations. There are people alive today and some who would never have been born, except that Dad took time to minister, pray and believe with them for a miracle.

And...he produced a son and a daughter. Both of whom have gone on to continue what he placed in them. They have been graced to be among teams that can make the playoffs. As for Superbowl rings - who knows? But honestly, for those two kids - who's counting. Both have become fully embedded into what God is having them do for His kingdom and have learned from their father that you accomplish more with hour eye on the goal post than you ever will with your eye on the scoreboard!

Here's to Philip Byler - "Dr. Phil" - the greatest quarterback in God's Football Hall of Fame. Welcome to the NFL!

Archie Manning stats from Wikipedia
 © 2016 Timothy Byler - All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, May 22, 2016

Birthday Thank You...Words are not Enough



As I turned 50 years old this week, I found myself overwhelmed. It wasn’t by the thought of a half-century behind me. It wasn’t the thought of what hasn’t been accomplished or dreams yet unfulfilled. I was overwhelmed by joy, and by love, and by what the future holds.

Hundreds of people connected with me this week with birthday wishes, presents or words of encouragement.  These are people to whom God has allowed me a connection; and while the individual nature of each of those relationships differ, one thing remains the same. There is love in my heart for every one of them. And, there is a great measure of thankfulness that God has graced me to have them in my life.

I am blessed with a full life. I have a beautiful family. I have parents who raised me well and who love and care for me deeply. I pastor the most amazing church on the planet – full of people who just simply amaze me. God has blessed me to have the opportunity to minister and make friends around the globe.  Life is indeed full.

But that fullness is not found in the opportunity to travel, to minister, to play concerts or to motivate others from a platform. That fullness is found in one simple word: relationship.

I am blessed for the relationships in my life. Everything for which God designed us, and in fact His creation, is surrounded in relationship. For instance, the flowers flourish because of their relationship with the bees. The ground benefits from its relationship with the ocean, which waters draw their functionality by recycling through the atmosphere to again rain down upon the earth.

Relationship is not simply important. Relationship is life! Sometimes it is fragile. Sometimes expectations fall short and even brokenness can occur. But God in His mercy continues to afford for us those relationships that heal and make us flourish. More so, He offers to us a relationship like no other- loving us unconditionally and without reservation. If we can simply grasp this, our lives our not simply preserved. They are enriched.

I have a rich life. It is rich because of my relationship with God. It is rich because of the relationship I have with my beautiful wife and my amazing kids. It is rich because of the relationship I have with others. The future is bright because it is already full. And for everyone who is there, I am grateful and full of love.

Thanks for being in my life and for making it better. Thanks for the joy of allowing me to know you in the past half century of my life. I look forward to what God will do in all of us in the years ahead.

Thanks for loving me.


Tim