Are we all a product of our environment? You’re ‘dern’ right we are!

All of us have to admit, whether we want to or not, that we’re a product of our environment. And sometimes that environment from decades ago pops up at unexpected times.

My parents both went as far as the eighth grade in school, yet I still count them as two of the smartest people I’ve encountered in life. What they lacked in book-smarts they made up for with what I like to call good, old-fashioned horse-sense.

I never, ever heard either of my parents utter a curse word, but they both had a distinctive vocabulary and slang terms that I heard daily. It’s amazing to me that all these decades later that vocabulary still surfaces occasionally.

Let me explain.

Last weekend my wife Lisa and I went to see the SIU men’s basketball game again Northern Iowa. It was a great game, great energy in the Arena and despite a dreadful final two minutes when the Salukis couldn’t make a free throw and let UNI back in the game, it was an outstanding performance and a 75-73 win. As we sat in our seats waiting for the crowd to clear after the game I made this comment: ‘It was a great game but they ‘dern near’ let it get away at the end.’

Every man reading this will understand the ‘look’ that I got from my wife after I uttered that sentence. First, she wrinkled her forehead, turned her head slightly and then, in the form of a question and with a hint of exasperation in her voice said: ‘Dern near? What … does dern near mean?’

I explained that ‘dern near’ means ‘almost.’ And of course she quickly asked why I hadn’t simply said ‘they almost let it get away at the end.’ It was a question I couldn’t answer. ‘Dern near’ just popped out, was my only explanation.

But, that exchange started me thinking about the colorful language and vocabulary that I grew up hearing daily. The realization that these words that I heard as a kid and still occasionally use as an adult might just vanish someday made me feel old and a little nostalgic.

The following morning, with ‘dern near’ still on my mind I grabbed a pen and paper and started writing down some great old-fashioned slang words that will undoubtedly go the way of the dinosaur someday.

Here’s my partial list:
‘Galavantin’ – This is a word I heard from both parents often during my high school days: ‘You need to get home early, I don’t want you to be out ‘galavantin’ around all night.’ To my parents, ‘galavantin’ meant driving up and down the same streets all night long or standing on a corner with a bunch of other knuckleheads. When I heard the word ‘gallivantin’ I took it as a direct deterrent to me having fun.

‘Tarnation’ – As I mentioned, my dad didn’t curse, so I always took this word to be a replacement for the word ‘hell’ because he often asked me: ‘What in tarnation is wrong with you?’

‘High falutin’ – This word was aimed at somebody putting on airs or giving the assumption that they had a higher status in life than they did.

‘Lollygag’ – Both parents used this word regularly, usually when they were telling me I was not going to ‘lollygag’ around the house all day and be lazy and do nothing.

‘Dilly dallying’ – This phrase was used often when I was trying to stall and get out of some form of work around the house. ‘I’m tire of you dilly dallying around, go get the yard mowed.’

‘Beatenest’ – This was one of the most unique words that they used and I still say it once in a while normally when talking about politicians. ‘That’s the ‘beatenest’ thing I’ve ever seen.’ In other words, it beat anything ever witnessed before.

‘Dad-blame-it’ – This was my dad’s pet word and I’m certain it replaced many expletives. When he said this word, it was time to take a step back. If he ever tossed out ‘dad-blame-it’ back-to-back, it usually didn’t turn out well for me.

‘Dad-gummit’ – This was just a milder form of ‘dad-blame-it’ – used when an incident didn’t require a raised voice.

‘Malarkey’ – Apparently back in that era there were a lot of people full of this because I heard my dad say many times: ‘He’s so full of malarkey it’s not funny.’

‘Well, I’ll swan’ – Used by my mother often to express wonderment or amazement. She would see something happen and then hang onto the first word a long time and say: ‘We-l-l-l-l … I’ll swan!’

‘A lick of gumption’ – Gumption meant common sense and a lick was apparently the smallest measure known to man. ‘That guy doesn’t have a lick of gumption.’

Yes, we are all a product of our environment and looking back and rehashing all these old and glorious slang words makes me realize again that I had it pretty ‘dern’ good.

Pastor Rick Warren: You Need the Support of Your Spiritual Family

By Rick Warren — September 18, 2018

”God decided in advance to adopt us into his own family by bringing us to himself through Jesus Christ. This is what he wanted to do, and it gave him great pleasure” (Ephesians 1:5 NLT).

The Bible says, “God decided in advance to adopt us into his own family by bringing us to himself through Jesus Christ. This is what he wanted to do, and it gave him great pleasure” (Ephesians 1:5 NLT).God wanted more than angels and animals and plants. He wanted a family. The Bible says the whole reason you exist is because God wanted you to become a part of his family, and that family is going to last forever.

Your spiritual family, God’s family, is going to outlast even your physical family. Physical families don’t last. They grow up, they move away, they die. But the spiritual family of God is going to go on and on for eternity.

The Bible says that God never meant for you to go through life alone. In fact, God hates loneliness. When God created man, he put him in the Garden of Eden, a perfect environment, and the first thing God said was, “It is not good for man to be alone.” God wants you to be part of the family of God.

What is God’s family? “That family is the church of the living God, the support and foundation of the truth” (1 Timothy 3:15 NCV). The church, the body of Christ, is not an institution. The church is not a bureaucracy. The church is not an organization or a social club. The church is God’s family. It’s not about rules and regulations and rituals and religion. It’s about relationships. It’s about love.

The church is “the support and foundation of the truth.” What happens when a building has no support and foundation? It collapses. Those of us in California understand this more than most because we have earthquakes. If you don’t have a good foundation under your building, it’s going to collapse when the earthquake comes.

God says your life is the same way. You’re going to experience some earthquakes in your life—financial earthquakes, health earthquakes, emotional earthquakes, relational earthquakes, career earthquakes. When those tough times come along, you’re going to collapse if you don’t have a spiritual family to support you.

You cannot fulfill God’s purposes by yourself. God wired us to need each other. We need each other in the family of God.

Talk It Over

  • God wants you to have the support of your spiritual family when life’s earthquakes come. How can you support someone in the family of God who is experiencing tough circumstances right now?
  • How do others in the family of God know the best ways to support you when you need it?

Give hope, prayer, and encouragement below. Post a comment & talk about it.

Walter Wendler: You, You, You, not Me, Me, Me

An effective leader must do everything within his or her power to create a strong organizational culture. Teamwork, knowledge of process, values shared by all workers, a clear understanding of organizational purpose, and a shared goal of attaining that purpose are the foundation for a positive culture according to Edgar Schein, the father of understanding organizational culture.

Walter V. Wendler

Herb Kelleher had a fix on how to create a strong culture. He said in a typically disarming fashion, “A company is stronger if it is bound by love rather than by fear.” The power in this thought is simply that love exists person to person. In addition, real love is always outward bound. Inward bound love is narcissism.

Self-centeredness wreaks havoc on any organization both for the individuals who comprise it and the goods, products and services produced. The power of Herb’s perspective is not just a touchy-feely engagement. According to a Strategy+Business, Herb’s contention was that at Southwest Airlines, “People are business.” Nice sentiment, but what value does it have in the marketplace? Well, by 2004, the Southwest Airlines that started in 1971 became the fourth largest airline in the United States with 30 consecutive years of profitability. In addition, and more astoundingly, $1 invested in Southwest Airlines’ 1972 public offering was worth $1400 in 2004.

Put people first. For Southwest Airlines, it was about putting employees first—even in front of customers. For Herb, customers occupied second chair, and stockholders were the caboose. This is a powerful testimony to what happens when a corporate culture values the work that people do regardless of the position they hold. A few things must happen if that is to be the case.

Precept One:  Leaders should do everything possible to accept and even celebrate well-intended failures. When someone in the organization attempts in good conscience to do something right, good or just in response to the need of someone served, and something goes awry, that is not failure. Instead, it may be the highest form of accomplishment. Fear of failure drives people who are there to serve into a mindset of no service at all, a mindset of self-preservation. Life is choked out of the heart of the servant and the soul of the enterprise.

Precept Two:  Leaders should welcome dissenting opinions intended to move the organization forward to greater heights of service. In too many organizational cultures, yes-men and yes-women rule the roost, and quality wilts just as a tree starved of water dies. Healthy differences of perspective create strength, not weakness.

Precept Three:  People must have confidence in leadership meaning what it says and saying what it means. Clarity in vision that people can easily grasp and embrace is essential. An unclear sense of purpose of leadership increases as proximity to the point of service decreases. The enterprise and the customer both lose.

Precept Four:  There must be passion for purpose. Everyone at every level must sense that everyday actions help meet the primary objective of the enterprise. If the worker bee cannot connect the dots back to primary purpose, the organization will fail miserably. Importantly, fault lies with leadership. This morning when I came to work I had a conversation with Marilyn who cleans my office. She told me that even though she is not an employee of the University—she works for a contracted maintenance company—our students are her students. She felt an obligation to clean the buildings, “To help students get an education.” How powerfully effective would be our university if everyone, from myself to this custodial worker, expressed that passion in action.

Precept Five:   If leaders do not champion the purpose of the organization every day in thought and deed, the organization will fail. Our university is here to serve students, and, as a public institution, the taxpayers of the state of Texas and the Panhandle. But our first priority in service is to faculty—to create a place where faculty can ply their craft. Such a sense of purpose will elevate the act of teaching to where it must be in the framework of actions that comprise the University. This happens at the very first contact that a student has with the University. For many that’s a campus visit or an application for admission. There should be in those processes a purposeful commitment by all engaged to connect the students’ desire to learn with the faculty members’ desire to teach. Processes should be crisp, clean, efficient, timely and painless. This is value-based leadership according to Brent Gleeson, combat veteran, and author ofTakingPoint: A Navy SEAL’s 10 Fail-Safe Principles for Leading Through Change,”

Strong organizations put energy where service occurs.

Strong universities do the same.

Your Daily Prayer: A Prayer for God’s Design

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A Prayer for God’s Design
By Matt Chandler

“Then God said, “Let us make mankind in our image, in our likeness” … So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.”  Genesis 1:26a-27, NIV

In this passage, we get what theologians have called for a few millennia the Imago Dei, the image of God, and the idea that men and women are different from all of creation because we have been made in the image of God.

The Imago Dei is God’s investment in humanity of God-like glory and moral capacity to reign and rule the earth as His representatives. This is what sets us apart.

What are the implications of the Imago Dei? There is an intrinsic human dignity that places us above everything else in the creative order.

We have an intrinsic value because of the image God has given to us. It’s not a functional thing as much as a gift from God. And it shapes how we view humanity — those we live side-by-side with and those we’ll never meet.

Yet we forget this amazing truth, and sin messes us up, and we treat each other in ways that must break God’s heart.

What if we could really grasp that we have intrinsic value because we are made in the image of God? The difference would be incredible. This is God’s beautiful design for us, and we were made to walk in this beauty.

Write one area where you consistently look to the world (created things) for purpose or meaning. What would change if you began to look toward God and His good design in that specific area?

Father, I thank You for our sameness. I thank You that we are brothers and sisters by Your design. May that truth shape how we view others, but first, may it shape how we view ourselves. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

 

Kavanaugh confirmation: Four ways Democrats’ plan to derail nomination could backfire

During Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearing earlier this month, Senate Democrats seemed content just scoring points with their base by quizzing the Supreme Court nominee about President Trump, abortion, dark money, racial issues and the like. Now, in the wake of Christine Ford’s sexual assault allegation against Kavanaugh, Democrats appear to be shifting to a new strategy aimed at delaying the final confirmation vote until after the November 6 election and actually defeating the nominee.

Here’s a link to the editorial at Fox News.

Daily Devotion: A Prayer for Restlessness

By Gwen Smith

The Lord replied, “My Presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.”(Exodus 33:14)

R.E.S.T. {Reflect. Engage. Surrender. Trust.}

ENGAGE

Jesus said, “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.” (Matthew 11:28-29, NIV)

The apostle Paul instructed us, “Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 4:6-7, ESV)

Most importantly, we must engage with the grace of God through Jesus Christ, which comes from the confession of our sin. “Have mercy on me, O God, because of your unfailing love. Because of your great compassion, blot out the stain of my sins. Wash me clean from my guilt. Purify me from my sin.” (Psalm 51:1-2, NLT)

SURRENDER

The best example of surrendering to God’s will is in Jesus. The night he was betrayed Jesus surrendered himself to God’s plan. He prayed, “Father, everything is possible for you. Please take this cup of suffering away from me. Yet I want your will, not mine.” (Mark 14:36, NLT)

Here’s the beauty of surrender: when you lay down your mess, your hands are then free to pick up God’s rest. Because the One who captures us in surrender is the One who sets us free. And in the surrender, you are empowered to trust Him more.

TRUST

Let’s look at what Jesus had to say about this.

“Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life? … So do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them.” (Matthew 6:31-32)

Friend, your heavenly Father knows that your job is stressing you out, that your marriage is hanging by thread, that you are bogged down with health challenges, that you are grieving that loss, that your finances are upside down… He knows the longings of your heart. He. Knows. What. You. Need.

What would happen if every morning you woke up and decided to R.E.S.T.? What if you determined each day to choose to trust God for what you need because you know that He knows what you need? Can you imagine living with that kind of faith?  That is exactly what the Lord is inviting you into. His rest.

Lord, I really want to get this one! Please help me to turn to You in all circumstances – in the good, the bad, and the ugly. Give me the strength to surrender my will to Yours, and guard my heart and mind with the peace as I choose to trust You with my struggles today.

In Jesus’ Name,

Amen.

Editorial: Vehicle Miles Traveled tax, the most toxic tax in Illinois politics?

There is one product that, for a century, has towered above all others as a symbol of choice, control and personal freedom in America: the automobile. There are more than 10 million registered vehicles in Illinois, according to the secretary of state’s office.

Here’s a link to the editorial at Illinois News Network.

Pastor Rick Warren: What to Do When You Doubt God’s Provision

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”When you go through deep waters, I will be with you. When you go through rivers of difficulty, you will not drown. When you walk through the fire of oppression, you will not be burned up; the flames will not consume you” (Isaiah 43:2 NLT).

God wants you to be a giving person. That means you sow generosity in your life. You give freely to others in the body of Christ and show God’s love to unbelievers. You look for ways to be generous with the resources that God has generously given you.But sometimes when we focus on giving financially to your church or to others, Satan will try to plant all kinds of seeds of doubt and fear in our minds: “What if you lose your job? What if you get sick? What if you’re incapacitated? What if the economy tanks? How are you going to be able to keep your commitment?”You may be facing some of those same anxieties. When you do face those doubts, you need to remember that God has promised to never abandon you and to always be with you. You don’t have to know what the future holds, because you know who holds the future.

No matter what you face in the future, you’re never going to face it alone. Isaiah 43:2 says, “When you go through deep waters, I will be with you. When you go through rivers of difficulty, you will not drown. When you walk through the fire of oppression, you will not be burned up; the flames will not consume you” (NLT).

This is the key to courage. There is nothing to fear when you know God is near. On your own you might drown, but God has said that he will never leave you or abandon you (go read Hebrews 13:5).

Maybe you feel alone right now. You may feel that way, but it isn’t true. God sees what you’re going through. God cares about what you’re going through. And God will help you out if you trust him.

Your fears and doubts are not from God. When it comes to your giving, you can trust that as God leads you to give, he will stand by you and provide for your needs. The only way to reap generosity is to sow generosity.

Talk It Over

  • How has God been leading you to give?
  • What kinds of doubts or fears do you have about following through with that commitment?
  • God has promised to be with you and take care of you, but sowing generosity can still require sacrifice. What are you not willing to give up in order to be generous? Spend some time praying and asking God to help you release whatever it is that keeps you from trusting fully when it comes to your giving.

Give hope, prayer, and encouragement below. Post a comment & talk about it.

Editorial: Some ‘journalists’ happy to pitch in on last-ditch hit job on Kavanaugh

The Supreme Court nomination seems like a new season of “House of Cards,” with many in the media helping write the script.

Here’s a link to the editorial at Fox News.

Editorial: Trump’s election STILL has liberals reeling – But even Woodward won’t knock out 2016’s winner

Poor Bob Woodward. Poor us. His new book on the Trump White House, “Fear,” was released this week, and its author has been making the rounds. But we’ve seen this movie before: Internationally known author writes book about President Donald Trump that will make all liberal dreams come true. The “expose” of Trump as Lord of the Flies, ruling over a dystopian, dysfunctional White House.

Here’s a link to the story at Fox News.

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