Monday, May 20, 2013

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check with the real expert!

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Day3
reading from the playbook› Psalm 139:13-16

A few years ago, as I was looking to purchase a cellular phone, a salesperson allowed me to take one of the phones home for a week to try it out. Attempting to be a good consumer, I quickly studied the brochures to learn about the features as well as the coverage and service the company offered. I became an expert in wireless communication—at least in my own mind.

Later that week I met a gentleman who obviously needed my technical expertise based on his use of a far inferior phone. As I presented this cellular-deficient man the scoop on wireless services and phone options,
he tried to interrupt me. Not to be deterred, I continued my informative presentation—I was certain the company would have hired me on the spot as their spokespersonhad they heard my spiel.

Moments later, I asked the man what he did for a living. I was shocked when he said, “I just retired from the company that built your phone. I helped design your phone and the services you tried to tell me about.”

An embarrassing moment for sure.

But don’t we do the exact same thing with God? He designed us and He knows how we work. Yet often we
assume we know best and don’t need His input. When we try to run our own lives and seek no guidance from God, we are as foolish as I was about my cell phone expertise. May God give us the strength to admit our foolishness and humbly learn that He always knows what’s best. After all, He made us.
—Danny Wuerffel, former National Football League quarterback, winner of Heisman Trophy in 1992

executing the game plan›
• What area have you been keeping from God, thinking you know better?
• Today, turn this area over to Him.

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"These signs will accompany those who have believed: in My name they will cast out demons, they will speak with new tongues; they will pick up serpents, and if they drink any deadly poison, it will not hurt them; they will lay hands on the sick, and they will recover."

Mark 16:17-18

In war, infantry will slog their way to a head-on encounter with the enemy, and they must have the resources appropriate to the moment. A field commander radios map coordinates to a fighter squadron, circling overhead. Suddenly a barrage from the sky strikes the foe. God’s promise to His people on Kingdom mission is to provide what they need, when they need it, and on the right coordinates. The Church loses the big point when it gets sidetracked debating the resources God gives. Instead, she is to go forward on the promise of His supply for what we need in each situation.

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