I mentioned Ken and Laura Colton in Tuesday’s blog.
Ken pastors a local Methodist church congregation.
Sunday Ken preached on Moses and the Promised Land.
Moses’ life is one of the Bible’s great adventure stories.
Hidden in Nile reeds as a baby to escape being killed.
Found and raised by the Pharaoh’s daughter.
Chosen by God to lead the children of Israel from bondage.
Crossing the Red Sea with Divine intervention.
Wandering in the desert in search of the Promised Land.
Receiving God’s commandments on Mount Sinai.
Learning he would see the Promised Land but not reach it.
God was teaching Moses that life’s not about destinations.
It’s about what we learn and how we grow on the journey.
It’s good to have destinations. We call them goals.
The real benefit is what we become on the journey.
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Thursday, July 2, 2009
The journey is the key
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Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Put balance in your life
My "Do what you love" blog last week struck a nerve.
Blog reader Mark Bostic designs homes.
Mark admits his work is a true passion.
But he warns not to focus your life too narrowly.
"A job you love can be great," he said.
"But great passions must be under control."
Mark makes a great point.
I made that mistake as a young journalist.
I lived and breathed writing and journalism.
After MacLeod and I were married, I didn’t change.
I just kept on working 12 hours a day.
That hurt her as she was raising our first child.
I was unaware that I was neglecting both of them.
It took a confrontation to show me my error.
I convinced her to unpack but it took a lot of persuasion.
Last Sunday we went for a cruise on Lake Murray.
Ken and Laura Colt0n invited us to join them on their boat.
I realized this was the first time I had relaxed all week.
Even now my passion for what I do can consume me.
So I’m still working at it as I know many of you are.
Don’t let passion blind you. Life has many rewards.
Faith, family, country, community, your health and well being.
With balance, we multiply life’s rewards.
To comment, please click on "comment" below
For more on this, please click here.
P.S. Only four days left on our Independence Book Sale.
Don’t miss out. Email me if you need details.
Blog reader Mark Bostic designs homes.
Mark admits his work is a true passion.
But he warns not to focus your life too narrowly.
"A job you love can be great," he said.
"But great passions must be under control."
Mark makes a great point.
I made that mistake as a young journalist.
I lived and breathed writing and journalism.
After MacLeod and I were married, I didn’t change.
I just kept on working 12 hours a day.
That hurt her as she was raising our first child.
I was unaware that I was neglecting both of them.
It took a confrontation to show me my error.
I convinced her to unpack but it took a lot of persuasion.
Last Sunday we went for a cruise on Lake Murray.
Ken and Laura Colt0n invited us to join them on their boat.
I realized this was the first time I had relaxed all week.
Even now my passion for what I do can consume me.
So I’m still working at it as I know many of you are.
Don’t let passion blind you. Life has many rewards.
Faith, family, country, community, your health and well being.
With balance, we multiply life’s rewards.
To comment, please click on "comment" below
For more on this, please click here.
P.S. Only four days left on our Independence Book Sale.
Don’t miss out. Email me if you need details.
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