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Jehovah Jireh.

I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances. I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want. I can do all this through him who gives me strength.”

‭‭Philippians‬ ‭4‬:‭11‬-‭13‬ ‭NIV‬‬

Some of us need to learn this ‘secret’ already available to us.

A secret is information known exclusively between one and another and at the exclusion of others.

My God will meet all your needs according to the riches of his glory in Christ Jesus.”

‭‭Philippians‬ ‭4‬:‭19‬ ‭NIV‬‬

God’s promise to provide for our needs means out of His discernment of what our needs are He will automatically dispense the right solution at the right amount at the right time and place and for the right reason.

He’s rich in everything and we are His children. To be content in all things is to know His provisions are generous and good, given to satisfy our lack out of His wealth.

That’s the secret solution unknown to those who fail to believe.

Be content and anxious for nothing.

Jehovah Jireh is my provider.

Gen 22 NIV

to live is Christ

But whatever were gains to me I now consider loss for the sake of Christ. I want to know Christ—yes, to know the power of his resurrection and participation in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, and so, somehow, attaining to the resurrection from the dead.

‭‭Philippians‬ ‭3‬:‭7‬, ‭10‬-‭11‬ ‭NIV‬‬

Of all human experiences, only one remains almost entirely unknown.

Despite hypotheses and relentless attempts at its description from every conceivable perspective, unhinged fantasy, limitless speculation and sordid detail, we still know nothing more beyond its cause except for the promise that we never will for as long as we live.

And then it will either be the nothing or the everything we ever dreamed of.

Paul had a goal.

His desire from prison was to die in order to gain the experience of being resurrected because his faith tells him it is, indeed, everything ever dreamed of.

To live is Christ. To die is gain.

As noble the thought may be, he also knows the world’s people won’t be saved by a bunch of dead Christians (contrary to popular belief of some.)

The more noble act is to remain here in faith and action, not to hasten our own demise just to experience the promise of the resurrection moment.

Paul was selfless to a fault, persevering in faith and action until one day in Rome when it caused his beheading and he finally gained the resurrection moment of which he had dreamed.

Of all human experiences only one remains entirely unknown except that it is a promised gift for keeping the faith and a job well done.

May be an image of text

change your mind.

Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.

‭‭Philippians‬ ‭4‬:‭8‬ ‭NIV‬‬

The mind is a terrible thing to waste, yet we spend an unholy number of neurons on the creation of anxieties and emotions based on falsehoods and ignoble self-deceptions.

Our brains process 74GB of information daily, much of which is phony, false or destructive of character.

And as we allow such thoughts to take root, they choke out the possibility of your internal garden bearing anything of beauty or utility for yourself or those around you.

This verse doesn’t advocate for a Pollyanna view of life through optimistic rose colored glasses. It is more that what you think on, you will become.

The mind creates thoughts the heart will follow and the heart behaves for others accordingly.

My God will meet all your needs according to the riches of his glory in Christ Jesus.”

‭‭Philippians‬ ‭4‬:‭19‬ ‭NIV‬‬

If you recognize the need to change your mind, allow God to feed that need.

Your heart and relationships will follow suit.

all in.

I consider everything a loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them garbage, that I may gain Christ

‭‭Philippians‬ ‭3‬:‭8‬ ‭NIV‬‬

All in.

Our life in today’s world is littered with so many things to get and gain, each filling an empty space of want that brings a temporary satisfaction until the next one comes along.

Like salivating dogs, we chase after garbage in a relentless search for completion.

“Knowing Christ Jesus” is a hard sell and intangible substitute for a nation of people so trained on seeking the next big thing. Worse yet, to find and follow Christ also requires abandonment of all those things we have worked so hard to acquire.

To be genuinely all in is a tough sell, but like clearing out a stuffed garage, we do so as an expression of our fealty and commitment to create a space where He alone can reside because the experience of knowing Him trumps all idols we’ve accumulated.

His surpassing worth to our life now and in eternity counts all else tangible and intangible rubbish.

It’s Sunday.

A good day to clean out the garage and take out the garbage.

unfinished.

Be confident of this, that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.

‭‭Philippians‬ ‭1‬:‭6‬ ‭NIV‬‬

If you’re at all like me, we’re both notorious for starting projects and losing interest before completing them.

Something more important or urgent steals away our finite attention until our best of intentions becomes just another piece of unfinished business we promise ourselves to complete someday.

Thank God—literally—your salvation is not something He loses interest in because of your lack of participation.

Once begun by your heartful profession of faith, it earns you a place in the center of God’s workbench where you are always worked on even when it doesn’t feel like it.

This fact usurps your feelings.

Jesus is the completer and finisher of our faith.

But when you reassume an active role, the progress is a lot more evident.

Be confident. He’s not finished with you yet.

May be an image of text that says 'Effort is a direct reflection of interest. Remember that.'

From dope dealing to hope dealing.

From dope dealing to hope dealing. That’s how I roll now.

Everyone knows at least one still unrecovering addict of some sort.

Statistically, 12 is the number of addicts you’ll know closely in your lifetime, probably more.

Some will make it over the addiction hump and sadly, some will be buried under it.

But addiction isn’t going anywhere. There’s too much money to be made from it.

The real question is: who do you become when you’re around them?

That depends on a number of variables and your life experiences. So to bring the question closer to home: who are you called to be around them?

Is there any moral or spiritual imperative that supersedes the common and reflexive human emotions of hate, disgust, or mistrust?

I’ll be first to suggest against wholly trusting an addict.

Addiction 101 clearly teaches that manipulation and lies are the tools along their pathways that lead to using.

However, to maintain hope for all people, we have to believe that all people are redeemable and worthy redemption en route to getting clean.

That means we addicts need chances at becoming what once and one hundred times in our lives we always wanted to be: clean and sober.

Like “normal” folks, addicts struggle every single day to be better people, with some more successful than others. They are the fortunate few surrounded by people of compassion.

A people of compassion is our calling. The people of the Second Chance just as we, ourselves, were given.

#AddictionProfessionalsDay

Grace & Peace Be With You.

“Grace and peace to you from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.”

‭‭Philippians‬ ‭1‬:‭2‬ ‭NIV‬‬

Why not greet one another with hope and joy? Prosperity and perseverance? Love and charity?

Paul always opens his letters from prison with pronouncements of grace and peace.

Grace is unmerited favor, something bestowed upon us that we cannot and did not earn apart from our salvation and life in Christ.

Peace is both a feeling and a condition. The feeling is confidence and assurance while under the condition of our absolute redemption, having made peace with God.

Paul’s greeting IS the gospel in its simplest and most elegant form.

These two are pronouncements from Paul to the believers, not wishes for them of something that will or might still come to pass. It’s his affirmation of identity of those who will hear his letter.

Grace and peace are what this world needs most and what we see at work in fellow Christians.

We should, ourselves, use it more often.

the struggle.

Put on the full armor of God, so that you can take your stand against the devil’s schemes. For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.

‭‭Ephesians‬ ‭6‬:‭11‬-‭12‬ ‭NIV‬‬

Evil almost always manifests in people—those with whom we encounter and interact. It’s not usually some intangible entity but sensed and experienced in the presence of someone it inhabits.

I like to believe most of these people are unaware that what they’re doing or saying is evil but that they are just misled and need a better leader. It helps me to see them as potential captives for God’s kingdom.

Every single time, my mistake is to try to argue and reason them into their salvation without first calling on the Lord to do a little spiritual warfare in advance to clear the path.

It’s hard to acknowledge or fight an enemy you can’t see or touch. So I usually jump right in as a kind and concerned adversary using my own skills and tools then wonder why my most persuasive arguments fall on deaf ears.

Read on in Paul’s letter here, verses 13-17, and the reasons why are crystal clear.

All are potential partners for the kingdom and worthy of our approach, but like with anytime you’re doing important business, you need to dress appropriately for the meeting.

Don’t get caught with nothing to wear.

Indeed, it’s a struggle.

my shit didn’t stink.

There was a point in my 15 year career as a marriage and family therapist when I thought my shit didn’t stink.

My calendar was booked out for weeks, I had a hospital practice and influential private practice referral sources, and I made a lot of money.

I scored high on the licensure exam, my masters thesis was on record as an example for younger students on how it is done, and I was the unanimous staff vote for the top counseling student of the year.

I started on a fast track to success, or so it seemed back then.

It may be true that pride does, indeed, come before a fall.

Despite my subsequent long and painful fall from grace that followed due to my divorce and decade-long addiction to crystal meth which left me penniless, homeless and full of self-hatred and regret for all the relational fallout I had caused, I clawed my way back to sobriety.

Since then, I’ve found that the more life experience I consume, the more prideful and delusional I had been about how good a therapist I’d believed I once was.

It’s taken a lot more than just time and the spending of more years clean and sober than I’d spent in drug and sex addiction.

While I now work in an entirely different profession, once a therapist, always a therapist, the skills of which transcend most others and become most useful when parlayed into the vast self-discovery required in the process of becoming and staying sober.

But sobriety is more than getting and staying off drugs. That’s called being “clean.” Sobriety, once set in motion, is the never-ending process of self-discovery about what makes you tick and why you tick the way that you do.

Sobriety sees the world differently, and years of mental health training and practice help you learn disgusting things about yourself.

Once embraced, that never-ending process is what KEEPS you sober for years to come.

Thanks to sobriety, I’ve recently discovered that as a therapist, my shit stunk to high heaven.

These years, I read articles and listen to podcasts about mental and spiritual health, self-preservation, and insights from practicing professionals whose work is inspirational at the very least and at the most, motivational.

Therapy has come a long way since I was schooled and to a trained eye, the truly insightful and skilled practitioners are as obvious as diamonds in a coal mine.

If I can swing the expense and find a gem of a therapist, I plan to re-enter the field as a client with so much more to learn about myself.

Bad therapy can sour the experience and expense of counseling, but good therapy conducted by a skilled practitioner is worth every session.

In retrospect, I wasn’t such a bad therapist. I was pretty damn good compared to some of my graduate classmates who eventually hung their shingles on counseling center doors around town to begin their careers.

I’d seen them work first-hand in our training and judgingly wondered how they might ever become gainfully employed in this profession.

But from my view these days, I see that poor practice standards aren’t tolerated either in school or by clients anymore and therapeutic skills and interventions are much improved perhaps because more therapists themselves have sought therapy and continue unabated on a course of self discovery.And perhaps best of all, they had accepted early on that their shit stinks just as bad as everyone else’s.

If you can, seek out a good therapist. Ask which books they’ve read, what continuing education courses they have attended, what spiritual orientation they practice. Ask them if they are good therapists and how they arrived at that conclusion. Ask them what they believe they do best in their practice and what they don’t treat in their practice and why.

You may just discover the right fit with someone able to help you discover how to fish yourself out of a toilet of misbeliefs and set you on a better path.

And perhaps ours will cross in the process on our journeys.

gratitude and agency.

Gratitude and agency are key. Gratitude is the appreciation of the good things in our lives, and agency is the belief that we have the power to make choices and control our own destinies. Both gratitude and agency are essential for success and well-being.

Gratitude can help us to:

Be more positive and engaged in our work.

Build stronger relationships with everyone around us.

Be more resilient in the face of challenges.

Experience greater job and life satisfaction.

Agency helps us to:

Be more proactive and take ownership of our careers.

Set and achieve goals.

Develop new skills and knowledge.

Make a positive impact on our organizations and communities.