Risk It! Be an “ABLE ALSO”

The intensity of being a contributor versus a consumer brings us to moments of challenged ability.  Be one that is able in the moment needed and others will entrust greatness into your hands.

 2Tm:2:2: And the things that thou hast heard of me among many witnesses, the same commit thou to faithful men, who shall be able to teach others also.

 Winners Make Commitments.training

Losers Make Promises.

 In these few short words to Timothy, Paul revealed a tremendous portion of the key to his winning life.  Look at the word choices. Among Many Witnesses.  The Same.  Commit.  Faithful Men.  Able Also.

Among many witnesses.  Paul was not afraid for his life to be tested against witnesses.  His words were true and he stayed with them.  What witnesses heard years before still was true of his life.  Timothy was charged to make sure solid teaching, life, and words passed on to other men of commitment.

The same.  Paul was open in his life.  He committed himself to being like Jesus. The same yesterday, today, and forever.

Commit.  Paul was not noncommittal.  He made commitments and expected others to do the same.

Faithful men.    These are hard to find.  Paul never gave up.  Betrayed continually, he never gave up looking for faithful men.

Able also.  We can be an “able also”.  An “able also” does the same in making commitment, sticking with it, being faithful, following through, endures all things, bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things.

Promises are cheap.  “I’ll be there.”  MEANS “If it fits the pressures of the moments right before.” OR “Whatever it takes to get you to quit asking.” .  “Til death do us part.”  MEANS “Until I redefine what I meant.” OR “Until I don’t want to handle the pressures anymore face to face.”

Commitment is expensive.  “I’ll be there.”  MEANS “Whatever the cost, I’ll rearrange life to get me there.”  “Til death do us part.”  MEANS “I will stick it out though I may not feel like it.  “I will take control of my feelings and bring them to submission in Christ.”

Psalm 15:1: LORD, who shall abide in thy tabernacle?  who shall dwell in thy holy hill? 2: He that walketh uprightly, and worketh righteousness, and speaketh the truth in his heart. 3 : He that backbiteth not with his tongue, nor doeth evil to his neighbour, nor taketh up a reproach against his neighbour. 4: In whose eyes a vile person is contemned; but he honoureth them that fear the LORD.  He that sweareth to his own hurt, and changeth not. 5: He that putteth not out his money to usury, nor taketh reward against the innocent.  He that doeth these things shall never be moved.

Take Inventory

What does it mean to be an “ABLE ALSO”?

What changes do I have to make?

Are there repairs that need to be done to broken commitments?

When am I willing to start?

Make Application

Write what you are going to specifically do in the next 30 days about this.

Pray To Be An Able Also

Father, make me an “ABLE ALSO”.  Change the way I promise to commitment.  Instill in me faithfulness.  When I am faithless, You are faith-full.  Make me like Jesus, the same yesterday, today, and forever. Psalm 51:10: Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me. 11: Cast me not away from thy presence; and take not thy holy spirit from me. 12: Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation; and uphold me with thy free spirit. 13: Then will I teach transgressors thy ways; and sinners shall be converted unto thee.

Manage Well : Go On Through

To go through a problem is to conquer it and create new paths. Go through. Don’t go around it.

Ps:95:8: Harden not your heart, as in the provocation, and as in the day of temptation in the wilderness: .

 A winner goes through a problem.

training

  A loser tries to go around a problem.

Philippians 4:13: I can do all things through Christ which strengthens me.

Problems are life. Sound like the last chapter?  You are right.  It is not the same though.  What makes a winner a conqueror, an overcomer, is the problems they face and conquer.  You will have problems.  1Pt:4:12:” Beloved, think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened unto you:”

The question is will you go through or around?

Going around.  The children of Israel spent 40 years going around their problems.  When they were offered the land of opportunity, they chose to stay away and not deal with their problems.  What was their problem?  Discord, lack of submission to leadership, unbelief, selfishness… basically just a lot of reliance on themselves and little on God.

Going through.  After that 40 year phase, a new set of children rose up and went through their problems.  They stuck together, defended each other, and took the blessings by going through their problems.

Going around.  The United States is full of men and women going around their problems.  Insecurity, lack of knowledge on how to be a dad/mom/husband/wife, lack of commitment, irresponsibility, self fulfillment keeps them from sticking with their families and spouses and friends.  It’s easier to go around.

Going through.  My heroes are the ones who overcome their insecurities, lack of knowledge, lack of commitment, irresponsibility, and self fulfillment, replace it with security in Jesus, knowledge from the Word, commitment to what counts, responsibility even when it hurts, and other fulfillment, and stick with the program.  It is not easy.  It is incredibly rewarding.

Hebrews 4:14: Seeing then that we have a great high priest, that is passed into the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast our profession.15: For we have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities; but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin.16: Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need.

Principle is principle is principle.  Relationships, work issues, projects, and hobbies all present problems.  When you allow others to help in the process, you prosper quicker.  Sometimes they have the solution you need.  Always, Jesus has the solution you need.

Take Inventory

Where do you have a problem that you have circumvented but not solved?

Are you ready to do what it takes to solve it?

Have you ever felt like getting mad at God because of a problem?  Did you go around the problem or through it?

Overcoming.  As I write this I am praying for five relationships where someone has come to me in the last week and asked for prayer.  They are GOING THROUGH!.  Anger, alcohol, and accusations make for hard lives. You can GO THROUGH.  You can overcome.  It takes both involved in the relationship, but it can be done.  Who are you praying for?

 Make Application

Write what you are going to specifically do in the next 30 days about this.

The Day You Launch a Product You Begin to Lose Ground

http://americanprinter.com/columnists/phil-larson/022515-phil-larson-grow-sustain

Every product enhancement must continue to be enhanced.  There is always a better mousetrap.  Better does not mean changed.  Better means it meets a customer need in fresh ways that help them achieve their goals.  That is better.

What about the internals that make that happen.  Here are a few tips focused on the print services industry as they adapt to changing volumes, order types, and media integration. The principles apply to any and all businesses and organizations.

Build A Better Business – Build  A Better Life Forward

Five Leadership Tips for Tough Times Every Mature Executive Needs to Learn.

Five Leadership Tips for Tough Times Every Mature Executive Needs to Learn.

Working as an agent of change in support of executives comes with scars and stars.  The stars are the memories that have power to change us for the better.  The scars are best left as lessons learned and give time and attention to heal.  But, wow, when you work beside a star boss or on a star team, your life is never the same.

There are five top performing bosses and the teams that surrounded them that have taught me powerful lessons in living and management.  Let me share these with you.  You can grow in a minute under the right coaching.  It would take a book to list all the lessons each of these leaders taught me, so I’ll just highlight five lessons that I believe every mature executive should learn.

Schille’s All StarsHard Times Bring Growth: John Schille is an incredible coach and leader.  In 2004, John was distinguished as the number one CIO in the United States and his organization received the same accolade.  At the time, I wa honored to be a director on John’s direct report team.  The performance level of the organization was tops.  The responsiveness to technical disruption was specific and on target.  The vision for the future, while working with John was unending.

During one incredibly hard season of growth of a department I had been assigned to improve, I remember sitting and discussing with John.  He looked directly into my eyes and said, “Phil, you’ll find that under the hardest times you look back and realize you grow the most.”  He was right.  I’ve remembered that lesson among many others ever since.

Guida’s Good Days: Reward When No One is Looking:  John Guida has a hard compassion about him that molded me.  He believed in me in extreme circumstance.  We had some tough discussions as we worked alongside a great team to pull a company out of chapter 11.  In 18 months, it was accomplished through amazing team effort.  After a pressing year, John came into my office with a sizeable surprise bonus.  By company regulation I was not eligible for bonus.  It was just not that company’s style.  But, here it was.  John had gone up the chain for me when I had no idea what was happening.

McCreery’s Mountain:   Be Gracious In All Seaons:  Mike McCreey is one of the most grateful men for whom I have worked.  As CFO of a struggling company, he exampled kindness and gratitude.  Every Friday, when the key operational management team would meet, Mike was first to have the coffee made and served.  He exemplified servant leadership.

One afternoon, I was in Mike’s office waiting for the third person to join us in a decision.  His secretary came in to serve us.  Mike made sure he thanked her for her act.  I’m sure he must have said thank you many times a day.  He turned to me and spoke in a calm and deliberate voice, “Phil, this world would be much better if people just learned to say thank you.”  It was a real strength in his life.

Heil’s Salvation:  Build the Man With Care:  Bob Heil was a mountain of man.  Heil means salvation in German.  Bob lived to serve others and assist them in rescuing themselves from themselves.  For two years, I was honored to study under Bob in a school he and Linn Haitz started to develop young men into movers and shakers.  It was leadership intensive.

At one point, Bob and I crossed swords.  I was young and impulsive and wanting to run out on my own and take the world.  He was mature and sensitive and giving me ample rope to hang myself but not so much to die doing it.  When I realized how stupidly I was acting, I went to Bob and asked his counsel.  He immediately understood, forgave me my stupidity, and gave me great counsel.  He could have responded in many ways to my mistakes.  He chose to respond with wisdom in order to allow me growth.  He chose to build the man in me with care and firmness.

Dryden’s Dynamics: Rest Stop Ahead: Ron Dryden has a sense of compassion and marketing and team dynamics not seen in many.  I think of many of the great coaches of national champion teams when I think of Ron.  Keeping a stable of stallions in motion is an art and a craft.  He did it well.

Our team took on an amazing challenge.  How do you take a white non-profit organization and move it to become multi-cultural while tripling the size?  This was a hard task.  There were many days of pains and problems.  The community in which we served was racially divided and antagonistic to these ideals.  My office was full of complaints and finger pointing as were the offices of the other team leaders.  As the Director of Operations, I handled everything from plumbing to prisons.

Big events were common, time consuming, exhausting, and rewarding.  Ron taught us to be rested going into a big event versus thinking we would rest on the other side.  That wisdom has served me well over the years.  Our tendency is to believe we can push to the max and then rest.  Yet, what if the big event works and we harvest big on the other side in sales, people, whatever we looked to accomplish?  Then we will be exhausted and unable to work the harvest of our efforts.  Rest up ahead of a big thrust.

Summary:  These five lessons can serve any leader.  As a change agent for most of my career, I’ve been called upon to work through tough situation after tough situation.  In each I’ve been able to act with growth, reward, graciousness, care, and rest.   It was these leaders that developed that into me by example.  Leadership is example.  That is another lesson.

Contact Phil Larson, Director of Shepherd Consulting  phil@shepherdok.com  405-388-8037…

Phil is a dynamic speaker, author, mentor, and agent of change.  His organization works to help executives and managers achieve their goals and dreams through decisive dynamics.  he is available to help you achieve your dreams.