Sunday, September 24, 2006

LEADING IN LIFE - The Leader's Prayer Life

God said a long time ago in Ezekiel 22:30 (Living Bible) "I (God) looked in vain for anyone who would build again the wall of righteousness that guards the land, who could stand in the gap but I found not one." God is looking for people to use. He is looking for leaders. Nothing happens until somebody provides leadership. Everything rises or falls on leadership. We're looking for better methods, machinery, motivations. God says, I'm looking for better people, people that I can use.
We're in a series on leadership, looking at the life of Nehemiah. In a presidential campaign, a number of the candidates were questioned about their private life. The typical response was "It's none of your business." One guy said, "My private life in no way affects my ability to govern this nation." Nothing could be further from the truth. God says the exact opposite.

The Leadership Law we're going to look at today from Nehemiah is The effectiveness of my public leadership is determined by my private life.

Today we're going to get our first inside look at the heart of Nehemiah. Nehemiah was a man of prayer, nine different times in this book he prays. In Nehemiah 1 we have one of the great prayers of the Bible. We learn a lot about people by listening to their prayers. We're going to get an inside look at this man, Nehemiah. We're going to see what his private life is like. We're also going to learn how to pray the kind of prayers that gets answered. God liked to answer Nehemiah 's prayers. If we can figure out what Nehemiah does then we can figure out what we can do to have our prayers answered.
Three questions:
1. When should I pray?
2. Why should I pray?
3. How should I pray?

Last week I said leadership can be learned. I believe the starting point is to learn how to pray.
Because that's what Nehemiah does first.

WHEN SHOULD I PRAY?
Before I do anything else.

The men had come back from Jerusalem and said Jerusalem is in ruins. The first thing Nehemiah did (v. 4) he wept, he mourned, he fasted, he prayed. Verse 4 also says he prayed for "some days". A leader does more than pray, but he doesn't do anything else until he prays. This is the starting point for what we want to look at. Leaders make prayer a first priority; others make prayer a last resort. That's the difference between leading in life and just living life. Leaders make prayer a first priority.
We are always on the go, want to get the job done, achievement oriented, goal oriented, busy people, prone to heart attacks. How many of us often find ourselves too busy to pray? Nehemiah says before we do anything else we must make time to pray. We'll see how Nehemiah used prayer.
Nehemiah was a man of action. Nehemiah is an organizer, motivator, manager. He likes to do things. He built the wall around the city in 52 days. Yet, instead of immediately going out and doing something, when he heard that something was wrong the first thing he did was get alone with God. He didn't form a committee. He got alone with God and prayed. This was the pattern of his life. (Cathleen and I moving?)There were nine different instances in his life.
He was a man of prayer.

WHY SHOULD I PRAY?
1. It shows I'm depending on God

The reason why we don't pray more is because we don't think we need to. We think we can handle it by ourselves. We think we can do it on our own. When you have a problem the human reaction, the natural reaction for us is to think, "Now what am I going to do about this?" instead of stopping and saying, "God, what do You want to do about
this?" Yet the Bible says in John 15 "Apart from Me you can do nothing." That's the only way we bear fruit.
We saw in Matthew 5:3 in the Beatitudes, "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." There is nothing God won't do for the person who is depending on Him. My usefulness as a leader, and yours, begins when I recognize my total dependence upon God. The way I know I'm depending on God is that the first thing I do when a problem comes is I pray.

2. It lightens my load
The reason why Nehemiah prayed was because he was
distressed by the bad news. He was a very sensitive person, very compassionate. He felt things very deeply. It says he wept over the ruins. But rather than simply mourning or moaning, he prayed. He took the problem to the Lord. He didn't just complain and gripe and wallow in self pity. He took his broken heart to the Lord.

The name Nehemiah means "The Lord is my comfort". When Nehemiah's heart was broken over the things that were going wrong in Israel, he took his problem to the Lord. God honors prayer that comes from a genuinely concerned heart. He longs to hear us say, "Lord, I can't handle this. I don't know how to do it. Help me!" That's the prayer that He likes to answer.
The fact is that leaders take their burdens to the Lord. Isaiah 40:31 "They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength. They shall mount up with wings like eagles; they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint."
If you're going to be a leader, it produces stress. Great
leaders find their strength on their knees.

3. It releases God's power
Nothing else releases God's power like the prayer of faith. Jeremiah 33:3 God says, "Call to me and I will answer you and show you great and mighty things which you know not." Prayer can do whatever God can do! Whatever God can do, prayer can do. Prayer taps in to the very resources of God.
Many of you came in here very fatigued. Prayer taps you in to the resources of God. When God is brought in on a
project, it turns the impossible into the possible.

The question I really want to look at today is:
HOW SHOULD I PRAY?

We have a sample of a leader's prayer in v. 5-11. You can learn a lot about a person by the kind of prayer that they pray.
A canned prayer indicates a dried up spirit. A selfish prayer indicates a selfish spirit.
Some prayers are like Christmas lists. Selfish prayers indicate a selfish heart.
Impressive prayers indicate an arrogant, prideful heart.

We learn a lot about Nehemiah by looking at the kind of prayer he prayed. Remember that Nehemiah, when he first heard about the downfall of Jerusalem, prayed for four months. This is not just a casual prayer. The prayer we're going to look at today is just a sample prayer he prayed. It gives us a pattern for successful praying. If you want to know how to pray, study the book of Nehemiah and
particularly this prayer.
Whenever people in the Bible ask God to do something they always presented a basis for it. They always said, "God I want you to do this because..." and they had a reason for Him to do it. There's many different reasons depending on the circumstance. Every time you find a prayer in the Bible, they gave a reason. A key question you want to ask yourself when you pray is this, "Why should God answer my prayer?" Why should I ask God to answer this prayer? The Bible teaches us that the right kind of praying is give God a reason to answer your prayer. Don't just say "I want this" or "This is my desire" -- Give Him a reason why you're praying this.

With that as a background let me give you the four secrets to answered prayer from the life of Nehemiah.

1. Base my request on God's character

This is the greatest reason to give to God. "I'm expecting You to answer this prayer because of Who You are. You are a faithful God. You are a great God. You are a loving God. You are a wonderful God. You can handle this problem, God!" Nehemiah comes to God and says, "God, I want you to do something back over in Jerusalem. Verse 5 "O Lord God of heaven, the great and awesome God who keeps His covenant of love with those who love Him and obey His command." Nehemiah said three things about God:

1. You're great -- that's God's position.
2. You're awesome -- that shows His power.
3. You keep your promises -- God's covenant.

The first thing Nehemiah did was he acknowledges who God is. That's what praise is. Acknowledge who God is and His greatness. Nehemiah is saying "God, I know our situation is in a mess, but I'm just reminding myself you're in control. I know that the problems over there in Jerusalem may be great but You are greater, You're bigger, You're bigger than this mess." He starts off by getting the right perspective. In starting to have answered prayer, say, "God, I want You to answer because of who You are. You've given us all of these things, these promises. You are a faithful God, a loving God, a merciful God" -- all these things the Bible tells us He is. You base your request on God's character.

2. Confess the sin in my life
This is step number two if you want to have answers to your prayers. The Jews had disobeyed God. As a result, God said, "All right, if you don't obey me you're going to loose the land of Israel." And they lost it. Because they had not obeyed God they lost their city, Jerusalem, the Temple and were taken into foreign captivity -- all because they had disobeyed Him. Many of the books of the prophets are about this very thing.

v. 6,7 "Let your ear be attentive and your eyes be opened to the prayer your servant is praying before you day and night for your servants, the people of Israel. I confess the sins we Israelites, including myself and my father's house committed against you. We have acted very wickedly toward you. We have not obeyed the commands and the decrees and the laws you gave your servant Moses."

Part one of Nehemiah's prayer is to base his request on who God is. "God, you're a great God. You're awesome! You keep your promises!" Part two, I admit who I am. He says, "We've sinned." Look at how many times he uses the word "I" and "we". He says "I confess... myself... my father's house ... we have acted wickedly ... we have not obeyed." It wasn't Nehemiah's fault they went into captivity. He wasn't even born when this happened seventy years earlier. He was born in captivity. Yet, he is including himself in the national sins. He says "I've been a part of the problem".

There is personal confession and there is national confession. This is something we don't know anything about. We don't have a corporate sense in America today. We are very individualistic. We're taught to confess my sins. When was the last time you confessed the sins of the nation? or the sins of your family? or your church? or your friends? We don't think that way. We're very individualistic. Our society has taught us the concept of you're only responsible for you. And that's just not true! You are your brother's keeper. We are all in this together. If there's one phrase I never want to hear it's "I've got to do what's best for me!" All kinds of things get justified with that phrase. “It doesn't matter whether I'm leaving my wife/husband and kids or whatever else, I've got to do what's best for me!” Nehemiah says "Not only do I have personal sin to confess but I have corporate sin. I'll accept the blame for other things.

Another Law of Leadership: Leaders accept the blame but losers pass the buck.
If you want to be a leader, you accept the blame and share the credit. Losers are always accusers and excusers. they're always making excuses why things didn't/couldn't happen, It's always somebody else's fault. Leaders accept the blame. "We have sinned against You." (Pres. - dropped ball - Katrina) The point is that all sin is ultimately against God. When you break a human law you are ultimately offending God. When you hurt somebody else, you're ultimately hurting God.

The older I get in the Lord, the more increasingly I'm aware of my own sinfulness and God's graciousness. What a gracious God that we have that He uses imperfect people in that way. I base my request on who God is and then I confess the sin.

3. Claim the promises of God
v. 8-9 Remember the instructions you gave to your servant Moses saying `If you are unfaithful I will scatter you among the nations. But if you return to me and obey my commands then even if your exiled people are at the farthest horizon I will gather them from there and bring them to the place I have chosen .. in my name." Notice it says "if ... I will" Circle "if". Then again He says "if ... I will". He has a warning and a promise.
Nehemiah is praying to the Lord and saying, "I want You to remember what You told your servant Moses." Can you imagine saying "remember" to God? He's reminding God what He had said in the past. God warned us through Moses that if we were unfaithful we would loose the land of Israel. But You also promised that if we repent You'd give it back to us. All through the Bible you find God's people reminding God about what He said He wants to do. David did it. Abraham did it. Moses did it. All the prophets did it. "God, I want to remind You of one of Your promises..." then they'd share it.

Question: Does God have to be reminded? No. Does He forget what He's promised? No. Then why do we do this? Because it helps us remember what God has promised. Nothing pleases God more that when you remind God of one of His promises. Do kids ever forget a promise? Never. (dad - 12y. - wanna 3-wheel now or new corvette @16?)
So you have to be very careful about making them. The Bible says we're imperfect fathers and if we imperfect fathers know that we need to fulfill our promises to our kids, how much more does a perfect Father, a Heavenly Father, intend to keep the promises He's made in His word.

Prayer transforms God's promises into performance. Prayer is taking God at His word. It's holding God to His promises. It's asking God to do what He's already promised He wants to do. Nehemiah says "God, first I'm basing my prayer on Who You are. Then I'm admitting who I am. Then I'm reminding You of what You've said."
There are over 7000 promises in the Bible waiting to be claimed.
Pray the scriptures - praying God’s Word is praying God’s will.
God never shuts His storehouse until you shut your mouth. God wants to bless you more than you want to be blessed. But you must claim the promises of God.

Nehemiah could claim these promises because he knew them. The promises he mentions in these verses are Leviticus 26:33 and Deuteronomy 30:4. When was the last time you memorized a promise or prayed out of Leviticus or
Deuteronomy?
The point is, the strength of my prayer life is determined by how well I know the promises of God. The secret of successful praying is pleading the promises of God. "God, you said it and because of what You said and who You are, I thank You that the answer is on its way. I'm expecting You to meet my needs." We need to learn the promises of God.

4. Be very specific in what I ask for
In order to get specific answers to prayer you've got to make specific requests.
If you make general prayers, how will you know if they are answered?
v. 10,11 "They are your servants, your people, whom you've
redeemed by your great strength and your mighty hand.
O Lord, let your ear be attentive to the prayer of this, your
servant and to the prayer of your servants who delight in
revering your name. Give your servant success today by granting him favor in the presence of this man."
Nehemiah has the whole prayer just to have the little request at the end. "When I go before the king to ask to be released to go build the wall, give me success when I make that request to the king." Nehemiah is willing to go to Jerusalem. He was available. He was willing to rebuild the project. But he knew he'd have to get the king's permission first who was definitely not a believer. You don't just let your right hand guy walk away. The king has the power of death and life over anybody. Nehemiah was asking a leave of absence for three years, to go back to his home town and rebuild a wall the king had ordered not to be rebuilt. This was the reason he was asking for success when he went to talk with the king.

He's not hesitant to pray for success. He's very bold in his praying. Have you ever prayed, "Lord, make me successful!" If you haven't, why haven't you? What is the alternative? A failure? There is nothing wrong with praying for success if what you're doing is ultimately for the glory of God. Pray boldly. Pray that God will make you successful in life for the glory of God. That's what Nehemiah did. This is a valid prayer. Give me success!

Remember this is just a sample prayer of four months of praying. What did Nehemiah do during these four months? Did he have this one prayer and he prayed it over several times a day? No, I doubt it. If Nehemiah was praying over a four month period his prayer probably evolved into this. Like our prayers do a lot of time. You start praying for something and then it gets clarified. That's one of the purposes God delays answering prayers many times; He wants us to clarify.
“Lord, give me success in this!

William Carey who founded the modern missionary movement used to say, "Expect great things from God; do great things for God." That's a good motto for every believer.

Summary: The type of prayer that God answers. Four marks of Nehemiah's prayer that are the same four marks we need to have in our praying if we're going to be a leader who has his/her prayers answered on a regular basis:

1. It's a prayer of conviction. It's a prayer of conviction of who God is. It's conviction that God is a just God, a great God, in control. He wants to hear me. He wants to answer my prayers. It is conviction acknowledging who God is. This is what praise is all about. Praise is bragging on God.

2. It's a prayer of confession of what I am and who I am. "God, I've blown it. I've made mistakes and I'm imperfect." Be very specific.

3. It's a prayer of confidence in what God has promised. "I know who You are, I know what I am, I know what You've said." God said it, I believe it -- that settles it! If God said it, that settles it, whether I believe it or not. Claim God's promises. The promises are the keys that unlock the answers to prayer. You've got to learn those 7000 promises.

4. It's a prayer of commitment. "I'm willing to be part of the answer. God, You can use me. I commit myself. I'll be part of the solution."
We're talking about leadership. Every one of you are leaders because leadership is influence. You are leaders in different parts of life. The issue is not whether you're a leader or not, it's whether you're a good leader or not. The first step in leadership is to develop a private life, time alone with God -- a personal, daily, devotional walk. If you want to be a leader, develop your prayer life. Learn to pray like Nehemiah prayed. Watch the doors of heaven open up.
Practical things: devotions
Next week we're going to look at the next chapter and answer the question, "What do you do after you've prayed?" I've prayed, I've been praying about the situation. What do I do next? A leader does more than pray but he doesn't do anything until he prays.

Prayer:

I'd like to walk you through these four steps. Think of one thing you've really had your heart set on. It's a real prayer request you'd like to pray. First, in your heart, base your request on who God is. Before you give the request to God, say, "God, I know You can answer this request because You are..." and tell Him what He is. A great God, a loving God, a merciful God. You listen to our prayers. You are a faithful God, You keep Your promises. On the basis of that make your request.

Number two, "God, I confess the sin in my life." Ask God if there is any sin He needs to reveal to you. We commit them specifically, we need to confess them specifically. Don't make a blanket approach, "God, forgive all my sins." Is there an attitude or action you need to change? Ask God to cleanse your life.

Then would you claim the promises of God. If you can't think of one right now, I suggest Philippians 4:19 "My God shall supply all your needs according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus." Thank God that He gives us these promises.

Then be very specific in what you ask for. Lay your request out to God. Some of you need to pray that God would make you successful in a certain venture or project. If you're not sure that God wants you to do it, get something you're sure God wants you to do.
Then a prayer of commitment. "God, I'm willing to be part of the answer. I'm willing to be used by You in any way for the answer."

Thank You, Father, for these lessons we've learned from this great leader Nehemiah. May all of us develop our prayer life and grow closer to You. In Jesus' name. Amen.

Sunday, September 17, 2006

LEADING IN LIFE - The Making of a Leader

THE MAKING OF A LEADER
We're going to start a series I'm calling "Leading in Life".
I want to begin with a verse out of Proverbs. Proverbs 28:2 "A nation will be strong and endure when it has intelligent, sensible leaders." Circle the words "strong" and "endure". Those are the two benefits of having good, strong leadership. I think you could apply this verse to your family. I think you could say, A family will be strong and endure when there's good leadership. And a business, and a church. In the Living Bible it says, "With honest, sensible leaders there is stability." There are few things that are needed more in life today than stability. We need it in our homes, our nation, our world. There are rapid changes and upheavals and we need stability. It comes from leadership.
(diff. in living and leading in life)
Today we're going to begin an exciting discovery what the principles of leadership are in the book of Nehemiah. That's going to be our textbook. For years all I knew about Nehemiah was the was rebuilding a wall. That's all I knew. But the fact is, this is the greatest leadership book ever written. By his examples we're going to learn principles of leadership.
Today I want to give you the background of the book. But before we do that I want to give you LAWS OF LEADER-- six principles of why we're going to even do this study.
1.NOTHING HAPPENS UNTIL SOMEONE PROVIDES LEADERSHIP FOR IT.
That is a law of life. Look at history. The Civil Rights movement was nothing until a man came along named Martin Luther King and said, "I have a dream" and he provided leadership. The NASA space program was nothing until a guy named John Kennedy said, "We're going to put a man on the moon by the end of the decade." A man by the name of Ray Crocks said, "I want fast food at a convenient price in a clean atmosphere" and he invented an entire industry called fast food. This church started because God said, "Joe and Cathleen, I want you to be leaders and get this thing off the ground." In your own family -- you have family problems... nothing happens until somebody in the family assumes leadership and says, "We're going to do something about it." Everything rises or falls on leadership. Most problems can be traced to a lack of competent leadership. The greatest problem today is a leadership shortage. The greatest need is trained leaders.

In the book of Judges there were seven cycles -- up and down, up and down. The last verse of the book Judges 21:25 "Every man did what was right in his own eyes. There was no king in Israel." Where there is no leadership, people do their own thing. There is instability.
2. LEADERSHIP IS INFLUENCE
If I had to summarize leadership in one word it's influence -- for good or for bad. There are positive leaders and negative leaders. Have you ever gone onto a playground at school and within five minutes you know who the leaders are? For good or for bad.(pic) Have you ever set with a group of teenagers and within five minutes you know who the leaders are? Have you sat in a committee meeting and figured out who the leader was, often not the chairman? It's the person everyone keeps looking to to find out what he thinks? Every time you influence somebody you're assuming leadership.
I Timothy 4:12 Paul told Timothy, "As a young man be an example in leadership." Age has nothing to do with leadership. You can be an influence at any age and you're a model whether you like it or not. Everybody here today is a leader, just in different areas. Anytime you influence somebody you're a leader. The issue is not Are you a leader? The issue is whether or not you're a good one. You are a leader -- in your family, at home, at work, at school. The issue is, Are you a good one or not?

Nehemiah is the outstanding example in the Bible. He
accomplished incredible odds in a brief time because
he was a leader.
3.THE TEST OF LEADERSHIP IS "IS ANYBODY FOLLOWING?"
If you want to know whether you're a leader or not, simple -- Look over your shoulder. Jesus said in John 10:27 "My sheep listen to my voice and I know them and they follow me." I Cor. 11:1 Paul said, "Follow my example as I follow the example of Christ." We all need human models. Sure we're to follow Christ but we need human models to follow.

John Maxwell's parable of leadership, "He who thinketh he leadeth and hath no one following him is only taking a walk."

Leadership has absolutely nothing to do with titles or position. It has to do with influence. This is a mistake a lot of people make. A guy thinks, because he has a title, people are going to automatically follow and that's not necessarily true at all. There is a big difference between having a boss and having a leader. It's not a position or a title. Many
people have authority but they don't have leadership.
Ever seen that?

If you have to tell people that you are the leader, if you have to remind people that you're the leader, you're not. Leadership is influence and if you're not influencing anybody it doesn't mater whether you think you're the leader or not -- you're not. It's all influence.

The same thing is true in your home. When you say to your wife, "We're going to do it this way, because I am the spiritual leader, " you ain't. You've just lost it. The truth is if you're really leading, you don't have to remind people.

How about if your kid comes to you and says, "Why should I do this?" and you say, "Because I say so". That is a very weak position to motivate from. It just doesn't work too good. The test of leadership is if you have somebody following. You cannot force people to follow you no matter what you do.
4. THE FOUNDATION OF LEADERSHIP IS CHARACTER, NOT CHARISMA
A lot of TV evangelists have had lots of charisma, but they've bombed out because they had no character. They had major character defects.
A while back on one of the children's quiz shows the question was "What do you call a person who speaks through a dummy without moving his lips?" The child said, "An evangelist?"
The foundation of leadership is character, not charisma. Charisma has nothing to do with it. You don't have to have charisma to be a leader. You do have to have character, credibility, because leadership is influence and if you don't have credibility nobody is going to follow you.

Reputation is what people say you are, character is what you really are. D. L. Moody said, "Character is what you are in the dark when nobody is looking." I Timothy 3:1-13, Paul lays out the leadership characteristics for church leadership. All those characteristics he laid out necessary to be in the ministry, not once does he mention you've got to have a seminary education. Leadership is not based on academies it's character, on who you are.

Leaders come in all types and shapes and sizes of temperaments. There is no one leadership personality. God wants to use your personality. Look at the four different temperaments: Paul was a choleric. Peter was a sanguine. Moses was a melancholic. Abraham was a phlegmatic. They are as different as night and day. God used them all. Leadership has nothing to do with personality. You don't have to be outgoing to be a leader. You don't have to be a sanguine to be a leader.
What you do have to have is character. All great leaders have character. Sometimes a person gets into leadership without character and then those character flaws cause their downfall.
As we look at Nehemiah, we're going to see a man of God who was a very ordinary type of person but did extraordinary things because he had character in his life.
The fact is you will burn out if you try to imitate somebody else's personality. If you want to be a leader, don't say, "I want to be like..." and pick a model. If you try to imitate their personality, you will most likely burn out. (didn’t figure out until came here) All leaders are very different, there is great diversity. What great leaders do have in common is credibility and character.
Hebrews 13:7-8 "Remember your leaders who spoke the word of God to you. Consider the outcome of their way of life, and imitate their faith." This passage gives us three characteristics of good leaders:
They have a message worth remembering. When they talk, people listen. "Remember your leaders who spoke the word of God to you." Evidently, there is something worth remembering there.
They have a lifestyle worth considering. "Consider the outcome of their way of life." Does their walk match their talk? Does their life match what they say they are?
They have a faith worth imitating. "Imitate their faith."
If you want to be a good leader, you need to develop a message worth remembering (What is my life message? What does God want to say to the world through me?), have a lifestyle worth considering and have a faith worth imitating. That's all character.
5. LEADERSHIP CAN BE LEARNED
If I didn't believe this we wouldn't be wasting time on this
series. Every one of you can be a great leader. Philippians 4:9 "Whatever you have learned or received or heard from me, or seen in me -- put into practice." Leaders are made not born. There is no such thing as a born leader. They are made by the way they respond to circumstances. You can take two people in exact opposite situations, circumstances, one of them will end up being a leader, the other washes out because of the choices they make.
The priority of training leaders I think can be seen in the ministry of Jesus. Mark 3:14 "He appointed twelve that they should be with him and he should send them out." Jesus had a public ministry and a private ministry. His public ministry involved preaching, teaching and healing. His private ministry involved training the disciples. Even within the twelve He had an inner circle -- Peter, James, John -- who got to go to the Garden of Gethsemane, the Mount of Transfiguration -- they got extra attention. In Galatians, Paul said Peter, James and John were the pillars of the church. Jesus invested the maximum time with those who would bear the maximum responsibility. He fed the masses but He spent most of His time training leadership. Leadership can be learned.
6. THE MOMENT YOU STOP LEARNING, YOU STOP LEADING
All leaders are learners. Every leader is a learner. The moment I stop learning, I stop leading. You must always be developing and growing and becoming what God wants you to be. Learning to be a leader takes a lifetime. We'll see it in the life of Nehemiah -- how God prepared him and God used him and how God used the lives of other people that Nehemiah taught.
Ecclesiastes 10:10 "If the ax is dull and its edge unsharpened, more strength is needed but skill will bring success." If you've got a dull ax and you're chopping wood, it takes more energy. But if you have a sharp ax it doesn't take as much energy. Work smarter, not harder. People say, Hard work brings success. I know lots of people who work hard, and aren't successful. They do hard work digging ditches every day, but they're not working smarter. You need to learn to be a leader.

I honor you for being here. The very fact that you're here says more about you than it does about this message. It says that you're interested in learning to be a leader. I honor you for that. The person who thinks, "I know it all" is going to be left behind. It's the person who says, "I need to learn. I need to grow." I want to challenge you to not miss any of this series. This will help you at work, at church, in your business, in your home. I believe God has a place for you to serve. I believe that the very fact that you're alive means God has a purpose for your life. That involves having an
influence on other people.

THE BACKGROUND OF NEHEMIAH'S STORY

In 586 BC the city of Jerusalem in Israel was destroyed. Jews were deported over to Babylon which is now Iraq. They were to be kept there for 70 years. But in 537 the first group of Jews were allowed to return. In 516 the Temple was rebuilt. In 458 Ezra led the second group of Jews back to Jerusalem. Then in 445 Nehemiah asked permission to return to Jerusalem with a third group to rebuild the city walls.
Where is it happening? Jerusalem.
The Problem is that the city walls needed to be rebuilt. Today we use other means to protect our cities -- like radar. We don't need walls. But in those days if a city was walled and an enemy came against it, it might take 2, 4, 6 months for the enemy to break in. The walls were very important. The Jews had been taken away in captivity into another country. They finally were allowed to trickle back in. Finally they were allowed to rebuild the Temple. But the city was still in ruins, rubble. All the walls were falling down. It was just junk and they were living in a heap.
The people were defenseless. They were vulnerable to attack and harassment because they had no protection. Because they were defenseless they were also discouraged and defeated.
Why were they in captivity in the first place? It was the sin of the nation. God said, If you guys don't get your act together I'm going to allow an enemy nation to come in, and He did. But now He's allowing the Jews to come back, the Temple has been rebuilt but the city is still in rubble, a big mess, and the walls are broken down. People are living in rubble, low morale, and they're defeated, discouraged, depressed. What do you do when you have that kind of situation?
You need a leader.

Nehemiah 1 "The word of Nehemiah, son of Hacaliah in the month of Chislev, in the twentieth year. While I was in the citadel of Susa, Hanani, one of my brothers, came from Judah and some other men, and I questioned them about the Jewish remnant that survived the exile and also about Jerusalem. They said to me, `Those that survived the exile are back in the province and they are in great trouble and disgrace. The wall of Jerusalem is broken down and the gates have been burned with fire.' [It's very significant about the gates.] When I heard these things I sat down and wept. For some days I mourned, fasted and prayed before the Lord God. Then I said ..." the next verses gets into his prayer.

Notice: Nehemiah first says "I was in the city of Susa". First place, notice this was written in first person. Nehemiah wrote this book. This is his journal. We're going to get a personal account of a leader, not from third hand experience. This is his personal journal. We're going to get an inside look at the leader.

He was in the citadel of Susa. Susa was not the capital of the Persian Empire but was kind of like a summer palace. Nehemiah is there in the king's summer palace which is in modern day Iraq.
Last part of v. 11, he says "I was the cupbearer to the king." This tells us what Nehemiah did for a living, who he was, what his occupation was.
It says Nehemiah was a cupbearer to the king. What was a cupbearer? If he was going to go back and try to rebuild the wall, obviously he's not a contractor, he's a cupbearer. A cupbearer was probably the second most important position in the kingdom. He was a combination Prime Minister, body guard, personal security agent and assistant to the king. He did all of these things. He was very well trusted. He was the person the most trusted by the king. He was the king's personal security agent, and prime minister. The reason he was called cupbearer was because part of his job was to taste the wine before the king drank it to make sure it wasn't poisoned. There were a lot of assassination attempts in those days. The king was paranoid and fearful so they would have a guy who would test all of the wine. If he keeled over they knew that was bad wine! It was a pretty dangerous job, considering in those days a lot of people didn't like the King.

The point I want to make here is that Nehemiah had to be absolutely loyal and trustworthy, a Jew brought over in captivity or actually he was probably born in Babylon because they'd been there 70 years, but he was not a Persian and he is second in command. Isn't it neat how God has a way of always getting His men in the right position at the right time? Nehemiah is really a major figure in the Persian government.

Verse 1 says in the month of Chislev his brother Hanani has been on a trip to Jerusalem and he comes back. Jerusalem is about 800 to 1000 miles from Susa. In those days that would take probably about two months travel on camel and it's all across the desert. It's major hard driving. His brother comes back and Nehemiah says, give me a report about all of our relatives, what's happening over there in Jerusalem? Hanani says, "It's all bad news, the people are in the pits, our relatives are discouraged, the walls have not been rebuilt. They've got the temple rebuilt but the whole city lies in ruin. All these guys are coming in invading the city and the people are discouraged, depressed, low morale. It's bad!"

Nehemiah's reaction in v. 4 "When I heard these things I sat down and I wept and for some days I mourned and I fasted and I prayed before the God of heaven." Nehemiah's reaction was four things: he wept, he mourned, he fasted, he prayed. He's really taking this thing seriously. He's saddened by this. He's embarrassed for the people of God. He says, I prayed and in the next few verses, 4-11, he gives us the prayer. Notice it says, "for some days". Circle that phrase. He didn't do it for just one day. How long did he do it? He tells us. In v. 1 he tells us this is the month of Chislev when he heard about it. In chapter 2, the very first verse, he says the month of Nisan of the twentieth year of the king he gets the chance to go. He's been praying all of this time. Nehemiah had been praying, weeping, fasting, mourning for four months. He took this seriously, very deeply in his heart. He prayed for four months straight. Nehemiah is a man of prayer. He has 11 prayers; there's more prayers in this book
than almost any book of the Bible. One of them we'll cover next week.

WHY DID GOD CHOOSE NEHEMIAH AS A LEADER? Of all the people why did God choose Nehemiah, the cupbearer to a pagan king? Three reasons:
1. NEHEMIAH WAS SENSITIVE TO THE NEEDS ABOUT HIM
Nehemiah's reaction is pretty incredible. Nehemiah has it made. He's at the peak of his career. Nehemiah is living on easy street, the second best position in the kingdom. He's got a great salary, he doesn't have to rock the boat. The problems in Jerusalem must seem like a million miles away. He's never even seen Jerusalem. He was born in Babylon because they'd been there 70 years. When he hears about God's people depressed, discouraged, defeated he takes it seriously.

In the following weeks I'm going to give you leadership insights from Nehemiah. Here's one of the first ones: Leaders are sensitive to the needs of people around them. That's the first principle of leadership I want to bring out of this book. Living in the Houston area, life is really so easy compared to the rest of the world. Most of the world would love to have your problems. Their problems are "Am I going to have food today?" and we're worried about "My shoes don't match my purse!" or "I've got on summer colors and it’s fall!" We live in the Houston area which is in so many ways insulated and isolated that all of the problems the rest of the world faces seem far away. You could turn on your TV any night and see all of these needs but become callused because we see them all of the time.

The point I want to make is this: The people that God uses are people who care about the things God cares about. And God cared about the fact that the walls of Jerusalem were broken down. Since God cared about it, Nehemiah cared about it and that made him a leader.

Bob Pierce, the founder of World Vision, used to say, "Let my heart be broken with the things that break the heart of God." That's the first step in being a great leader. A sensitivity to the needs around you.
2. NEHEMIAH WAS DEPENDABLE
He had a proven track record. We see that the king considered him so trustworthy he gave him the most reliable position of the kingdom -- cupbearer. He intrusted his personal security to him. There was enormous trust there. The point I want to make here is that God uses people who are trustworthy, reliable, dependable.

Luke 16:10-13.   "Unless you are faithful in small matters, you won't be faithful in large ones. If you cheat even a little, you won't be honest with greater responsibilities. And if you are untrustworthy about worldly wealth, who will trust you with the true riches of heaven? And if you are not faithful with other people's money, why should you be trusted with money of your own? "No one can serve two masters. For you will hate one and love the other, or be devoted to one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money."

We see a couple ways God tests our faithfulness to see if He's going to use us or not. One of the ways He tests us is how we serve in another person's ministry before He gives us our own. Another way is what do we do with our money? The Bible tells us that the way you manage your money determines how much God can bless your life. Your giving determines to a great degree how much God can bless your life. If you cannot be trusted with this small amount of worldly wealth who's going to trust you with true spiritual riches?
3. NEHEMIAH WAS AVAILABLE
When the situation needed a leader, Nehemiah said, "I volunteer! Here am I, send me!" He had the job, the position that everybody else wants and the problem is a thousand miles away, two months away across the desert on a camel and he says, "I'll go! I'm not even a contractor but I'll go rebuild the wall!" God still chose him even though he didn't have the skills for that particular job. But he was sensitive and he was dependable and he was available.

God is not looking for ability in leaders as much as he's looking for credibility, dependability, and availability. Those qualities are a matter of choice. You may say, "I don't have certain gifts or talents or intellect." That doesn't even matter to God. What matters are, Are you credible? Do you have character? Are you growing in character? Are you sensitive to people? Are you dependable? Can God rely on you? Dependability is much more important than ability. Are you available?

Nothing happens until someone provides leadership for it. Everything rises or falls on leadership. God wants to use you as a leader in your home, your business, your church. If you'll stick with me over the next several weeks, I will teach you the principles from God's word on how you can be a leader.


Prayer:

As we close, let's do a little personal evaluation. How about these three reasons God used Nehemiah? Am I sensitive to the needs around me? Ask yourself that. Or am I so caught up in what I'm doing, my plan that I can't hear God's voice? Am I sensitive? That's why God chose Nehemiah. Am I aware of what my wife's greatest needs are? my husband's needs are? Am I sensitive enough to be aware of what my kids' greatest needs are? Am I aware of the needs of the people that I work with? Am I aware of the greatest needs in my church? Could I name them right now? Do I even care? What breaks your heart? Does your team losing on TV upset you more than people around you are going to die and go to hell unless we reach them with the good news? What breaks your heart?

How about dependability? Can I be depended on? Am I reliable? How about availability? Am I available to God? to be used in any way that He wants to use me?

As we close, I invite you to pray a one sentence prayer: "God, I want to be willing to be used by You anywhere, anytime, any way." If you say that and mean it, hang on for a fun time. If you get usable, God will wear you out and there is no greater thrill than to be used by God in the kingdom of God.

Father, may be we challenged from the life of Nehemiah as we look at this man. The principles are thousands of years old but they apply today in the rat race we live in. Lord, we want to be sensitive, dependable and available to You. In Jesus' name. Amen.

Sunday, September 10, 2006

'Finding GOD in your iPod' - iLife - by Cathleen Parks

‘Unwritten” - Natasha Bedingfield

No one else
Can speak the words on your lips
drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins
Feel the rain on your skin
No one else can feel it for you
Only you can let it in
No one else, no one else
Can speak the words on your lips
drench yourself in words unspoken
Live you life with arms wide open
Today is where you book begins
The rest is still unwritten

------------------------------------------------------

Today is where YOUR book begins.

Over the last 5 weeks in this series, ‘Finding GOD on your iPod’ was a creative way to share with you the structure of our church, FOCUS*. The same structure just so happens to also be the keys to living a successful life.

The structure is based on 2 scriptures:

The first one is called ‘The Great Commandment’ because Jesus was asked what the greatest commandment in the law was and this was his answer.

Matthew 22:37-39
'Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.' This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: 'Love your neighbor as yourself.'

The second is called the great commission because this was Jesus’ directive to use, his call to us...

Matthew 28:19-20
“Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.”

Those 2 scriptures show us how to live a purpose-driven life as well as a be a part of a purpose-driven church.
A healthy church is one living out the 5 purposes in those 2 scriptures - a God-driven life consists of those 5 purposes. So let me make it clear that when I refer to this purpose driven life I am actually talking about 2 different things


1 your individual life
2 the church body, which is in itself life

Based in these 2 scriptures we can see that the 5 ingredients to being purpose driven are clear - let’s break them down:

-Love the Lord your God - Worship - iWorship
-Love your neighbor as yourself - Ministry/Service - iLove
-go and make disciples - Evangelism - iShare
-baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit - Community/fellowship - iConnect
-teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you - Discipleship - iLearn

Our goal at FOCUS* is to learn together how live out these 5 purposes. In everything we do - we want to see these 5 purposes overlapping each other.
Our focus is not to grow a church - that isn’t what it’s about - our focus is to have a healthy church.
We can measure whether this life called the church body is healthy by looking at these 5 purposes, or systems, in the same way that seeing if or physical bodies are healthy by looking at the 9 body symptoms.

In our own body make-up - we have 9 central systems that govern the body, nervous system, circulatory system, muscular... respiratory... skeletal... and so forth...
(Joe and some of you may have seen that at the
‘Body Worlds’ exhibit)
When all are functioning we are in balance. What happens if just one begins to falter?
We get out of balance, become unhealthy
We stop either growing or functioning properly

To live out a purpose driven life we need to have all 5 purposes, or you could even say systems, functioning:

So we say:
A great commitment to the Great Commandment and the Great Commission will grow a great church!

or

A great commitment to the Great Commandment and the Great Commission will grow a great person!

How do you see yourself living out these 5 purposes?
Maybe 1 or 2 real well?
Maybe not any really?

No matter where you see your life today, no matter where you are on this scale today - you CAN move forward -
you CAN live a purpose-driven life. Just like the final line in todays song - the rest is still unwritten

Let me show you how this works. We already established that there are 5 purposes or systems that have to be in place to see a healthy, purposeful life. But let me take it a step further and say that these purposes need to overlap - intertwine - they are dependent on one another. To see even 1 system functioning at it best means that the other 4 systems would be functioning also. In some cases, systems will fail without the support of another system. For example, you absolutely cannot love others as yourself until you love God with all you’ve got first.

Neighbor = those you are in contact with throughout your day

Give example of v.b. tour. and drive home
Ask: What would you do in that situation? How would you feel about helping?
Is it fair to say that on your own you could not love them enough to desire to help them? I’m sure most of us would say that we would struggle a little here. Our struggle is evidence that we need a Godly love that accepts and forgives. It reaches out to those we may not normally want to reach out to. So you can see that loving God with all we have really is a prerequisite to loving others as ourselves.

I believe that when we apply the prerequisite and we truly fall in love with God, we seek to get to know Him and then we grow in love more and more - then loving others will come much more naturally to us. In the same way, when we begin to see others with a Godly perspective, which the closer we get to Him the easier that becomes, we can’t help but to have a desire to put into action The Great Commission.

The first thing the great commission calls us to action on is to ‘go and make disciples’. This is evangelism. It is simply telling others about Jesus. Sharing your experiences with Him. Sharing His love and what He’s all about.

Our desire to share Jesus with others is a direct reflection of our ability to see people through a Godly perspective. To know that each individual is created by, and deeply loved by, our God spurs in us a desire to love them to.

The great commission leads us on a journey then with people. It says first go and make disciples/to evangelize and then to baptize. I like this one because it emphasizes community and fellowship. It demonstrates the need for one another. Can you imagine someone attempting to baptize themselves? We really do need each other. Time and time again God’s Word reiterates our need for one another:
Heb 10:24& 25And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds.
25Let us not give up meeting together, ... but let us encourage one another.

James 5:16 Make this your common practice: Confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you can live together whole and healed.

John 13:34 Love one another. In the same way I loved you, you love one another.
Job 42:11 All his brothers and sisters and everyone who had known him came and ate with him in his house. They comforted and consoled him.
Job 16: 5 my mouth would encourage you; comfort from my lips would bring you relief.
Provebs 12:25 Worry weighs us down; 
   a cheerful word picks us up.
This one sums up what we can be to one another. This is what Paul and Timothy wrote in a letter.....
1 Thessalonians 2:11-12 
You saw with your own eyes how discreet and courteous we were among you, with keen sensitivity to you as fellow believers. ....With each of you we were like a father with his child, holding your hand, whispering encouragement, showing you step-by-step how to live well before God, who called us into his own kingdom, into this delightful life.
Man that’s community! with keen sensitivity to you as fellow believers. ....With each of you we were like a father with his child, holding your hand, whispering encouragement, showing you step-by-step how to live well before God
Actually as mentioned before, this scripture shows the overlapping of the five purposes because you can see how it naturally flows into the last purpose that says ‘ teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you -’. Listen to how clear it is in vs. 12....showing you step-by-step how to live well before God.
These purposes are our roadmap to health. Individually and corporately. We are called to be a people that absolutely love God. And not because we have to - nobody, including God, wants to be loved like that. But instead we love God because of who He is. We take action to get to know Him. To learn more and more about Him, and to grow deeper and deeper in relationship with Him. And as we do, we develop a love for others that spurs us on to the other 4 purposes of service, evangelism, community, and discipleship.

You know as we looked through some of this scripture today some of you may have paused right in the beginning. Right when we hit ‘ 'Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.' You might feel like you love the Lord but you realize maybe that you love Him because you are suppose to. Because you’ve been taught to - because you are obliged to. But with all your heart, soul and mind.....maybe not. Coming to this place and reconciling it is the first step to the rest of life. It is the prerequisite to everything. In our song it is the main verse:
Staring at the blank page before you
Open up the dirty window
Let the sun illuminate the words
That you could not find
Reaching for something in the distance
So close you can almost taste it
Release your inhibitions -Let it go - come to a place of full acceptance. A place of love for God that is truly with all your heart, soul, mind.

And then I think the song really demonstrates what happens next, ‘ Feel the rain on your skin
No one else can feel it for you
Only you can let it in
No one else’. No one can feel your emotions, dictate your life, you make your decisions and only you choose to let God in. And then what?
‘ no one else
Can speak the words on your lips
drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins
The rest is still unwritten

Let your book begin today. If your here and you are thinking - yep - that’s me. I want to love God with all I’ve got - this is your beginning.

Pray

If your here today and you know you’ve got the number 1 step down but your feel like you could use a little help with steps 2-5, join the club. We all need a little reminder every now and then to remember what it’s all about. Are you allowing others to speak into your life and are you speaking into others? Now matter how successful you are with these 4 purposes, as the song says, the rest is still unwritten. Every day is a new day to learn something new as we grow in the Lord and to impart something new as we encourage those around us. Let’s pray together that God would illuminate areas of our lives that he desires to work in, in a greater way. And let’s commit together to be a people who are dedicated to and partnering together in living purposeful lives

Sunday, September 03, 2006

'Finding GOD in your iPod' - iShare

I love that song. It is a very creative video.
I have a soft-spot for Nickelback b/c I’m a 80’s metalhead and I like NB’s stuff. They have some very thoughtful lyrics as well - this song, 'Savin’ Me' - Overall, he just wants out of a bad situation and needs help doing so, but he wants to be helped by someone who truly thinks he deserves saving.
A pretty inspirational song.

The chorus is impactful:
And teach me wrong from right 
And I'll show you what I can be 
Say it for me 
Say it to me 
And I'll leave this life behind me 
Say it if it's worth saving me

I wonder what we could say? I wonder what we could share
that would be worth it for someone to hear and listen?
What could we say, what could we share that it would be so meaningful to others that they’d leave (all that they know) their life behind them and go with what you have?

We are to be a voice of HOPE

This is a message God spoke in the O.T.

"But you are my witnesses, O Israel!" says the LORD. "And you are my servant. You have been chosen to know me, believe in me, and understand that I alone am God. There is no other God; there never has been and never will be. Is. 43:10

Israel’s task was to be a witness, to be a voice of hope, telling the world who God is and what He has done. Believers today share the same responsibility - do people know what God is like thru your words and example? Though they cannot see God directly, they see Him reflected in you. (mirror)
Another O.T. scripture -
”Those who are wise will shine as bright as the sky, and those who turn many to righteousness will shine like stars forever.” Daniel 12:3

Many people strive to be stars in the unstable world of sports or entertainment, only to find the pursuit meaningless or temporary. God tells us how to be ‘eternal stars’ - by “turning many to righteousness” - by being a Voice of Hope!

Throughout the New Testament God is changing the lives of people through His Son Jesus Christ - story after story... Sual(Paul)... Cornelious... the Blind man... and on and on...

Look at this story in John 1:

“The next day John was there again with two of his disciples. When he saw Jesus passing by, he said, "Look, the Lamb of God!" When the two disciples heard him say this, they followed Jesus. Turning around, Jesus saw them following and asked, "What do you want?" 
They said, "Rabbi" (which means Teacher), "where are you staying?" “Come," he replied, "and you will see." 
So they went and saw where he was staying, and spent that day with him. It was about the tenth hour.
Andrew, Simon Peter's brother, was one of the two who heard what John had said and who had followed Jesus. The first thing Andrew did was to find his brother Simon and tell him, "We have found the Messiah" (that is, the Christ). And he brought him to Jesus. 
 Jesus looked at him and said, "You are Simon son of John. You will be called Cephas" (which, when translated, is Peter). John 1:35-42

I want you to think about this for a moment, this is HUGE!
We’re talking Peter here! Peter... who... became disciple...
... was part of Christ’s inner circle
... was the 1st great VoH after pentecost
... became the recognized leader of the church

and it was his brother Andrew who lead him to Christ.
Peter was living this normal, regular routine life and then Andrew takes him to Christ. From that moment on Peter found purpose in life, his reason for living, life actually meant something - Andrew had something worth sharing. (changed Peter's life)
Andrew was a voice of hope - this is a great example of how God has called us to be His witnesses that we read in Is. 43 and how to shine like the stars that we read in Da. 12
to be a Voice of HOPE

Here’s another ex. closer to home (lynn video)
Lynn is a godly woman who continues to impact the lives of those around and beyond... and did you catch how she was lead to Jesus Christ? or how she ‘meet the Lord’ in her own words there?
2 people - Andy and her mother

Andy is living out Dan. 12:3, shinning star - He is this mirror reflecting the glory of God, the love of God out to others - and Lynn was one of those who saw Christ in Andy.
Her mother is living out Is. 43 as well as John 1 leading her now adult daughter to church to meet Christ.
Andy and her mother had something worth sharing - they were both a VoH

Let’s look at Rick (video) - how cool - their testimony - heard that b4? your testimony can be broken down to 3 simple steps - Life b4 JC - how met JC - life after JC - that’s testimony.

Your life story will change the life of others

How did Rick come to know Christ?
Wife and other believers (men’s group)

Let me ask you, who made a difference in your life?
Who was a shinning star in your life? Who reflected the love of God to you? Someone did, maybe a # of people did

Now let me ask you this - how can we make a difference?
How can we share this good news, this amazing story of love, forgiveness, and acceptance?

HOW?

Invest and Invite

All of us know people, people who are close to us who do not know Christ intimately. Who have not stepped over that line and accepted Him as Savior.
Invest in them - you’re not on your own, we will be praying with you and partnering together to share the love of Christ w/ them. I promise you our goal every week here is to share the love, acceptance, and forgiveness Christ offers.

Operation Andrew:

LOOK AROUND where you live, work, or go to school—
this is your mission field. List names of individuals you
know who need Jesus Christ.

LOOK UP because God changes people through prayer.
Pray each day for those on your list, that God will give
you opportunities to share His love with them.

LOOK OUT for ways to cultivate friendships with each
person on your list. Spend time with them. An invitation
to dinner or a sporting event will cultivate friendships, to build trust which can open the way to talk about Christ.

LOOK FORWARD by beginning to talk with each person
on your list about attending church or maybe a small group or down at Montrose with you.
Choose a specific date, pray, and invite them.

LOOK AFTER those who respond to Christ or even begin
to show interest in the Gospel, for they need your
encouragement. Continue to love and pray for those
who do not respond.