Monday, September 22, 2014

Prayer for End of Meeting

Lord, I thank you for this meeting and
for the decisions and discussions made.

May you O Lord carry these decisions
and plans to great success
and to bless many lives
far more abundantly
than we can ask or imagine. (Eph 3:20)

May you continue to  watch over us
and keep safe and close to you
for in your presence there is fullness of joy
and at your right hand
are pleasures forever more. ( Ps 16:11)

Grant us a good night rest
refresh us
re-energise us
and strengthen us for another new day ahead

For we can do all things thru Christ who strengthens us. (Phil 3:13)
Amen

Prayer - Preparation to Come Before God


"Holy, holy, holy is the LORD Almighty; the whole earth is full of his glory." (Isa 6:3)

Dear Heavenly Father

What a Holy God you are.

What an awesome privilege for us mere men and women to approach a holy, righteous God like you.

And as we approach your throne of grace ...

Create in us a clean heart, O God (Ps 51:11)
Renew a right spirit within us.

Take away our pride,
cast out the indifferent spirit in us
deliver us from the bondage of self-limiting thoughts
unload the heavy burdens we are carrying

So that we can present ourselves to you as living sacrifices, holy and acceptable.

We are ready Lord to learn from you and follow you.

Lead us Lord in this session, by your wisdom and with your understanding.

For as you promised:

By wisdom a house is built;
and by understanding it is established. (Ps 24:3)

May you O God be glorified in all we do today.

Amen.




Prayer for Intimacy with God

Dear Father in Heaven

We are the clay, you are our potter;
we are all the work of your hand (isa 64:8)l.

For you created the universe and the earth and everything that is in it.
You are Almighty.

You are exalted among the nations. You are exalted in the earth (Ps 46:10)

What a blessing it is for us to be your children - sons and daughters of the Most High God.

And God, we want to know you more and more;
to be like you.
This is our one desire.

As the Psalmist said (Ps 27:4)
One thing have I asked of the Lord,
 that I will seek after:
that I may dwell in the house of the Lord
all the days of my life,
to behold the beauty of the Lord
and to inquire at his temple.

Give us this desire Lord.

Amen

Friday, September 19, 2014

Prayer for the Grieving

Prayer for Grieving


Lord,

I am crying out to you.

Lord, my emotions are screaming at me.

Lord, I feel alone.

Sadness surrounds me, and depression is pulling me down.

I long for what I have lost. I ache.

My loss permeates my mind and my emotions. My grief aggressively tries to influence the course of most of my waking moments.

Father, help me process my loss. Help me move forward. Help me to welcome joy into those places of pain.

Lord, I need to draw nearer to you. You are my hope and my salvation through this dark valley.

I pray in Jesus' name,

Amen

Joshua 1:9 

The Psalms Are for You Now

The Psalms are often our go-to Scriptures because they are so immediately digestible in an “I…” format.

“The LORD is my shepherd;
I shall not want…
Even though walk through the valley…
You are with me.” (Psalm 23:1, 4a)

A Psalm is exactly what we need in the moment. The Psalms are designed to be exactly what we need in the moment. Not only that, but the Psalms connect you to the sorrows and joys of saints in history, Christ’s own sufferings, and give us a way to approach the Father when we don’t have the energy or the words. The Psalms are for you, for today. That’s why we  will start a new series that features insights from David Powlison on the Psalms.

The Psalm’s Four Voices
As we begin this series, here are the “four voices” that you should be aware of whenever you read a psalm.

1. The first voice calls out the experience of the writer…
Each Psalm contains the words of a man who is faced with real-world troubles, sins, and joys that drive him to cry out to his Lord. We can hook into these experiences. The point is that they are common to us, and we can cry out to the Lord for the same things.

2. A second voice sounds the experience of the people of God through all ages.
You are part of a vast company who have made and are making this psalm their own…Your individual experience does not occur alone…You don’t have to work up faith all on your own. You are part of a choir, and sometimes others can carry the tune while you catch your breath.

3. The third voice registers Jesus’ experience.
Your Redeemer was among the afflicted, a man of sorrows, acquainted with grief. Your individual experience is the subset of another’s experience, if you are in Christ.  Psalms are not meditative techniques for achieving mental equilibrium. It expresses the inner life and words of a Person whom [we] can grow to love.

4. Finally, you, the readers, weigh in with the fourth voice.
These words are meant to map onto your experience; your experience is meant to be expressed with these words. The Word of God—words of the psalmist, of believers, of Jesus—comes to change us.

We encourage you to join us as we walk through the book of Psalms together, guided by Powlison’s insights on how they intersect with the hardships and complexities of real life. We’ll start with Psalm 10 in days to come.

Excerpts from David Powlison, “Predator, Prey, and Protector: Helping Victims Think and Act from Psalm 10” JBC 16:3 (Spring 1998), 27-28.

Facing Loss and Death

The aging process brings a cascade of losses—“shadows of death.” How should we think about the often fearful prospect of aging?

We are meant to gain a sense that our lives are on a journey to a destination. We tend to interpret life by immediate experience. But if I know I am on a journey, then I’m aware that I’ve come from somewhere, I am somewhere, and I am going somewhere.

Psalm 23 is one of my favorite passages. It establishes the mindset of being on a journey. The Shepherd who cares, feeds, protects, restores, and guides is taking you on a journey to his own home. He is with you even when you pass through the valley of the shadow of death and face many evils.

What does it look like to journey faithfully with others in their experience of loss? How do we provide meaningful, helpful comfort?

This question has good answers, but no easy answers. Let me offer some leading thoughts that get at the question.

First, like most aspects of wisdom, this question raises issues of how to walk out a delicate balance between complementary truths. For example, the Bible’s teaching and example shows that we are meant to be utterly candid about grief and heartache. And, at the same time, we are meant to live with an indestructible hope and an inexpressible joy because of what is imperishable. Wisdom navigates how to live both.

How we offer comfort to someone else also expresses this delicate balance between complementary truths. Both the Word of God and the human connection matter. The promises of Scripture are crucial to finding genuine comfort. And the help of others is also crucial. The Holy Spirit is the life-giver and hope-giver who takes both the human touch and the Word and makes them effective. You could never put the balance into a formula.

What would you say to someone who feels paralyzed by the thought of future loss?

This calls for a careful, pastoral touch. I’ll mention four elements that play a part.

First, sympathy and care say, “I know this is hard. And I understand why it causes a lot of fear for you.” Sympathy and identifying with another’s experience play a part.

Second, help the person get perspective. For example, the harder you cling to someone or something you deeply love, the more your joy in the present moment is destroyed by fear.

Third, biblical realism teaches us to take to heart that all the blessings of this life are temporary. You cannot cling to what you will inevitably lose.

Fourth, the hope in Scripture speaks of an imperishable inheritance. You are not paralyzed by the fear that “My life will be destroyed by this loss” when you anchor your life in Christ himself.



Facing Death with Hope: Living for What Lasts

Is a life-threatening illness, a major life change, or just plain old age forcing you to face your own mortality? Is your eventual death looming like a dark cloud over your life? Are you sure of what will happen when you die? How are you dealing with your questions about death? Fear? Dread? Denial? Keeping busy?

Probably, like most of us, you’d rather not think or talk about your own death. But ignoring your death won’t stop it from happening—the mortality rate is still 100%. Medical advances extend lives, but no one lives forever. In the end, doctors lose every patient. Eventually you and everyone you love will die. Every life on this earth ends in death.

But is our death really the very last sentence in our book of life? Or is there something beyond death? Christians have testified with all their hearts for centuries: “I believe in the resurrection of the dead.” What does that mean? It means that if you follow Jesus, your physical death will not be the last sentence in your book of life. Jesus’ resurrection makes death the second-to-last-sentence in your life. When you die, if you believe in Jesus, you will hear his final say on your life: “Well done, good and faithful servant…Come and share your master's happiness!” (Matthew 25:21).

Perhaps you know that Jesus rose from the dead, yet when you think of your death you’re still full of fear and dread. That’s because just knowing the facts of Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection is not enough. You must know Jesus intimately. The courage to face your death comes as you put all your faith and trust in him. This booklet is written to help you face death honestly and know Jesus intimately.

DEATH IS NOT A FRIEND

When people finally muster up the courage to talk about death, they often romanticize it. They talk vaguely about release from pain, going to a “better place,” and being reunited with loved ones. But the Bible never portrays death as a friend. Death is called “the last enemy.” Death is the final and ultimate loss. It feels unnatural and wrong, because it is unnatural and wrong. We were created by God to live forever. Death is not what God intended for his world.

FACING THE SHADOWS OF DEATH

You don’t face death just once at the end of your life. Throughout your life you face what David, in Psalm 23, called “the shadow of death” (Psalm 23:4). A shadow brings the looming sense that the dark is approaching. Walking through the “valley of the shadow of death” takes many different forms. Death is the ultimate loss, but many smaller losses also bring the shadow of death into your life. You have probably already faced some of these shadows:

  1. Loss of health: Whether you are struggling with a chronic illness or a sudden catastrophic event, the losses that come with physical suffering foreshadow death.

  1. Loss of loved ones: When death comes to those we love, we feel the shadow of death keenly. But we also experience loss when a relationship ends for any reason. When you experience betrayal in a relationship, you are getting a small, bitter taste of the alienation, isolation, and abandonment that is the ultimate experience of death.

  1. Loss of youth: The years pile up, the hair turns white, the wrinkles form, the body starts to break down, and the memory starts to fail. It’s as though fingers of darkness are reaching out to you.

  1. Loss of independence: As you age, you experience weakness in various forms. Old age can make you as helpless as a young child, but for children the expectation is of gain. As you age your expectation is only of loss.

  1. Loss of usefulness: If you live long enough, you will outlive your usefulness in the workplace and watch life go on without you.

  1. Loss of meaning: As you get older, possessions, other’s opinions, status, success, and whatever else you were striving for will lose their significance.

These losses can shadow your life at any time. Whether you are young or old, every significant suffering, loss, and evil you experience leaves the bitter taste of death in your mouth.

THE CAUSE OF DEATH

Why are there “shadows of death”? What brought all this sorrow and sadness into the world? What causes death?
When we talk about why someone died, we usually talk about the immediate reason that they died—accident, old age, illness, a natural disaster. But the Bible deepens our thinking about the cause of death. Paul said in his letter to the Romans that “the wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23). Sin is living in God’s world and acting as if we are in charge. Adam and Eve were the first people to act like their own gods and disobey the one true God, but each of us has followed in their footsteps. Death is the sad result. The fear and dread we feel when we face our own death stems from our deep down sense that we have failed to perfectly obey God. We deserve to die.

But who tempted Adam and Eve to live as if they were in charge of the world? Who tempts us? Satan. So, at a deeper level, he is the cause of death. The Evil One is called the murderer from the beginning. The Bible describes those who are held in bondage to the fear of death, as being enslaved by the devil. He is a killer (Hebrews 2:14–15).

At the deepest level, God’s holy and just wrath means death. Every cause of death—hurricanes, old age, cancer, the wages of sin, the murderous power of Satan—is a subset of the holy and just wrath of God on sinners. We are all touched by the curse, and the curse gets the last say on our earthly life.

JESUS FACED DEATH FOR YOU

But for those who know Jesus, death doesn’t have the last say, it has the next-to-last say. The last word for the Christian is the resurrection. The last word is life. The last word is mercy. The last word is that God will take us to be with him forever. God’s free gift of eternal life stands in stark contrast to “the wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23). Jesus stands in contrast to the killer, the murderer, the slayer. He, the only innocent person who ever lived, faced death, not for his own sins, but for the sins of his people (John 3:16). Jesus faced death for you.
On the cross he faced death in all of its dimensions. He was killed by asphyxiation and torture, but this was only the physical cause of his death. As he died he bore the wages of sin, suffered the malice of the evil one, and experienced the holy wrath of God. He, the innocent one, willingly died for the guilty. When he freely gave up his life, death was slain by God, and Jesus rose to new life. God’s grace destroyed the destroyer, and death was thrown into hell. Because of Jesus, life has the last say. Because of Jesus you don’t have to experience death as he did. He has already paid for your sins. You will die physically, but rise to life eternal (John 3:16).
HOW CAN YOU BE SURE THAT ETERNAL LIFE IS YOURS?
Come to Jesus, ask for forgiveness for your many sins, and believe that his death paid the price for your sins and that his resurrection is your guarantee that you also will live forever. This is Jesus’ promise to you, “I tell you the truth, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has crossed over from death to life” (John 5:24). Because of Jesus you don’t have to fear that when you die you will experience God’s judgment. Jesus has already experienced that for you. What is waiting for you after death is real life—eternal life. You don’t have to earn this life. It is God’s gift to those who put their trust in Jesus. This is how the apostle Paul explains it, “For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 6:23). We all deserved death, but Jesus died in our place. When you trust in him, you no longer have to fear death, because now you share in Jesus’ life. The eternal life Jesus gives is life the way it was meant to be—free from evil, sorrow, and sadness, and rich in everlasting joy, peace, and purity. The natural, well-earned wages of human life bring death and grief, but God’s mercy and grace bring the delights that are at his right hand forever. Sharing in Jesus’ life is how you face all the shadows of death in this unhappy, fallen world and how you face the final darkness of death itself. Because he is alive, you know he will be with you when you die. Because he is alive, you know he will be waiting for you after you die. Because he lives, so do you.
JESUS FACES DEATH WITH YOU

Isolation comes with all suffering, but it is even more pronounced when you face death. As you face death, the proverb, “The heart knows its own bitterness” (Proverbs 14:10 ESV) becomes very real. No one on earth will go through that door with you. But remember David’s words, “Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil for you are with me” (Psalm 23:4). Who is with you? Jesus is with you. Listen to his words, “I am with you always” (Matthew 28:20).

Your friends and relatives cannot go with you as you die, but the One who is closer than a brother promises to never leave you or forsake you. Jesus has a first hand knowledge of what you are facing. He will be with you as you face death and as you die. His life, death, and resurrection are your guarantee that beyond death’s door is a glorious new life. This is the reality of your faith. Your faith is not a nice theory, or a bunch of sweet, comforting, religious platitudes. God himself will be with you in the moment when death stretches its fingers toward you.
FACE DEATH LIKE JESUS DID
Because Jesus is with you, you can face death as he did. How did he face death? Was he calm and unaffected? No, he experienced death as a terrible enemy. On the cross he cried out words from Psalm 22, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Psalm 22:1; Matthew 27:46). Jesus lived out this psalm of death and torture on the cross. But this is also a psalm of hope: “For he has not despised or disdained the suffering of the afflicted one; he has not hidden his face from him but has listened to his cry for help” (Psalm 22:24). Jesus’ cry of desolation and forsakenness was in the light of his certain hope that God does not finally forsake those who are afflicted. Jesus was not a stoic as he died. He looked death right in the eye, felt keenly its pain, degradation, horror, and loss, and then trusted his heavenly Father as he said, “Into your hands I commit my spirit.” (Psalm 31:5; Luke 23:46).
These words are not calm, cool, and collected. They are the words of a man who is fully engaged with his troubles, fully engaged with his God, and is bringing the two together in honest neediness and honest gratitude. The two sides of faith—the need and the joy—are both present in Jesus’ experience. This Jesus is with you. This Jesus is alive and able to help you face death with faith. You can draw near to him. He will give you forgiveness, mercy, and help in your time of need. He endured, “for the joy set before him” (Hebrews 12:2). He will be with you, so you also can endure. You don’t have to shrink back and pretend you’re not going to die. You don’t have to pretend it doesn’t hurt. You can entrust your soul to your heavenly Father just as Jesus did.
JESUS IS WAITING FOR YOU

A friend of mine often asks people, “Who are you looking forward to meeting when you get to heaven?” People tell him about their loved ones, or interesting people from the Bible, but almost no one says, “Jesus.”
Many years ago in Time Magazine there was an article about people who were facing death. Hundreds of terminally ill people were interviewed and photographed. Most of their pictures looked dreary and sad. But an elderly man’s picture almost jumped off the page. His face was full of life and vitality. In his interview, he said he couldn’t wait to see Jesus. He was joyful in the face of death because he was looking forward to seeing his Savior.

You cannot face death with true, honest courage unless you are looking forward to meeting Jesus—the One who faced death for you and who is now alive and with you. Are you looking forward to meeting the Lamb of God who took away your sins? Do you long to hear your Good Shepherd call you by name? Are you looking forward to going to your heavenly Father’s home? It’s a home of glory, filled with the radiance of the Holy Spirit. In God’s home all wrongs are made right, all darkness becomes bright, all losses are restored, and all tears are wiped away.

When you pass through death, you are passing through to the moment when faith becomes sight, when you will actually see the One whom you love sight unseen. To die in the hope that God is with you is to pass through the loss of all things into the gain of all things, into the gain of Christ.*


David Powlison, M.Div., Ph.D., is a faculty member at CCEF and a counselor with over thirty years of experience. He has written many counseling articles, booklets, and books including Seeing with New Eyes; Speaking Truth in Love; and Power Encounters: Reclaiming Spiritual Warfare.

Prayer for Those Coping With Depression

Dear Lord, you are our refuge in good and in bad times. In your infinite mercy, bring peace and comfort to those of us who face days sometimes filled with pain and depression. 

Help us to realize that through you there is joy and the promise of lasting peace. 

Help us through the rough times. Walk before and beside us so that we may walk in your footsteps and reach out to you in our journey on this earth. 

Help us to focus on our blessings rather than our misfortunes, dear Lord. 

Thank you for hearing and answering our prayers. Amen




Prayer against Depression - by Saint Ignatius of Loyola

O Christ Jesus,
when all is darkness
and we feel our weakness and helplessness,
give us the sense of Your presence,
Your love, and Your strength.

Help us to have perfect trust
in Your protecting love
and strengthening power,

so that nothing may frighten or worry us,
for, living close to You,
we shall see Your hand,
Your purpose, Your will through all things.

By Saint Ignatius of Loyola

Verses for Depression

God Never Loses Sight of You 

Deuteronomy 31:8 “… It is the LORD who goes before you. He will be with you; he will not leave you or forsake you. Do not fear or be dismayed.”

Deuteronomy 32:10: In a desert land he found him, in a barren and howling waste. He shielded him and cared for him; he guarded him as the apple of his eye.
 
Psalms 34:17 When the righteous cry for help, the LORD hears and delivers them out of all their troubles.

Psalms 40:1-3 I waited patiently for the LORD; he inclined to me and heard my cry. He drew me up from the pit of destruction, out of the miry bog, and set my feet upon a rock, making my steps secure. He put a new song in my mouth, a song of praise to our God. Many will see and fear, and put their trust in the LORD.

Your Trust and Hope is In Him; Call Upon Him 

Psalms 3:3 But you, O LORD, are a shield about me, my glory, and the lifter of my head.

Psalms 32:10 Many are the sorrows of the wicked, but steadfast love surrounds the one who trusts in the LORD.

Psalms 37:3-4 Trust in the LORD, and do good; dwell in the land and befriend faithfulness. Delight yourself in the LORD, and he will give you the desires of your heart. 

Psalms 42:11 Why are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you in turmoil within me? Hope in God; for I shall again praise him, my salvation and my God.

1 Peter 5:6-7 (KJV) Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that he may exalt you in due time: Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you.

He Has Great Plans for You; Hang in There 

Jeremiah 29:11 For I know the plans I have for you, declares the LORD, plans for welfare and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope.

John 16:33 I have said these things to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world. 

Romans 8:38-39 For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.

2 Corinthians 1:3-4 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God.

1 Peter 4:12-13 Beloved, do not be surprised at the fiery trial when it comes upon you to test you, as though something strange were happening to you. But rejoice insofar as you share Christ’s sufferings, that you may also rejoice and be glad when his glory is revealed.

Prayer for those undergoing depression

God in Heaven, we pray for all those undergoing depression, that the Lord will work out Your perfect will in their situation and bring about healing in Jesus Mighty Name. 

We ask that Jesus Christ, You are The Great Physician, please heal all those that have undergoing depression, let the fire of God destroy all causes of infirmity. 

We speak peace to all the patients and ask the healing virtue of Our Lord God will flow through the brain, through every vein, tissue, cell, ligament and that healing will manifest. 

We believe that Gods desire is manifest in your life. His desire is written in 3 John 2 “Dear friend, I pray that you may enjoy good health and that all may go well with you, even as your soul is getting along”. 

We speak peace to all the families having which have someone undergoing depression. 

We speak uncommon provisions to cater for all the expenses needed to take care of the patients. 

We destroy every generational curses and declare that they will not continue but the blessings of God will overshadow each and every one of you. 

We are in agreement with Gods word in Jeremiah 30:17 “ But I will restore you to health and heal your wounds declares the LORD.” So be it, in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen. 

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Online Education

25 Killer Sites For Free Online Education

Whether you’re five or ninety five, the internet has a lot to offer. Particularly when the topic is education, the resources on the internet are endless. Best of all, many high quality sites are completely free. From history to coding, excellent free education awaits on the following 25 sites.

Prayer for Healing

heal-me-lord

Heavenly Father,

You are our Creator, and you are our Healer. You are Jehovah Rapha - the God who heals. You have compassion for us in our sicknesses and our pain.

Your mercy is from everlasting to everlasting.

I come to you this day, asking you to heal my body. I ask you to go into each cell and correct whatever is wrong. Father, bring healing, harmony, and unity to every cell, every organ, and every system of my body. I ask that you would heal the root of any pain that I experience. Thank you that you are repairing everything that has to do with my body.

Right now I am giving you my fears and my worries. I pick up the shield of faith and draw confidence that you are working on my behalf this day. Amen

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

God of healing
God of wholeness
we bring our brokenness
our sinfulness
our fears
and despair
and lay them at your feet.

God of healing
God of wholeness
we reach out
hearts and hands
minds and souls
to feel your touch
and know the peace
that only you can bring.

God of healing
God of wholeness
this precious moment
in your presence
and power
grant us faith
and confidence
that here
broken lives
are made whole.


Romans 5:1-5
Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which we now stand. And we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God.

I enter this day with joy
knowing you are with me
every step of the way,
knowing there is a purpose
to each breath that I take,
knowing there is a hope
toward which I walk.

I enter this day with faith
knowing you are the strength
which I depend on,
knowing you are the love
that is all embracing,
knowing it is your peace
which calms my soul.

I enter this day with praise
knowing that I worship
with service as with voice,
hoping that my words
might reveal your truth,
hoping that your grace
might touch another heart.


The Ignatian Way

Welcome to The Ignatian Way, a series of online presentations that introduce the main ideas of Ignatian spirituality. Each one is an 8-15 minute multimedia slide presentation that includes links for additional information or exploration. When you finish the series, you should have a good idea of what Ignatian spirituality is all about, and how it can help you to grow closer to God. - 

Prayers for Meetings

School Board Meeting Prayer
Loving and Gracious God, you are indeed the giver of all good gifts and we thank you today for all your blessings, for the successful outcomes of our school events and for all our staff members, both the teaching and support members.
We ask that you bless them abundantly and we continue to seek your wisdom, guidance, courage and strength. Be with us in our deliberations and help us to be wise in the decisions we make for the good of all those who have placed their trust and confidence in our leadership.
Give us insight to lead with integrity that our decisions may reflect what is right and good. Keep us from short-sightedness and pettiness. Help us to make decisions that are for the good of all and guard us from blind self interest. Dear Lord, grant us the humility to always seek your will in all that we do and say.
All Glory be to you, loving God, now and always through Christ and the Holy Spirit forever and ever. Amen.

Items of prayer
1. Thanks .. O give thanls to God, he is good ...
2. Gifts ... every good and perfect gift is from you
3. Wisdom, guidance ... by wisdom a house is built
4. Humility ... to seek God's will and to give you the glory
5. Power n Love n Self Control ... to serve
6. Protection Ps 121
Thank you Lord, you have prepared for us a banquet table of the words of truth and wisdom and understanding,  we pray Lord that you will also 
10 Create in me a clean heart, O God,
    and renew a right[b] spirit within me.
11 
to receive them with joy and delight. We pray your word and messages for us will not return to you empty but will accomplish that which it purposed and prosper in our lives, every part of it .. in speech, in conduct, in thought. Bind those 'little foxes' Lord, catch them for us Lord, like pride, fear, anxiety, so that they do not spoil our vineyards, spoil our session, our commitment, our plans - because our vineyards are in blossom.







Opening Prayer for Meeting

Lord, we are meeting today to conduct matters of business. Guide our hearts and our minds in the spirit of fairness, right thought and speech. Impart your supreme wisdom upon our activities so that our affairs may reach a successful conclusion. Thank you for being our source of guidance today. Amen!

Opening Prayer for Meeting

Heavenly Father, we come to you today asking for your guidance, wisdom, and support as we begin this meeting. Help us to engage in meaningful discussion; allow us to grow closer as a group and nurture the bonds of community. 
Fill us with your grace, Lord God, as we make decisions that might affect the students, staff, faculty, alumni and friends of Saint Louis University. And continue to remind us that all that we do here today, all that we accomplish, is for the pursuit of truth for the greater glory of You, and for the service of humanity. We ask these things in your name, Amen. 

Opening Prayer for Seminar

Let’s place ourselves in the presence of the Lord. (Pause for a few seconds)

Dear God, we offer everything to you during this seminar. May we ask for your blessing and divine providence that the activities set for this undertaking be successful and effective.

May we also retain the invaluable knowledge and learning experiences that we derive from this activity, for actual application when we leave this venue.

We pray that you bless all the committees in charge that they fulfill their tasks responsibly; that the objectives they have set may all be achieved.

Your generous blessing would mean the success of this seminar. We know that without it, we can do nothing.

May we be living witnesses of your genuine love, through the implementation of the knowledge acquired through this activity. Grant us your divine wisdom as we go about our daily task after this seminar.

This we ask in Jesus’ name, amen.


Opening Prayer 

Father, we give You thanks. We give You praise and glory. We give You honor. 
We also come humbly before You admitting our great need for You. Not simply 
a partial need, Lord, but a comprehensive, deep, constant, and daily need. Thank 
You that You give grace to the humble. And so we humble ourselves before You 
and ask that You would pour out Your grace in mighty measures today. 
Graciously speaking to us. Graciously touching our hearts. Graciously working 
in us to will and to do according to Your good pleasure. And graciously, 
transforming our lives to the image of Jesus Christ. By Your Holy Spirit, unfold 
Your Word and make it alive to us. And Lord, we confess that we can only live 
by every word that proceeds from Your mouth. So speak to us. We are ready to 
hear what you have to say. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

Pray for workers

From the writings of the Apostle Paul
1. Pray for open doors
“Devote yourselves to prayer, keeping alert in it with thanksgiving. At the same time pray for us as well that God will open to us a door for the word…” (Colossians 4:2,3)
  • Pray that God will open doors of ministry, partnership, and friendship.
  • Pray that the Holy Spirit will lead mission workers.
2. Pray for boldness
“Pray also for me, so that when I speak, a message may be given to me to make known with boldness the mystery of the gospel… Pray that I may declare it boldly.” (Ephesians 6:19-20)
  • Pray for effective cross-cultural communication.
  • Pray for boldness to speak God’s Word.
3. Pray that the Word of God will spread 
“Finally, brothers and sisters, pray for us, so that the word of the Lord may spread rapidly and be glorified everywhere.” (2 Thessalonians 3:1)
  • Pray that spiritual forces of evil will not hinder the spread of the gospel.
  • Pray that the Word of God will be received with joy like seed that fall on 'good soil'.
4. Pray for protection 
“Pray that we may be rescued from wicked and evil people; for not all have faith.”
(2 Thessalonians 3:2)
  • Pray that the Lord will guard mission workers from the evil one. Ps 121
  • Pray that the Holy Spirit will change the hearts of those who hear the Word.
5. Pray for God’s guidance in travel; pray for refreshment of body, mind, and spirit 
“Pray that by God’s will I may come to you with joy and be refreshed in your company.”(Romans 15:32)
  • Pray for protection and provision in travel.
  • Pray for spiritual refreshment from the Holy Spirit in the company of other believers.
When praying for mission workers and volunteers, pray for:
  • A growing relationship with God
  • Time and energy to nurture that relationship
  • Deep awareness of God’s love
  • Availability of spiritual mentors
2. Emotional needs
  • Growing sense of God’s presence
  • Loving relationships
  • Healthy self-image
  • Ability to adapt to another culture
3. Physical needs
  • Health and strength
  • Adequate living conditions
  • Safety in danger
4. Family relationships
  • Healthy give-and-take
  • Dealing with family concerns far away
  • Finding “family” where they are
5. Team relationships:
  • Ability to work in harmony
  • Courage to be honest
  • A sense of appreciation for others
6. Effective ministry
  • Grace to live and communicate the gospel
  • Eagerness to learn from another culture
  • Fluency with other languages
  • Open doors that lead to changed lives
7. Country of service
  • A stable political situation
  • A good relationship with government
  • Patience to deal with bureaucracy
  • A vibrant church

The Worker’s Prayer

The Worker’s Prayer
Lord, I thank you for this job and
the blessings it provides.
May you watch over me this day
and keep me safe from harm.
Create in me a willing spirit
and happy heart.
Grant me the ambition to work hard
and give me the strength to finish
what I have started.
May my hands always be prepared
to help lighten another’s load.
And finally, Lord, remind me that
the quality of my work is a reflection
of you to those around me.
Amen

DEAR TIMOTHY: SET YOUR EYES ON FAITHFULNESS

by Jeff Robinson (PhD, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary) is an editor for The Gospel Coalition. He serves as senior fellow for the Andrew Fuller Center for Baptist History and Tradition at Southern Seminary. Prior to entering ministry, he spent nearly 20 years as a newspaper journalist in Georgia, North Carolina, and Kentucky, covering everything from politics to Major League Baseball and SEC football. He is co-author with Michael Haykin of the book To the Ends of the Earth: Calvin’s Mission Vision and Legacy. Jeff and his wife Lisa have four children. 

Dear Timothy,
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. The last time I wrote you, recall that I sought to stir up your mind by way of reminder, to use the words of our dear brother Peter, that you must find your contentment in Christ alone, else you will be habitually frustrated in your ministry. Remember, that was my first watchword for you in the ministry: contentment. Today, I write to you and commend to you a second, equally vital, watchword:faithfulness.
My dear brother in Christ, the world will try to press you into its God-denying mold when it comes to gauging your success in ministry. The world, and perhaps a good many well-meaning but carnal-minded people in your congregation, will tell you that for your ministry to be considered a success, you will have to exhibit regular conversions to Christ, have a lakeshore lined with candidates for baptism and possess attendance numbers that increase astronomically overnight within your congregation. They will seek to sell you on the notion that those are the marks of ministerial success, and you may be allured by such cheap reasoning. Don’t buy it.
While we certainly desire healthy church rolls and want to see untold numbers experience the effectual grace of Christ, you must remember that conversion and church growth are God’s business. (Recall what happened after Pentecost when God added more than 3,000 to his church in one day? Wasn’t that glorious?) Those may be measures of what God is doing in your ministry, but not necessarily. Recall the false prophets I have warned you about, the ones who have roiled the church in Ephesus, and remember also those super apostles with whom I contended at the church in Corinth? They were gaining quite a following, and who among us would assume that the fruit of their false teaching was healthy?
Timothy, God is not calling you to be omnipotent, for you are merely a weak clay pot, common, expandable crockery. God is not calling you to be omniscient, for all men are ignorant to such a degree that James had to remind us that him who makes plans without considering God’s sovereignty is sinfully presumptuous. God is not calling you to be omnipresent, for you minister in vain if you seek to be everywhere all at once out of a sinful fear of man. God is not calling you to please men, for men are fickle. The church members who are today praising you are just as likely to be calling for your ouster when your ministry threatens to upset the peace within the kingdoms over which they occupy the throne. He is not calling you to earn their praise. You must please him alone. God is not calling you to fear men. You must fear him. If you will fear God and nothing else and hate sin and nothing else, God may turn the world upside down through your ministry.
No, God is calling you simply to be faithful. He is calling you to be faithful in feeding and leading his flock. Remember, it is his flock. It is his kingdom, not yours. You have been called to build it, by his grace, faithfully. What does such faithfulness entail? It’s not going to look like that which the world calls “success,” and you must settle this notion in your heart and mind now. God has called you to faithfulness in preaching his Word, being ready at all times to proclaim his truth. Forsaking all else, God has called you to set the oracles of God before the people of God to the glory of God every Lord’s Day. Do not worry about results. Results are God’s business. He has called you to faithfulness in studying to show yourself approved, a workman who is able to rightly divide his Word. That will always be priority one: Many hours in study and prayer will establish you in this crucial endeavor. He has called you to be faithful in guarding the gospel he has deposited into your care, which means you must know sound doctrine and teach sound doctrine. He has called you to be faithful in refuting false doctrine as well. Therefore, my dear son, you must work hard to be a pastor/theologian. That is an irreducible part of faithfulness in ministry. Studying God’s Word and learning theology are hard work, but such labors will pay dividends into eternity, for this is the way God, in his infinite wisdom, has ordained it.
So God is calling you to be faithful in guarding your doctrine, but he is also calling you to be faithful in keeping a close watch over your life and conduct, what Solomon in Proverbs calls “guarding your heart with all vigilance.” Though you are young, you must be faithful in living out the theology of grace that has been given to you through God’s Word. Will your people find your theology compelling if the theology you claim to hold dear has had little discernible effect on your life? How can you commend grace to others if you are not willing to live a godly, gracious lifestyle? A man of grace must be a gracious man, a wise and godly sage once told me.
You must be faithful in asking God to form those character traits in you that I passed down to you in another letter, traits that God gave me as qualifications for his undershepherds. You must be a faithful family man, loving your wife as Christ loved the church and training your future children up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord. You must petition our Lord for daily grace in being sober-minded, self-controlled, respectable, hospitable, and gentle. You must plug the ears and shield the eyes of your heart to the deadly lure of money, and you must be able to teach and debate the truth with others in a gracious and winsome matter. Living out these attributes by God’s grace and praying that God will bear the full range of the fruit of his Spirit in you are all a part of what it means to be a faithful herald of God’s Word.
And you must persevere in faithfulness even when war has broken out all around you in the ministry. Remember, you are a soldier of Christ. Until our Lord returns, you will be at war, not at peace. Thus, you must fight the good fight of faith on behalf of yourself and your people. You must persevere in loving the members of your congregation, even those irascible, incorrigible souls who withhold love from you and defame your good name to others. Remember what I told the church at Corinth: Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. You must love them with the kind of selfless love that compelled our Savior to the cross.
Timothy, no matter what the world tells you, no matter what well-meaning church people tell you, if you do all these things consistently, you will then be a worker approved by God who need not be ashamed, no matter the size of your church or the scope of your ministry. You will adorn the gospel, your message, with the sweet aroma of Christ. I close with the same words of encouragement that I told to the Corinthians, for it is a helpful summary of the Christian man’s call to faithfulness: Be watchful, stand firm in the faith, act like a man, be strong. Let all that you do be done in love.
There is much more I could say, but I pray this pithy encouragement will steel your frame toward the pursuit of faithfulness. May God make you content in his Son and faithful to the end in proclaiming his Word and shepherding his flock for his glory. May our invincible sovereign Lord make his face to shine on you and your labors. Grace be with you.
Faithfully your father in the faith,
Paul 

The Fraud Triangle

Have you ever heard of the “80/10/10” saying? It suggests that 10 percent of the population is honest; they will not lie, steal or cheat under any circumstances. Another 10 percent of the population is dishonest and will participate in criminal activities whenever they can. The remaining 80 percent, given sufficient pressures and the right opportunity may behave unethically.

See article 'The Fraud Triangle'.

Second article


The first element needed for fraud is OPPORTUNITY. Simply put, it’s the ability to commit fraud.

Employees have the opportunity if they have access to assets and information that allows them to conceal their fraudulent activities. While employees need access to perform their jobs, that access can provide the employee with opportunity.

Committing fraud through use of one’s position normally happens when internal controls are weak or nonexistent, or where there is poor management oversight

Example:
Pulling cash out of the collections from a special event to pay for costs of the special event.
Not keeping track of how many computers you have.
 Leaving the Sunday offering in a place where one person could get into the offering by themselves without anyone knowing they had accessed the offering.

The second element of the fraud triangle is PRESSURE. Desperate people do desperate things. Pressure comes in many forms, both financial and non-financial. Individuals may have personal financial issues such as high medical bills or past-due mortgages. Others gamble or have addictions that may compel them to commit fraud. For some, it is simply the desire for a lifestyle they couldn’t afford otherwise. Lastly, unrealistic
goals and deadlines can also provide incentives for employees to commit financial reporting fraud.

The final fraud triangle element is RATIONALIZATION. Rationalization occurs when an employee justifies why they commit fraud. For example, a person who faces losing their home might say “I deserve to have a nice home.” Employees who have not received pay increases might say “I’m just making up for being under paid. I haven’t had a raise in years.” 

Sometimes, an employee will rationalize theft as “borrowing.” Other times, individuals may believe that “the company deserves it” for the way they treat customers or employees. Another approach is the entitlement mentality.  I’ve worked so hard for this organization that I deserve a raise.  That’s all this is – just a raise.

 A theological description of rationalization can be found in Jeremiah 17:9, which says “The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure.  Who can understand it?” (NIV)  Our human ability to deceive ourselves is beyond comprehension.

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