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Take It To The Limit- Morals Series
Contributed by Tim Hedberg on Mar 10, 2008 (message contributor)
Summary: Don’t cave under pressure, keep your convictions.
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Take It To The Limit
February 3, 2008
Daniel 1:1-21
On the top of your bulletin is a quote. A quote I found in an article in our Skagit Valley Herald back in December.
It was an article about learning to say no.
In order to live into your life.
In order to live your life.
In order to not let others run you.
Steer you.
Manipulate you.
Your family
Kids
Money
Time
Relationship
The article says we have to learn to say "no." Dr. Ury, from the Harvard Law School, said this (read together)
In order to say yes to what’s truly important, you first need to say no to
other things. It’s the defining challenge of our age.
The defining challenge.
The challenge that will set the course for where your life is headed according to this man is learning what to say yes to and what to say no to.
In order to live.
In order to become.
In order to grow up and into our God-given dreams.
In order to faithfully pursue the call that God gives to each of us. We will continually be confronted with moments of decision, moments in time where we can say yes or no to the option before us.
Some of these moments have the potential to harm you and hinder the God inspired road you were on. Others have the potential to help you and hoist you up in living more faithfully with God.
On a weekly basis
For some of you on a daily basis, you come face to face with decisions that will define what is truly important and valuable to you. And friends this morning I want to make the case that quite often the right answer in such times is no.
When culture comes inviting.
When your friends come pushing.
When the text message comes with an offer.
When the neighbor has this semi legal and semi illegal wacky idea.
When you are in that difficult comprising situation with friends or strangers staring at you.
Pressuring you.
I agree with Dr. Ury, it is a defining moment of your life.
I’m told try methamphetamines once and you’re hooked.
Say yes to the high of gambling, sex pornography a few times and it becomes a
life changing habit.
Say yes a few times to going out with the boys or the girls for some evenings
of lewd behaviors and activities.
Say yes again to getting a credit card after cutting your previous ones up after
you got yourself in trouble and it can derail a life.
Culture pushes us to push our limits.
To take our lives to the limits.
To live at the edge with
No margin
No safety net
No boundaries
No room for error.
And quite often the consequences can define/influence your entire life.
Two weeks ago, we talked about the relentless pressure we are under to live compromising lives financially.
We talked about the prodigal son - how he left home with his inheritance. The world called and he responded. Breaking moral, ethical, financial boundaries. The result - joy? No - pain, loneliness - a desire to go home.
This week I talked with a man whose 2 Pastors had to declare bankruptcy because they had spread themselves to thin.
This week I talked to a person whose good friend is gambling $1,000 of dollars a week - who isn’t coming home at night - he has no financial limits.
You and I read and hear about house foreclosures increasing at a record rate.
You and I this week received free credit card offers. What did you do with them?
Our phones rang with telemarketers inviting us to try some gadget for free.
And if we aren’t careful we say
"yes" to trying.
To testing
To checking into it
And when we do, we let down our guard and we begin down a road that can be devastating. Some of you know this - what you can work monthly to save for, or years to accumulate can be gone practically overnight if we don’t have good financial barriers. We talked about that two weeks ago.
Last week, we talked about time barriers. Time boundaries.
Why is it that we are more stressed out.
More frantic.
Driving faster cars.
Having timesaving devices at home.
Able to do work from our house
Car
Work
Coffee shop on our cell phones.
And yet have so little time for our selves to enjoy?
We have difficulty defining what is essential and what is additional.
We talked about Moses last Sunday. What he was doing as a Judge. As the only Judge for all of Israel, what he was doing wasn’t good - working from morning until evening. Wearing himself out. He needed an outsider to come in and say,