Skip to main content

Choosing a Better Approach

                  Every organization is having difficulty making plans right now and that includes our Bible camp at Kenosee Lake.  So, when our board sat down at their computers to talk about our vision for the future, I braced myself for a long and tense meeting.

                When you ask nine people for their opinion about what to do or what is most important, you can expect some disagreement.  Throw in the fact that these people are on the board because they love the camp and have strong feelings about it, and you can imagine that we had a lively discussion, to say the least. 

                When the meeting ended, I wondered, “How long will it take someone to email me and disagree with some of the decisions that we made?”  As the chairman of the board, I get lots of emails, before and after every meeting, telling me how we could have done things differently. 

                It did not take long.

                The next morning, one of the ladies emailed the entire board.  However, instead of complaining, her email was filled with sentences like, “James, I appreciate all the time you spend doing maintenance at the camp” and “Angela, your comments yesterday were great!”  

                This lady addressed each board member by name and then complimented them.  That was the entire note.  No complaining.  No lobbying.  No criticizing.  Just a simple, short, very specific note of encouragement for each of the other board members.

                When I read that, I smiled and thought, “That is what we can do for one another”.  We can lead, lift, and inspire each other.  We can focus on the many things that we appreciate rather than the few things that we dislike.

                Proverbs 11:25 states, “A generous man will prosper; he who refreshes others will himself be refreshed."

                Can we be generous with our love and our appreciation of others?  More to the point, will you take thirty seconds right now and send someone a note?  Your words will encourage someone else and they will change your focus as well.

                A world that is upset and arguing much of the time needs someone who will notice, and point out, something good!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

New Article: Grace Changes Everything

               A young man broke into a business and did $5000 damage. As part of his Restorative Justice sentence, he was required to meet with my friend Garth.   Garth believes in making apologies and restitution.   It took several months, but Garth finally convinced the young man that these were necessary steps, so he tried to arrange a meeting with the business owner.                The business owner wanted nothing to do with this situation.   He was angry and wanted a more severe form of justice.   Eventually, however, he agreed to meet the young man to hear what he had to say.                  The young man looked the business owner in the eye an...

New Article: We need a Better Scorecard

                   “Is that a Sun Ice?”                “Excuse me,” I said.                My friend pointed to my new ski jacket and asked again, “Is that a Sun Ice?”                It was 1991 and Sun Ice was the big name in ski wear at the time.   “No” I replied, “I can’t afford one of those”.                “Oh” he said as he lost interest and then just walked away.                I had not seen this friend in more than a year and, sadly, his first ...

New Article: Surprised by God

                 We would be shocked if we could hear the Bible for the first time again.   On every page, something unexpected happens.   The only reason we are not surprised is that the stories are so familiar to us.   Think about some of the unexpected interactions that God has had with his people.                For example, every culture has stories about a creator, but none imagined that God would become part of the creation.   That the creator would lower himself and become human is surprising, to say the least.                Not only did he become one of us, but he also came as a baby.   A tiny, helpless, baby!   If I wer...