Play solid Listen Signal stream duotone UCB Radio Network
MAY 19
0:00 0:00

May 19, 2019 · Bob Gass

Take time to reflect (2)

“In the day of adversity consider.” Ecclesiastes 7:14 NKJV

The digital age has great advantages. Through emails, texts, and tweets we can communicate quickly. The disadvantage is that it doesn’t cultivate in us a desire to think about things deeply. You can’t microwave personal growth; it requires a crockpot. The Bible says, “In the day of prosperity be joyful, but in the day of adversity consider: surely God has appointed the one as well as the other.” By taking time to reflect: (1) You gain confidence in decision making. Ever made a snap decision and later wondered if you did the right thing? Reflective thinking can help to defuse that doubt. It also gives you confidence for the next decision. Once you’ve reflected on an issue, you don’t have to repeat every step of the thinking process when you’re faced with it again. You’ve got mental road markers from having been there before. (2) You clarify the big picture. Reflective thinking encourages us to go back and spend time pondering what we have done and what we have seen. To keep from making the same mistake over and over, you must stop and examine the process that led to it. In other words, reflection helps you to see the big picture. (3) You take a good experience and make it a valuable experience. They say we learn by experience. No, we learn from evaluated experience. An experience becomes valuable when it informs and equips us. That’s why daily prayer and Bible reading are so essential. You’ll understand things in God’s presence that you won’t understand any other way.

Bible in a year: Luke 9:18-36  and Psalm 51-53

Previous Daily Encouragement

The power of a shared faith

If you want to know how the person you’re marrying will look twenty-five years from now, look at their parents and you will get...

Kids and kites

Letting go of our children is one of the toughest phases of parenting. Erma Bombeck compared it to flying a kite. “Mom and dad...

God can cancel your past (3)

One of Christ’s last declarations from the cross was, “It is finished.” That phrase comprises just one word in Greek, tetelestai, meaning “paid in...

God can cancel your past (2)

Have you ever watched children playing with an Etch A Sketch? If they make a mess of the picture, all they have to do...

God can cancel your past (1)

Jesus “cancelled the record of the charges against us…by nailing it to the cross.” The word cancel means to remove, to neutralize, to offset...