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WilLear 09-11-166 |
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Learning to Soar How
to Grow Through Transitions and Trials Avery
T. Willis Jr., and Matt Willis Penguin
Press, 2009, 405 pp. ISBN 978-1-59420-213-1 |
Avery Willis is executive director of the
International Orality Network. Matt is
his grandson who serves in Asia. Don’t
get stuck in mediocrity. Leave
complacency behind. Follow the Eagle from
birth, through babyhood, adolescence, and young adulthood to maturity. If you understand and apply the life stages
of eagles and allow God to stimulate you through life’s challenges, you can
soar in your spiritual journey. In this book you will learn patience as God
uses hardships to strengthen your faith and guides you by His Spirit. A discussion guide for small groups is
included at the end. “God often brings difficult circumstances into
our lives in order to prompt us away from complacency and a spiritual
plateau.” (26) “God’s ways have not
changed … [but] if you don’t’ know God’s ways, you can misunderstand His
actions….” (27) The nest provides comfort and security to baby
eagles. But they can’t fly in the
nest. The parents claw out the leaves
and fur, exposing the briars and sticks to prod the eaglets up out of the
comfort. (30) God stirs our nests to
get us off our agenda and on to his. (31) “It doesn’t matter what your issue
is—you must surrender it to God if it is keeping you from being obedient to
Him and allowing Him to work abundantly in your life.” (35) “God is intent on your knowing Him and joining
Him in His plan.” (37) “God is always
a purposeful God, even when we can’t fully comprehend His reasons. …it’s
always possible that we will misinterpret God’s perfect will as an
undesirable situation (See Isaiah 55:8-9).” (37) “…we need to decide what we want from God:
to be comforted or to be conformed to His will. God may give you both, but which one is
your goal?” (39) The authors provide a list of ways of know when
God is stirring and when God is not stirring your nest. (43-44) “He may be stirring you because you have been faithful
with little, and He wants to make you responsible for more. God is likely doing something new in your
life to make you more complete.” (48)
“External change is inevitable, but internal
change is a choice. Make the choice to
trust God in your adversity. Don’t
seek quick fixes from God; seek Him!” (54)
“Waiting time is not wasted time for anyone in
whose heart God has placed a vision.
Difficult time. Painful
time. Frustrating time. But not wasted time.” (56, quoting Andy Stanley) “It is important that we stand in awe of God not
only for how personally He cares for us but also for how powerfully He rules
the vast universe.” (57) “If God takes care of the gigantic universe, can
you trust Him to care for you and your problems?” (60) “He is always doing for you what He knows
is best, though your present situation may seem to indicate otherwise. God does want to bless you, but the process
to that end is not always quick or pleasant.” (61) God leads us from stirring to soaring in four
ways. He stirs our nest to prepare us
for change. He hovers over us during a
time of waiting. He takes us on His
wings and teaches us to fly. He is the
wind that carries us. (64) “Way of God #1: God takes very ordinary things or people and does
extraordinary things with them.” (65) That way He gets the glory. “When you give God what’s in your hands, He
multiplies your potential beyond your wildest dreams.” (67) “Way of God #2: God wants you to obey His instructions whether or not
they make sense to you.” (68)
“Way of God #3: God wants you to be obedient regardless of the
results.” (69) When Moses, in obedience, put his hand in his
cloak, it came out with leprosy. “If
you obey God the first time and it doesn’t seem to turn out right, will you
have enough faith to do the next thing He tells you?” (69)
“Way of God #4: God tells you just enough to know what to do next.” (70) “Way of God #5: God doesn’t want your excuses and is angered by your
disobedience and disbelief.” (71) “Don’t pray that God will send someone else
if He has told you to go.” (72) “God wants to develop your faith from experience
to experience until you trust Him in every situation.” (78) God thrust Israel again and again into
situations where they had to trust him.
“If you want to learn to fly, messing up is inevitable, but giving up
is unacceptable.” (83) Don’t let
failure keep you from victory. God tests you to humble you, to reveal what is in
your heart, to demonstrate that your soul starves apart from him, and to
mature your faith. (85) “In the midst of difficult circumstances, there
comes a point when you must either believe—and enter a new level of trust and
dependency on the Father—or choose not to believe. This is what we call a crisis of belief. The situation challenges you to trust God
in an unprecedented manner and grow or else stunt your growth by doubting
God. If you turn back at the point of
uncertainty, adverse circumstances, or risk, you will miss the blessings of
God. In this case, you cannot remain
both comfortable and committed. God’s
blessings come outside of your comfort zone.” (88) “Learning to live by faith is not just cranking
up your courage, gritting your teeth, and trying to do better. It is a time when you totally trust the
Lord to do what you cannot do. Yet a
crisis of belief also challenges you to act on what you really believe and
leave the results to God.” (92) “Getting a word from God means that the Holy
Spirit reveals a specific scripture to you in your situation and impresses
you to claim it and act on it by faith.
It may be a promise, a warning, a prohibition, a rebuke, a correction,
or an instruction. In other words, God
speaks personally to you through His Word and its application to your
situation, and He challenges you to believe Him.” (95-6) “No one has ever become a mature disciple who
does not spend time in God’s Word and apply it to his or her daily life.”
(99) “I keep a running list of what I
need to hear from Him about. After all
these years I am still amazed how He takes my regular daily Bible reading and
applies it to my present situation and list of problems through the Spirit’s
affirmation.” (100) “A spiritual marker is a time when you knew that
you experienced God and saw Him work in your life. God gives you spiritual markers so you can
see how He has worked mightily in your life.” (103) “He will help you see how the challenge you
face now is in line with past directions.
I have been asked to do many good things that I turned down because
they did not line up with my spiritual markers. … His leading will not
violate how He has led you in the past.” (103) “Although eagles must be willing to try their
wings, it is the wind currents that really enable them to soar.” “One mark of an eagle’s maturity is
learning to depend on the wind, and for a disciple it is learning to depend
on the Spirit.” (110) “Soaring by faith is not asking God’s
blessings on your own flights but rather riding His purposes for you as He
leads wherever He chooses.” (114) “Your greatest opportunity to soar in faith is
when the storms of life come—times of uncertainty, fear, and adversity. …as
you place your faith in the Lord in the midst of them, the Holy Spirit will
strengthen you and lift you above the storms.” (125) Are you working on such a big vision that it
cannot be completed in your lifetime? |
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