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Coming Clean about Our Weakness [Excerpt by Wes Yoder]

 

Excerpt from Wes Yoder's Bond of Brothers: Connecting with Other Men Beyond Work, Weather and Sports (eBook). 

 

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One of the most counter-intuitive statements our Lord ever made does not describe very well the day-to-day perspective of almost anyone I know: "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness" [2 Corinithians 12:9].

Now how about that? We spend our lives telling each other to focus on our strengths, to work in our core skill sets, to dance with the thing that brought us to the party, to perfect our brand, and to protect our image. This is not the beginning of an argument to tell you not to use your strengths, but it is to say [this:]

If you want to see the power of God at work in your life, you'll have to quit hiding your weaknesses from people and from him — as though you can hide anything long enough to actually get it past God or even the people who know you.

 

[This teaching] really just means you have to be honest, to deal in truth rather than fiction. This is the requirement of Jesus that scares [the living daylights] out of most Christians.

 - Wes Yoder

 

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Other Posts You May Like

Build a Fire: Manhood that's Honest, Strong, and … Weak? via Wes Yoder
Kneeling before the King via Wes Yoder
What If God Were Your Best Friend? via Wes Yoder

 

(Some styling above is a web-exclusive feature not included in the text of Bond of Bros. Image attribution: "Abraham and Three Angels" by Rembrandt, c. 1646 [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

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What if God was Your Best Friend? [Excerpt by Wes Yoder]

 

Excerpt from Wes Yoder's Bond of Brothers: Connecting with Other Men Beyond Work, Weather and Sports (eBook). 

 

Learn More about Bond of Brothers eBook Learn More

If it is entirely true — and it is — that God, who now lives within me, knows all my thoughts and loves me anyway, I have to say two things: God suddenly has become my best friend, and perhaps he was all along the way.

I can fear his friendship, which I will do if I do not believe he is good, or I can welcome him and start living an unbelievable life with a new partner and friend.

He knows all my sorrows and everything else within me. His Spirit is the searchlight that knows and sees all. And his Spirit makes of my life a light that illuminates dark places so others can find their way.

So imagine what might happen if both you and your wife have the same best friend — God — and quit hoping you won't disappoint each other because you know and accept that you will, and because you know your best friend will be there to help you sort out the mess.

Your life would be different, and perhaps you, too, would have a hard time remembering why you thought you needed [a legalistic and perfectionistic] religion when you have a perpetual invitation to enjoy a relationship with God.

- Wes Yoder


Abraham and the LORD in Gen. 18

Abraham fellowships with the LORD in Genesis 18. Also see John 15:15

 

Q: How would your life change if you considered God your friend? Share your comments on this post.

-Adam Forrest, Zondervan

 

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Learn more about Bond of Brothers (eBook)

 

Other Posts You May Like

Kneeling before the King via Wes Yoder
Build a Fire: Manhood that's Honest, Strong, and … Weak? via Wes Yoder

 

(Some styling above is a web-exclusive feature not included in the text of Bond of Bros. Image attribution: "Abraham and Three Angels" by Rembrandt, c. 1646 [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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Kneeling Before the King [Excerpt by Wes Yoder]

 

Excerpt from Wes Yoder's Bond of Brothers: Connecting with Other Men Beyond Work, Weather and Sports (eBook). 

 

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Picture men on their knees before a king in humility and dignity. The monarch says to those kneeling before him, "I knight thee," and forever after, these men are knights, made so by the honor conferred by their king, made so by accepting who the king says they are…

Now picture this: You are asked to kneel before the King of heaven — the King of kings and the Lord of lords. You bow before the one who created you in his image. You can no longer hide anything — not the lies, not your failures, not your desires, not your pride, nor your self-indulgences or sins, nothing at all. So you present what you have, which is yourself and the meager collection of treasure you have stored in your heart.

 

Before the King

You can worship your own image no longer because your eyes now behold the glory of the King standing before you. In his hand is the sword of truth, honor, and courage, and his eyes flash with authority. You come to this moment with so little. What you bring, frankly, is embarrassing. Before this great Master and King, there remains one simple, honest prayer and hope of your heart.

 

In that moment, as you kneel before him, he says in the strongest yet gentlest voice you have ever heard, "Welcome, my son. I hereby confer on you your manhood. It is a gift for which you were created but could not attain. Thanks for bringing me your treasures. I now give you mine. If you accept the exchange, stand up and enter the freedom I have created for you."

 

The God Dare

Try it. Try bringing him everything. Everything.

Dare to hold your hands open before the one true and living God and say, "Lord, take from my hands anything not pleasing to you and place into my hands only those things that are pleasing in your sight. Do anything you want to bring my life into harmony with the original design."

These are the prayers of genuine manhood. You will not be disappointed, I promise.

- Wes Yoder

 

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(Some styling above is a web-exclusive feature not included in the text of Bond of Bros. Image attribution: By Howard Pyle (1853-1911) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

 

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Build a Fire: On Manhood that’s Honest, Strong, and … Weak?

 

Excerpt from Wes Yoder’s Bond of Brothers: Connecting with Other Men Beyond Work, Weather and Sports (eBook). // There’s a story behind this excerpt’s appearance today. Recently on our Facebook post about the Mom’s Devotional Bible Contest, a gentlemen asked, “What do you have for dads?” … I realized I had no giveaway for dads! But then I remembered Yoder’s book, which to me was as nourishing as home-smoked venison. Hope you enjoy. -AF

 

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Build a Fire

In the end, if you are a man at all, you will be an honest man. Or you will be dishonest, something less than a complete man, with a dead or dying heart. Not even you can fully convince yourself you are a real man as long as your heart is dead.

But the choices are yours. You will be false, or you will be true. You will be hard, brittle, and acerbic, or you will be strong, gentle, and true. You will be authentic and present in the circumstances and relationships of your life, or you will be a counterfeit, irrelevant, and emotionally absent man when it really matters. You will display courage in the face of danger, or you will fold in fear. You will demonstrate dignity and honor, or not…

 

Build a fire with your brothers; identify your masks — your false self — and then throw them into the roaring flames.

As you continually mature, you will find you are strong and courageous in one setting and a fearful shell of a guy in another. Don’t be afraid to think and to ask yourself what part of your manhood is completely formed and what part must yet grow into the person you really are, into the person God says you are… Build a fire with your brothers; identify your masks — your false self — and then throw them into the roaring flames. You’ll walk away together with a renewed fire in your hearts for the adventure ahead.

 

Build a fire with your friends

Image: Men of the US Army Company A, 16th Infantry; in San Jeronimo, Chihuahua, Mexico, 1916.


What is Manhood About?

Manhood, then, is first of all about being authentic, for God who created masculinity calls men to be honest and alive in the presence of others, including your wife or girlfriend (one at a time, please, and in the right order). It means being alert and honest, available “in spirit and in truth” to your father and mother, your children, your employer, your brothers, as well as to the guy whose interior emptiness drains the life out of the room at work, at church, or at the club.

 

Manhood is also about initiating a confessional life, acknowledging “when I am weak, then I am strong” … Just as you, in a broken world, cannot know the greatest joy there is to know without knowing something about the greatest sorrow in the world, so you cannot know and experience your true strength until your weakness is no longer a precious secret within you. You may as well admit your weaknesses and failures, first to yourself, then to God, and then to those who love you most. They already know. God certainly does.

 

Don’t become or continue to be the invisible man, the dad your family wishes they knew… If you are that man already, today is a new day in which the mercy of God is available for the asking. The specific name of this mercy is friendship…

 

Try asking your friends a few questions about what being a man is all about, and watch where the conversation goes.

- Wes Yoder

 

Question: What’s one essential ingredient of manhood?

 

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-Adam Forrest, Zondervan

 

(Some styling above is a web-exclusive feature not included in the text of Bond of Bros. Image attribution: [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer’s personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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