Tag Archives: The 1980’s

Don’t Let Yourself Go

To deter drug use during the 1980’s, Nancy Reagan came up with the slogan “Just Say No.”  While some historians have labeled this former public service announcement a failure, she was on the right track.  People don’t wake up and become addicts over night.  Rather, addictions develop through a series of poor choices, one compromising decision at a time.  Thus, a far better warning is don’t let yourself go where evil lurks.

A man without self-control is like a city broken into and left without walls, Proverbs 25:28.

Discipline is a vehicle to keep individuals out of danger.  Similarly, self-control can guide people when they are tired or weary.  Nonetheless, temptation attacks minds, implanting fantasies, lustful desires and ill-conceived ideas.  Escaping these thoughts require divine intervention.  However, prayer does not always prevent people from tasting forbidden fruit, going beyond defined boundaries into the unknown longing for a permanent high.

But I discipline my body and keep it under control, lest after preaching to others I myself should be disqualified, 1 Corinthians 9:27.

Yesterday, I missed working out for the first time in 2017.  Sure, it doesn’t seem like a big deal, but I know what this decision can result in.  As an expert snoozer, not getting up the first time your alarm goes off can set a precedent.  The next time you roll over to hit snooze sends a message which feeds your sinful nature, “I’ll get up when I want to.”  If you have great expectations for 2017, don’t let yourself go any further.  Before laziness takes over, trust in the Lord to keep you on track to fulfill what God has called you to do.

by Jay Mankus

 

 

Ordinary People; Desperate Times

Still of Timothy Hutton and Mary Tyler Moore in Ordinary People

The 1980 film Ordinary People starred Mary Tyler Moore, Donald Sutherland and Judd Hirsch.   This film which won 4 Oscars, highlighted the breakdown of an upper class family when the accidental death of the oldest son creates a wide communication divide.  While our culture, music and style has changed, ordinary people continue to struggle to build a loving, stable and  supportive home for children to live.

If this wasn’t enough, men, women and recent college graduates are fighting to find employment which can pay their bills or keep them afloat until a higher paying job opens up.  From my own experience over the last 9 months, words like loyalty, pensions and savings accounts are becoming extinct for many.  When hundreds of people show up to an employment center and wait in line for 7 hours for an interview, you know we are living in desperate times.

Despite the nature of our current economy, Jesus has left Matthew 6:25-34 for such a time as this to restore hope to Americans and the world.  As most people are daily focusing on their external problems, God is at work internally, providing for birds, flowers and grass, Matthew 6:25-30.  Therefore, do not let worry suck the life out of you!  Rather, make seeking God and His righteousness your main priority.  Though, we are all ordinary people living in desperate times, there is an extraordinary God who has prepared in advance good works for you to do so that your needs will be met, Ephesians 2:10.

by Jay Mankus