Beyond Today Daily

Dealing with Uncertainty

Uncertainty can lead to tremendous stress. What are ways we can deal with the things we don't know?

Transcript

[Gary Petty] I read an article in the English newspaper, "The Guardian." And the researchers in this article were talking about the cause of stress and how uncertainty leads to stress. And how uncertainty can lead us to actually destroying our health, our anxiety, fear. And they gave an example. I wanna read this example. You have a very important meeting. You leave the house with plenty of time, and there's a little traffic. You feel no stress. You're gonna get there on time, right?

And a second scenario, you leave the house and partway to the meeting, you get stuck in a massive traffic jam, and there's no way out, you're stressed. We've all been there. You gotta be someplace. You're looking at the time. You're watching it tick away, and you're stuck. Basically, it was a parking lot because you can't move forward. You then realize that you have no control. This can lead to a lot of different reactions. Some people are just, "Well, okay, I give up." Other people are on their phone. You've seen them. They're outside their car walking up and down through the traffic, just frantically talking on their phone because there was somewhere they had to be. There's some meeting. There's some deal, and it's not gonna happen. And they're on the phone, maybe they were buying a house, and they're trying to get taken care of. They're stressed. They don't know what to do. Some people are angry. You see them just pounding the wheel or pounding the horn, knowing that nobody can move, right? All these different reactions to, "I've lost control of what's going on."

In the third scenario, there's unanticipated heavy traffic. You're overcome by stress as you fight the traffic with the uncertainty that if you're gonna get to the meeting on time. And some people in that uncertainty, they become NASCAR drivers. You know, they're weaving in and out. They're moving all over as they're trying to get to where they're going to be.

Now, the truth is all of these situations had uncertainty, right? I mean, in the first one, everything's going great, but you can have a flat tire on the way there. We've all been through that too. And suddenly, you know, your car breaks down, you have a flat tire, something happens. And suddenly, you're not gonna be able to make your meeting. You're not gonna be where you're supposed to be. You're not gonna get your kids to practice or you're gonna miss a game or whatever it is. And there's all this stress because of this uncertainty. Okay.

We live in a world of uncertainty. What can you do to calm yourself? Okay. A couple of things. First of all, you need to understand, and realize, and accept the certainty of God's love and involvement in your life. And if you don't have that as a certainty, you need to go pray about it. You need to ask God to help you experience His love, His concern, and discover His purpose.

So that means you gotta be in the Bible. In this time of uncertainty, everybody should be spending more time praying and reading their Bible. And anything that's keeping you from praying and reading your Bible, get rid of or change it to a different priority. You have to make time to do that or this stress will just become more and more overwhelming.

There's then there's actually some physical things you can do. And I want you to make a list. Sit and make a list of things you can get certain control over. Okay? Here's a few. This is something I wrote down for me. Declutter my house. Get control of time commitments that do not serve God or help others. Make sure you're not obsessed with monetary gain or things. Okay. I mean, sometimes we can be so absorbed in the getting things that we're missing out on life, and that's actually creating more stress. Get control of the amount of time you spend in entertainment. I mean, we all need some entertainment. But in times of uncertainty, we can actually just let entertainment sort of overwhelm us and we're just locked into it. And that actually now becomes stressful. Get control of your prayer and Bible study time. Get better control of your health. Take care of yourself.

You know, we do live in a time of uncertainty. But remember, God is concerned, God is involved, God hasn't abandoned you. So reach out and ask Him to help you in this time of uncertainty.

That's BT Daily, and join us next time.

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Gary Petty

Gary Petty is a 1978 graduate of Ambassador College with a BS in mass communications. He worked for six years in radio in Pennsylvania and Texas. He was ordained a minister in 1984 and has served congregations in Longview and Houston Texas; Rockford, Illinois; Janesville and Beloit, Wisconsin; and San Antonio, Austin and Waco, Texas. He presently pastors United Church of God congregations in Nashville, Murfreesboro and Jackson, Tennessee.

Gary says he's "excited to be a part of preaching the good news of God's Kingdom over the airwaves," and "trusts the material presented will make a helpful difference in people's lives, bringing them closer to a relationship with their heavenly Father."

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Student Teachers

Christians have dual responsibilities of being students and teachers. We teach our children and others as opportunity is given to us, and we are students of the Bible--God's Word. In the Millennium we are destined to be teachers of the survivors who make it through the Tribulation. Could we continue to be students of God as spirit beings? Will we continue to learn?

Transcript

[Mike Iiams] At our home in Idaho, we get a daily paper that keeps getting smaller, and I try to read it every morning a little bit and catch up on the local news and the world news, see what's going on here and there in the world. And as I work through the paper, I always enjoy reading certain comics that are maybe enlightening or bring a smile to my face. And at some point there as I wind up reading the paper, I like to read "Dear Abby." "Dear Abby" is the syndicated advice columnist in our paper. There are lots of "Dear Abby" style people in lots of newspapers. People who give answers to people's questions on, I believe it came off of "Dear Abby's" website, they receive 10,000 questions per week. People seeking advice on all kinds of things that, honestly, we could answer if we just used our Bible.

So as educated students of the Bible, you should be able to answer the advice columnist and even the young people, the 13, if you're 13, you should be able to answer the advice columnist. So I'm not suggesting you have to read them, but I think it's just interesting that people ask questions that just don't seem, like, really? You asked that? You can't figure that out on your own? But no, they can't. So 1 Peter 3:15, we don't necessarily have to turn there. You can write it down. You probably know it. You've probably turned to it many times, but it says that we should always be ready to give an answer. So whether it be "Dear Abby" or somebody at work or somebody on the street, you should be able to read and give answers. So you can be turning to Ezekiel 36. I had it and then I pulled my paper out and lost it. So let's see if I can find it again. Ezekiel 36:33, we've been told various times during the Feast that we're going to be kings and priests in the Millennium, in the world tomorrow, Millennium just being the beginning of the Kingdom of God. We look forward to that.

And people are going to need questions to fundamental answers. They're going to need answers to fundamental questions that have occurred because no one has ever lived through a time such as is going to lead up the Millennium. So people are going to need answers. Ezekiel 36:33 says, "Thus says the Lord God, ‘On the day that I cleanse you from all your iniquities, I will also enable you to dwell in the cities, and the ruins shall be rebuilt.’" I wonder how they got that way. The ruins. "The desolate land shall be tilled instead of lying desolate in the sight of all who pass by. So they will say, ‘This land that was desolate has become like the garden of Eden; and the wasted, desolate, and ruined cities are now fortified and inhabited.’" How is that going to happen? Does God wave His magic wand and suddenly these things take place? Verse 36, "Then the nations which are left all around you shall know that I am the Lord, have rebuilt the ruined places and planted what was desolate. I, the Lord, have spoken it, and I will do it."

So you might notice that God works through people and many times, yes, God is quite capable. He could come down and do everything Himself, but that's not the way it works when you're around God. He works through people. We can assume that the people that have lived through Satan's wrath and the Day of the Lord will have a lot to learn. But they'll have a lot of questions when they start picking themselves off the ground and dusting themselves off, they're going to need some help. And who is going to be there? Who do we anticipate being there to help them? They're going to be confused folks. They're going to be heartbroken. They're going to be, you know, "I can't find my glasses." "Where's my cell phone?" "Call 911." There's nothing for them to go to because their cities are laid waste and they're desolate.

You folks on the East Coast recently experienced a near brush with a disaster with Hurricane Dorian. And unfortunately, I haven't met the people from The Bahamas. Are there people from The Bahamas here? I'd like to meet you. I don't see you, but that's okay, we can talk later. They're out there. Yep. Okay. We'll talk later. Please come find me. I'll be back in the booth back there, sitting in the corner. That's what I did when I was five. But you people here in Georgia had a near miss, right? That hurricane went up the East coast, but the people in The Bahamas weren't quite so fortunate. They had 2 days of 185 mile an hour winds. And when the wind blew over and people started coming out of their shelters or wherever they were hiding, they started looking around, I don't think they were saying, "Well, where's my cell phone? Where's my new car? Where's my this or that?"

I think they were looking for their husband or their wife or their child and saying, "Are you okay?" And the big hug. They needed some comfort. They needed some people there to take care of them. And maybe they were even saying, "Now what? Now what?" Like, "Our blackboard just got erased. Now, what are we going to do?" "Our house that we just finished. The streets, the schools, the grocery stores. What are we going to do?" But they were thankful to be alive and materialism took a back seat to what they were dealing with. I see the people of the Millennium being somewhat similar to that, only worse. I imagine that they will be looking for food and clothing and comfort and everything has changed. Nothing is going to be the same. There is no Calvary riding in from the United States with foodstuffs and ships and helicopters.

I think it's going to be very quiet because just about everything will have been wiped out. Over the years as the kids were younger, there was this TV show called MacGyver. They're laughing. MacGyver could be in the most desolate, impossible location, and he would find something to solve the problem, make a bomb out of duct tape, or make a helicopter fly with… I don't know. It didn't matter. He could fix it. Yeah. He always lived to the next show so. He could escape or solve a problem when there was nothing around to do it. I don't see MacGyver getting along very well. I don't think it's going to work. There won't be any cell phone networks. There won't be any Amazon Prime, no interstate trucking. The grocery stores probably won't be there and they certainly won't have stocked shelves.

I can't tell you what it's going to be like, but for anyone of us who lives in America, you better be scared. Because it's not going to be like you grew up. I know that Jesus Christ said in Matthew 24:22 that “unless those days were shortened, no flesh would be saved alive… no flesh would be saved alive.” This is going to be a pretty big deal. “But for the elect’s sake those days will be shortened.” Actually. The verse doesn't say alive. Lots of flesh will be saved. But if you read into it, literally we could blow ourselves off this earth with the technology that we have. So there will be survivors. They will pick themselves up. There are people there that are going to need served. What I expect them to see is not what they'll be expecting to see.

What I expect them to see is not what they'll be expecting to see. They're going to expect to see the way it's always been. They're going to expect to see the helicopters coming in or whatever it may be. But I'm expecting to see entering from stage left, God's saints. The people who have been prepared for such a time as this. Brethren, I expect to see us coming in stage left, to be there to help those people. And they're going to need it. God's saints will have the golden opportunity of their life to practice what they've been learning for decades. Things that become old hat right now. They seem like, "Well, we've always done it this way." Things will be different. Everything will be different. Okay. Here's a question for you. You can write this one down.

Have you ever thought of yourself as a student teacher? Have you ever thought of yourself as a student teacher? In my school career, occasionally, there would come a person into the class that wasn't the regular teacher, was not a professional, would walk in and typically this person would be nearing the end of a teaching degree program. They're trained, they've had a lot of experience doing lots of things, but they've never stood in front of the class and taught them. And so they're a little nervous. They're not professionals, they're not seasoned, they're nervous, and they already know it's not as easy as it looks. I kind of think maybe we're going to be that way. "Okay. This is all new. This is new territory. We've never done this before." And so you're going to have to buck up and say, "Okay, how should we do this?"

So what will we be doing in the Millennium? The beginning of the Kingdom of God? Again, the Millennium is not for us, unless I could see God using it as a training ground for us to say, "Well, there are lots of other things. Do you ever see the planets and stars out there?" Maybe we're going to, you know, go into some development program and move on after the Millennium, I don't know. You have to speculate. You have to read these verses and say, "Where's God going with this?" And we'll talk more about that on the Eighth Day. So, again, the Millennium is not for us, except that it would appear that God's using it as a training ground for us and having us there. So we could talk about, okay, we've been raised incorruptible. The saints have come back to life.

We've been changed. We join them in the air. We end up sitting with Jesus Christ on His throne. That will be different. And Daniel 7:27 talks about “the kingdom and dominion, and the greatness of the kingdom under the whole heaven, shall be given to the people, of the saints of the Most High. Whose kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and all dominions shall serve and obey Him.” And then the saints are going to judge the world, as we've heard about. And at some point in there the rewards are being handed out. This is all new territory for us, brethren. We have to open our minds and think like, "What is God doing here?" This is not just repetition, repetition. There's something bigger coming down the pike. Returning to Isaiah 30, so who is experiencing the Millennium? Who's actually the ones that need the help? We're there to help. We see ourselves as teachers, we see ourselves as God's in charge, and God's working through us. God's doing things.

Isaiah 30:20 says, "And though the Lord gives you the bread of adversity and the water of affliction, yet your teachers will not be moved into a corner anymore." Who are those teachers? It would stand to reason that that should be us. We're the saints. We're supposed to be the saints. We're supposed to be growing and overcoming day by day and we need to do that. Said, "Yet your teachers will not be moved into a corner anymore, but your eyes shall see your teachers." So I would read this as the people of the Millennium or they can easily see who's there working with them and their teachers. “Your ears shall hear a word behind you, saying, ‘This is the way, walk in it,’ whenever you turn to the right hand or whenever you turn to the left.” Many people would rather have someone show them how to do something. We rented a car at the Feast, right? Have whatever your heart lusts after, right? So we rent this Cadillac.

This car is so smart. I get in the car, this isn't in my notes. I get in the car, because I'm not short, I close the door and hit the start button and the seat goes right up to the windshield. Like, all right, somebody short drove this car. All right. So I run the seat back, put the steering… and the steering wheel comes out. And so I push everything back where it's supposed to be, and I hit set. One. All right, that should be good. Turn the car off. Turn the car back on. And I do this like three, four times. Every time getting like, "All right, maybe I missed something. Maybe I didn't hit the set button right. Adjust the mirrors. Okay. Ready? Try it again." Right up to the windshield. Time after time, I'm like, "All right, get the manual out." Has the manual in the car. So I read the manual. And I carefully read the manual. Same thing.

I must have done this a dozen times and I'm going, "Never buy a…" No, I don't want to say never buy a Cadillac. I'm reading the book and I still don't get it. Finally, I tried something different, and eventually, not that it stayed that way, but eventually, I get the seat to stay back where it's supposed to be and if my wife doesn't drive the car, I'm okay. But we read the Bible on a daily basis, right? And then we have to have time to go out and put it to practice, you know? And then your wife walks in the room and somebody drops something on your toe. And so like, what you just read in the Bible, doesn't work. And so you read the Bible again and somebody drops something on your toe and it doesn't work and you keep going back, right? There's this process going back and forth.

So the owner's manual is important, but the actual living, the actual doing, you need both. Right? So in my work, I work in the electrical trade, there are a series of steps between deciding I want be an electrician and receiving the credentials that tell you that you are an electrician. You need four years of on the job training and you need classroom instruction. Both are needed. Have you noticed that God gave you six days to work, and the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord, your God? And so we need both. And those people in the Millennium are going to need both. But they're going to need someone there because if somebody had come up to my Cadillac and showed me how to do these silly buttons, I would have gotten it so much easier.

The fact that it kept breaking, I don't know whether it's me or the car, but whatever, but the people in the Millennium are going to need, just like I would prefer to have someone show me how to do something, it'd be so much easier. I wouldn't have to think about it. I could just do, you know, "Okay. They did that. That's what I'll do." So the people of the Millennium are going to need the same thing. They're going to need the daily education. They're going to need the formal training. Who's going to do that? I think we are. Yes, folks. It looks like we're going to be teachers, and right now we're learners. Right now, we're sitting here quietly, laughing at my funny stories. We're sitting here, we're being taught. We can't stay this way. It's not going to stay this way forever. Things are going to change. I hope you realize the day is coming when the survivors will need teachers.

We're going to have to break out of our mold. We're going to have to do the caterpillar butterfly thing. We're going to have to change. And we're going to be there for those people to oversee them, to look after them, and I don't see us ever stopping learning. You can argue about this or discuss it when you're not sitting here watching me but do you ever see a time in your life, even if you're a spirit being, do you ever see a time when you're not going to learn anymore? Do you think when you turn spirit being that God's going to suddenly plug in the hard drive that gives you access to everything He's ever done or ever known? I don't know. I kind of don't think so. I just think we're going to spend an eternity going, "Aha. Aha! Oh, look at that. That's how you did that." I don't see us stopping being learners. I see an eternity with God, an exciting time when He lets us in on secrets and how He does things, and how He teaches us in that time, we'll have to wait for.

I think it'll be nice to learn for all eternity from God. It's hard to imagine things that we have never seen. Turn to 2 Kings 6. I want to relate a little story. Like, how does God do things? How is God going to proceed? I mean, we see through the glass darkly, right? 2 Kings 6. You know, we're we have limited vision. There are things that we've never seen before. Things that we've never done before. And somehow, we have to look beyond the here and now. We have to look beyond. So 2 Corinthians 6… I said that wrong. 2 Kings 6:15. And so we're going to break into the story here. The King of Syria is making war with Israel and there's some dialogue going on. So we'll break in verse 15, "And when the servant of the man of God arose early and went out, there was an army, surrounding the city with horses and chariots. And the servant said to him, ‘Alas, my master! What shall we do?’” This is death, you know, “How are we going to survive this? The city is surrounded and we're toast.”

Verse 16. "And he said, ‘Do not fear, for those who are with us are more than those who are with them.’" Verse 17, "And Elisha prayed, and said, ‘Lord, I pray, open his eyes that he may see.' Then the Lord opened the eyes of the young man, and he saw. And behold, the mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire all around Elisha. So when the Syrians came down to him, Elisha prayed to the Lord, and said, ‘Strike these people, I pray, with blindness.’ And He struck them with blindness, according to the word of Elisha." So no man in this story was going to know what God had in the mountains. Couldn't see it. And in many ways, we can't see what miracles God's going to perform for the people of the Millennium. There's some stuff has to happen. How do we feed the people? How do we take care of them?

We have to, in some ways, wait and see. We have to get there. Brethren, we must remember who is the captain of our salvation and never underestimate his ability to have a plan and working out in an awesome way that humans could never think of. I don't know the details, but we serve a God that has had a plan in place since the foundation of the world and He's not going to be defeated. That plan is going to happen and fortunately, by God's grace, we've been called to help take care of it. Certainly, you know, our lack understanding is not going to impede God. God can show us what He needs and I think we'll be eager servants to do whatever He says. He'll tell us what to do. We just have to be ready. So does it bother you a little bit, even a little bit, that you're going to be in teaching positions? For a lot of people, it does.

Because we're all self-conscious and in our society, teaching usually means standing up in front of the classroom, you have this organized group of, you know, they're five rows of chairs and six rows, deep or five chairs in a row and six rows deep, and you have 30 people and you have all this, you know, you have to have your lesson plan ready and this and that. But you have to think about it, you have been teachers basically all your life. There's a picture in our album, somewhere of my son and I standing side by side, he was much younger. I don't know how old he was. Much younger old. And just the way we're both standing, whatever the pose was, we were both doing the same thing. I never taught him how to do that. I didn't instruct him, "All right, you sit down and I'm going to show you how to do a pose with your father."

But somehow, I modeled it and he copied it. What's wrong with that? What's wrong with that picture? Nothing's wrong with the picture. And you probably have poses and pictures in your album that show you the same thing. Parents teach children even when they're not trying to. Sometimes it's good and sometimes it's not so good. So this life is a training ground and we get to… whether it be woodworking or how to line up or how to do music or whatever it is, most of you, probably all of you through your life at some point have taught others how to do things. I've spent a little bit of time in the classroom as a teacher. It's different, and yet that's the formal education. But I see teaching as a multifaceted collection of stories, examples, good examples, bad examples, examples how to do it, examples how not to do it.

You could say, "Do it because God said." You could say, "Do it because God said not to." But those in the Millennium have to be taught God's way. They have to own it, but it will be easier when they can look at their teachers and model what the teacher's doing and copy it and see that God's way works. We're supposed to be learning that now. Our kids learn that at camp. They have to remember that and they have to make it a part of it. They have to own it. So the reward for us is not sometimes obvious or apparent. It could be that when you look back on something, that you're awed by how God has led you through a certain trial or through a certain situation. You're awed that God is working with you. You know, the fact that we're even here, God's working with us and draws us, and then we ended up walking by faith and say, "Well, if you say it, I'm going to do it."

So we have to trust God that He's going to do what He says and not worry about the reward. God can take care of that. We don't have to. When I was 17, I started working for one of the fellows in the Church and he was a house painter. So I started working as a house painter. He was a church member, right? You say, "What does this guy have to offer?" Well, let me tell you his credentials. He fought a common addiction at that time, he was bankrupt, he'd lost everything. He had a wonderful little wife, and I think she was quite an encouragement to him, but he had a checkered background and a lot of trials. And it would have been easy for him to quit, to throw in the towel, to give up. And for some reason, this guy that just didn't have a lot going for him took me under his wing. I don't know why. He took me under his wing. He became a teacher and a mentor and a helper and he came alongside me at age 17. This old guy… It was impressive.

Did he set out to say, "Well, I'm going to make Mike Iiams' day. I'm going to do this and I'm going to do this." No, he just did what he read in the Bible and he saw that it worked. And he did it and I look forward to seeing him again after the resurrection. So I think there will be, again, a lot of work to do, and I think we have to look to God to work out the little things that we're not sure about how to do it. He can help us. We're gaining experience now. And you gain experience now in whatever way you can. So I think we're going to be teachers. I think there's some things we need to know. All right. So I've been around teaching. I've done a little teaching, as I said. I want you to think about this, write this question down. What makes a great teacher? What makes a great teacher?

So after the teaching experience that I've had of both teaching and sitting in the class, I've never really thought about this question until recently. So I started researching it. Hooray for Google. So I started looking at church literature and I read blogs and I read the summation of surveys and I read essays. And I even read the Bible to see what I could find what makes a great teacher. Well, I've come up with 22 items. There'll be three scriptures on each one, and I want you to think about it. All right. So the classes that you like best. The learning situations that you've liked best. The times when someone showed you how to adjust the seat in your car. What is your favorite way of being taught? Think about this. This is personal. I can't tell you what the best way is.

So can you copy some of those ways? Are those good ways? Was the teacher entertaining and, or, you know, what made it go well? Why did you like those classes? It's been a long time since some of you sat in class. A long time. But you go to church services every week, don't you? And you take your textbook with you and you take notes. And I've heard that you have tests all week long. So isn't that like education? I think it is. All right. So we've got to go through our 22 items. What makes a good teacher? Okay. Get your pen revved up. All right. The number one, all the surveys, the number one thing about being a great teacher is you have to have a good attitude. Good attitude's essential. No one to go sit through a class with a grumpy old teacher. All right, we've got to move along. Number two, patience. Patience.

The Bible term for this is longsuffering. And sometimes it feels like that. And the secular definitions of patience include words like bearing pains, trials, without complaint, strain, not hasty. The capacity to tolerate delay or suffering without getting angry or upset. The ability to stay calm when it would be easier to freak out. Patience. If you're going to be a great teacher, you need patience. Oh, by the way, patience is only developed through trial and adverse conditions. Aren't you lucky? I'm not there yet, because what's interesting is it's like this trial, next trial, every trial, you have to have patience. And that seems like are we ever going to get there? I think we will. So as we go into the Millennium, it's going to be important to know how to calm people down, because you're going to have to be patient, but they're going to have to be patient, right? So you're going to have to develop patience. A good teacher has to be patient. And it's a process.

All right. Number three, enthusiasm. I wrote this point and I thought of Eeyore in Winnie the Pooh. It goes like this. "Yeah. We're going to the Feast of Tabernacles. It's going to be cold. The ocean's wet and I get sand in my hair and it's really dark at night. Oh, my." We need to exude enthusiasm. How about, "We went to the Feast and we learned so much. We met new people and had a great time. I can't wait to go back to Jekyll Island." Even your friends would rather have you be excited about going to keep the Feast of Tabernacles than being Eeyore. I'll refer you to Acts 18:24-28. This is a little story about Apollos who was an eloquent man and he was really into the truth of God. And even though he was teaching wrong, he taught it with enthusiasm until Aquilla and Priscilla pull him aside and say, "Hey, dude, you got it wrong." And they enlightened him. And then he went out with the new truth and he taught them vigorously. And it's a good example of how we can be enthusiastic.

So a great teacher needs to be enthusiastic, and that too is a process. All right. Number four is encouragement. Encouragement. So imagine the saints getting dropped into these little pockets of millennial people. They're frightened, they're hungry, they're scared, and here comes to the chopper with the parachutes and they drop some saints in on them. I don't think it's going to be quite like that. Maybe it's more like Star Wars, and all of a sudden you materialize. Okay? I'm not sure how that's going to be. Anyway, they have to figure out if you're a good guy or a bad guy, but you're going to have to again, talk them down. You're going to have to encourage them. You're going to have to give them hope, feed them, turn some crumbs into meals, whatever it takes. You're going to have to be there to encourage them.

I give you as a reference, go read the first few verses of every one of Paul's epistles. And he encourages them. He just baffles them with this brilliance as he goes into this, you know, whatever the subject is going to be in the book, he just gives it just flowery and the gift of God in Jesus Christ. And he's just like, wow, how could you not keep on reading? So go read Paul's and Titus. All of them are, again, the people in the Millennium are going to need encouraged. It's a process. All right, number five, you ready for this? All right. So I'm going to start going faster or we're going to run out of time. All right. So these are accumulated from, again, as I said surveys and all the various things that people write. Okay, great teachers set expectations high for students. They have clear objectives. They were prepared and organized. You're getting all these?

A great teacher engages students and gets them to think. A great teacher formed strong relationships with students. A great teacher has mastered their subject. They are great communicators. A great teacher has a love of learning. A great teacher is a skilled leader. He is one who collaborates with colleagues, who maintains professionalism, who doesn't take himself too seriously, who doesn't put himself on a pedestal. Hope you didn't miss anything. A good teacher loves to teach. A great isn't just a teacher. He has a life outside the classroom. A great teacher helps students if he sees them struggling. A great teacher eats apples. The reason is because, apparently, it's kind of a peace symbol and it says to the students, "I've been where you are," and it becomes kind of a bonding point. "This guy eats apples. He must not be quite so bad after all." And number 22, a great teacher sings.

And their point was that he's willing to take risks in front of those he's teaching. He demonstrates reaching new heights, the occasional bumps and bruises that happen when you don't get it right the first time. Now, I know that a bunch of you didn't get all of these. So how about turning to Galatians 5:22, where it says, "But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control. Against such there is no law." Now, if you summarize the 22 points I gave you, a bunch of them are there in that one verse. These two verses summarize what I just rattled off. And other things in this list are scattered all the all through Paul's writings, and honestly, through the whole Bible, through Proverbs, through many of the stories in the Bible. You know, you've been studying to be a great teacher ever since you were converted. Isn't that amazing?

And so you're well on your way to being a great teacher because you already have the textbook. And yes, the patience and enthusiasm and all those things, you'd dig those out of the Bible. It's all there. You're supposed to have joy, you're supposed to have love for one another. So there's nothing new here. You get to the Millennium and you just flip to Galatians 5, and you go, "Okay, what's my lesson plan?" All right, we're going to do these things. And do you realize that you're regularly studying about the greatest Teacher of all. The greatest Teacher who's ever lived. You have a lot of experience studying the best, all right? You go to the ultimate, you study the very best of teachers, and you find you're studying Jesus Christ who walked the earth and the Bible has recorded some of His greatest teachings. How did He teach?

Well, He taught with authority. He knew His subject. He presented it differently than anyone ever had. He taught in parables. He taught so that He actually would confuse the audience. And it worked. He taught, where did He teach? In the classroom? No, He taught as He walked by the way, as He walked through the grainfield as He, yes, when He was in the synagogue. When He was hanging on the cross. He taught frequently and often and in many ways. He was the master. He was the teacher. He is the ultimate master teacher. And He determined at some point that people learn better when they have a full stomach. So then He would feed them and then they would learn better. And the food that didn't belong there, He ran them into the sea.

So I don't know what formal education will look like in the Millennium. I believe God isn't going to use the model we have in society today. I just kind of don't see classrooms and universities and higher education. I somehow see, see I kind of believe that God isn't going to reinforce the foundation if you're thinking about the Kingdom as a building project. He's not going to reinforce the foundation and He's not going to rewire the electrical system and patch the roof and straighten out the walls. The Kingdom of God is a do-over. It's erase it and start from scratch. Satan's done. Man's ways are done. And now God takes control. And He doesn't need the help of the great minds of this day to do those things. He needs the minds that are filled with His Word. Minds that that will listen to what He says, will do it and do it with a good attitude. Do it enthusiastically. People who eat apples and sing.

A lot of it will have to do with reeducation. There may not be much left of dams and infrastructure and I kind of don't think the food processing plants are going to work all that well. I anticipate a whole new infrastructure and, yes, I too will have to learn a lot of things because I've lived in Satan societies all my life just like you have so many things are going to change. And yes, we're going to be spirit beings, but that doesn't answer all my questions. So I'm going to have some questions. So what will we be doing in the Millennium? I think we're going to be teaching and working with bruised people. I think there'll be lots of ways of teaching and you don't have to worry that you're going to have to stand up in front of the class and be embarrassed about it. I think God's going to give you what you need when you need it. And you can do what you are given to do boldly and strongly and not worry about failing. I think there's going to be something about being a spirit being and it's going to help us there and God's going to give us, again, what we need when we need it.

What makes a great teacher? I'd say a righteous person makes a great teacher. You can figure out all the T crossings and I dottings. That's going to work out just fine. You just keep on studying your textbook, it's going to be okay. You can be there and you're going to be part of the solution. And we need to continue learning those skills in this life in preparation. We just keep on day by day, week by week, year by year, taking in the information and learning how to interpret God's Word and how to use it. God is fully capable of having the preparations in place, but He does a lot of work through people. And I believe He's going to do a lot of work through His saints and He is going to be able to take care of all the people in the Millennium. He's going to be able to feed them and clothe them and give them shelter. Exactly what that plan is, we just need to wait and see.

And one other thing, I believe that we'll be able to answer any of the "Dear Abby" type questions. And again, you can do so with your Bible knowledge now. You can read, you can look around, in many ways you can see the problems in this world and you can nail what the problem is and the solution that it's going to take to fix it. And a lot of it has to do with Satan's influence right now. We have a plan coming down the pike for that. We've already celebrated that day recently, and it's going to be okay. So living God's way today is not imaginary. We're not just doing this for some exercise. It should be part of our foundation and our core. It should be something that we learn everything we can as we're walking through the steps where we can have confidence on a week by week basis that we're, we're coming closer to the Kingdom of God.

Yes, we're all getting older and that's a good thing. We're still here and we're still chugging along and God's still teaching us, but we have to sometimes stretch our mind a little bit. It is not going to be like it is now. It is just not going to be anything, it's going to be a do-over. And we can talk about it, we can prepare for it, we can use our imagination. I don't even know if I can, just like I read to you about Elisha, what can't we see? What's going on in our lives that we can't see? And just trust that God knows what He's doing.

So if you prepare yourself, as I believe, all of you are, if you prepare yourself, an opportunity will come. Student teachers, accept that you're always going to be able to learn, that you're ready to learn and be willing to pitch in and teach anyone in this life that is willing to learn and wants to learn. Whether it be God's way, whether it be woodworking or how to mow the grass, it's good for us to teach each other now, and it's good for us to learn from each other. And I would just say that we keep on preparing to teach, keep studying your textbook, and learn how to be the best teacher, learn how to be a great teacher, and we model ourselves after Jesus Christ.

 

Gary Petty is a 1978 graduate of Ambassador College with a BS in mass communications. He worked for six years in radio in Pennsylvania and Texas. He was ordained a minister in 1984 and has served congregations in Longview and Houston Texas; Rockford, Illinois; Janesville and Beloit, Wisconsin; and San Antonio, Austin and Waco, Texas. He presently pastors United Church of God congregations in Nashville, Murfreesboro and Jackson, Tennessee.

Gary says he's "excited to be a part of preaching the good news of God's Kingdom over the airwaves," and "trusts the material presented will make a helpful difference in people's lives, bringing them closer to a relationship with their heavenly Father."

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Distractions in the Masses

How can we avoid the distractions that surround us?

Transcript

[Joshua Creech] A couple of weeks back, we were taking a drive as a family. I can't remember where we were heading. And all three of our boys sit in the very back of the van. So they're always lined up back there. And a surreal reality sank in. Something struck real close to home. And I'm not sure what brought it on, but as we were driving, I looked over at Lizzie and I said, "You know, they're never going to understand what it means to be disconnected. They aren't ever going to climb into a vehicle and start driving and be disconnected." We are always connected through our cell phones now through GPS. Many of the vehicles we have now have Wi-Fi in them. Something they're not going to know. I remember I used to get in a car and we'd drive and you're cut off from the world until you got to where you were going. There was nothing else there. And as we talked about this a little bit more, I started to feel really old because it sank in that, you know, it's not just my children. We have young adults who now don't have that experience. Young adults didn't have the experience of getting into a vehicle and driving and not having some type of cell phone or something where they could get connected to somebody. We feel lost without our phones now. I know a lot of people say they turn around and go back home and get them. They feel that lost without the phone in their pocket. It's just something that they won't experience. They're never going to have that disconnect with the world.

This is going to make me sound and feel even older, but I remember the first cell phone I had. It wasn't mine. The first one I had, it wasn't mine. It was my parents' cell phone, but anytime I went to school or anytime I went out with friends, if we had sports activities afterward, I was expected to take it with me. So they gave us the house… it was the family cell phone. We had one for the entire family. So they would give it to me so I could take it with me and that way, if it was a sporting event, I could call them when we were leaving whatever school we were at and they knew what time to get back to our school to pick us up. So it made things a lot more convenient. It helped out with timing, but we were always connected. We had a way.

So it's not the small cell phones that you guys know today. This thing was a brick. It seemed huge to me. I couldn't carry it in my pocket. So as soon as I got in my car, I threw it in my glove box because the thing was a couple of inches thick, about 4 inches long. So probably about the same screen size that we have now, but just add two inches of depth to that thing. And then in order to talk into it, you had to flip down the mouthpiece, which was another two inches. It had the little antenna that you pull up. That was the first cell phone that our family had. And it'd been pretty popular for a while. So it wasn't the newest one at that time, but that's what we had. So I remember a time when I didn't have that. It was so big that if I did need to keep it on me, it looked like a little camera case, a small camera case to carry this thing around because you couldn't get it into your pocket. So that's what I had. That was my first cell phone. That's what started connecting me to the world. They didn't have all the capabilities they do today, but technology at that time was advancing quickly. Not quite as quick as it is today. We've seen a drastic increase over the past 10 years of how sophisticated technology is becoming. With all of these connections, with this technology comes distractions. Comes distractions.

So before we get fully submerged in this main idea that I want to talk about today of distractions and what we can do to try to avoid them, I want to touch base on a little bit of a bigger picture. Try to get an idea of where we're at in time and a little bit of the prophecy because I fully believe that we are either at the cusp of reaching some prophecy and getting into a new age or that we will soon be there. One of the two. We could see more prophetic events at any point in time. So if you would, if you look over in Daniel 12 with me, Daniel 12, it talks about the prophecy of the end time. Daniel 12:4.

It reads, "But you, Daniel, shut up the words, and seal the book until the time of the end; many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall increase… Many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall increase.” This is a wide range of things, spiritually speaking. We understand what's going to come and that there's a lack of God's knowledge right now and understanding of what His words are and how people apply them to their lives. But I think this also has a physical aspect to it. This has to have a physical aspect of how we're capable of doing such things. So with these technological advances, the knowledge is increasing, we constantly have access to answers to any number of questions that we have. And it just seems logical to me that these two are running hand in hand right now, that our physical technology and the knowledge that we have and what humankind has been capable of doing is playing a part in the spiritual aspect of fulfilling this idea of God's truth will be spread. It will be known. So if you just think about this from the Church's standpoint, we have many possibilities. Our articles and our magazines, we can send them all over the world. We're able to send it all the way to the opposite side of the earth. A couple of days, maybe weeks, depending on how we expedite it, but it can get there at a pretty timely manner. Not too much trouble.

Logistically, there have been advancements where they can move stuff at a fast rate, but then we take a step back and we see there's been even more advancements. We have even more opportunities. They're more economical and they're more timely. We have the capability of sending sermons, Bible studies, BT Dailies instantaneously. Our media department is working tirelessly to produce new material because that's going across the world in the blink of an eye. That's all it takes anymore. We put it on our website, every inch of the earth is covered. There's no question about it. So that increase in knowledge, we have technology that helps that knowledge increase. And then he also wrote about running to and fro. Many shall run to and fro. So if we put these hand in hand, what do we see? Yeah. We see we are able logistically to ship things. We can personally fly to the other side of the world in a couple of days. We can move. We have ships, we have cars. We have any means of transportation, but spiritually, we see people running to and fro as well. We see this on a deeper level.

People are starving. They're thriving for some sort of truth, some sort of knowledge of God's word and understanding. And they have trouble. They have trouble comprehending the actual truth, so then they start bouncing. They find tidbits here and there. They bounce from religion to religion, different theories, different ideas that pop up because they're starving for it. They're trying to figure out what the truth is, so they just continuously bounce. They're searching all over. They're running to and fro, looking for it anywhere they can find it. They're not going to find it until God decides it's time to open their eyes. That's what's tough for us to understand, but we have to be in a position that we're prepared for. We're prepared to inform people all over the world when that time comes.

We have a scripture over in Amos. If you flip over to Amos with me, that hits this right on the head, we see that God's word said this is the way it's going to be. Amos 8:11. Verse 11 reads, “'Behold, the days are coming,’ says the Lord God, ‘That I will send a famine on the land, not a famine of bread, nor a thirst for water, but of hearing the words of the Lord.’" Hearing the words of the Lord. Do we see people, the people we work with, some friends, maybe their neighbors, do we see them thriving, starving? Starving for those words, starving for some sort of understanding. The rapid growth of technology over the past couple decades has allowed us to reach the ends of the world. There's no point where we're cut off from.

Many of you have probably seen different news things going on this week. Oh, yeah. We had the meeting between President Trump and President Putin and then shortly after that, the Russians released they have five new plans for advanced weapons. They released some of the details of that, showing their weapons systems that they have. Or maybe you heard about the cyberattack on Singapore. Singapore's government health system database had a cyberattack where 1.5 million people had some personal information stolen.

These are things going on the opposite side of the world, but we know instantly what's going on and what's happening. So there's huge benefits. There are huge benefits and assets to being able to use this technology, the doors it has opened for us. But if we're not careful, these connections, this technology, it can also become a distraction. It can become a distraction. So as vague as some of these prophecies are at giving us the full details of how God is planning to fulfill each prophecy, He doesn't give us exact timeframes, He doesn't give us specifics now. He gives us a broad picture of what we can look for and what we can turn to. He doesn't tell us the specifics on how He's going to unfold His plan during the end times. But there are a few things in the Bible that we are 100% clear on and He gives us a few things that we need to work on, change in our personal lives. And one of those is being distracted. If you flip with me over to 1 Corinthians, 1 Corinthians 7, we find it clear as can be about distractions. 1 Corinthians 7:35. Verse 35 reads, "And this I say for your own profit, not that I may put a leash on you, but for what is proper, that you may serve the Lord without distraction." We may serve the Lord without distraction. He's not trying to hinder us. He's just trying to help us refocus. He's trying to help us to understand what's important. What is the most valuable thing in our lives?

And there's another section I'd like to flip over to in Mark. In Mark, we find the "Parable of the Four Soils," and one of these four soils is exactly this, this being distracted and getting sidetracked. Mark 4. So this is broken up into two sections. The first section of Mark, he actually gives the parable. And what happens is there's a group of people who don't understand what he says. They don't understand the parable or the correlation that he's trying to make. So, after he gives the parable when they're a little more secluded and it's a smaller group, they ended up asking him like, "What did you mean by this? What did this parable mean?" And that's where we get into verses 18 and 19, Mark 4:18-19. It gives us explanation. He explains exactly what He was meaning by it. So verse 18 says, "Now these are the ones sown among the thorns; they are the ones who hear the word, and the cares of this world, the deceitfulness of riches, and the desires for other things entering in choke the word, and it becomes unfruitful." These are those distractions. These are those distractions that slip in, they try to detract us from paying attention to God's Word, being able to focus, focus our time, and dedicating it to what we need to, what's for the greater good.

And you don't have to turn there. But in Luke's account, it actually adds an extra piece that I really like. I'll read it for you. If you want the reference, it's Luke 8:14. It's the same example of this parable from Luke's account. It reads, "Now the ones that fell among the thorns are those who, when they hear, go out and are choked with cares, riches, and pleasures of life, and bring no fruit to maturity." That section of, "and pleasures of life," pleasures of life, those are the fun things in our lives. Those are the things that we want to make sure we do. The exciting things, the things we enjoy. We can't let them overtake what's most important, the Kingdom of God. We have to be fully dedicated, fully dedicated to making sure that that's priority number one. We have to make that a priority. We have to make that the priority because we're destined to be part of God's family. We are destined to be sons and daughters of God. That's what His plan is for us, and we have to make that the priority. If we don't, we've lost track. We've become distracted, distracted from our purpose here, our purpose of being created. Distractions come in all shapes, all sizes, all forms. There's no limit to them. Some of them are good, some of them just take up time. Anything that diverts our attention away, anything, from the main goal that we have, is a distraction. We can't forget that that Kingdom of God is where that priority has to be, priority number one.

So if we think about the story I opened with, never being disconnected, I don't ever see anything changing in technology to where we're going to lose that ability unless major disasters occur. But as far as our economy, and sustaining it, and advancing, it's going to keep advancing. It's hard to picture it accelerating at the rate it has been because we've moved along so quickly in the past few years, but that's the way it's leading. It has put us in a completely different category from 20, 30, 40 years ago. We have so many different distractions trying to take up our time. If you think about just going to stores, places we visit, normal activities. You can't go into McDonald's or you can't go into Starbucks anymore without them having TVs running different news channels, sometimes they run sitcoms. We're always connected. There's always something going on.

And if we're sitting there and they don't have something on that we're wanting to watch, what do we do? We either flip out our phone or we pull out our laptop because they have free Wi-Fi. They've given us the ability to be able to connect to whatever we want for free. Just hop onto their Wi-Fi. So those times, what do we do? We try to eat our meal or drink our coffee and maybe you scroll through, find a TED Talk, find a YouTube video of something that you wanted to learn about. So you start watching through it. Before that TED Talk is done, you end up finishing your meal. Then we're stuck. We're not sure what to do. We don't want to waste our time. Our time's valuable, right? We have lots of things to get done, so we don't want to sit there and watch the rest of it because we're done eating. We could be doing something else. Technology has given us an avenue out of that. You hit that little data button, instantly connected again. We walk down the street, we walk down the street, connected on our cell phone. Keep watching our YouTube video, keep watching the TED Talk as we're traveling to wherever we need to get to.

We are always connected. We have the capability. I looked up a Time... Time did a study on this. This was from a couple years back. Back in 2012, they found the following results from a study that they did talking about cell phones. So 84% of people surveyed said they couldn't go one single day without their mobile device in their hand, 84%. And that was six years ago, in 2012. I would imagine that's only gone up. They feel that they can't go one day without it, that lost sensation I said that when we get in our car and get just a block down, we realize, "Oh, man, my phone." That's that feeling. That's that anxiety that they get because they don't have it in their pocket because they're used to being distracted. Twenty years ago, I didn't have it, but it seems like I can't live without it now. And we're in a completely different era when it comes to technology.

Sounds like I'm bashing cell phones. I'm really not. I love cell phones. There's tons of benefits that come with it, but we have to be careful. We have to use it wisely. We have to be cautious when we think about how often we're using it because it is the easiest accessible piece to distract us, at least for me. I would imagine that most of you are the same way. It is the easiest thing to use as a distraction. It can suck us in real quick. And what does it distract us from? Distracts us from being focused on what truly matters. On doing God's work, focusing on His word, preparing ourselves for the Kingdom of God, preparing for the Kingdom of God. That's what we're doing. Does it ever distract you from your Bible study? If it does, we have a scripture, a scripture that will help with that, Psalm 119.

Flip back to the Old Testament. Psalm 119. If we read verses 15 and 16, this is why it's so important not to get distracted. The importance of what we're doing. Psalm 119, starting in verse 15 says, "I will meditate on Your precepts and contemplate Your ways. I will delight myself in Your statutes; I will not forget Your word." How do we not forget? How are we to not forget? It's by studying. It's by getting into it. We are closest to God when we're in His Word. When we buckle down and dig into the words that He's written for us, that's when we're closest to Him. That's how we don't forget His words, by going over them over and over again. This is how He's communicating with us. This is what He wants us to learn. This is what He wants us to know. It's not just on the surface. It's not just… yeah, you may know some here and there. This is at our very core. It's what makes us who we are. These are the actions that we live every day and that's what He's wanting. That's why it's so important that we not forget His Word.

I'm not the greatest reader out there. That's my wife. She'll read 10 books before I can get through one. And I end up reading the same page over and over again. I sit there and look at it, I get to the bottom, I realize, "I didn't get anything out of that." Read it again. Still, nothing. My mind's off somewhere else, distracted. So I read it again. If it takes three times, read it three times, but we have to know His Word. And it's not failure. It's not a failure that we've read it 3 times, or 5, or 10. That's not failure. That's focus. That's staying dedicated to God and doing what He's expecting of us, what He's asking us. That's focus. That's drive. That drive that puts His words in our heart. That's what it is. We want to know it, front to back.

Turn with me over to Hebrews. Hebrews 4. This section is focusing on the Sabbath, but it gives us, in a bigger sense, the power and significance behind His words. Hebrews 4, I'm going to read verse 12. Says, "For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of the soul, and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and the intents of the heart." That's cutting deep. That's cutting all the way down to our actions, our intents. Our heart, that makes us who we are, pumps the blood through us. God's Word, they're not merely words written on a piece of paper. They're not written down into books. They're not just letters and phrases. They're life-changers. They are life-changers. They have the ability to change our thoughts, change our actions. They can refocus us onto the Kingdom of God when we get distracted. They are truly relevant for our future. Impactful. That's what His words are. They're impactful.

If, if we dig deep enough, His words will change us. His words will make us a different person, but we have to allow it. We have to get into it. It's Him. It's through the closeness that we have with God that will change us. That will alter our thinking, alter our actions, to who we actually want to be, for our future. That's a big part of our daily Bible study. It's a big part of our prayer, whether it's sending cards to those who are on tough times, those who are sick, they're struggling with decisions they have in their life. Whether it's getting out and visiting. That's the changes that makes in us. It's the person we become. It's the person we're going to become. With all the distractions, that becomes really, really difficult. They get thrown in from every direction now. We are constantly trying to be blindsided by distractions. So, that focus, that focus is key.

Have you ever been engulfed with curiosity? Have you ever found a section of the Bible that you quite didn't understand, an aspect of our teaching that you didn't quite… you know what the teaching is, you know what our stance is, but you never really dug into it and actually researched it to understand the ins and outs and the scriptures that we use to understand and comprehend what God has. What do we do with that? When we have those questions, what do we do? Do we just let them linger? Say, "Somebody's done research before. We're just going to go based on what they say. That's it." No. That's not what we do. That's not what we do. We decide to research it, right? What do we do? We pull out our Bible, we grab a concordance. Maybe we grab our laptop, grab some documents from UCG. Maybe it's a booklet or some articles that have been written and soon you're sitting there and you realize you've completely barricaded yourself in. You're not getting out. You're ready to go. You have all your materials. You're going to figure it out. You're going to figure it out. You want to know, you want to know what God says. You want to understand why. We want to have that base. So we're there, ready to go.

So we get researching. We're looking it up, whether it has to… maybe it's word by word. You're going through every Greek or Hebrew word and understanding exactly what it is and where it came from, what multiple meanings it has, but you're starting to get it. You're starting to get with the studying. You're figuring it out. You're working on the next pieces that you need to work through and it's coming. You've got multiple tabs up on your laptop flipping through different translations. Maybe it's multiple commentaries trying to give you background on different scenarios and the society at the time, but you're getting it. You're pulling it out and you get tired of flipping through. You get tired of flipping back and forth between tabs. So what's our other option? What do we reach for? Reach for that cell phone, right? Either a cell phone or a tablet, something, because we don't want to flip it back and forth. So we pull the cell phone out and we sit it there and we pull the commentary or whatever we're using for our research and we set it there, so now we've got a laptop, we've got our books, we have our cell phone, and it's all working out.

We're accelerating the rate we're getting information. It's timely. It's intensifying. We're figuring it out piece by piece. We start circling, highlighting, write notes in the margins. We all have different methods, but we all have some method that we use to try to put it in our Bibles or in our notes so that we know for next time that we've researched this and it'll trigger something, telling us, "Hey, we know what this piece means." Just as you're getting to the end of it, you think you're just about there, you hear, "Ring, ring," so you ignore the first one. You're like, "All right. I'm busy doing this." You ignore that your cell phone just went off and you keep going, and then a second one comes through, "Ring, ring." So you're like, "All right. Well, let me see what it is. Let me check it real quick."

So you flip it up and it was something important. There was a prayer request that just went out. Somebody in our congregation has an urgent need, an urgent need for prayers. And that's what came through, whether it's through email or just an actual text message from a group of people, but it was important. So what do we do? We take a minute, we stop what we're doing, we pray about it. We pray about it and then we're ready. We're ready to get right back into that studying, get ready to figure out what's left. Before we can sit that cell phone down, "Ring," "Buzz," whatever it is. We've got hundreds of defaults on these phones now. That or you hear somebody's favorite song go off. They can make notifications, whatever they want, but in the phones themselves, they have hundreds built. Those aren't enough, though. We have to put our own songs in there.

But it goes off before you can even put it down and then we're sucked in because it's still in our hand. We get sucked in, whether it's the piano song, whether it sounds like a nuke going off. It distracts us. It distracts us. What is it? Facebook pops up. We've got a couple people who put little heart emojis. They love some pictures we had posted. My wife puts lots of pictures of our kids. A couple people liked it, who knows what's going on? Candy Crush. You got some new lives. They're ready for you. Come play. Come play Candy Crush. Amazon Prime, it'll notify you. “Hey, items in your cart, they've decreased in price.” So then you're thinking, "What did I put in my cart?"

So you pull it up. You're like, "Oh, okay. I got to see. I got to see if this is something I really needed. I've been waiting on a couple of these items." And then you start searching for other things. Get distracted. Or it's Facebook again. You got a friend request. Somebody wants to be friends. Expanding that network, our community. "Yeah, I'll accept you. I know who you are." Right after camp was bad for that one. I kept getting, like, 20 a day. Redbox, Redbox movies. They release new movies every Tuesday. Rent one, get one free. Do they even tell you what movies are out? Runkeeper, I have a bunch of friends on Runkeeper. They let you know when your friends ran. Lets you know how far they went, where they went. Domino's Pizza, two medium, two-topping pizza, $5.99 each. Dinner time, right? Yeah. Even my alarm clock. My alarm clock has a notification. It pops up and lets me know that I haven't set the alarm for tomorrow. It wants to make sure I get up for work in time. It's helpful. It's helpful when I actually forget, but it can be a distraction at the wrong time. It can be a distraction.

We are bombarded. We are constantly bombarded. Every app that has ever been created, I think has some type of notification. And if you're not diligent about going through your settings and turning every single one of those off, it's going to notify you. And very quickly, we get sucked down that pit and we get sucked into whatever that notification is and we're completely distracted, what we meant to do. Every time we reset, every time one of those distractions comes through, those are temptations. Those are temptations to quit. We were on Bible study. We were working hard. We were figuring it out. Those notifications, those are a chance to quit, a chance to keep us from what our true future is. Our true goal of becoming part of the family of God.

Proverbs 4, Proverbs 4 tells us how to battle this. What we need to do. Proverbs 4:25. It's a real short, quick one. Verse 25 says, "Let your eyes look straight ahead, and your eyelids look right before you." Look straight ahead. The Message Bible actually phrased this slightly differently. It says, "Keep your eyes straight ahead. Ignore all sideshow distractions." Ignore all sideshow distractions. Is that what we find? Do we find some of these distractions the sideshow, right? Something that's not primary in our lives that just kind of pops up, especially when we're trying to accomplish something and we have no intentions of doing anything else but we end up having to refocus over and over again because of these distractions. They're all over the place. And I don't think they're backing off anytime soon. I don't think society is going to make it any easier. If we look at social media, we look at video games, we have books, TV, movies. We have playing sports. Maybe it's crocheting, knitting blankets for friends. Maybe they're having a baby. All of these things can become a distraction. We make an endless list of things that we want to do that could become a distraction from what our focus is at the time. Because we sit there, work on something and we think, "Oh, I meant to do this." And we're sidetracked.

Most of those things are fun. They're the things we enjoy, but we also have necessary distractions. On top of all these fun distractions, we do have necessary ones and we have to be careful with those also. God has requirements. He has expectations. And if we're not careful, they become distractions instead of being part of what make us who we are in our lives. God expects us to teach our children, to teach our families to grow, to care for our families. That's His expectation. That's His expectation. We have to develop our families. 1 Timothy 5 goes over this. If you turn over to 1 Timothy 5, this section here is talking about caring for the widows, But verse 8 touches on a broader note. 1 Timothy 5:8.

It reads, "But if anyone does not provide for his own, and especially for those of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever." We have to take care of our households. We have to care for our families. Not only spiritually, that's not the only focus. We have to feed them. We have to buy clothes for them. If you have little kids, it's usually buying clothes twice a year for them because they grow so quickly, but they have needs. We have to bond. We have to play with them. We have to grow spiritually and physically. So we have needs. We have expectations to care for our families, provide for them because if not, it says we've denied the faith and we're worse than an unbeliever if we're not caring for ours.

We have other expectations, too. How many of you have neighbors? Nobody has neighbors. Wow. I want to live where you guys live. I have one neighbor on one side. He's the guy that mows his yard twice a week. Makes me look bad all the time. But luckily, on the other side, they let it go till it's like five, six inches, like every other week. So I try and do it at least once a week, try to do a good blend between the yards. I don't want to disgruntle the one. You know, they always give you dirty looks if your grass is a whole lot higher than theirs. Those are things. Those are expectations we have. Those are the necessary expectations that we have of upkeep on our homes. If it's not a leaky toilet, or a running faucet, or a broken pipe, something that needs fixed, a light bulb, there's always something in the house. There's always something that needs done. After 10 years of owning a home, I've learned some valuable lessons. One of those is if there's nothing wrong with the house, watch out. It is guaranteed something will break. I've never lived in my house and had everything completely done. It's never been perfect. These are part of the necessities of life. This is caring for our families, taking care of the responsibilities that we have, the expectation God does have of us. The key is making sure that they don't become the distractions in our lives. If we don't let them get to that point of becoming distractions, then we're able to maintain it. We're able to focus and actually give it the time that it needs.

So if you flip over a couple pages with me to Titus, Titus 3:14, it says, "And let our people also learn to maintain good works, to meet urgent needs, that they may not be unfruitful." That they may not be unfruitful. The urgent needs. These are those things in our lives that pop up. These are the things that we're not expecting or anticipating, but they do need done. They can become a distraction. But what's a bigger distraction is if we're not taking care of the other things that we should have already maintained and we've already taken care of because the urgent ones wouldn't be that urgent because we have the time to do it. So what is this all boiling down to? Where do we get to that we can make a concerted effort to make sure we're doing this in a proper manner? It all boils down to time management. Time management will help us avoid many of these distractions, many of these scenarios that become urgent instead of just taking care of them when they should be. We have to be deliberate with our time. That'll help us down the road in every aspect, spiritually and physically, because we'll have the time to apply it to what we need.

I found a quote, Rick Warren, he's a pastor and he was the founder of the Saddleback Church. He says, "Time is your most precious gift because you only have a set amount of it." We only have a set amount of it. It's tough to think about. None of us want to think about not existing. We don't want to think about when we're not here anymore. But the truth of it is that's the way it is. We don't know what's coming. Proverbs 27:1 reads, "Do not boast about tomorrow, for you do not know what a day may bring forth." That's Proverbs 27:1. We just don't know. We just don't know what it holds. So if we're planning accordingly, we'll have a much better approach to being able to fully anticipate changes or urgent needs that come up if we equip ourselves, if we manage our time better. Even though we don't know what it truly holds, we can plan wisely. We can organize what we need to accomplish to help us battle these distractions, to help us stay focused.

If you flip over to the book of Ephesians, flip to Ephesians. Paul writes about the need of taking advantage of the time we have. Ephesians 5:15-16 says, "See then that you walk circumspectly, not as fools but as wise, redeeming the time, because the days are evil." It's wise to redeem the time, to use the time is wise. And if you flip over a couple more pages to Colossians 4, we see this again. Colossians 4:5. It says, "Walk in wisdom towards those who are outside, redeeming the time." Redeeming that time. So what methods can we use? What methods can we use to manage our time more efficiently, more effectively? What can we do? Hopefully, by thinking about this, it'll help us be able to apply the right amount of time to each activity. We'll have it narrowed down so that we can do that.

So one of these methods is actually to sit down and plan. So to actually take the time to sit down and plan. If we sit down to try and do a daily planner, we'll figure out what we need to accomplish. Those must-have dones. And while we're in that process, it usually ends up extending out a week or two because we all have requirements, whether it's through our job, where we have deadlines or other things with the house. Who knows what it is? But we all have commitments. We all have something that, generally not do specifically today. So it helps to sit down and do that plan. Figure out exactly what it is and how we need to allocate each day so that we can fulfill all the requirements, how we can get to that end goal and be done without cramming it all in on that last day because oftentimes, that's not okay. That's not going to work. Just crammed it in at the last time. It's not beneficial to do it that way either, but sometimes it just won't work.

So plan, take some time to figure out what you need to do, how it's going to work out. Identify those urgent tasks, the ones that need done now. That'll help us. That'll help us with this time management. Another method is staying focused, stay focused on the specific items we're dealing with at the time. Sometimes that means dump everything else. That means get rid of all the extra items that we think we need to do and stay dedicated to that one. Dump all the distractions along with all the other items that may interrupt us. We don't want anything. We want to stay focused on the exact thing that we want to get done as much as possible. That means putting the cell phone in the other room or the tablet. Maybe it means locking yourself in the basement where there's no windows. I find myself just looking out the window at times, the kids playing. Whatever it takes, whatever it takes. That's what we have to do. We have to make a concerted effort not to stretch out tasks because that's what it does. That's what these distractions do. It's what they do. Something that should take us two hours ends up taking us four or six, or that's the only thing we did that day when it should have just been two hours and we could have accomplished other activities as well.

Don't let the phones become distractions any more than they have to be. Don't let them sidetrack us from the intended jobs. If we know something has the potential to distract us, time and time again, we've personally seen it with ourselves. We've seen it happen and we know, "All right, this is probably going to throw me off." Remove it, remove it before it gets a hold on us. Remove it before it becomes that distraction. Don't even take the chance. Don't take the chance of letting it mess with our focus and throw us off because we've planned. We've planned it out. That's what we need to get done.

We can make a big list. If you research ways to help time management, there's tons and tons of lists. There's one last one that I'd like to touch on to help avoid these distractions. And the final one that I'm going to mention is procrastination. Procrastination, this kind of goes back and forth between the distractions and procrastination because they bounce off of each other. We do not, for one, want to procrastinate when it comes to our spiritual growth. Absolutely not. We want to study today and we want to study now at the time that we've allotted for it, which hopefully is daily. It should be daily. We don't want to put it off. We don't want to put off the time that we have set aside because then it gets put off again and again. Distractions lead straight into procrastination. They cause procrastination because it pushes things out. It pushes those priorities away. Every minute that we allow distractions in our lives, it eats up more time. It eats up more of our valuable time and something has to get pushed back. And it's usually the things that we wanted to get done, that we needed to get done.

A lot of times it's actually more damaging because, at that point, it's already been procrastinated to some point. We got distracted earlier and it got pushed back and now we're pushing it back again. So we just see this cycle, the cycle of going forward if we're not careful. And we don't want to get distracted. Procrastination leads to big adjustments in our schedule. So all that time, all that dedication that we sat down and planned and got down into the specifics, the nitty-gritty of how we needed to do our day, how we need to go out just got thrown out the window because we spent a whole bunch more time on distractions. So then we procrastinate. So it changes that schedule. Don't allow the distractions. Don't allow the distractions to cause us to procrastinate and push back our plans and responsibilities. We'll find that as we go out through our time, our attention is completely fragmented. I find mine more and more increasingly fragmented day to day if we're not careful. Little bits of job and work, social life, everything takes up some of our time. That's our life. It is fragmented out into sections and it just keeps becoming more and more fragmented. We have to be careful that we don't let distractions come in and embed themselves and pull us away.

Never forget Satan. Satan is the cause of this. Satan is the cause of these distractions. He is the number one distraction. We read over and over again in the Bible, he is the tempter. He's called "the tempter" over and over again in the Bible. That's what distractions are. It's a temptation to pull us away from what we're trying to accomplish. And if that's our Bible study and our prayer, that's a big problem. And that's his goal. That's his job. He hates the family of God. He hates the thought of the kingdom of God. He wants to destroy every single one of our lives. He wants to distract us to the point that we aren't connected to God, that we aren't doing those things that keep us close. Reading His word to where it's embedded in us. That's his goal. He doesn't care how it gets done. He doesn't care how we're distracted. He'll use everything the world can throw at us and then he'll multiply it because every time one of us falls away, he has a little bit of success. That's his only goal. That's all he has left. He knows he's lost because God's plan is going to happen. And we are all supposed to be part of it. We are all supposed to be there. That's what He has in mind for us. That's what God's plan is for us. Don't let Satan's plan distract us from that. He wants to rip us out of the Kingdom of God, out of the family of God. Don't allow the distractions today to destroy our lives tomorrow. Take time to plan, focus on the plan, and take time to study.

 

Gary Petty is a 1978 graduate of Ambassador College with a BS in mass communications. He worked for six years in radio in Pennsylvania and Texas. He was ordained a minister in 1984 and has served congregations in Longview and Houston Texas; Rockford, Illinois; Janesville and Beloit, Wisconsin; and San Antonio, Austin and Waco, Texas. He presently pastors United Church of God congregations in Nashville, Murfreesboro and Jackson, Tennessee.

Gary says he's "excited to be a part of preaching the good news of God's Kingdom over the airwaves," and "trusts the material presented will make a helpful difference in people's lives, bringing them closer to a relationship with their heavenly Father."

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