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Sunday, June 21, 2009

For the Dads...

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Monday, June 15, 2009

It's going to be alright

It's Going to Be Alright

"I've read the last page of the Bible. It's all going to turn out all right."

Billy Graham

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DON'T GIVE UP


Don't Give Up

"Hope begins in the dark, the stubborn hope that if you just show up and try to do the right thing, the dawn will come. You wait and watch and work: You don't give up."

Anne Lamott

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Battle Hymn of the Republic

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Louis Armstrong - What a Wonderful World

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Letter from God by Paul Harvey

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Sunday, June 14, 2009

LET EACH ONE OF YOU SPEAK TRUTH... EPHESIANS 4:25

Daily Devotion

Two forceful personalities in a relationship are like two rivers flowing into one; there's going to be a strong current. Anger can be instant like a flash of lightning, or prolonged like the rumble of thunder. Sometimes we clash painfully, other times we distance and silently abandon the relationship. But anger handled the right way doesn't have to destroy. Here are God's rules for handling your anger.

Source: The Word For Today

...Let each one of you speak truth...
Ephesians 4:25 NKJV

Rule 1: Keep it honest. "Stop telling lies. Let us tell...the truth...don't sin by letting anger control you..." (Eph 4:25-26 NLT). When you're angry don't deny it. Anger can be constructive. We're right to get angry when people are mistreated and wrongs are not made right. Saying, 'I've been feeling angry and because I value our relationship I'd like to talk about it,' is honest, non-threatening and invites resolution. Observe: (a) Ignoring, stifling, suppressing, or pretending you're not angry is basically dishonest. (b) Another form of lying when you're angry is exaggeration. "You never listen to what I say." "You always ignore my wishes." "Nobody does anything around here except me." Such generalisations are untrue and serve only to aggravate and polarise, guaranteeing the real problem gets obscured and goes unsolved. (c) Another way to lie when you're angry is blaming. "If you'd arrive on time I wouldn't have to nag you," or "If you'd quit nagging so much, maybe I'd start being on time." Blaming is a way of evading your own responsibility while pointing the finger at others. It angers others, perpetuates your own anger and never produces the result you want. God's way is, "Let each one of you speak truth," and it works when you do it in love.

SoulFood reading: 2 Kings 7-9, Luke 1:1-10, Ps 73:1-16, Pr 13:17-19

This Daily Encouragement comes from The Word for Today devotional available free from UCB Australia. For more information, please visit The Word For Today website at www.thewordfortoday.com.au

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HOLD ON TO YOUR DREAMS

Your Daily Spiritual Stimulus
� Wednesday's Blessing Main Index Archives

Hold On to Your Dreams

Friday June 12, 2009

Categories: Employment Prayers, Financial Crisis, Financial Healing Prayers, Financial Recovery, Financial Renewal, Money Coaching
Sometimes, when we are experiencing financial difficulties we can begin to feel that our own gifts, which have little to do with money, have also become devalued. At times like this it is not uncommon to see people abandon their gifts or life's passion as being too "frivolous" or unimportant.

In a world that revolves around money and commerce, it is all too easy to become seduced by the notion that the only contributions we make to the world that matter are economic ones. But it's not true.

No doubt, we all need to earn enough money to support our families and take care of our financial needs and responsibilities. And, it may also be true that many of the things we love to do can be challenging to make a living at but...that should not keep us from doing them.

If we abandon our gifts and our dreams there can be unexpected side effects. Clients who come to me after years of not expressing their gifts often feel depressed, less vital, or without a sense of purpose in their lives. These feelings cannot be suppressed indefinitely and sometimes they can create real life consequences that can effect our health or relationships.

So, regardless of your financial circumstances, I strongly encourage you to continue to express your gifts purposefully and passionately, even if you never make money doing so. Your unique gifts and talents are how you express the Divine Spirit within you. These are God's gifts to us that we are given unconditionally and asked to express unconditionally.

No matter what financial hardships you may be undergoing, it is very important that you acknowledge that you and your gifts are valuable. When you value and express your gifts freely and without attachment to a monetary outcome, you will feel better about yourself and feel more energized and enlivened. Then, with this renewed energy, you can move forward to focus on revitalizing your career and improving your financial circumstances and perhaps, along the way, someone may hire you to do what you love. If not, it's still a blessing to have a job that supports you and your family while you continue to express your gifts, whenever and however you can.

Hold on to your dreams!

The greatest tragedy in life is not death;
the greatest tragedy takes place
when our talents and capabilities are underutilized
and allowed to rust while we are living.

~ Amma

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HOLD ON TO YOUR DREAMS

Your Daily Spiritual Stimulus
� Wednesday's Blessing Main Index Archives

Hold On to Your Dreams

Friday June 12, 2009

Categories: Employment Prayers, Financial Crisis, Financial Healing Prayers, Financial Recovery, Financial Renewal, Money Coaching
Sometimes, when we are experiencing financial difficulties we can begin to feel that our own gifts, which have little to do with money, have also become devalued. At times like this it is not uncommon to see people abandon their gifts or life's passion as being too "frivolous" or unimportant.

In a world that revolves around money and commerce, it is all too easy to become seduced by the notion that the only contributions we make to the world that matter are economic ones. But it's not true.

No doubt, we all need to earn enough money to support our families and take care of our financial needs and responsibilities. And, it may also be true that many of the things we love to do can be challenging to make a living at but...that should not keep us from doing them.

If we abandon our gifts and our dreams there can be unexpected side effects. Clients who come to me after years of not expressing their gifts often feel depressed, less vital, or without a sense of purpose in their lives. These feelings cannot be suppressed indefinitely and sometimes they can create real life consequences that can effect our health or relationships.

So, regardless of your financial circumstances, I strongly encourage you to continue to express your gifts purposefully and passionately, even if you never make money doing so. Your unique gifts and talents are how you express the Divine Spirit within you. These are God's gifts to us that we are given unconditionally and asked to express unconditionally.

No matter what financial hardships you may be undergoing, it is very important that you acknowledge that you and your gifts are valuable. When you value and express your gifts freely and without attachment to a monetary outcome, you will feel better about yourself and feel more energized and enlivened. Then, with this renewed energy, you can move forward to focus on revitalizing your career and improving your financial circumstances and perhaps, along the way, someone may hire you to do what you love. If not, it's still a blessing to have a job that supports you and your family while you continue to express your gifts, whenever and however you can.

Hold on to your dreams!

The greatest tragedy in life is not death;
the greatest tragedy takes place
when our talents and capabilities are underutilized
and allowed to rust while we are living.

~ Amma

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Saturday, June 13, 2009

She Is

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She Is

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MAY YOU BE BLESSED - VIDEO

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Friday, June 12, 2009

May you be blessed video

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SEEK YE FIRST THE KINGDOM OF GOD - medley

Seek ye first


��Mode:�mp3/MIDI
  1. Seek ye first the�kingdom of God
    And His righteousness;
    And all these things shall be added unto you.
    Hallelu,�Hallelujah!

  2. Ask, and it shall be given unto you;
    Seek, and you shall find.
    Knock, and it shall be opened unto you.
    Hallelu, Hallelujah!

  3. Man shall not live by bread alone,
    But by every word
    That proceeds out from the mouth of God.
    Hallelu, Hallelujah!

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A problem child in the family

Daily Devotion

You say, "She's such an obedient child, but her brother breaks every rule!" Or, "Our first child's so organised; our second's a disaster area!" Children are created unique. Dealing with that reality is a parent's great challenge. Look at God's directives in Proverbs 22:6.

Source: The Word For Today

Train up a child in the way he should go...
Proverbs 22:6

(1) "Train up a child." Thoughtful, loving, productive, happy children don't just evolve - they're trained. Our latchkey generation has proved "...A child left to himself disgraces his [parents]" (Pr 29:15 NIV). Wise parents choose their child's direction, then maintain it by�positive reinforcement�and consistent discipline. They mould their child's attitude and behaviour in line with�God's Word. Solomon's reference to a child in this Scripture indicates a pre-teen who can still be moulded. If you miss those early training years your job's tough, but with God's help, not impossible. (2) "In the way he should go." Ever hear of 'cross-grain parenting'? It's trying to make your child something they're not meant to be. Forcing�square pegs�into round holes invites rebellion in spirited children and creativity-destroying conformity in compliant ones. This Scripture in The�Amplified Bible�advocates training a child, "In the way... [In keeping with his individual gift or bent]." Study your child's gifts, then direct them accordingly. Putting square pegs into square holes reduces resistance, invites cooperation and recognises your child's God-ordained destiny. When it's their path, not yours, they'll commit to it.�

(3) "When he is old he will not depart from it." When they're in the place God designed them for, nobody needs to manipulate, control or threaten them. They're invested, creative, challenged, fulfilled and happy to grow up in the square hole God shaped for them!

SoulFood reading: 2 Kings 4:18 - 6:33, Mark 16:1-20, Ps 80:12-19, Pr 13:13-16

This Daily Encouragement comes from The Word for Today devotional available free from�UCB Australia. For more information, please visit The Word For Today website at�www.thewordfortoday.com.au

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Thursday, June 11, 2009

Nearer my God to Thee - Titanic Video




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fi1hgIcflFU&feature=related
Nearer My God To Thee
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5iC...
The scene 'Nearer My God To Thee' from Titanic (1997). NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED, this video clip is for entertainment purposes ONLY.

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John Harper was preaching ARE YOU SAVED while Titanic was sinking



Ninety-six years ago today, the "unsinkable" Titanic met it fate in the icy waters of the North Atlantic. The following is the story of one of the unsung heroes of that dreadful night - Pastor John Harper. May his story inspire us still today.

John Harper was born to a pair of solid Christian parents on May 29, 1872. It was on the last Sunday of March 1886, when he was thirteen years old that he received Jesus as the Lord of his life. He never knew what it was to "sow his wild oats." He began to preach about four years later at the ripe old age of 17 by going down to the streets of his village and pouring out his soul in earnest entreaty for men to be reconciled to God.

As John Harper's life unfolded, one thing was apparent...he was consumed by the Word of God. When asked by various ministers what his doctrine consisted of, he was known to reply, "The Word of God!"

After five or six years of toiling on street corners preaching the gospel and working in the mill during the day, Harper was taken in by Rev. E. A. Carter of Baptist Pioneer Mission in London, England. This set Harper free to devote his whole time and energy to the work so dear to his heart. Soon John Harper started his own church in September of 1896 (now known as Harper Memorial Church). This church, which John Harper had started with just 25 members, had grown to over 500 members when he left 13 years later. During this time he had gotten married but was shortly thereafter widowed. However brief the marriage, God did bless John Harper with a beautiful little girl named Annie Jessie "Nina" Harper.

read more ...


http://randomresponses.blogspot.com/2008/04/true-hero-of-titanic.html

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WALLACE H. HARTLEY

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LEADER OF THE EIGHT MAN BAND AS THE TITANIC WAS SINKING PLAYED " NEARER MY GOD TO THEE"

Friday, June 12, 2009 6:57 AM
From:
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WALLACE HENRY HARTLEY


Information taken from Wikipedia - view license
Wallace Henry Hartley (June 2, 1878 - April 15, 1912) was a violinist who led the band on the RMS Titanic on its maiden voyage. He became famous for leading the eight member band as the ship sank on April 15, 1912.
read more...Information taken from Wikipedia - view
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallace_HartleyBANDLEADER

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Most families have a 'black sheep.'

Daily Devotion

You say, 'I raised all my children the same way, how come this one is a problem?'

Source: The Word For Today

Through wisdom a house is built, and by understanding it is established.
Proverbs 24:3 NKJV

(1) Congratulations on succeeding with your other children! You're ahead of the curve. A good family rule is: Pray about your shortcomings; focus on your successes. Don't obsess over one particular child, short-changing the others of your time and attention. Though it doesn't feel natural, reduce your intense concentration on your problem child. Stop 'fixing' them, enjoy all your children, and watch things improve. (2) Children develop at different rates and in different ways. Many problem children are just late arrivers; give them the time they need.

(3) Most families have a 'black sheep.' They make us uncomfortable by not doing life like the rest of us. Accept what you don't like about them until God either changes them or teaches the family mature, unconditional, non-controlling love through them. (4) You do your best as an imperfect but loving parent, then your children, not you, make their own choices. The prophet Samuel's sons "did not walk in his ways. They turned aside after dishonest gain and accepted bribes and perverted justice" (1 Sam 8:3 NIV). Embarrassing and disappointing, yes! But no charge of spiritual or parental failure is laid on Samuel's doorstep. As godly a man as ever lived, he 'walked the talk.' But when push came to shove, his sons had their options and chose not to do likewise.

However dysfunctional your child may be, under God their greatest asset is a parent who responds by faith, not by fixing, by praying, not prying, and who gets out of God's way and lets Him work.

SoulFood reading: 2 Kings 1:1 - 4:17, Mark 15:33-47, Ps 80:1-11, Pr 13:11-12

This Daily Encouragement comes from The Word for Today devotional available free from UCB Australia. For more information, please visit The Word For Today website at www.thewordfortoday.com.au

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Wednesday, June 10, 2009

a day after titanic disaster, a list of names indicating saved or lost

Link

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Monday, June 8, 2009

Nearer my God to thee

A Hymnologist Looks Back to the Story of the Titanic.
Jessica M. Kerr


When Sarah Flower Adams wrote the hymn, "Nearer, My God, To Thee" in 1840, she could not have dreamed that it would come to be associated, over 50 years later, with one of the greatest tragedies in maritime history. The story is well-known. As the R.M.S. Titanic, proud flagship of the British White Star Line, sank beneath the waves, having struck an iceberg on her maiden voyage, the ship's band is reported to have played the hymn "Nearer, my God, to Thee". The music and the singing by those still left on board was heard by the survivors in life-boats until all sounds died away, and the great ship disappeared beneath the waves. More than 1500 passengers and crew went down with the ship including the eight members of the band; but among the survivors there were a few who remembered the music and the singing of the hymn in those last tragic minutes. So runs the story to this day; and in England it is still, half-a-century later, the accepted version of the courageous part played by the ship's band. In his book "Famous Shipwrecks" (London, 1950), Frank Shaw wrote "The ship's orchestra, men not used to the ways of white water, men unimbued by the sea's stern traditions, and yet heroes one and all, coolly collecting their instruments. ..through the clamor of lowering boats and the wails of women and the crisp shouts of men, playing - playing, stimulating music, careless music -and then - when the imminence of death purged their souls of gaiety, coming together in that splendid hymn of appeal "Nearer, My God, To Thee". When Noel Coward's play "Cavalcade" was produced in London in 1931, the scene on board the "Titanic" was enacted to the sound in the background of this hymn

These brave musicians, led by Wallace Hartley, played minute by minute as the ship sank lower and lower by the bows. Their valor has become legendary, but their untimely deaths have fueled a debate .


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Sunday, June 7, 2009

12 Ways to Love Your Wayward Child :: Desiring God Christian Resource Library

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Saturday, June 6, 2009

Reflections: every day life with God

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My dad's love through divorce, alcohol, and ALS

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Thursday, June 4, 2009

My dad's love through divorce, alcohol, and ALS

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A poem and prayer about thanking God - Thoughts about God

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Christian poem called The Sunrise - Thoughts about God

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Wednesday, June 3, 2009

The Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir

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Thank you Lord, Hillsongs

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Amazing Grace Light Show.

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Amazing Grace Light Show.

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Father's Love Letter

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Tuesday, June 2, 2009

GOD BLESS YOU RICHLY TODAY

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SEEK THE LORD


Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

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New Music

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YouTube - Pray, pray, pray!

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Good versus Evil and Pride versus Humility

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Good versus Evil and Pride versus Humility

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Failing Forward: Turning Mistakes into Stepping Stones to Success

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Individual Gifts of God's Grace

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heart of the giants



Blog EntryHeart of the GiantsFeb 11, '08 9:04 AM
for everyone
By Preaching Connection

It's always fun to learn the story behind the story. The other day I saw an inspiring glimpse into what helped propel the New York Giants to the Super Bowl championship. In various ways before seeing this TV feature story, I'd heard about how the Giants had turned around a season that appeared to be heading nowhere, and then I saw part of their last game of the season against the Patriots when they played the undefeated team and gave them everything they could handle. I was surprised to hear that they beat the Buccaneers, then the favored Cowboys, and then the Favre-led Packers. Somehow they had that special something that puts a team over the top, despite all adversity.

Then I saw a TV feature about the man who it seems is a large part of the heart of the team. Greg Gadson doesn't even play football, but he knows team spirit. He's a lt. colonel in the army, and a veteran of the Iraq war. He's a well-built man with a stout-looking head and neck and shoulders. The only thing he lacks physically is legs. They were blown off in Iraq as he rode in a Humvee. What saved Gadson's life were the people around him: the other soldiers on his team who pulled him to safety and got him to the doctors, the surgeons who rescued him medically.

So what does all this have to do with the Giants? When Giants' coach Tom Coughlin heard Gadson's story, he asked Gadson to come and speak to his team. The night before the game with the 2-and-0 Redskins, Gadson spoke from his wheelchair to the Giants. He told his story. As one of the Giants' players said later, Gadson helped put things in perspective for him. The next day the Giants came from behind to defeat the Redskins, and then overcame one difficult challenge after another until they overcame the ultimate challenge of the undefeated Patriots in the Super Bowl. At every playoff game except one (because he needed surgery), Gadson was on the sidelines rooting his new teammates on to victory.

What's a preacher? You're an inspiration for God's team. You inspire them with your life and your sacrifice and perseverance in hardship. You inspire them with your sermons and your conversations. You're the Greg Gadson for your church.

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injured soldier produces giant emotions

AP Photo/ New York Giants/Jerry Pinkus
The Giants and coach Tom Coughlin (right) have rallied around Iraqi war veteran Greg Gadson.

PHOENIX -- To date, the United States has 3,940 confirmed deaths in Iraq. Back in May, U.S. Army Lt. Col. Greg Gadson, a battalion leader, very nearly found himself on that list. An IED (improvised explosive device) thoroughly shattered his body. Only 70 pints of blood, the exceptional field work of men in his 1st Infantry Division and the skill of doctors saved his life.
His legs weren't so fortunate.

The New York Giants, however, consider themselves blessed to have made this double-amputee's acquaintance. They credit Gadson, who played football at Army with New York wide receivers coach Mike Sullivan, with helping to salvage their season and making it something approaching superb. His stirring pregame speeches and his living example of courage and perseverance have inspired them all the way to Super Bowl XLII.


ESPN's Sunday Countdown
Check out Rachel Nichols' report, on Super Bowl Sunday, featuring U.S. Army Lt. Col. Greg Gadson's inspirational impact on the Giants. Sunday Countdown, 11 a.m. ET, ESPN

"I think sometimes I'm given a little too much credit for, quote, being inspirational," Gadson said on Monday in an interview at Walter Reed National Army Medical Center in Washington. "I may be, and if people take inspiration from that I'm glad and I'm grateful. But at the same time, I think I'm just trying to fight, and I'm trying to survive."

Even so, the Giants have won an NFL-record 10 consecutive road games, including three in the playoffs, leading up to Sunday's game against the Patriots. They believe Gadson has been a significant factor in that success.

"Coaches and everybody always want to say football is like war, it's a battle -- no," Giants linebacker Antonio Pierce told ESPN's Rachel Nichols last week. "This guy, he lives in the real war, the real battle. He knows what it's like to hear bombs and stuff going off.

"We're playing a kids' game, trying to have fun. He put that in perspective: Enjoy life, enjoy the moment, enjoy what you're doing, because it's rougher out there than what you really think it is."

The story begins at West Point in the summer of 1985, when Gadson first met Sullivan. Gadson was an outside linebacker, viewing his responsibilities in terms of territory; the perimeter could not be exploited. Sullivan was a defensive back.

"Mike was a high-energy guy," recalled Gadson, who was a three-year starter. "He had a great, positive spirit. He's going to pick you up, and that's what I respect and remember [of] him as a teammate."

Over the years, they lost track of each other. After graduating from the U.S. Army Airborne, Ranger and Air Assault schools, Sullivan got into coaching. His first NFL assignment, as a Jacksonville Jaguars defensive assistant, came in 2002, in Tom Coughlin's last season as Jacksonville head coach.

Gadson, meanwhile, was commissioned in time for the Gulf War -- he was a platoon leader in an artillery battalion -- and went on to serve in the Balkans and Afghanistan.

Gadson had been on the ground in Iraq for three months when he returned one night from a memorial service for two soldiers from his sister battalion. His vehicle was hit and with only 15 minutes left in the "golden hour" -- the 60 minutes following a critical injury in which a person's life often can be saved if proper care is administered -- he arrived at the hospital.

Gadson's life was indeed saved, but a week later, when his arteries began to deteriorate because of an infection, doctors amputated his left leg. One week after that, they took the right.

Sullivan, who had been in and out of touch with Gadson, came to visit him at Walter Reed in mid-June.

"It was very, very moving," Sullivan said. "He was such an amazing player in college, fast and strong, and then you see someone in the chair, in a life-altering type of condition, it was tough to see. I went there to lift his spirits -- and he lifted mine."

Sullivan presented Gadson with a Giants jersey bearing his name and No. 98, his number at West Point. There was a helmet, a hat -- and a reconnection. Sullivan asked him if there was anything he could do for him.

"Well," Gadson said, "when you guys come to town, I would love to see you guys play."

Before the Sept. 23 game at Washington, Sullivan mentioned Gadson to Coughlin.

"I have so much respect for those serving our country in Iraq," Coughlin said. "He's a real hero, he's the real deal. This is a guy who's given a tremendous sacrifice of himself so we can sleep under the blanket of freedom, so I wanted to meet this guy."



He was such an amazing player in college, fast and strong, and then you see someone in the chair, in a life-altering type of condition, it was tough to see.
--Giants assistant coach Mike Sullivan on Greg Gadson
On a Saturday night at the Giants' hotel, following the offense, defense and special-teams meetings, Sullivan introduced Gadson to the team.

"I talked to them about their gifts as athletes, and their privilege and special opportunity that they have," Gadson said. "I told them that when you're deployed, we're fighting for our country and our flag and mom and dad and apple pie, but when it comes down to it, those things are the furthest thing from your mind.

"You're fighting for that guy that is right next to you. Just like my soldiers, they came and fought for me and saved my life. I told them about the 18-year-old PFC medic that didn't want me to lose consciousness. He's yelling at me and just literally willing me to stay conscious and keep fighting."

The Giants, to a man, were moved.

"I never remember a room being that quiet," Sullivan said. "As the meeting broke, it was a standing ovation."

Said Pierce, "It really put [things] into perspective for us, because at the time we were an 0-2 team, and we didn't know which way we were going."

The Giants' defense had allowed a total of 80 points in their two previous losses, to Dallas and Green Bay, and they were trailing the Redskins 17-3 at halftime. But the Giants scored three unanswered touchdowns in the second half, the last one a 33-yard pass from Eli Manning to Plaxico Burress with 5:22 left.

Burress did not spike the ball. Instead, he sprinted to the Giants' sideline and dropped it into the lap of Gadson, who was sitting in a wheelchair.

"That's when," Gadson said, "I became one of the Giants."

The Giants' season may well have swung on the final 51 seconds of that game. Washington had a first-and-goal at the Giants' 1-yard line when quarterback Jason Campbell spiked the ball. The Giants stopped the Redskins on the next three plays to win the game.

"To see a guy fight in those circumstances, you really can't help but give your best and give your all," said defensive end Justin Tuck, who helped stop Redskins running back Ladell Betts on fourth down. "It kind of put us in that situation to stop taking things for granted. We really focused from that point on."

The Giants won their last seven road games, then finished the regular season with a rousing home loss to the Patriots, 38-35. When the Giants arrived at the team hotel before the wild-card game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers the next week, Gadson was waiting for them in the lobby -- and somehow, he was standing.

"It was just kind of a priceless moment for me," Gadson said, "making eye contact with them."

He had been fitted with prosthetic legs and, even though he had difficulty walking, was standing there, accepting hugs and handshakes. The younger players called him "sir," but one veteran felt comfortable enough to chide him, "Hey, Greg, you look a lot taller now."

"To see him taking a couple of steps was amazing," cornerback Corey Webster said. "We were so happy for him."

[+] Enlarge

Matthew Emmons/US Presswire
Eli Manning greets Greg Gadson after the Giants' win in Green Bay.
Gadson had hoped to attend the divisional playoff game in Dallas, but when doctors performed another operation on his legs, he wasn't allowed to travel. When the Giants upset the Cowboys, the Giants named him an honorary captain for the NFC Championship Game at Green Bay, and he and his 13-year-old son, Jaelen, made the trip.

The wind chill was below zero, but Gadson didn't want to watch the game from the warm suite the Giants had arranged for him.

"He wanted to be right out there on the front lines, so to speak," Sullivan said. "You'd see players would go up to him and he'd look them right in the eye, and you could tell they were feeding off his courage and his inspiration."

The game was in overtime when Webster intercepted Brett Favre's pass at the Packers' 34-yard line. That ball too was deposited in the hands of Gadson.

"I felt like he deserved the ball," Webster said, "because he's a big motivating factor for me, personally, and for the team."

Four plays later, Lawrence Tynes kicked the winning field goal and, improbably, the Giants were on their way to Phoenix. Yes, of course, Gadson will be there. He has become part of the team. Burress, who also comes from the Tidewater region of Virginia, calls him regularly and exchanges text messages with him.

The Giants, substantial underdogs in Super Bowl XLII, have not lost a game when Gadson is on the sidelines. They would not be surprised if it happens again.

No matter the outcome, while the risks and results of war and the game of football are vastly different, Gadson said there are many parallels.

"In war, people's lives are changed forever," he said. "Everybody who knows me has been affected by the injuries, and I'm blessed to be alive. [But] as a football player, I had the same kind of commitment that I have as an Army officer and a soldier. Your mind does not distinguish between the commitment. The emotional, never-quit attitude, the fighting attitude is all the same.

"I don't coach them. I don't call plays. But I think that they represent themselves well. I'm very proud of them."

Greg Garber is a senior writer for ESPN.com.

Posted by shephered at 12:06 PM No comments:

bishop teddy jake - from the cross to the pentecost

http://www.thepottershouse.org/mailer/images/cross_to_pentecost01.jpg

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BISHOP TEDDY JAKES


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bishop teddy jake - from the cross to the pentecost

http://www.thepottershouse.org/mailer/images/cross_to_pentecost01.jpg

Posted by shephered at 3:42 AM No comments:

Monday, June 1, 2009

An AWESOME video with an EXCELLENT message: WHAT ARE WE DOING??!!!

Link

Posted by shephered at 5:08 PM No comments:

KING OF CASTLE BY BISHOP T JAKES

Bishop's Blog

King of the Castle

May 27th, 2009

According to a recent report, the recession overall has hit men much harder than women, with four out of every five jobs lost being held by a male worker.

African-American men lead the unemployment surge, with an unemployment rate of 15.4 percent. More than one-third of young black men ages 16 to 19 in the labor market are unemployed. In fact, a recent report found that 8 percent of black men have lost their jobs since November 2007.

With so many men of all cultures—African American, Caucasian, Hispanic, Asian—losing their jobs, many have also lost their sense of self.

For generations, men have been judged on how well they provide for their families, and how well they take care of them. Their identities have been intricately woven into and forever linked with the job they perform from 8 to 5 each day. Their value, their place as the head of the household, and the king of the castle, are all connected to the paycheck they bring home each week.

Now, for many, that paycheck is gone and employment opportunities are scarce. Men are fighting for a sense of belonging, a sense of feeling needed, and a sense of, “I am still a man.”

The recession, while brutal on those who have gone months, some years, without a job, is equally as challenging on those who remain gainfully employed in the workplace.

For those who still have a job, the ever present fear of losing that job and the anxiety that comes from constantly wondering, “Is today the day?” can be overbearing and too much to handle.

For others, it is the guilt of watching their good friends lose everything—their homes, their cars, their families—due to the loss of employment, while they themselves are somehow still maintaining and still surviving.

Thomas Paine once wrote, “The real man smiles in trouble, gathers strength from distress, and grows brave by reflection.” Never before in our history has that saying been put to the test on such a regular basis. The answer, my brothers, is simple—faith.

Faith to know that the sun will rise, the rain will stop, the pain will go away, and God, our God, has not left you or forsaken you. He is here for you, and He will uplift you.

You are not your job or your paycheck, you are so much more. You are a strong, resourceful, resilient man, and like those who have struggled before you, you will not only survive, but you will flourish!

As a matter of fact, from June 25 – 27, right here at The Potter’s House church in Dallas, Texas, I will be hosting Manpower, our men’s conference.

We will delve into many of the areas that I touched on in the above text, and many other topics as well. My hope and prayer for this conference is that it will be a safe place for warriors to heal and get back on the battle field no matter what your fight might be.
Space will be limited to first-come, first-served and there is no registration fee required so that men who lack the resources can still have the opportunity to participate in this life-changing event. Of course I would love for the men reading this to come. It is a men’s event. But what I really want from you today is for you to share tips on subjects you think men need help sorting through, such as tips for success. When responding, if you could share your gender as well, that would be great so that I can get a better understanding of your perspective. In other words, I want to hear from the sisters as well!

Maybe I can share some clips after the event for those who can’t come.

Those of you who are believers, please pray for its success.

In the meantime, stay strong my brothers, stay strong.

Blessings,

Bishop Jakes

Posted in Conferences/Events, The Potter's House | 32 Comments »

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