Through His Eyes

Don't become so well-adjusted to your culture that you fit into it without even thinking. Instead, fix your attention on God. You'll be changed from the inside out. Readily recognize what he wants from you, and quickly respond to it. Unlike the culture around you, always dragging you down to its level of immaturity, God brings the best out of you, develops well-formed maturity in you.Rom.12:2 (MSG) Then you can see things through His eyes.

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Location: Dallas/Ft. Worth, Texas, United States

I have the best job in the world. I am the Pastor and Church planter of Life Connection Church. I am married to Lisa for 27 years and have two adult children, Brooke 23, Nick 21 that have been and still are an incredible blessing to my life. Brooke is a graduate of UTA and is in the corporate world and Nick is a business major at Texas Christian University.

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Credit Card Craze

Article from www.christianitytoday.com

Credit Card Craze
A look at what we're really trying to buy—and how to be more intentional about spending.
by Donna F. Savage

"Things have to change," my friend Sheila declared. "No more fancy restaurants! No more expensive birthday celebrations!" Her determination intensified the longer we talked.

Sheila had spent more at Christmas than usual. Then she charged $250 for their daughter's birthday gift and dinner for eight in mid-January. Two weeks later, Sheila's son-in-law picked the restaurant to mark his birthday and safe return from Iraq. Another $275. Now she and her husband, Mike, faced three more birthday dinners within six weeks. Their bank account couldn't take the hit.

Birthdays aren't the real problem," Sheila admitted to me. She recalled the days when her young daughters squealed with delight over a brightly wrapped box or a frosted cake with candles. As the girls grew older, Sheila felt pressured to make each birthday special. Gifts gradually cost more. Home-cooked meals gave way to expensive restaurants. The reality of her family's expanding expectations now was plastered across January's credit-card statement. Sheila didn't want to disappoint her kids, but she knew birthday dinners had to move back home.

I admire Sheila's decision to tackle the silent advance of spending. Most of us similarly struggle with materialism. According to a CNBC survey, 43 percent of American families spend more than they earn; the average household carries more than $8,000 in consumer debt. Rising incomes and easy credit offer unprecedented affluence, evidenced by our overflowing closets and garages. Yet unrestrained spending, with its bloated credit-card balances, leads many families into financial bondage.

HOW DID WE END UP HERE?......REST OF ARTICLE HERE

1 Comments:

Blogger Saija said...

wishing you a Merry Christmas full of all those things money can't buy!

12:10 PM, December 25, 2006  

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