"I discipline my body like an athlete, training it to do what it should. Otherwise, I fear that after preaching to others I myself might be disqualified." ~1 Cor. 9:27
A Place for Knowledge, Truth, and Empowerment
Monday, July 19, 2010
Please Join Me...
~Julie
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Assuming Makes an A**... ::: No donkeys allowed :::
It is very easy to look at the actions of others and assume that they are doing something with evil intent or wrongful hearts, but this is not always the case. In the book of Joshua, several clans of Israel were accused of turning away from God because they had built an altar in a different land than where the altar of the Lord was instructed to be built. Because they did this, the other clans assumed that they were offering sacrifices to other gods and rebelling from the true God. When they confronted the tribes about their rebellion they were met with a shocking response; "God knows!" They knew that God was aware of the purity of their hearts. They knew that God understood that the altar they built was only a tribute to God and not an altar on which they would be sacrificing to idols, or anything else. The assumptions of the others tribes on the hearts of their kinsmen made them look like fools. Only God can know the true hearts of people, whether their actions reflect evil or good.
I recently heard of a disturbing situation where a fellow Beachbody coach was accused of flaunting his success and rubbing it in the faces of others, merely because he makes posts on Facebook about it! This is the most ridiculous thing I have ever heard, especially since I have never, ever seen anything to make me believe that there is some prideful exhibit occurring. Quite the contrary, the couple who has had great success has accomplished that success through diligence, perseverance, and triumphing through many difficult times! How sad and disappointing for such heartfelt people of character to be attacked for showing others what truly can be brought to fruition through hard work and consistence.
When we see the successes of others, we should be careful not to come to conclusions too quickly. There is far too much we do not know about the lives of others, and there is certainly plenty we can not possibly know about the heart and intentions behind the actions. We must be certain to act as adults and not children.
In my morning bible study I have begun the book of Ruth. In today's reading I watched as Ruth came along Naomi to support and assist her. I also saw as she offered to glean food for both of them from the fields in the area:
"Let me go to the fields and pick up the left over grain behind anyone in whose eyes I find favor," (Ruth 2:2).
The footnote for the scripture was surprisingly applicable to this topic that was on my heart. It reads, "Instead of depending on Naomi or waiting for good fortune to happen, she took the initiative. She went to work. She was not afraid of admitting her need or working heard to supply it. When Ruth went out to the fields, God provided for her. If you are waiting for God to provide, consider this: He may be waiting for you to take the first step to demonstrate just how important your need is." How easy it would have been for Naomi and Ruth to sit on their haunches and be victims to their situation. They could have looked all around them and seen loads of farmers working to harvest the fields and been jealous of all the success and blessing "everyone else" was experiencing, while they suffered with difficult times. But, Ruth took the initiative. She saw what needed to be done and she got up and did it, no questions asked. And because of her diligence and consistent hard work she was greatly rewarded by the farm owner, Boaz. Because of Ruth's determination to find solutions to their problems, she experienced blessing.
Instead of looking to the successes of others as a reason to be jealous and callous, we should celebrate! When we respond with petty arguments, accusations, assumptions, and jealousy, we act as children involved in a fight over a mutually loved toy; "I want that, so you can't have it." We must be adults and act with maturity, showing happiness and joy for the successes of others. The next and best step in this progression is to act wisely, not only showing joy for another's success but then saying, "what can I do to achieve the same successes for myself?" Wisdom turns lessons into application and action.
Are there areas in your life where you could be a bit more wise and take the initiative to achieve the results you seek? God does not usually provide miracles in places where we already have everything we need to get the job done because He has already provided it. We must not be lazy or prone to flights of fancy, but hard-working, diligent, and committed to success, no matter what the task at hand. Maybe you want to lose weight. Maybe you want to make more money, or get out of debt, or have a better marriage or relationship with your kids, etc. All of these things can be accomplished, but we must be certain to do our part in achieving the goal.
I have a scripture on the wall in front of my desk which reads, "Commit to the Lord whatever you do, and your plans will succeed," (Proverbs 16:3). I had heard the scripture many times before, but what caught my eye to put it on the wall was the footnote:
"We must maintain a delicate balance; trusting God as if everything depended on him, while working as if everything depended on us."
We cannot forget our part in achieving our goals. We cannot expect God to do everything while we sit and do nothing. When we work in partnership with God, beautiful things happen and we experience His wonderful provision and blessing in our lives. There is just nothing better than walking with Him and getting to know Him better. Ask God what areas in your life need action, and then follow through with getting to work! You may be surprised at what you can achieve!
Friday, July 2, 2010
Changing Lives, One at a Time
When difficulties come up in life, sometimes it is an opportunity to look at your life and see what can be changed to make you a better stewardship in life. We have chosen Beachbody to help us accomplish this goal, and so have many, many others. Blessings abound with Beachbody!
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Pt. 2: Loving Your Neighbor
Yesterday I discussed the application of Mark 12:30, which states the Great Commandment. The second portion to the Great Commandment is also paramount in healthy living; "Love your neighbor as yourself," (Mark 12:31). We cannot adequately say we are living healthy if we ignore the second portion of the Greatest Commandments.
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Pt. 1: Showing Love to God
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Monday, June 28, 2010
Get that nutrition under control easily with the new Beachbody Meal Planner! Available with all Club Memberships, which only costs $2.99/wk! Join now to experience this awesome new perk to the Team Beachbody Club.
Success Should Never be Undermined!
ALWAYS celebrate the small victories! That's what leads to the huge wins!
How to Get Fit
In a similar way, I understand that many people tend to think that they need to do bible study for hours a day in order to grow. This is not the truth, either. The truth is that starting small and regular is more important! Spending 10-15 minutes in study 6-7 days a week will provide immense gains in spiritual understanding. Gradually, as this understanding naturally progresses, it is typical to spend more time studying, but this happens naturally and gradually. Again, it should not be "pushed." Your spiritual muscles will let you know when it is best to "advance to the next level." The most important thing, though, is to be in study almost every day. Getting study, or a workout, for 3-4 hours one day a week will not benefit you nearly as much as 6-7 days of a shorter dose!
Sunday, June 27, 2010
Meet Beachbody's CEO, Carl Daikeler
Beachbody produces the top-selling fitness programs available. They have more heart and bravado to fight for the health of people than any entity I have ever seen! This is why I have partnered with them to help fight this Fitness Revolution. Enjoy this video to learn a little more.
Saturday, June 26, 2010
The Origin of Unmet Needs - In Touch Ministries - Dr. Charles Stanley 2010
Friday, June 25, 2010
No More Doubting Thomas
"Then Gideon said to God, 'Do not be angry with me. Let me make one more request. Allow me one more test with the fleece. This time make the fleece dry and the ground covered with dew.' That night God did so. Only the fleece was dry; all the ground was covered with dew." ~ Judges 6: 39-40
Footnote: "...Demanding extra signs was an indication of unbelief. Fear often makes us wait for more confirmation when we should be taking action. Visible signs are unnecessary if they only confirm what we already know to be true. Today the greatest means of God's guidance is his Word, the Bible. Unlike Gideon, we have God's complete, revealed Word. If you want to have more of God's guidance, don't ask for signs; study the Bible."
Wow, do I struggle with this same thing as Gideon, and later Thomas. I know what I am "supposed" to be doing, but it is so easy to get caught up in my fear and then keep asking God to "make it clear to me." I do this with so many different things, but definitely most often with things that might be perceived "negatively" by others. But, we are not supposed to be fearful of man's judgement, but of God's, so ultimately, when He tells me to do something and I don't because I am scared of what someone else might think, I am putting their value and importance higher than God's...ugh! Today is a new day though. Today we get another chance to begin doing what God is asking, whether or not we are fearful. Fear does not have to stop us...and I venture to say that the more we walk, even in fear, the less fear we continue to have because we experience God's provision and company. He is so great! I just love His promise to Gideon; "Go in the strength you have...I will be with you." What more do we need?!
The clear connection I see with this is the fact that we all know we are supposed to eat healthier foods and exercise regularly in order to keep our bodies healthy, but do we do that? Sadly, as a nation, we are becoming more and more overweight, obese, and morbidly obese...we are literally eating ourselves to death! This type of behavior does not honor God, nor does it honor His creation; our bodies. God has made His promise; He will be with us, so now we need to walk in obedience (no pun intended) and begin the process of living healthy, physically active lives. Doing so will show honor to God and the life He has given each and every one of us, as well as benefit us in amazing ways. God rewards the faithful and blesses obedience. This is definitely an area where the rewards are great and the blessings are known! Start today with changing your life, developing healthy habits, and becoming the you God designed you to be.
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Of Great Worth

I have recently been thinking a lot about our culture and how much of a preoccupation we have with external appearance and fitting into a very specific set of expectations without much room for deviation. Seeing the far reaching downward spiral of this pushed mentality is eye-opening and disturbing because it reaches into our inmost being and attacks the very core of who God has called us to be. With images of naked beauties covering the pages of nearly every magazine on the shelves lining the checkout counter, or pictures condemning the hint of cellulite, wrinkles, or gray hair, it is nearly impossible to escape this endless barrage of lies that are constantly thrown our way.
One of the side effects for this type of unending imagery is our inability to know what true beauty looks like. We are always seeing the “fantasy” or the “lie” presented as truth, but instead of recognizing these things for what they are, we turn around and question the reality; “Should my body look this way?” “Should my hair be turning this color?” “Should my face be changing like this?” The distortion of our beliefs has led to unhealthy remedies to counter the lies, while nursing the pains caused so deep within. We turn to things of this world for healing, whether it is food, pornography, sexual encounters, fantasy, rigid control, etc, and all end with us continuing to walk the downward spiral of disintegration until we are left in a heap on the floor, feeling hopeless and damned. C.S. Lewis wrote it masterfully in “The Screwtape Letters” when he wrote:
“Never forget that when we are dealing with any pleasure in its healthy and normal and satisfying form, we are, in a sense, on the Enemy’s (God’s) ground. I know we have won many a soul through pleasure. All the same, it is His invention, not ours. He made the pleasures: all our research so far has not enabled us to produce one. All we can do is to encourage the humans to take the pleasures which our Enemy has produced, at times, or in ways, or in degrees, which He has forbidden. Hence we always try to work away from the natural condition of any pleasure to that in which it is least natural, least redolent of its Maker, and least pleasurable. An ever increasing craving for an ever diminishing pleasure is the formula. It is more certain; and it’s better style. To get the man’s soul and give him nothing in return- that is what really gladdens our Father’s (Satan’s) heart.” [Lewis, C.S., “The Screwtape Letters,” IX]
We are having our joy stolen from us because of a twisted and evil enemy that wishes for us to remain pitted in the depths of our despair. He does not want us to experience freedom. He does not want us to experience the feeling of being loved and valued. Satan wants us to believe the lies that he has warped into the mind of the media. And he wants us to stay there and never get up.
But, our God is a redeeming God. He will not leave us in the valleys, but always continues to push us forward to the relief of the mountaintops to see the beautiful view. He counters the lies of the enemy with Truth and the truth shall set you free! Our God shouts our value to Him from the Heavens, spreading His message throughout His Word; “All beautiful you are, my darling; there is no flaw in you,” (Song of Solomon 4:7). He pours Himself into our hearts and into our lives that we “…being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the saints, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge- that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God (emph. mine),” (Ephesians 3:18-19). Only when we really cleave to this Truth, lining up all thoughts and actions to this core belief, will we be in a position to experience Godly victory over the Enemy’s ploys. We are to be “rooted and established in love,” not questioning and doubtful of God’s eternal love for us and extreme value for each of us. We are to “be filled” with this love and, therefore, experience “all the fullness of God!” When we are full of God, we cease the endless search for being defined by anything else. Our world wants to put a label on each of us, as fat, thin, pretty, ugly, smart, stupid, etc, all based on the values that have been set by an evil being of the underworld. In all truth, these do not hold up to the scrutiny of God, as He searches the heart to determine where we are with Him. Our true beauty comes from within, as the “unfading beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is of great worth in God’s sight,” (1 Peter 3:4). The buck stops with God, and it is only in Him that we can get an accurate understanding of who we are, for what we were created, and what we are called to do. If the foundation of our being, our self-identity, is not founded and centered upon His Word, we are like the “foolish man who built his house on sand,” (Matthew 7:26). You are beautiful. You are wonderfully made. You are lovely and valuable. You are of great worth! You are deserving of love. You are a child of God, co-heir with Christ, and, therefore, considered royalty.
So, what does this mean for our lives? Well, if we are worth more than rubies, and loved beyond measure, than our treatment of ourselves, whether in thought or deed, must reflect that high position of value! We are not our own; we were bought at a price (1 Cor. 6: 19-20). We must treat our bodies as we would treat something on loan from a King, for that is exactly what we are. Would we feed royalty mediocre food, ill-prepared and malnutritious? Would we expect royalty to be sluggish and dilapidated in form, or strong and capable? Or would we feed someone of high esteem the very best, prepared with attention and knowledge of nutritious benefit, and praise the sight of them keeping healthy with physical activity to meet their demands? Not everyone needs to have a six-pack, but we should all seek to maintain healthy lifestyles, eating healthy foods, and getting daily activity into our days. We should not all look the same, but we should all feel lively, energetic, and full of vitality. God created food for energy, to fuel our bodies and make us capable to live to the fullest each day. He provided activities to strengthen our bodies, work out our minds, and challenge us to push ourselves to the next level, whether that be in lifting weights, gardening, skiing, dancing, etc. We are of great worth, and our lives should reflect this internal value system, created and placed there by God Himself; not one of pride or conceit, but humility, honor, and love of our Father. May your thoughts and actions be held to the standard of our Lord, carrying you through each day, and bringing you to fulfillment in Him.
Monday, February 8, 2010
Physical Health and Spiritual Health

I have recently had my eyes opened to the relationship between physical health and spiritual health. The fact is, our responses to both can be ridiculously alike. Some of us learn something new about an area in our lives that needs attention and immediately get to work in chipping away the rocky areas to reveal the smooth stone underneath. Others of us may hear what we need to do, but not want to face the effort that we know will go into changing our condition, and therefore ourselves. Then there are those of us who hear what we need to do and completely deny the fact that we need to do it. We blatantly say, “Well, that may work for others, but it is not going to work for me so I am going to keep doing what I am doing.”
God’s hope, obviously is that we all respond to His revelations with wholehearted obedience, because of our relationship with Him; one which is built upon knowing that we know that we know that God loves us and wants only the best for us, even if He is leading us down a path that will clearly bring some pain or discomfort. He is able to see the proverbial “light at the end of the tunnel” for us, even if we cannot see anything clearly yet. He knows that even though we will need to endure and persevere through a trying time, the life that will emerge from the difficult time will be a beautiful diamond, full of fulfillment and true happiness, where He has allowed us to partner with Him in writing us into His story and revealing His glory. Those of us who are able to keep our eyes on God and His vision for our lives will be able to withstand trials of this world, because “we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose (Romans 8:28).” Only in our trust of God can we truly begin to follow Him without hesitation. The critical element in being able to trust God, though, is first understanding the character of God. If we have trust issues with God, it is because we do not yet know His character and that He alone is trustworthy. Our God is such an awesome and wonderful God, and when we really embrace how much He loves us, how desperately He wants us to be whole in this world of brokenness, we will be able to willingly follow and obey His leading, even in times of uncertainty and fear.
When God calls us to behave a certain way, He is doing so because He knows that it will result in us experiencing true freedom in this world and therefore true happiness, found in joy. God does not tell us to obey so that we can be respected, or brought into positions of authority or influence, or so that we can become wealthy. His goals are deeper than that for us. He is not focused on the external, but the internal condition. It is for this reason that the Pharisees were rejected by Christ; their actions may have been obedient to the law, but their hearts were selfish and greedy with a wrong motivation. They sought prestige and power, not closeness and relationship with God. He understands that when we seek to know Him more intimately through our daily bible study and quiet time with Him throughout the day, in prayer, we will begin to be transformed from the inside out, naturally flowing with compassion for others, respect for our spouses, patience with our children, and many other displays of spiritual fruit. We will no longer have to “try” to live in the spirit, because the spirit will just flow freely through us in our actions. James 2: 18 says, “Show me your faith without deeds, and I will show you my faith by what I do.” James understood that his faith and relationship with God naturally flowed and showed in his behavior and his actions. He lived a lifestyle that resulted in Godly behavior.
So, what does this have to do with fitness? Plenty! If our motivation to lose weight is so that we can be more lovable, sexier, thinner, etc. than we are aiming for a goal that is too focused on the surface. Gaining abs for abs sake should not be the goal, but living a lifestyle of predictable discipline (both in exercise and nutrition), which will naturally result in a healthy looking body, should be the intention. When we view our exercise as a means of conditioning our bodies so that they can be stronger and more capable to handle daily tasks, we are thinking of things in truth. When we eat foods because they fuel our bodies with the necessary energy to live each day, knowing that we will in turn have more energy and feel better overall (both mentally and physically), we are living with a truth-focused mindset.
God’s love and offer for TRUE happiness and fulfillment can only be found through walking with Him each day and applying His Word. Our walk with Him prepares us for difficult situations and keeps us “at the ready” for tests and temptations that may arise. Similarly, our food and exercise choices offer us the chance to live a life where we are comfortable in our skin, are able to move about freely, and can face the years with confidence and focus, no matter what circumstances lay ahead. As a result of healthy nutrition and regular exercise, we have more vitality, energy, and feel good about ourselves. Our bodies begin to show on the outside what is happening inside. Our God-given physique begins to emerge, that which God knit together when we were in our mother’s womb, and that body may or may not look like the bodies on the cover of “Shape” magazine. I pray that we all seek to develop a lifestyle of discipline and predictable patterns of health, understanding that our bodies will reflect our choices, but not be the motivation for those choices. Let us each take care of the body that God has given us; we only have one.