30 Devotions For Youth Leadersনমুনা
The Seven Mile Challenge
“As an avid cyclist, I enjoy a vigorous ride regardless of the length. In my early days on a bike, I often shot from my driveway eager to outperform my previous workout. But instead of peak performance, I found myself battling early fatigue, a gut-wrenching biking experience. My workouts became grueling instead of invigorating.
I began to realize that if I started at a more moderate pace, the ride would not only be more enjoyable, it would be more productive, and believe it or not, faster. If my lungs were heaving before I broke a sweat, then something was wrong.
Even on a twelve mile ride I discipline myself to control the pace until I’ve checked off the seventh mile. I’ve tested this strategy over and over, and it works.
It wasn’t until a few weeks ago that I came to realize that I had similar issues with my daily routine. Starting the day reading the paper often threw off the entire day. I glanced at the Denver Post’s headlines and the first page of the Sports section...by this time I had drained my cup of coffee. I poured a second cup, now more distracted than ever by the mounting heap of stuff that cluttered and consumed me.
Then, and only then, did I pick up my Bible and sit down to read. Game over. I’d lost.I had started to sprint from morning’s first light and there was no catching my breath. There was no seven mile start to my day. I pedaled for all I was worth, right from the start, and wondered why I had a hard time focusing. Why did the Word seem distant and difficult? I was “winded” before I even started to read!
Ten days ago I decided to start my days with seven miles of silence and reflection. Before I pick up my phone. Before the Denver Post. Before a quick, harmless glance at the news. Before everything...
“Seven miles of calm, confession, worship, and grace fill my day with resolve, passion, and wonder. What a difference a few miles make.
“Are you ready for the seven mile challenge?
About this Plan
This one month reading plan is designed to encourage, teach and inspire anyone who works with youth. Taken from Youth For Christ president Dan Wolgemuth’s weekly blog, “Friday Fragments,” these 30 devotions offer a fresh vision for ministry and challenging insight into what it means to walk with God.
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