Wherever you are a part of something bigger than yourself you are part of a team.
Most of us are a part of a team somewhere; in business or at work, in marriage or in a family unit, on a church or ministry team, as a volunteer or in politics or sports.
Yet in the day-to-day run of relationships teams can get tangled.
Personalities can begin to grate like sandpaper. Petty arguments can surface too easily. A team can sabotage itself with it’s own irritations.
When we come to the team table of marriage or business or community we come with our list of strengths. Seldom do we talk about the fact that each of us will also come with our weaknesses thoroughly intact. Yet we seem surprised when weakness surface.
Very often our greatest weakness is simply our greatest strength out of balance.

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On a team someone may be too controlling, or procrastinate too often. The wisdom of the Bible tells us that in relationships our general attitude should be one of restoring, or, as the original language implies, one of mending nets. It implies a joint effort of finding the holes and mending them.
This restoring process is talked about as something to expect, something we need not be surprised at, something to perhaps even plan for.
Imagine sitting down with a new team and feeling the excitement of the task ahead. Imagine the wedding … or the vision casting exercises as the future is looked at expectantly. Then imagine your surprise when the team leader begins to talk about the fact that each team member will have weakness too. That you will irritate one another and that there may be holes in your skill sets or in the team. You begin to feel uncomfortable; afraid you might not measure up in some way. Then the leader continues and says, “We will have a restoring, or mending mindset on this team. We will be proactive in taking steps to maintain our team and here’s how we will do it.”
True strength acknowledges weakness. It is all too often the little things that wear on us and become the source of eventual dispute or even demise. Take the opportunity to grow together as a team, from marriage to marketing.
Look at your team positions both inside your home and outside in the busy world. Begin to practice God’s wisdom. Model it, share it, ask God to help you. He is the only one who can truly “mend the holes in any net”! This is true strength.
Do you recognize the need for God’s wisdom in your life? Does your marriage or team need you to help mend the holes in the net? God waits to have you invite Him into your life to help you to walk in His strength.
Won’t you ask Him today to share the journey of life with you?
Dear God,
I know I need You in my life. Forgive me for going my own way and ignoring Your wisdom. Today I want to turn around and go Your way. I invite You to come into my life and to begin to change me. Thank you that You care and that You will bring a harvest of good into my life and my relationships as I learn Your ways and trust You to help me. Amen.
What Do You Fear?
What do you fear, and why? Is it holding you back from realizing your full potential?
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I am under financial stress. Kindly pray for me.
Dear Rufus,
Thanks for stopping by our site and asking for prayer. I would love to pray for you.
Dear Heavenly Father,
Thank you that You promise to meet all of our needs. I pray for Rufus, that he would be at peace in the midst of the financial stress that he is under. Give him wisdom and discernment to know how best to deal with this situation, how to spend less and save more, and how to discipline himself to stay on a budget. Amen
Rufus, we do also have prayer mentors that volunteer with our site. Just fill in the form http://powertochange.com/discover/need-prayer/ and someone will email you.
A great resource for getting out from under financial stress is Dave Ramsey. For more information go to http://www.daveramsey.com/home/