God's Love

3 Different Fasts to Consider for Lent This Year

3. Noise and Distractions
Finally, if you’re looking for an extra-challenging fast to consider this Lenten season, consider making room in your schedule for quiet.
While it may sound contradictory to the noise and distractions of this world, fasting from such things will enable you to hear the Lord more clearly and deepen your relationship with Him.
Romans 12:2 of the ESV tells us to “not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.”
Everywhere you look, people are busy. Running and rushing around to the latest event, commitment, yoga class, or trip, society is numb to the concept that involvement does not equal happiness, nor does Christian preoccupation equal a relationship with God.
In college, I was the queen of schedules and responsibility. With a color-coded calendar of at least 10 shades of the rainbow, I lived this way for five years and didn’t mind it. Since graduating college, however, it has not been until entering young adulthood that I realized what free time, space, and less busyness could do for my relationship with God.
While I understand that seasons of busyness will exist, and having a schedule is not wrong, I want to encourage you today to seek the Lord while He may be found, even if it’s merely in the quietness of your drive to work or five minutes spent in prayer on the floor.
If we expect God to speak to us, we have to be willing to listen and to hear, we have to be accustomed to the silence.
Let Psalm 46:10 and 62:5 be our prayers today:
“Be still, and know that I am God. I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth!”
“For God alone, O my soul, wait in silence, for my hope is from Him.”
Photo Credit: © Getty Images […]

God's Love

What Is the Serenity Prayer? Is it Biblical?

Origin of the Serenity Prayer: Dr. Reinhold Niebuhr 
Dr. Reinhold Niebuhr is universally attributed as the author of what we know as “The Serenity Prayer.” Its dissemination was likely from a diary excerpt from Niebuhr’s student and collaborator Winnifred Crane Wygal. Wygal placed the prayer in newspaper articles as early as the 1930s and then, in a somewhat altered form, in a book of worship in 1940. 
Over the years, different versions of the prayer have been published. The Serenity Prayer can be found in either the common shortened form or the longer, full version with portions of language altered. The most popular version is as follows:
The Serenity Prayer

God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference.

The most well-known version was published in 1951 with the addition of the word “grace.”  This full-version reads:

God, give me grace to accept with serenity the things that cannot be changed, Courage to change the things which should be changed, and the Wisdom to distinguish the one from the other.Living one day at a time, Enjoying one moment at a time, Accepting hardship as a pathway to peace,Taking, as Jesus did, This sinful world as it is, Not as I would have it, Trusting that You will make all things right,If I surrender to Your will, So that I may be reasonably happy in this life, And supremely happy with You forever in the next. Amen.

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5 Serenity Prayer Principles in the Bible  
The Serenity Prayer is a petition to God asking for calmness and peace in all matters of life.  It asks for strength and courage to alter the matters within a person’s control and for acceptance in matters which cannot be changed. Ultimately, the prayer requests the ability to identify which circumstances are amenable to change.

1. God directs us.
Proverbs 20:24 teaches us, “A person’s steps are directed by the LORD. How then can anyone understand their own way?”
God’s righteousness and providence control a person’s paths, steps, and directions. The believer must accept His direction and influence before inner-calmness and peace can be experienced. 
2. There are some things we cannot change.
Titus 3:9 teaches us to “avoid foolish questions, and genealogies, and contentions, and strivings about the law; for they are unprofitable and vain.”
Man does not have the ability to change his family tree, science, or factual history.  Debating and questioning factual matters are of no helpful consequence and only results in confusion and unrest.
3. We need God’s help to discern wisely.
In Matthew 16:3, it is written, “[a]nd in the morning, ‘Today it will be stormy, for the sky is red and overcast.’ You know how to interpret the appearance of the sky, but you cannot interpret the signs of the times.”
From this scripture, we are told it is easy to observe what is readily visible by the eye, but the meaning behind what’s obvious is not always understood. The weather cannot be altered regardless of human attempts to control it. However, one can prepare and make decisions based on clear objective observations.
4. The power to overcome sin comes from God.
“Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body so that you obey its evil desires. Do not offer any part of yourself to sin as an instrument of wickedness, but rather offer yourselves to God as those who have been brought from death to life; and offer every part of yourself to him as an instrument of righteousness. For sin shall no longer be your master, because you are not under the law, but under grace” (Romans 6:12-14).

The person without the Holy Spirit (the unbeliever) may believe the lie that they are hopelessly unable to control the urges to abuse alcohol because of a genetic predisposition for substance abuse.
The believer with the Holy Spirit would agree that one cannot control sinful urges within their own strength and power (Hebrews 2:17-18). The believer realizes the power to overcome sinful desires of the flesh is only by and through the Spirit of God (Romans 8:12-13).
5. We must surrender to God’s good ways, not continue in our sinful ways.
The Serenity Prayer is in agreement that the ways and desires of men and those of God do not always match. 
The prophet Isaiah in 55:8-9, boldly declares “[f]or my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts.”   
The Serenity Prayer in Alcoholics Anonymous
The recovery group, Alcoholics Anonymous, incorporates the abridged form of the Serenity Prayer in its 12-step program, viewing the road to full recovery as a spiritual journey. The prayer provides spiritual encouragement to willing participants by breaking down each essential step to recovery. The first being acceptance.
Upon joining Alcoholics Anonymous, the participant accepts the negative presence and power that alcohol has in her or her life. Any damage or harm that has been done in the alcoholic’s life up to the present point cannot be altered or amended. The prayer requests the wisdom to determine what can be changed and what cannot be altered. This knowledge and application force the participant to realize he or she cannot control the urges or the effects of alcohol on his or her body but has the power to control the act of consuming alcoholic beverages in excess or placing oneself in places or circumstances detrimental to sobriety.

Scriptures of Serenity to Pray for Wisdom and Courage
“Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the wicked, nor stands in the way of sinners, nor sits in the seat of scoffers; but his delight is in the law of the LORD, and on his law he meditates day and night. He is like a tree planted by streams of water that yields its fruit in its season, and its leaf does not wither. In all that he does, he prospers. The wicked are not so, but are like chaff that the wind drives away. Therefore the wicked will not stand in the judgment, nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous; for the LORD knows the way of the righteous, but the way of the wicked will perish.” ~ Psalm 1
“Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths.” ~ Proverbs 3:5-6
“If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him.” ~ James 1:5
“Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, teaching and admonishing one another in all wisdom, singing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, with thankfulness in your hearts to God.” ~ Colossians 3:16
“But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, open to reason, full of mercy and good fruits, impartial and sincere.” ~ James 3:17

“Be strong and courageous. Do not fear or be in dread of them, for it is the Lord your God who goes with you. He will not leave you or forsake you.” ~ Deuteronomy 31:6
“For God gave us a spirit not of fear but of power and love and self-control.” ~ 2 Timothy 1:7
“Be watchful, stand firm in the faith, act like men, be strong.” ~ 1 Corinthians 16:13
“Wait for the Lord; be strong, and let your heart take courage; wait for the Lord!” ~ Psalm 27:14
Chad is a believer in Christ, attorney at law, wannabe golfer, runner, dog lover, and writer. He enjoys serving his church as a deacon and Sunday School teacher. You can find him on Facebook, Twitter, and at his golf devotion par3sixteen.com. He and his wife Brandi reside in Tennessee with their canine son Alistair.
Photo Credit: GettyImages/Rawpixel
This article is part of Christianity.com’s prayer answers including famous, topical prayers and information about the power of prayer. Find more related articles in the collection of prayers below:

The Serenity Prayer, The Lord’s Prayer, Morning Prayers, Prayers for Healing, Thanksgiving Prayers, Advent Prayers, Christmas Prayers, Prayers for Peace, Prayers for Protection, Prayers for Strength, Praying in the Spirit. […]

God's Love

How Do I Talk to My Children About Sex?

God has given our children sex organs. They encounter these organs every day. As their organs develop, so should their understanding, with special acceleration at the onset of puberty.
Wise parents serve their developing children by helping them grow in understanding of what God designed all this engineering for. Differences between maleness and femaleness are discerned very early by children, and wise parents help bring clarity to their children’s understanding of these myriad differences and God’s purposes for them (Proverbs 16:4).

“We’re not just teaching our kids about sex, but about stewardship.”

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Maleness and femaleness are divine ideas. “Male and female he created them,” Genesis 1:27 says. It is God who invented all these body parts and their functions and pronounced them good. While it would be unhealthy for our homes to dwell too much on such topics, it also would be unhealthy to ignore them, much less to make them strictly off-limits as topics of instruction. We’re teaching our kids not just about sex, but about stewardship, about God’s design, and about God himself. Sex is not a dark and evil subject when stewarded properly. When God said it was not good for Adam to be alone, he implied good could get better.
God is pleased to address sexual matters in the Scriptures, so we would be foolish to muzzle him, thinking we have better standards than he.
Why Parents?
One of the roles of parents is teaching. God told his people, “Gather the people to me, that I may let them hear my words, so that they may learn to fear me all the days that they live on the earth, and that they may teach their children so” (Deuteronomy 4:10). And Paul says to fathers, “Do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord” (Ephesians 6:4).
Generally speaking, parents really should be the ones who initiate conversations with their children about sex, because the children’s health-education teacher or kids on the playground might not share the same values, and it is values — more than biological and anatomical diagrams — that matter.
Learning from parents can head off error and help address the shock (some newly enlightened youngsters predictably respond with, “Gross!”). For example, today, if you are a virgin, the world thinks there is something seriously wrong with you, something even immoral. And some say that if you can’t stop youth from having sex, just teach them how to do it “safely.” But there is no safe way to thumb your nose at God, who has placed guardrails around this wonderful, powerful, and sometimes mysterious aspect of human life and spirituality.
The stakes here are high. The rewards and regrets are often much more consequential in sexual matters than in most of the matters on which parents tend to focus — grades, friendships, sports, and so on. Oh, the shipwrecks that have occurred in the swirling waters of sex.
Children Are Learning Sex
Your children are already forming an understanding of sex. But what kind of input is shaping that understanding? Perhaps we’re already behind the curve. I didn’t want my children to arrive one day at a place where they asked, “Why didn’t my dad tell me about this?”
Our children hear voices saying, “If you don’t look at porn, how will you know how to treat sex?” But if they do look at porn, they will be misled regarding how to steward their bodies, minds, and souls. Today’s dominant view of sex — the view permeating pornography — ignores (even mocks) God and objectifies others. In this view, other people are simply objects for one’s own immediate gratification, no matter what that gratification does to them. But sex involves more than anatomy; it’s inescapably enmeshed with values, relational dynamics, acceptance or rejection of God’s design for one’s own life, and the lordship of God himself.
So, your children are likely already learning about sex. Are they learning what they know from you? Or from somewhere else? And if somewhere else, do you really trust their teachers?
How Then Shall We Begin?
We can assume that parents already know something about the biological aspects of sex, which, after all, is how parents typically come to be parents. I assume you know more than your children’s peers, who may already be speaking about sex with your children. It’s not primarily how much you know (you don’t need a medical degree), but the context in which you converse about it, and the spirit of reverence and heart of love.
Don’t worry about giving the subject an exhaustive treatment. Your children have years to grow in their understanding, just as you have grown in yours. With that being said, here are some lessons you might apply over the long haul.
1. Begin with God.
The first step, then, in answering how to speak with your children about sex is to embrace God’s endorsement of the subject matter.
Sexuality is good, and stewarded properly it is not shameful. After creating male and female, God declared it good work (Genesis 1:31). He charged them (and Christian marriages today), “Be fruitful and multiply” (Genesis 1:28). And he called sex between a husband and his bride “wonderful”:

Three things are too wonderful for me;     four I do not understand:the way of an eagle in the sky,     the way of a serpent on a rock,the way of a ship on the high seas,     and the way of a man with a virgin. (Proverbs 30:18–19)

As you teach and caution your children about the dangers of sexual immorality and impurity, remember to be as supportive of (godly) sex as God is.

“Sex is one slice of a larger pie called ‘discipleship.’”

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Second, take other important steps long before addressing the topic of sex, because preparation for understanding sex starts long before they’re “old enough.” Do your children first have a strong spiritual foundation? Do they know God made everything? Have they learned the difference between serving and being served? Sex is one slice of a larger pie called discipleship.
2. Cultivate credibility.
Wisdom keeps age-appropriateness in mind, but if you’re asking yourself, “How long can I put this off?” you’re asking the wrong question.
Establish loving credibility with your child. When I asked my now-grown daughter (who today has her own children) about this subject, she reminded me that I took her as a preteen on dates and “had her heart” before broaching the subject of sex when she was 11. “I love you, and therefore I will be candid (yet discreet) about this important subject (and every other subject),” was a yearslong preamble to speaking of sex.
3. Beware of putting off the conversation.
Third, be proactive. Shortly after being asked to write this article, I was working on a home project with two granddaughters, ages 15 and 10. I told them I was invited to write an article on how to talk about sex with your kids, and asked them what they thought I should say. There was no big gasp or long awkward silence. They jumped in as they would on any other subject. It seemed natural, not forced or artificial, as though we should get back to real life after talking about this embarrassing, fake subject. They weren’t embarrassed but helpfully frank.
Again, be proactive. The subject of sex becomes more awkward the longer it is put off. The awkwardness is ours, not theirs — unless they adopt our awkwardness as their own. Be open; welcome any question about anything, including sex.
4. Seize teachable moments.
In addition to scheduling a bigger conversation, seize upon smaller, teachable moments with younger children — about body parts, modesty, privacy, strangers. Some call this the Drip Method — many talks versus The Talk.
Consider: Have you ever heard parents ask other parents if they have given their child The Talk about driving, getting a job, pursuing holiness, or any other subject in the whole wide world? You seldom give your children The Talk on any other subject. You don’t give them The Talk on nutrition, money, or nearly anything else, so why do it that way with sex? We don’t need to make a bigger deal of it than it is.
5. Read the whole Bible with them.
In your family Bible reading, don’t avoid texts that mention such things as circumcision, prostitutes, rape, and Rachel’s feigned period in Genesis 31. The whole Bible is for the whole family. By treating such biblical incidents matter-of-factly when you encounter them, you make helpful deposits in the steady development of your children. If your 4-year-old doesn’t ask what a prostitute is, move on. But if your 10-year-old asks, “Mom, what’s a prostitute?” that’s a teachable moment.
Explicitly teach biblical precepts such as do not commit adultery, don’t marry an unbeliever, and so on. Moses goes into remarkable sexual detail in giving God’s law to Israel. And then he says this: “You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house” (Deuteronomy 6:7). Yes, to the children — teach the children Moses’s precepts about sex.
Heart of Sex Discipleship
Help your child see sex within the context of broader principles — for example, the Ecclesiastes Principle: there is a time for nearly everything and a time for refraining from nearly everything. Or consider this broad principle: the impulsive desire for immediate gratification can torpedo future happiness, and instead bring painful regrets.

“The most significant sex organ is the heart, and the second-most significant is the brain.”

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Remember that not all children are the same, some being more forthright and others being more withholding. Tailor your interactions accordingly. Be discreet. The older the child and the more specific detail to be addressed, the more likely having the conversation in private would be wise. Let them know that if they have questions later, they can always come to you.
In instructing your children, keep in mind that the most significant sex organ is the heart, and the second-most significant is the brain.
Employ All Your Resources
What is sex for? Sex isn’t just about an act. It’s about God’s ways — his ways of making babies, of populating earth and heaven (no one is born again who isn’t first born), of providing for intimacy in marriage, of displaying the complexity of his creative design.
Along the way, commend your developing children for evidences of manliness or ladylike grace in contexts not primarily about sexual intimacy — a son carries heavy boxes for his mom, a daughter interacts politely with adults, a child demonstrates self-control in any area of life.
Plunder the wealth of resources in your congregation. Specifically, talk to parents who have conversed with their own children about sex, and ask them how they went about it. Did they take their pubescent youngsters on special outings, or go through a book together? Did dad talk to the sons and mom speak with the daughters? Ask them.
Pray, asking God to guard the hearts and minds of your children. And then take heart. It’s always the right time to grow in stewardship of God’s gifts and to speak with your children about them. […]

FAMILY & MONEY

My Stealing Addiction Gives Me The Illusion Of Control

Things I’ve stolen over the years equate to several thousands of pounds. Sometimes, the value of items I’d steal in one single spree equated to hundreds. I’d go to my local high street, a list of items in my head, and hit department store after department store; the bigger and busier, the better. The day I realised, aged 28, that everything I was wearing was embezzled –a polo neck from Uniqlo, ripped jeans from AllSaints, M&S underwear, gold hoop earrings from Anthropologie, and Byredo perfume – I knew I needed help.
As an attractive, Caucasian, middle-class woman, I’m hardly the archetypical shoplifter. To my knowledge, I’ve never been suspected, which I’m certain is down to how I look, rather than my smooth sleight of hand. Raised in a middle-class home in Bristol, state-educated and with myriad opportunities handed on a plate, I was happy, loved and privileged. I occasionally stole items of little worth from shops or supermarkets when I was 11, but didn’t everyone? It was a phase I assumed I’d leave behind in adulthood. But at 25, my stealing vamped up to a full-blown addiction.
I was an editor in book publishing but felt creatively stunted and unfulfilled. I craved adventure and change – the office job was stable, but the sense of monotony I felt each day was clawing away at my insides. I took a career sabbatical, got a teaching qualification and left for Italy to teach English and forget my troubles – cliché, I know. It was the age-old antidote to the fact that I wasn’t sure who I was anymore, I felt untethered. I’d broken up with my boyfriend and I hadn’t spoken to my mother in about nine months, after she left my dad from another man, and effectively abandoned our family. I was troubled, suffering quietly from what I now know to be post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), from the betrayal and gradual erosion of our family unit.

Daria Kobayashi Ritch

My sense of worth was next to none. Stealing made me feel in control when other parts of my life were unravelling. I lived in a small town in Campania and, far from fluent in the native language, I continued stealing from the local shops and pharmacies to fill the time. Even when I eventually made friends and had a whirlwind romance, I didn’t stop. I was deeply unhappy, but in complete denial.
At first, I mostly stole make-up, skincare products, jewellery and perfume, but then I moved onto clothes and mastered the art of buying one small thing to deter unwanted attention and filling my pockets with stolen goods on the way out. Some of the things I have stolen over the years are: make-up, a cushion cover, a watch, a silver ring; myriad pairs of underwear, jeans, several bottles of expensive perfume, a multitude of face serums and endless packets of false nails (in a desperate attempt to curb my nail-biting habit).

At 25, my stealing vamped up to a full-blown addiction

When my teaching job came to an end in Italy, I moved back to London and became a freelance writer. I lived from payslip to payslip, always on the hunt for work, and the lack of security only pushed me deeper into my habit. I stole on weekends, evenings, during lunch breaks, whenever I could. It was never about the money. I could afford all the essentials such as food and travel, and had enough to cover occasional meals out, theatre and gig tickets. This was no situation, it was always a want, not a need.
Moments before the crime, everything is still. I feel for labels, security tags, or whatever might sound a security alarm. My breath quickens and my eyes dart about the shop, looking for cameras. It’s important to act fast, so I find a secluded spot away from the gaze of security guards or shop assistants, occasionally flashing a smile to alleviate suspicion. Sometimes, I’ll slip into a changing room to break the labels off, the same way one plucks an unruly hair with great satisfaction. Once I’ve made my decision, I bury the item in my bag and feel a surge of anticipation. This endorphin hit follows me out of the shop and lingers like a happy shadow for an hour or two, but the highs only lasts so long. Once I’m home, the guilt rolls over me like a thick impenetrable fog and I tell myself: enough. Enough now.
I always feel dirty. The addiction is at odds with who I am as a person. Over the years I’ve volunteered for various charities, from refugees to homeless shelters; I consider myself an ethical consumer, support local businesses and am easily ground down by the world’s injustices. In short, I feel like a complete fraud. It’s like I had two personalities, but the dishonest one was continuously stamping out the other.
Only three people close to me know my secret. When I told my current boyfriend, he was extremely concerned, but not wholly surprised given his knowledge of my history of anxiety and depression. He told me to always call him when the urge came, but, of course, I never did.

Daria Kobayashi Ritch

I finally sought professional help in the summer of 2019. I’d just left London and was renting in a rural town with my boyfriend. It should’ve been an exciting time, but the weight of the secret dragged me into a deep depression. I knew this time that my addiction was feeding the low moods, bouts of anger and self-hatred. My depression was a warning. If I didn’t overcome the addiction, I’d lose everything – my relationship, my freedom, my job, happiness and sense of self-worth. I knew that if the problem persisted, people in this tight-knit community of 8,000 would eventually find out.
The local GP showed little sympathy as I asked for help in floods of tears. Despite having discussed my mental health history at length, he told me that shoplifting was a crime and I could stop myself if I wanted to. He prescribed me a course of Sertraline, an antidepressant that’s usually for people who suffer from with obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD), and I convinced him to put me on a waiting list for a wellbeing service. Six months later, I eventually received virtual cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), and alongside the course of antidepressants, the compulsions dwindled.
My therapist identified the stealing as one of my many obsessive behavioural traits, also including nail-biting and hair pulling. Stealing kept my anxiety – momentarily – at bay. It gave me a sense of routine, during a time that felt chaotic. But it fed off my existing obsessive-compulsive tendencies, and was indirect self-harm, a cry for help.

It’s like I had two personalities, but the dishonest one was continuously stamping out the other

I’ve been close to telling my sisters, but I just can’t go through with it. I know it’d cause upset, hurt and maybe distrust. I’ll be an auntie soon, and I just can’t take that risk. I will always carry this shame and will never fully forgive myself, but I am an addict, and addicts can’t choose what it is they’re addicted to.
I am now 30 years old and 13 months clean. But in truth, this is partly a product of Covid-19. When the pandemic struck and turned our worlds upside down, our lives changed and so did our shopping habits. During the first national lockdown in March 2020, I had to follow the arrows that adorned the supermarket’s vinyl floor like everyone else, and snake around the aisles with the eyes of whoever followed on the back of my head. The urge would come, but I managed to quench it.
To any outsider, I have my sh*t together. I’m a relatively successful copywriter with words in national newspapers and various literary magazines. I’m recently a homeowner with my boyfriend. I want to put this all behind me, but I know I can’t. I fear that when our world opens up again, and the high streets spring back to life, the urge will grow on me like a vicious parasite that can’t be rid. And I will, once again, be at the mercy of my addiction.
If you’ve got a story that you think would work for The Secret Lives of Women, please email secretlives@elleuk.com
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‘Becoming Thin Made Me Fatphobic’

‘I Sold Sex To Fund My Shopping Habit’

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FAMILY & MONEY

Fred VanVleet makes history in record game for Raptors

February 2, 2021

Fred VanVleet made some history on Tuesday night.
VanVleet scored 54 points in Toronto’s 123-108 win over the Orlando Magic. The 54 points were a franchise-high for the Raptors.
VanVleet’s point total was also the most ever for an undrafted player, topping Moses Malone’s previous mark of 53.
VanVleet scored so many points because of how hot he was as a shooter, rather than due to the volume of shots he took.
The 26-year-old guard went 17/23 from the field, including 11/14 on threes. He also was 9/9 on free throws. Norman Powell was second on the team with 23 points.
VanVleet entered the game averaging 18.8 points per game this season, which is a career-high mark. […]

FAMILY & MONEY

DeMar DeRozan had funny reaction to Fred VanVleet breaking his record

February 2, 2021

DeMar DeRozan had a funny reaction to Fred VanVleet’s big game on Tuesday night.
VanVleet went for a franchise record 54 points in the Toronto Raptors’ 123-108 win over the Orlando Magic. DeRozan, who played for Toronto from 2009-2018, was the previous record holder with 52 points scored in 2018.
DeRozan tweeted his congratulations to VanVleet while also taking a friendly jab at his longtime teammate Kyle Lowry.
“Congrats to my brotha Freddy V! Kyle old a– couldn’t do it. Glad you did champ! Been telling you!” DeRozan said on Twitter (edited by LBS for profanity).
That’s a really friendly spirit from DeRozan, who doesn’t seem at all bothered by his record being broken. The feeling in Toronto was positive all around.
VanVleet said one of his joys was his teammates being happier for him than he was for himself.

Highlight of VanVleet’s night? “Celebrating with my teammates and seeing them be happier for me than I am for myself. They were more excited all night than I was, and that’s a testament to this team, this group, the direction we’re going, and the love we have for one another”
— Josh Lewenberg (@JLew1050) February 3, 2021

The Raptors are having a down season at 9-12, but VanVleet gave them a big moment to celebrate.
Photo: Game Face/Flickr via cc by-sa 2.0 […]

FAMILY & MONEY

NBA, players union nearing deal for March 7 All-Star Game

When the NBA season began, many assumed that there would be no All-Star Game this year due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, but ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski reported that the NBA and players’ union are working towards a deal for the All-Star Game to be played on March 7 in Atlanta.
According to Woj, the event would be a scaled-down version of the typical All-Star weekend, as the current plan is to have “a single-night event that encompasses a game between the Eastern and Western Conferences and skills competitions.” And the current discussions are around the logistics of transporting players in and out of Atlanta quickly and safely so that there is no risk of an outbreak.
“Safety protocols are among the details still being ironed out,” Woj wrote.

The NBA currently has a mid-season break scheduled for March 5-10, allowing the All-Star Game to be scheduled during that small window without disrupting the season. The second half of the shortened 72-game season has not yet been scheduled due to the understanding that some teams have played several fewer games than the rest of the league due to COVID-19 protocols.
Sources have indicated that the willingness of players to participate in the event has been the biggest force of positive momentum for the All-Star Game, as the game almost certainly would have been canceled if star players had felt it was too unsafe to play. But that does not mean that everyone is on board, as many players and executives reportedly see the All-Star Game as “an unnecessary risk for the league.” […]

INSURANCE & MORTGAGE

Join Life Happens’ Twitter Chat for Insure Your Love – Life Happens

Join Life Happens for a Twitter Chat during Insure Your Love month this February. We’ll discuss new data that shows Americans are shifting their priorities and focusing on financial security in response to COVID-19.
The pandemic has helped many of us appreciate the little things more than ever, those small wins that carry us through a tough time. We hope this chat serves as a reminder that life insurance is a simple act of love you can take today to ensure your loved ones are protected financially tomorrow.
Date: Thursday, February 11 from 1 to 2 p.m. EST
Where: Join us on Twitter using your personal handle or your company’s handle.
Hashtag: Use and follow #InsureYourLoveChat during the above timeframe
Life Happens will moderate the discussion and drive the conversation on Twitter using the questions and statistics below. Remember, you’ll have to use the #InsureYourLoveChat hashtag in each tweet.
All statistics below come from the study “Life’s New Appreciations,” Life Happens, 2021.
Q1: The pandemic has shifted our priorities, helping us appreciate the little things and small wins. What are some small wins people can accomplish financially that might be simpler than they think? #InsureYourLoveChat
Q2: Three quarters of Americans agreed that it’s important for them to get their finances in order this year. How can they best start working toward that goal? #InsureYourLoveChat
Q3: We found that 58% of Americans said COVID-19 has drastically changed which milestones they’d like to accomplish in life. Does this statistic surprise you? #InsureYourLoveChat
Q4: Some traditional milestones like marriage and having children are less of a focus this year. Meanwhile, achieving financial security is still at the top. What changes have you noticed in the way people approach their overall financial picture? #InsureYourLoveChat
Q5: Over half (55%) of Americans said this past year was the first time they spoke with a loved one about life insurance. What would you say to help that other 45% get the conversation started with their loved ones? #InsureYourLoveChat
Q6: Americans had more financial discussions over the last year, which included the need for their significant other to buy life insurance and reviewing their existing policy. How are you raising awareness about life insurance this month? #InsureYourLoveChat
The basic motivation behind the purchase of life insurance is love. Help us spread awareness of Insure Your Love during February, the “month of love,” by using #InsureYourLove on social media all month long. […]

God's Love

5 Secrets to a Life Poured Out – Not Burnt Out

1. Create Stronger Boundaries
Contrary to popular belief, serving God and others should not come at the expense of our physical, mental or spiritual well-being. A lot of my personal burnout has come when I’ve been stretched too thin and have not been willing to say “no” to tasks that have become draining. Sound familiar?
When we begin to create stronger boundaries in our lives, it frees us up to focus on being filled up with God’s renewal. Our balance is restored and we can regain more clarity with where our energy should go to further live out our God-given purposes.
It’s a lie of the enemy to believe that we can be all things to all people. We are to move forward in faith and lean on God to provide all the resources and support we need. “And my God will meet all your needs according to the riches of His glory in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 4:19). Today, I invite you to give yourself permission to create stronger boundaries with your time, energy, and relationships. As you courageously do so, you will begin to replace burnt out with renewal.
2. Be Filled with God’s Renewal Each Day
As we continue to serve God each day, what are we being filled with to sustain us? To live a life continually poured out, we have to actively be filled and renewed with God’s word, wisdom, and strength. When we operate within our own strength, we are exhausted, overwhelmed and serving from an empty cup. Burnout consumes us and resentment can set in if we are not intentional about being filled with the sustaining and uplifting presence of God daily.
“Therefore, repent and return, so that your sins may be wiped away, in order that times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord” (Acts 3:19). Our feelings and flesh are fleeting and must be filled with spiritual sustenance to strengthen us. Staying connected with God through daily prayer, devotion, gratitude, and worship fills our spirit when we want to give up, and renews our minds when we are weary.
Photo Credit: © Getty Images/VitezslavVylicil […]

God's Love

10 Scriptures on How to Live in the End Times

“But if we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus, His Son, purifies us from all sin.” (1 John 1:7)
To navigate through the end times, it’s critical we stay out of the darkness of the world and walk in God’s light, so we won’t stumble off track. Ephesians 5:8 explains, “For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light.”
As Ephesians 5:3-5 describes, walking in darkness involves participating in sexual immorality, any kind of impurity, greed, obscenity, foolish talk, crude joking, and more.
Instead, we’re to walk in the fruit of light, which consists in all goodness, righteousness and truth, and to find what pleases the Lord (Ephesians 5:9).
Walking in darkness means believers have wandered away from God’s word and are backslidden in their relationship with Him. 1 John 1:6 explains, “If we claim to have fellowship with Him and yet walk in darkness, we lie and do not live out the truth.”
As Ephesians 5:15-16 warns, “Be very careful, then, how you live—not at unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil.”
Photo Credit: © Pexels/Andrea Piacquadio […]