By
Robert H. Schuller
Here is the
good news I want to share with you today. You and I can become emotionally
and spiritually healthy human beings, when God, through the sacred
sentences of the Holy Bible, speaks to us and becomes our Spiritual
Healer in times of sickness.
This morning
I have chosen a Bible verse to share, that has done that for me
in my life.
"One who rules
the spirit is mightier than one who takes a city." (Proverbs 16:32)
Wow! This Bible
verse has really impacted my possibility thinking.
General Dwight
Eisenhower, the heroic general who led our troops in triumph over
Hitler in World War II, once said that the sermon he remembered
impacting his life more than any other sermon was a message on "How
to Manage Your Moods" which was based on this verse:
"One who rules
the spirit is mightier than one who takes a city."
I don't know
who delivered that sermon, nor what the content of the message was,
but I would agree that, yes, you and I as human beings, controlling
our moods, are more dynamic and heroic than a general who conquers
a town or a country.
How can you
Manage your Moods?
First: Get
acquainted with yourself.
Yes, you are
a person of cycles, seasons and tides. We all are. Learn to know
yourself, your high times and low times. You have times when you
are up and times when you are down. Now don't be depressed and say
the low time is depression. It often is not depression. You are
calling it by the wrong title. You are just taking a breather. No,
you're not burned out. It's a brownout. In a brownout, the power
is temporarily off, but don't call it a burnout. The power will
come back on.
When you're
down, maybe it's physical. Maybe you need to exercise more. Maybe
you are eating the wrong foods. Maybe you need a medical exam. But
if there is no physical reason, maybe you are just on a low tide
and that's natural. It's okay. Don't let it worry you. Don't be
upset about it.
Second: Don't
Be Afraid of Your Moods.
My Uncle Henry
Beltman was a missionary in China. In the early 20's, he built missionary
churches and schools there. He came back home when his wife became
very ill and then, shortly after that, China was overtaken by the
Communists, and he could not return to work there again. When Uncle
Henry was an old man, over 80, I said to him, "Uncle Henry, I'd
like to see where you worked in China. Would you like to see if
your buildings are still there? Do you think the Communists destroyed
them on their march to get rid of the missionaries? Let me take
you there."
I owed him
so much. He inspired me to become a preacher. I shall always be
indebted to him for that. So he and I went to China.
We traveled
modestly as China was not welcoming tourists warmly. We shared rooms,
but I couldn't sleep. I began to think of all the heavy responsibilities
back home in America. The next morning, at breakfast, I said, "Well,
I didn't sleep too good last night."
Uncle Henry
said, "I didn't either, but that doesn't bother me."
I said, "Why
doesn't that bother you? Sleep is so important, especially at your
age."
"No," he said,
"I learned years ago, not to worry if I did not sleep. I just rest.
Bob, if you need sleep, the body will sleep. Don't worry about it.
Just rest. Think, meditate, pray, relax, and rest."
Wow! Ever since
then I have never worried if I wake up at two o'clock in the morning
and don't get back to sleep. I just rest and relax and give my body
the rest it needs.
Don't be afraid
of the down time.
But - Never
make a negative, irreversible decision in a down mood.
All of nature
seems to scream out to you when you are in a low mood to do something,
to make a decision, to quit, to pack up, to send a letter, make
a telephone call, resign, or walk away. Don't make a negative, irreversible
decision in a down time.
The smart decisions
are made when you're at your best, not at your worst.
Learn to manage
your moods. (1) Get acquainted with yourself, and (2) Don't be afraid
of your low moods. It's time to refill, refuel, retreat and just
rest.
"One who rules
the spirit is mightier than one who takes a city."
When you retreat,
guess what? You are managing your mood. When you don't make a negative
decision in a low time, you are managing your mood, your mood is
not managing YOU.
Third: Accept
personal responsibility for your moods.
Somebody asked
me the other day, "Of all the messages you have preached in your
life, Dr. Schuller, is there one, more than any other, that stands
out?"
Yes, there
is. I can tell you that in 26 years of televising our messages to
the world, overwhelming requests came for a sermon that I preached
entitled: "I Didn't Know How Heavy My Luggage Was ėTil I Stopped
Carrying It." It was also the longest sermon title I've ever had.
It seems that
in all of my travels when I would disembark from the airplane, down
the steps or through the jet way, somebody would be waiting to welcome
me. Their usual welcome always included the offer, "Let me take
your bags." And I would be insulted by that. "Do I look that old?
Do I look that feeble? Do I look that sick? No, thank you, I'm strong
enough to carry my own bags. They're not heavy."
I don't know
when it happened and I don't know why it happened, but there was
a time when someone greeted me as I stepped from the airplane. "Oh,
let me take your bags." And for some strange, unpredictable reason,
I said, "Thank you." And I gave him my briefcase. It was not a big
suitcase, but just a little briefcase where I kept papers and books.
I forgot how
heavy it was, now suddenly both my hands were free. Then somebody
said, "Dr. Schuller, may I shake your hand? You saved my life."
I reached out to give them a handshake and a hug. I was now free
to comfort or inspire people. I could put my arm around a shoulder.
I didn't know
how heavy my luggage was until I stopped carrying it.
What heavy
luggage are you carrying? This morning I see a dear wonderful friend,
whose name I shall not mention, sitting in church. I buried her
husband 21 years ago. Every week she visited his grave. And at least
once a month I would visit her. "How are you doing?"
She would reply,
"Not good. I can't get over his death. I bring flowers to his grave
every week." For about three years she was overwhelmed with grief.
Finally I said
to her, "Come here. Sit down." I'll call her Mary.
"Didn't I have
a nice funeral for your husband?"
"Oh, you really
did, Dr. Schuller. I'll never forget it. I play the tape of the
funeral often."
"You play it
often?"
"Oh, yes."
"How often?"
"Oh, once or
twice a week."
"And you visit
his grave how often?"
"Oh, every
week."
I said, "Mary
the body is buried. The grave is closed. Mary, there is a time when
you have to stop grieving and start living. I'm giving you an order.
From now on you are only allowed to visit the grave once a year.
No more. That's an order from your pastor."
She looked
shocked. "You mean it?"
I said, "Yes,
I mean it."
"And the tape
of the funeral service"
"Put it in
a drawer if you want to, but don't listen to it anymore."
Mary listened,
and took my advise. A few months later, I noticed her at a church
social and her personality was bubbling again. Wow!
You are responsible
for your moods. So am I. Remember "The one who takes control of
his spirit is better than the one who takes a city."
Manage Your
Moods:
1) Get acquainted
with yourself
2) Don't be
afraid of your moods
3) Accept personal
responsibility and
4) Cultivate
the habit of controlling your mind.
As our family
grew up, we taught all of the children the poem by Ellen Wheeler
Wilcox. We said it often at the breakfast table:
"I'm going
to be happy today,
though the
skies are cloudy and gray.
No matter what
comes my way,
I'm going to
be happy today."
It was a decision.
So when the children would repeat it, I would say, "If something
happens today that troubles you, turn the dial in your thinking.
You make the choice to be positive."
One of the
most shocking experiences I've ever had in my years of travel on
the continents of the world happened on my first trip to the Soviet
Union. The Cold War was on and I was traveling with Wilbert Eichenberger.
A fearful tension surrounded us throughout the country, and we were
eager to get out of Russia.
We boarded
the train in Lvov, en route to Vienna, Austria. The train stopped
suddenly on the border of "no man's land" between Russia and Czechoslovakia.
Everybody was ordered to get out of the train. As we stood there
on the sidewalk, we watched vehicles approaching along the railroad
track and they carried what looked like huge jacks, made of steel,
maybe 12 feet high with two arms that stuck out. Two jacks were
rolled up underneath each train car. Suddenly the entire train,
a half a mile long, with all 30 passenger cars still connected,
was raised high in the air, leaving the wheels standing on the tracks.
Then another
vehicle came and pushed all the wheels back into Russia. Down the
track from the Czechoslovakian side, came an entire new set of wheels
that were narrower. Then we noticed there were narrower railroad
tracks just inside the tracks from Russia. We learned that Czechoslovakia
had put up narrower railroad tracks to keep trainloads of Russian
soldiers from storming into their country.
Now, the narrower
wheels were being put on for the narrower tracks of Czechoslovakia.
The jacks were lowered and pushed away, the passenger cars were
put on the new wheels, and we were allowed to board again. We were
on the tracks of freedom.
Some of you
need to change tracks just like that. The tracks of negative thinking
and cynical thoughts that are making you sick. It is time to stop
carrying the heavy luggage of your hurts.
Manage Your
Moods or Your Moods Will Manage You.
"The one who
controls his spirit is better than the one who takes a city."
Fifth: To manage
your moods you probably need a miracle.
A hundred million
miracles are happening every day and this church specializes in
them. We really do. Today, we are honoring our New Hope Telephone
Counselors. In September of 1968, this church was the first church
in the United States of America to have a 24-hour live, telephone
counseling suicide prevention service. We have prevented many suicides.
All of this is managed and manned by men and women and young people
from this church. Thousands of these volunteers, for over a quarter
of a century, have been making miracles happen for those who are
desperate for a miracle and they dial the telephone number (714)
N-E-W H-O-P-E and they get NEW HOPE!
Some of you
simply need a miracle. Recently, Barbara Walters celebrated her
20th anniversary of television interviews. The program I watched
was one where she interviewed Arthur Rubinstein. I don't think anybody
at a keyboard has ever brought us greater music. And she asked him
a very sensitive question. "Is it true that once you battled real
depression?"
"Oh yes," he
said. "That's true. I was so depressed and the depression was so
bad, that I didn't want to live." He said. "I made a decision to
kill myself. I looked all over for a rope, but couldn't find any.
All I could find was the belt on my bathrobe. So I took it, made
a slip knot, put it around my neck... walked into my garage moved
in a chair, tied the end of the belt to the beam tight I jumped,
and the belt broke! I fell to my knees. I staggered outside of the
garage and suddenly, there, like never before in my life I was overwhelmed
by the beauty of life. And I have loved life ever since."
Rubinstein
was encountered by God. He may not have used that name, but that's
what I believe happened to him.
William Cowper
needed a miracle. He, too, fought depression. William Cowper also
attempted suicide more than once. He put a rope around his neck
and the rope broke. So he walked to the river, where he knew of
a deep spot by the bridge, but there were so many people on the
bridge, he could not jump. He went back home where he took an ornamental
sword off the wall and put it to his chest. He threw his body down
on it, but the point of the sword hit a rib bone, snapped the sword
in two and suddenly, William Cowper called out, "Lord, forgive me."
"And at that moment," he said, "Jesus Christ came into my life.
I sensed His presence. It was powerful. It was real."
He was born
again. He wrote a poem and it became a great hymn of the church.
Years later a tornado destroyed our house and we lost everything
except the clothes on our back. We went to the little country church
in Iowa for a special prayer meeting. What hymn did we sing? They
sang the hymn, with the words written by William Cowper, who with
Jesus in his heart wrote:
God moves in
mysterious ways.
His wonders
to perform;
He plants His
footsteps on the sea,
And rides upon
the storm.
William Cowper
A miracle to
match your mood. Is there one? Oh, yes. It will come to you. God
is in the miracle business. He's got a miracle to match your mood.
That's a promise!
Prayer: Thank
You, O Lord, You know us better than we know ourselves. You know
our tomorrow's, better than we know our yesterdays. And, You see
solutions when everyone else sees only problems. Thank You. Amen.
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