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I saw this post from Scott Hodge (The Orchard Community) earlier today and loved it so much I felt the need to put it here.
Apologizing has become somewhat of a lost art, don’t you think? And to a large degree it’s understandable because no one likes to admit failure – it’s humiliating and when done well, there’s no room for pride to stick around. Which is why it’s so hard to do! Yet…..you know this as well as I do…apologizing well is one of the most powerful gestures we could ever show another human being.
So here’s five quick thoughts on how to do it well.
1. Acknowledge your failure.
“I have failed you. I’ve let you down. I have done wrong.”
2. Acknowledge the impact of the failure.
“I have failed you….and as a result, I know I’ve caused you a lot of pain….I’ve put you in a very precarious position…..I have hurt you.”
What NOT to say: “I’m sorry you were offended by what I did.” NO. That sucks. Take responsibility.
3. Tell them you’re sorry.
“I’ve failed you….and I know it has caused you a lot of pain….and I just want you to know that I am truly sorry.”
4. Commit to change.
“….and I’ll do whatever I can to make sure that never happens again.”
5. Shut the #*($&! up.
This is where we get into trouble. Because the tendency is to add on:
“I’m sorry….it’s just that…”
“I’m sorry….but I didn’t mean it!”
“I’m sorry…it’s just that you…”
No. Don’t make excuses. Don’t complicate it. Don’t qualify it.
In 2005 Donald Miller started The Mentoring Project, an organization that helps churches start mentoring programs and pairs mentors with boys in need. Don’s work with the fatherless led the Obama administration to invite him onto the president’s task force on fatherlessness and mentoring. In 2006 Donald’s book To Own A Dragon: Reflections On Growing Up Without A Father was published. The book is Don’s reflections on growing up without a father (whom he didn’t even meet until he was 35), and the struggles it caused him. In April 2010 To Own A Dragon was reprinted with new chapters and a new title - Father Fiction: Chapters for a Fatherless Generation.
I bought a copy of To Own A Dragon when it came out, but I still haven’t made it all the way through. Not that it isn’t a good read; on the contrary, I love Don’s works. But as someone who, for the most part, grew up without a father and having confronted those demons and made peace with my father, To Own A Dragon is, for me, more of a guide in helping others who are fatherless than helping myself. However, I do plan on buying a copy of the reprint for the new chapters.
Anyways, I’ve been following The Mentoring Project for a couple years now and the statistics Don presents in To Own A Dragon and A Million Miles In A Thousand Years are staggering. Twenty-seven million kids are currently growing up without dads, teens who grow up without a father are more prone to suicide, dropping out of school, drug use, unwanted pregnancies, abortion, divorce and crime. Eighty-five percent of the U.S. prison population grew up fatherless. Coincidence?
Big Brothers/Big Sisters has a thousand boy waiting list, but no waiting list for the girls. That’s a national average for cities across the U.S. There’s 360,000 churches in the United States – what if each one partnered with The Mentoring Project? The goal of The Mentoring Project is to take that waiting list all across the country down to zero through the church. According to Don, “we could potentially mentor all the fatherless boys in America within twenty years, effectively shutting down prisons, curbing teen pregnancy and abortion, curbing the divorce rate…. all those issues would be taken care of through the church.”
Also in the interview, Don highlights the successes they’re already seeing through The Mentoring Project. Imago Dei, one of their partner churches in Portland, Oregon, was recently asked by the Portland Independent School District to provide 500 more mentors for their students!
I should also clarify Donald’s definition of “growing up fatherless” isn’t exclusive to those who were raised by a single mother or orphans and foster children. Absentee fathers are just as big of a problem. Absentee fathers are men who, while still maintaining a home in the traditional sense (husband + wife + children = family), neglect their children, aren’t good examples of what a husband and father should be and therefore aren’t good examples of what a man should be. I was listening to an interview with Donald and he made a good point: the issue isn’t just a fatherlessness issue, it’s a masculinity issue. We have a crisis of masculinity. To quote Donald:
We have a problem where men really don’t know how to be men or what being a man looks like. So you have passive men and then you have the over-macho shouting man, and something’s wrong with both of those pictures.
As Mark Driscoll once said, “we have a lot of boys who can shave”. A lot of men aren’t really men, but boys trapped in a man’s body, clinging to adolescence and not knowing what it really means to be a man. To quote Driscoll:
The sweet-spot is like 18-34 for demographics, because what they do is they know that you guys don’t know what it means to be a man and so they tell you that being a man is defined not by what you produce, but by what you consume.
“Drink this beer, you’ll be a man!”
“Drive this truck, you’ll be a man!”
“Play these video games, you’ll be a man!”Really?
Seriously?
All too often we’re told our manliness comes from what we consume, but the truth is, when you die, no one is going to care how many women you slept with or how many times you drank your buddies under the table.
What people will remember is what you gave back – what you produced.
So, in honor of Father’s Day, I’d like to thank those men who have been my mentors. Just to clarify, I love my father. And he loves me. He knows he hasn’t been the father he wanted to be. He knows his poor choices in life led to consequences such as divorce and my fatherlessness. And I’ve forgiven him for that. To all reading this, if your father is still alive, make sure you have some type of contact with him on Father’s Day. Whether he was there for you as a child or not, make the effort to show him love. As for the men who have mentored me and at one time or another stepped into that father figure role, thank you. I’m far from perfect, but I don’t even want to know where I’d be had it not been for all of you. I’ve listed their names below as a sort of public thanks (alphabetical order):
Mark Bennett, Allen Boehm, Ron Brown, Lee Haynes, Chad Hays, Mark Leonhardt, Jeremy McCaa, Kenny McCaa, Joey Metz, Arvil Ogle, Phil Parker, Brent Stephens and Troy Wold.
Links:
Donald Miller
The Mentoring Project
Catalyst Interview With Donald Miller
Father Fiction: Chapters for a Fatherless Generation
A Million Miles In A Thousand Years
Mark Driscoll on Adolescence
What’s the deal with people who have no clue when it comes to proper grammar and spelling?
I realize Twitter has a 140 character limit and Facebook also has character limits, so sometimes you have to shrink words – but seriously, there’s no excuse for some of the butchering of the English language that I see on the web.
Here’s an example, taken from a Facebook fan review of A Nightmare on Elm Street:
People Have An Issue Becuz Freddys Not As funny As He Was In Da Other 1s.. But They Cant Make The Movie Exactly Da Same. They R Changing All The Movies A Bit. I Mean in Friday The 13th Jason Was Running. It Was Gud U Just Have 2 B Open Minded N Not Expect The Original Knightmare On Elm Street
Not bad enough? Here’s another from the same comment thread:
PPL TLD MEIT WAS ASS BT IMA WATCH IT BOTLEG SHIID IAINT WASTING MY MONEY
You can make any excuse you want, but that ain’t leetspeak. That’s something else entirely, but for the sake of my readers I won’t write it.
But it rhymes with mucked up.
=)
This is something that’s been gnawing at me for awhile.
Years in fact.
But seeing how violent some of the Obamacare protestors have become, I feel like I have to say (or write) something.
Hate for your fellow man or woman = SIN.
That being said, I realize that sinners sin (seeing that “sin” is the root word of “sinner”). But Christians are called to love.
Ed Young once said,
Acceptance, NOT approval.
I mean, that’s what Jesus did, right?
He met sinners where they were at; not after they had changed or “cleaned up” or “gotten right with God”, but where they were at. (Mark 2:16 & 17, Luke 5:27-32)
He accepted them for who they were, but He didn’t approve of their lifestyle.
Nor did he condemn them for their lifestyle. He knew how to cut to the heart of the matter without judgment or condemnation. (John 4:1-42, John 8:2-11)
In fact, the only times we see him being judgmental in the gospels are in His encounters with wayward religious leaders. (Matthew 15:1-3, Matthew 23:13-39)
So, if Jesus was able to show love and accept those around Him, even when they differed in opinion, lifestyle, choices, beliefs, etc., why can’t we?
Earlier today I tweeted the following;
Hatred = sin. God created equally so why hate? Black/white, conservative/liberal, gay/straight, Mac/PC, etc. (Matthew 5:21-22)
Take, for example, conservatives, liberals and this past weekend’s healthcare vote.
Is it wrong to voice your opinion? No.
Is it wrong to protest peacefully? No.
But when you start dragging people through the mud, when you make derogatory jokes about those who you’ll “end up buying insurance for”, when you claim Obama is the anti-Christ and the end of the world is at hand, are you showing Jesus through those actions?
Does anyone reading this really believe God was surprised by how the vote turned out?
I’m not telling anyone to stop making their opinions known, or to take a back seat. Ignorance is not bliss.
But if you call yourself a Christian, remember who you represent.
If you’ve got something to say, say it in love. (1 John 4:20-21)
Another example – homosexuality.
I don’t care what you believe concerning homosexuality and sin. That’s another post for another day.
But reread 1 John 4:20-21 real quick.
Know any gays or lesbians?
Are you showing them love, or do you love to make fun and belittle them?
I could go on; racism, classism, education, etc., but you get the point.
There’s a song on the latest North Point CD called “Everything” which pretty much sums up my point in the first verse.
God in my living
There in my breathing
God in my waking
God in my sleeping
God in my resting
There in my working
God in my thinking
God in my speakingBe my everything (4x)
A few years ago Mike Foster and Jud Wilhite (Deadly Viper Character Assassins, Junky Car Club) birthed an idea that revolved around radical grace. That idea was People of the Second Chance (POTSC for short). What started as a sidenote to their other ministries has developed into a movement of it’s own. As Mike and Jud wrote on the front page of POTSC,
People of the Second Chance is no longer just a nice concept with some stickers and tee shirts, but the very story we are living out right now.
So take a few minutes to visit the new website and blog.
Become a fan at Facebook.
Follow POTSC on Twitter.
The Search for God and Guinness by Stephen Mansfield officially releases October 13, 2009, but you can get it now at Amazon. I’ve got my copy for review on the way from Thomas Nelson. From the trailer it looks to be a good read. Wonder if it’ll be in Lifeway or Family =)










