Julie and Julia : 365 Days, 524 Recipes, 1 Tiny Apartment Kitchen by Julie Powell
Mansfield Park (Barnes by Jane Austen
Jesus: 90 Days With the One and Only (Personal Reflections) by Beth Moore
The Missional Leader: Equipping Your Church to Reach a Changing World (J-B Leadership Network Series by Alan Roxburgh
Simply Christian: Why Christianity Makes Sense by N.T. Wright
The Price of Privilege: How Parental Pressure and Material Advantage Are Creating a Generation of Di by Madeline Levine
A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life by Donald Miller
Killing Cockroaches: And Other Scattered Musings on Leadership by Tony Morgan
1 John Addie baptism biblical studies birds Birthdays Book Reviews Breastfeeding Brian christmas coffee Colleges culture emergent Emma Family Life fishing galatians goals good friends hell humanitarian InsideOut People Insight insights from books Isabelle Journal Thoughts Just for fun leadership love Mac Mandy Mandy's Mondays marriage messages ministry Motherhood movies Owen Pennsylvania Life photos prayer pro-life seminary spiritual life Starbucks Student Ministry Switzerland The Blog World Theology Uncategorized vacation weather Websites winter retreat youtube
“…life will present us with hundreds of opportunities in a single week to take a look at our internal world, to walk with God there, to become more fully his. Don’t let your internal life go unshepherded.” – John Eldredge, Walking With God (p. 192)
The tendancy in our society/lifestyles is to only check the internal world when something is seriously wrong, but whatever is going on in the internal world is what drives or controls that which we do on the outside. How I deal with my kids is a result of what’s going on inside, how I respond to the “idiot” driver at the intersection is a result of what is going on inside, what I say when I feel threatened by someone is a result of what’s going on inside, and how I plan my schedule is a result of what’s going on inside. As Eldredge said so well, we have so many opportunities daily to do a quick or deep internal check.
I have realized that the analogy of shepherding doesn’t really help most of us, because we have never had sheep, been on a sheep farm, been to a petting zoo, or even worn wool! BUT we have all had or been coaches…a coach seems to be the closest common analogy to a shepherd. A coach encourages, resources, challenges, celebrates, and even gets in our faces from time to time. A coach identifies things that we need to do differently as well as put us in positions to let our strengths shine and be used for the greater good.

Are you coaching your inner life on a daily/weekly basis? I am so thankful for friends of mine who help me coach my inner world, who push me to make the hard decisions and celebrate the strengths God has put in me. Let me encourage you to not let your inner life go UNCOACHED so that you are more fully his, for the greater good!
Popularity: 2% [?]
