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Top 10 Faith and Work Quotes of the Week


FAITH AND WORK BOOK REVIEW:

Master What Matters: 12 Value Choices to Help You Win at Life by John Maxwell. Center Street. 204 pages. 2022
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Maxwell Moments, a new line of John Maxwell books, is described as “an innovative new line of derivative books unlike any other Maxwell books in the marketplace. They will look and feel fresh, appealing to a younger and more innovative audience. Titles in the Maxwell Moments series will be single-concept books in a creative format, chock full of wisdom, insight, and inspiration. Each will contain the essence of one of John’s messages, divided into short chapters to be savored in small bites, read in a single sitting, given as gifts, and used as mentoring tools.”
In this volume in the series, Maxwell tells us that there are only a handful of important value choices you need to make in your entire lifetime to win at life. He states that most people overcomplicate life and get bogged down. He covers twelve important choices, each given their own short chapter, to make in order to be successful. They are:

He tells us our choices are the only thing we truly control, and that the most successful people in life are the ones who settle their value choices early and manage those choices daily.
Among the subjects he addresses in the book are your daily agenda, a positive attitude, good relationships, adding value to others, resolving conflict quickly, keeping your commitments, maximizing your potential, good thinking, being generous, excellence, and your priorities.
Maxwell Moments may very well find a new audience for John Maxwell’s teaching, and I think that’s great. For me however, I prefer his full-length traditional books.

Below are 15 of my favorite quotes from the book:

  1. Winning at life is going to bed at night knowing you have done your best and given yourself to the things that matter the most.
  2. Many people figure that tomorrow is bound to be better, but they have no strategy for making it better.
  3. People don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care.
  4. Everything you are doing now is something you have chosen to do.
  5. To change your life, you need to change your priorities.
  6. To be successful, you can’t allow what’s urgent for others to drive your life.
  7. When you take control of your day, you take control of your life.
  8. There is no substitute for time when it comes to your family.
  9. Experience is good only if it’s reflected upon and you learn from both mistakes and successes.
  10. The greater your thinking, the greater your potential.
  11. The ultimate goal of thinking is translating ideas into action.
  12. If you want to win at life, you must make your health a priority.
  13. One of the greatest causes of debilitating stress in people’s lives is doing jobs they don’t like.
  14. What is the greatest choice you can make to win at life? What value has a lasting impact? Being generous.
  15. Don’t measure your life by the number of people who serve you or the amount of money you accumulate. Look at how many people you serve. The greater your giving, the greater you’re living.

Faith and Work Book Club – Won’t you read along with us?

We are reading through You’re Only Human: How Your Limits Reflect God’s Design and Why That’s Good News by Kelly Kapic. The list of demands on our time seems to be never ending. It can leave you feeling a little guilty–like you should always be doing one more thing.
Rather than sharing better time-management tips to squeeze more hours out of the day, Kelly Kapic takes a different approach in You’re Only Human. He offers a better way to make peace with the fact that God didn’t create us to do it all.
Kapic explores the theology behind seeing our human limitations as a gift rather than a deficiency. He lays out a path to holistic living with healthy self-understanding, life-giving relationships, and meaningful contributions to the world. He frees us from confusing our limitations with sin and instead invites us to rest in the joy and relief of knowing that God can use our limitations to foster freedom, joy, growth, and community.
Readers will emerge better equipped to cultivate a life that fosters gratitude, rest, and faithful service to God.
This week we look at the second half of Chapter 8: Why Doesn’t God Just Instantly Change Me? Here are a few helpful quotes from this section of the chapter:

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