"A man without a vision is a
man without a future. A man without a future will always return to his
past."
"A knife cuts because it has a narrow focus" (Cleddie Keith).
"A coward dies a thousand deaths, but a brave man dies only once" (Roman soldiers).
"When God predetermined our destiny, He factored in our stupidity. Therefore there's always enough time to finish?"(Larry Randolph)."The level of sacrifice that an environment requires will determine the size of people that will follow" (Kris Vallotton).
"A knife cuts because it has a narrow focus" (Cleddie Keith).
"A coward dies a thousand deaths, but a brave man dies only once" (Roman soldiers).
"When God predetermined our destiny, He factored in our stupidity. Therefore there's always enough time to finish?"(Larry Randolph)."The level of sacrifice that an environment requires will determine the size of people that will follow" (Kris Vallotton).
A progressive revelation of an
ageless revival for our generation is growing in our hearts. It is for those
who went before us and for those who are yet to be born. Yet, the question of
how the vision is to be implemented remains.
One famous Proverb says, "Where
there is no vision, the people are unrestrained, but happy is he who keeps the
law" (Proverbs 29:18). Vision is the bridge between the present and the
future. Without it we perish or go "unrestrained," as the New
American Standard Bible puts it. Vision gives pain a purpose. Those without
vision spend their lives taking the path of least resistance as they try to
avoid discomfort. The level of sacrifice that a vision requires will determine
the size of people who follow. Sacrifice separates the small from the great.
Consider the example of a young man
who has just graduated from high school and joins the military. As soon as he
steps off the boot camp bus, the sergeant starts yelling at him. He has to
march over to the barbershop and get his head shaved. Then he is up early in
the morning to exercise with someone screaming at him and talking about his
mother. Just a month before, he was in high school. He would have never put up
with any of this nonsense from his teachers or classmates. But somehow his
whole mindset has changed. Why? He is enduring the "cross" so to
speak, because of the joy on the other side of it. He realizes that boot camp is
preparing him for a greater destiny. His vision of the future is giving his
present physical discomfort meaning and purpose.
So many of us go through life not
understanding the purposes of our trials. We spend our days walking a crooked
path, believing that every obstacle in the road is a problem and something to
be avoided.
The second part of this Proverb
says, "But happy is he who keeps the Law." The law isn't just
something God gave to Moses. It is also the restraint, boundaries and
disciplines we develop around our life to direct us through obstacles instead
of around them. These obstacles become baptisms of fire that forge our
character so we can attain and maintain a life of greatness.
WHAT IS VISION?
Vision is what we see, but it is
also the way in which we see. Vision is the lens that interprets the events of
our life, the way we view people and our concept of God. If we have a scratch
on our glasses, it may seem like everybody around us has scratches too, but the
problem actually lies with us because our vision is impaired. Jesus said that
our eyes are the windows of our heart. Paul prayed that the eyes of our heart
would be enlightened. In other words, we perceive with our eyes but we see with
our hearts. Our minds receive images from our eyes but our heart interprets
these images. If our heart becomes bitter, jealous, hurt or in someway
infected, the lens of our heart is distorted. What we perceive is happening and
what is really going on could be two completely different things. Jesus said,
"You will know the truth and the truth will make you free" (John
8:32). The word truth used here is not referring to the Bible itself, (although
all truth is rooted in the Bible) but here the word truth means reality. Jesus
is saying, you will understand what is real and that will free you. So many of
us live in a virtual reality. The way we view life can feel and look real, or
make perfect sense, but still not be real at all. Have you ever watched a good
movie and gotten totally into it? You experience all the emotions of real life.
You may even leave the theater still "feeling" the movie, but it was
just a movie? it was never real. The truth is: we see what we believe to be
true. Another way to put it is, if you have the wrong pretext you will
misunderstand the context. Having a revelation of what is real will deliver us
from a life of torment that virtual reality often causes.
ESTABLISHING CORE VALUES
Therefore, the things we believe to
be true determine the way in which we interpret life. These "things"
are called "core values." Core values are the lens or eyes of our
heart. It is important for us to realize the incongruence between what our core
values presently are and what we really want them to be. Often, the things we
say we believe and the things we actually believe are not the same. We must
understand that it is not the truths that we believe in our head that are our
core values, but rather the ones we believe in our heart. The things we
perceive to be true determine the way we respond to the world around us and to God
who lives within us.
These core values also help define
the part of the flock that we find ourselves called and attracted to. The
children of Israel experienced this principle when they came into the Promised
Land. Joshua assigned land to them according to their tribes and divisions
(Joshua 18:10). In other words, they received land according to their diverse
visions. For instance, if they had a vision for farming, they probably did not
go with Caleb to the mountain country but instead were given land that best
facilitated their vision. Therefore the land they were given and their vision
was congruent. From this perspective, it is not very hard to see how some
church splits happen. Sometimes pastors, in their zeal to build their churches,
attract people that have a vision for things that their churches or
"land" (metaphorically speaking) will not sustain. This dual vision
eventually ends up in di-vision.
FORESIGHT, INSIGHT & OVERSIGHT
True Godly vision consists of
foresight, insight and oversight that come from His sight. Foresight is like
looking at life through a telescope. This outlook allows us to know what is
ahead as it connects us to our future. Foresight is the element of vision that
helps life make sense and gives us the motivation that we described earlier.
Insight is like viewing life through
a microscope. This perception gives us an understanding of why things happen in
life. It also helps determine the underlying motivations of the heart.
Oversight puts life into context. It
is like flying over our house in a helicopter. There is a perspective that we
can only receive from this vista that helps us understand where we are with
respect to where everything else is. The sons of Issachar are great examples of
this kind of vision. The book of I Chronicles says that these men understood
the times and had knowledge of what Israel should do (12:32). People that are
blessed with this type of vision often have great wisdom concerning the seasons
of life.
His sight assures us that the vision
we have is from God. A vision from the Lord creates a mission from heaven. This
is illustrated in the life of Moses when he went up on the mountain, received a
vision of the tabernacle, and was told to construct it according to the pattern
that he had received. (Exodus 24:16-28:43) Visions like this are just
"pipe dreams" without some sort of administrative plan to complete
them. A lot of people have lofty ideas about things they would like to
accomplish for God but they seem to have no sense of how to see the dream
fulfilled. There are entire books dedicated to this subject, therefore, I will
just give an overview of how to accomplish a vision.
PRACTICAL IMPLEMENTATION
The first part of accomplishing any
vision is to take it from the unseen world and bring it into the natural realm.
This can be accomplished by simply writing down the vision. Articulating the
vision on paper pulls the dream that is in your spirit (that no one can see but
you) into the visible world so that others can capture it in their own hearts.
Tools that help to visualize the mission such as architectural drawings,
models, testimonies of others who have accomplished similar dreams, or visits
to places that have a common purpose are all helpful in capturing and defining
the vision for both yourself and others who will come alongside and help.
Habakkuk puts it this way: "Then the LORD answered me and said, 'Record
the vision and inscribe it on tablets, that the one who reads it may run. For
the vision is yet for the appointed time; it hastens toward the goal and it
will not fail. Though it tarries, wait for it; for it will certainly come, it
will not delay" (Habakkuk 2:2-3).
There is an old story about three
bricklayers that helps illustrate what it looks like when people receive
motivation from taking ownership of a vision:
There were three bricklayers working
beside each other on a wall. Someone came up to the first one and said,
"What are you doing" "What;'s it look like I am doing?" he
replied sarcastically, "I am laying bricks!" The man asked the next
guy on the wall what he was doing. He said,"Can't you see what I am doing?
I am building a wall." Then the last man was asked what he was doing. He
exclaimed, "I am building a great cathedral for God!"
Who do you think will do the best
quality work and be the hardest worker? Vision causes people to love their work
because they can see the big picture. Someone once said, "If you want to
build a great ship, you can go out and find some talented craftsman or you can
find a person who loves the sea." Imparting God's vision to the team
around us is the single most important factor in seeing the mission
accomplished.
The next step is to create a plan to
accomplish the mission. The Bible says, "Without consultation, plans are
frustrated, but with many counselors they succeed; the plans of the heart
belong to man, but the answer of the tongue is from the LORD" (Proverbs
15:22 & 16:1). From these two verses we see that although the vision must
be from God Himself, men are to help develop the plan that brings about the fulfillment
of the vision. Notice how Solomon highlights the fact that developing plans in
a vacuum, (without the expertise and insight of others who have different gifts
and perspectives than we do), will ultimately end in frustration.
It's important for administrative
people to understand that they are there to administrate the mission. The word
administrate means, "add-to-the-mission," not change the mission.
Visionaries often do not like to work with administrators because by nature
administrators are refiners and finishers. Sometimes administrators do not
understand that they are being brought in to help visionaries determine how
something should be accomplished, not what should be accomplished. If the
vision is so large that it requires the help of Heaven (which it often does
when it really is from God), it will be important that the visionary impart the
vision and the faith to see it accomplished to the team. First Timothy 1:4 says
that the administration of God is "by faith."
FEAR COUNTERACTS FAITH
People often disguise their fear as
wisdom when they enter into a supernatural mission that can only be
accomplished with the help of God. Moses had this problem when he sent the
twelve spies in to the Promised Land to determine where they should enter. Ten
of the spies misunderstood their mission and somehow thought they were being
asked whether or not they should take the land at all.
This type of misunderstanding of the
roles people are invited to play in the mission has caused the demise of so
many would-be miracles, paralyzing the church of the living God. For years, the
people of God have often settled for what can be accomplished by human effort
and ability, because we have allowed the opinion of faithless people to
determine what we will achieve, instead of being faithful (faith-filled) to the
vision we saw "on the mountain". This is a perversion of the gospel
of the kingdom. We should never settle for anything less than what God told us
to do.
SETTING GOALS
After the plan is established, goals
must be set. The Bible says, "I press on toward the goal for the prize of
the upward call of God in Christ Jesus" (Philippians 3:14).
Goals are simply the vision broken
down into smaller pieces that are measurable in time and space. In other words,
they are specified parts of the mission that we will accomplish by a
predetermined date. Many people don't like to set goals because they think that
if they are not able to accomplish them on time, they have failed. The truth of
the matter is that, "If you fail to plan you plan to fail." Great
leaders know that setting goals is what gives the mission a sense of urgency.
Urgency is a friend to managers as it sets the pace for those who are carrying
out the mission. If wisdom is used in goal setting, very little management is
needed to motivate the workers since urgency manages them. However, be careful
not to give your workers more to do than they have the faith to accomplish in a
given time period. If it is too much, they will not even try, just like trying
to catch a bus when it is already a block ahead. You probably won't even run
after it, as there is so little possibility of you catching up to it. On the
other hand, if the bus just starts to pull away from the curb when you get
there, you will probably move out of your comfort zone to try to catch it. Yet,
setting goals too low will not create a sense of urgency at all. People will
not be very motivated and it will result in a lot more work for the managers.
The final stage of seeing the
mission accomplished is establishing your steps. Proverbs says, "The mind
of man plans his way, but the Lord directs his steps" (16:9). Psalms says,
"The steps of a man are established by the Lord, and He delights in his
way. When he falls, he will not be hurled headlong, because the Lord is the one
who holds his hand" (37:23-24). Steps are your day-in, day-out walk with
God: the step-by-step, moment-by-moment, hour-by-hour decisions you make and
the things you do that take up your time and use up your life. When your vision
is honestly birthed by God Himself, He will be delighted to direct your steps.
The most important thing to remember about your steps is that they should be
found somewhere in your mission. Go back through your planner from the previous
month and retrace your steps. Does it look like they are directly attached to
your mission? If not, either redefine your mission or redirect your steps.
Remember, history is at stake.
FROM http://www.jesusculture.com/articles/the-power-of-a-vision