The Man Minute: A 60-Second Encounter Can Change Your Life
Every “Man Minute” devotional is designed to be read in sixty seconds, yet you’ll carry the insights you gleans into a lifelong journey of spiritual manhood. The Man Minute is packaged alongside a DVD featuring hunts—each couched in spiritual truths—with some of the most recognized hunters on the planet. 
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The Man Minute: A 60-Second Encounter Can Change Your Life
Every “Man Minute” devotional is designed to be read in sixty seconds, yet you’ll carry the insights you gleans into a lifelong journey of spiritual manhood. The Man Minute is packaged alongside a DVD featuring hunts—each couched in spiritual truths—with some of the most recognized hunters on the planet. 
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The Man Minute: A 60-Second Encounter Can Change Your Life

The Man Minute: A 60-Second Encounter Can Change Your Life

by Jason Cruise
The Man Minute: A 60-Second Encounter Can Change Your Life

The Man Minute: A 60-Second Encounter Can Change Your Life

by Jason Cruise

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Overview

Every “Man Minute” devotional is designed to be read in sixty seconds, yet you’ll carry the insights you gleans into a lifelong journey of spiritual manhood. The Man Minute is packaged alongside a DVD featuring hunts—each couched in spiritual truths—with some of the most recognized hunters on the planet. 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781634094085
Publisher: Barbour Publishing, Incorporated
Publication date: 11/01/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
File size: 849 KB

About the Author

Jason Cruise is a nationally known speaker and author. His fingerprints are on many of the faith-based men’s ministry resources that are in publication today. He was the creator and host for Spring Chronicles for Sportsman Channel and was the producer of Mossberg's Rugged American Hunter series. Jason is the Senior Pastor of ClearView Baptist Church in Franklin, Tennessee where he lives with his wife, Michelle, and their sons, Cole and Tucker. Visit his website at www.JasonCruise.com 
 
 
 

Read an Excerpt

The Man Minute

60 Seconds Can Change Your Life


By Jason Cruise

Barbour Publishing, Inc.

Copyright © 2015 Jason Cruise
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-63409-408-5


CHAPTER 1

You'll Find It (If You Really Want It)

The Pharisees and the teachers of the law were looking for a reason to accuse Jesus, so they watched him closely to see if he would heal on the Sabbath.

Luke 6:7


If you want to see the beauty of life, you'll find ways to make it happen. The opposite is true as well. If you want to find fault in people, it's easy to do, and it won't take you long to accomplish your mission.

I know I have junk going on inside my bones. In fact, you'd be better off just coming to me and letting me tell you where my weaknesses reside. Believe me, I know where they live.

Religious leaders followed Jesus around town — not with open hearts, but rather to find any reason whatsoever to bring Him down. Jesus was without sin, but that didn't stop them. In the absence of sin, people will often create trouble for you — even if you are the Sinless One sent to redeem all humanity.

These mockers had seen Jesus' miracles, had seen love in action. That's not enough, though, when you're a religious snob. They had to find fault, or else they would have to look into the mirror.

Let us never be like those religious leaders. Let us never be the kind of people who go out of our way to find fault in others.


What Not to Do

Like one who takes away a garment on a cold day, or like vinegar poured on a wound, is one who sings songs to a heavy heart.

Proverbs 25:20


Having spent more than 20 years in ministry, I've learned that when people's dreams are crushed or their hearts are breaking, the worst thing you can do is to play the part of the cavalier pied piper with an upbeat song. It's cold to sing songs to a troubled heart.

Don't misunderstand: the scriptures are not telling you to withhold songs of hope. People depend on hope, for the absence of hope can cause someone to follow harmful paths. Be sure to offer hope, but be careful how you package it. When people are heartbroken, the last thing they need is the guilt that comes from hearing someone say, "It's all good. Just praise the Lord anyway."

I've learned that deep despair causes people to ask questions, and those questions — when pain is too fresh for praise — tend to drown out songs of joy. What people remember most in times of heartache is that you were there. The best way you can help them is through the glorious simplicity of your presence, because that reminds them that God hasn't left them stranded.


Neglect

"Who am I, Sovereign Lord, and what is my family, that you have brought me this far?"

2 Samuel 7:18


I recently felt the strong pressing of God's hand on my heart concerning neglect — specifically my neglect of Him. I had been letting anything, and everything, move in line ahead of Him, and I had been neglecting taking the time to have consistent conversations with the God who made me.

King David said something that will forever haunt me. God is moving among His people, and the ark of the covenant is on the move as well. David begins to have visions of building God a proper house. God shares His vision for His people through Nathan the prophet, and David is overwhelmed that he's a part of the plan.

It's then that David asks, "Who am I?" — a question that shows the king's astonishment that God would desire a man like him. It's a question I ask myself often.

We live in a world of upside-down wisdom, and it's easy to think that something could be so important that it gets priority over daily conversations with God. Yet so often I bow to that way of thinking.

I know God doesn't need me to talk with Him. He's not in need of anything. But for some reason, He's made me a part of His plan. Because of His wonderful, unexplainable love for me, He wants me to talk with Him, because He knows that my very life depends on it.

I just can't afford to neglect the time He wants to spend with me.


What You Can Become

Judas son of James, and Judas Iscariot, who became a traitor.

Luke 6:16


The Gospel of Luke refers to Judas as the man who "became" a traitor. Things like that can happen to a man when he isolates his heart to his own whims.

No man in his right mind just gets up one day and says to himself, "I'm going to have sex with a woman who isn't my wife." No man gets up in the morning thinking, I think I'd like to embezzle money from my company and spend the next few years in prison.

I'm sure if you walked up to Judas just 12 months before he betrayed Jesus and told him he would sell Jesus' whereabouts to those looking to arrest Him, he would have looked at you as though you were sent straight from the devil.

Every time I've asked someone who's had a great failure in his past about how it happened, there is always one common denominator: it didn't happen overnight. Every one of these men can point back to a specific time when things started to slip.

A man usually doesn't just fall into serious sin. Rather, it's often a slow descent culminating in the terrible realization that he's become something he never dreamed he could be.


Out of Options

But when she could hide him no longer, she got a papyrus basket for him and coated it with tar and pitch. Then she placed the child in it and put it among the reeds along the bank of the Nile.

Exodus 2:3


I never knew pain — real soul pain — until I became a father. There is something about watching your kids go through pain that takes you to places your own personal pain simply cannot take you.

Imagine the torment Moses' mother went through as she placed her infant child in a homemade floatable basket and released him to the fate of a river. That's desperation beyond comprehension, and it required tremendous trust in God. It was either that or have him killed — for that was the edict passed down from Pharaoh, that any Hebrew who gave birth to a boy must turn him over to be thrown into the river to drown.

Sometimes I wonder how we as the people of God treat a world that doesn't know Him at all. I wonder how we affect a doubting world when we so casually throw around the idea of "trusting God with everything."

As Jesus followers, we often reduce trusting God to a message of: "Hey, if you were a better person, a stronger person, a true believer, then you'd just trust God. It's that simple."

Okay, fine. Then go ahead and put your eight-week-old son on a homemade float and send him down the nearest river. How simple is it to trust God then?

When you encounter people who are in unthinkable situations, always tell them the truth. Tell them that trusting God is their best option. Testify to that truth, but by all means testify gently. What a person whose world is collapsing needs in that moment isn't a flippant theologian but a real friend who speaks the truth in gentleness and love.


What You Think You Need

"Which is easier: to say, 'Your sins are forgiven,' or to say, 'Get up and walk'? But I want you to know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins." So he said to the paralyzed man, "I tell you, get up, take your mat and go home." Immediately he stood up in front of them, took what he had been lying on and went home praising God.

Luke 5:23–25


I think Jesus intended all along to heal the paralyzed man whose friends had brought him to Him for healing. I think He saw an opportunity to address some toxic chemicals buried within the hearts of the religious elite at the scene, and He wasn't going to miss it.

Jesus showed everyone in that crowd that there are things you think you need, and then there are things beyond that, things God knows you really need.

This man probably thought his greatest need in life was to walk again — and who could blame him? If I couldn't walk, I'm sure walking would consume my thoughts every day.

However, even if this man's legs worked perfectly, sin would still paralyze his soul. Healthy legs would have simply allowed him to walk into hell on his own instead of being carried there by others.

What he needed most was not the ability to walk, but a free soul. And Jesus was more than willing to offend some religious elites to teach us that lesson.


Reckless People

Better to meet a bear robbed of her cubs than a fool bent on folly.

Proverbs 17:12


Can you imagine hiking through the woods and encountering a grizzly sow who cannot locate her cubs? The truth is, there is most likely less than a 1 percent chance you'd walk away from that encounter without suffering severe bodily harm, most likely death, at the paws of a beast that can kill not only quickly, but without remorse. You'd call any man a fool's fool to mess with a panic-stricken sow. In fact, most of us would readily admit that such a man got what was coming to him.

So put the thought of that kind of encounter into the context of Solomon's wisdom about people who live recklessly. A "fool bent on folly" is a man who has abandoned common sense and caring. He is bent, meaning the hard-wiring of his soul craves that which is no longer in alignment with the heart of God.

I've watched men become reckless. It's an ugly thing. Too many times I've heard men relay to me that they honestly believed they were immune to the depravity of those within their circle. That same thinking is akin to thinking you can encounter the panicked sow and walk away unscathed.

The wisdom behind Solomon's words is this: stay away from those who live recklessly, for if you put yourself within their circle, you will not escape without scars. Reckless people wreck people. Whether or not you think it's possible, they will take you with them to places you don't want to go.


Which Father to Listen To

My son, keep your father's command and do not forsake your mother's teaching. Bind them always on your heart; fasten them around your neck. When you walk, they will guide you; when you sleep, they will watch over you; when you awake, they will speak to you.

Proverbs 6:20–22


Solomon wrote of the wisdom of listening to your father and mother. But it has occurred to me that his core message is directed at those who follow Yahweh.

The apostle Paul called our enemy, Satan, the "father of lies." And if a man is not in Christ, then he will listen to and follow that father, the one who wants to sway his spirit away from his heavenly Father. The devil often disguises himself as one speaking with a voice of reason, and he often tells men to "follow what you think is best."

Whose voice do you listen to — that of the heavenly Father, who always has your best interests in mind, or that of the father of lies, who wants you to do only what you want to do? If you are in Christ, then a new spirit is in you, and you can trust your heart to hear the voice of your heavenly Father. You are not obliged to follow what you hear or feel in the moment. Rather, you can "bind" the teachings of your Father on your heart so that "they will guide you."


Start with Where You're Standing Now

"You have been faithful with a few things; I will put you in charge of many things."

Matthew 25:21


Envy can reveal itself in subtle forms. Envy, like every other sin, is often the starting place leading in a direction far away from God. Because sin usually starts small, you tend not to notice it so much — and something as subtle as envy feels a long way from stealing or murder.

So often when I speak at men's events, I hear men talk about how they wish they could have a place in ministry that impacts men. The truth is, they do have that place, but they don't recognize it.

A man will often look at what he wishes he had instead of looking at what he actually has in front of him. This is Satan's way of keeping him on the bench, entertaining thoughts of getting into the game.

My grandfather fought in World War II, and he was once assigned to a unit that, in his words, "had a lot of city boys in it." He recalled a time when the men were starving because it had been days since they'd even seen any real food. Then they pushed through some timber and entered a field in the German countryside. My grandfather's heart exhaled with relief, but one of the men lamented, "When are we ever going to find some food?" My grandfather answered, "Boys, we're standing on potatoes."

Cultivate the field you're standing in right at this moment. It's the only field God has given you for now, and He wants you to work it as hard as you can. Read between the lines of Jesus' story of faithfulness, and you'll find this important truth: God won't give you larger fields to work until you plow the ground you're standing on today.


Small Things

Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows.

James 1:17


Not long ago I was on a personal retreat — planning, praying, and just spending personal time with God. I figured that if I went to Bozeman, Montana, I'd be in the mountains — literally closer to God — and thus my spiritual reception would be stronger.

I remember getting up one morning, sitting on the steps of the cabin and enjoying the view of the mountains, and praying something like this: "God, don't let me miss You in the small things today." I had no idea what that prayer was about to do to me, in me, and around me. I soon found out.

It started with the owner of River's Edge Fly Shop spending an incredible amount of time with me, showing me some of his hot spots on the local rivers. It continued as a girl at a coffee shop — who seemed to be energized by helping others, even someone buying a single cup of coffee — treated me like a true friend.

After spending some time planning and looking into my ministry work, I was on my way to get dinner at a local dive in Bozeman. It was then that I hit a time warp that has messed with my brain to this day. I had run out of gas just once, and that was in high school. Once was enough, for I learned that living on the edge of a thin tank wasn't worth the hassle. My own vehicle is a Toyota Tundra, and when its low fuel warning light comes on, I know I have about 40 miles left. That wasn't the case with the truck I'd rented. Apparently, when the gas light came on in that vehicle, it was its way of saying, "Life is about to get painful for you if you don't find a gas station in 47 seconds."

Within 10 minutes of running out of fuel, I was in a car headed to a gas station. It was driven by a husband and wife — the Reids — who treated me as if I were their grandson in need of help as they helped me get back on the road.

When I finally got to a local restaurant, I found it was going to close in about 30 minutes. My food came fairly fast, but I basically had the place to myself. Ross, one of the attendants, approached me and asked, "What kind of music do you like?"

For some reason, at that moment I chose to say, "Classic country." He immediately changed the background music to classic country, and out came Waylon over the speakers. "You didn't have to do that," I said.

"Well, why not?" he answered, and we entered into a long conversation about how rare it is to see businesses do the small things for people nowadays.

I felt the encouragement of God surrounding me so thick that I could almost breathe it in, and just then I remembered that I had asked God to keep me from missing Him in the small things that day.

I couldn't help but wonder how many days I'd had just like this one, when so many things went my way, yet I simply couldn't see it ... because I wasn't looking.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from The Man Minute by Jason Cruise. Copyright © 2015 Jason Cruise. Excerpted by permission of Barbour Publishing, Inc..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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