Monday, August 27, 2012

Woeful Tales of Misdirected Salesmanship

Meeting planners should demand more from their supplier partners in these tough times

Woeful Tales of Misdirected Salesmanship
Plenty of people responsible for leading sales teams and hospitality organizations tell me that their people are really working as hard as they can, doing everything possible to dig up business in these lean, recessionary times. I’m sure that they want to think that. It is only natural that they want to believe in their sales team’s efforts being up to the challenge in the murky economic doldrums we find ourselves in.

But sadly, I don’t believe that all salespeople are doing everything possible to corral the fewer clients having meetings and events these days. They can’t be, given the stories and examples that have been relayed to me within the last several months.

When Lynne Valentic, CMP, a longtime planner currently working as a conference director at Custom Management in Charlottesville, Va., tells me the major problem she sees today from salespeople “is getting them to call me back,” there is something really, really wrong. And she is only one of many planners that have made similar comments in this economy.
 Lame sales efforts--in a recession? Wait a minute! Stop the presses! Something is wrong with that picture!

The Word on the Street
But before you jump to conclusions that I might just be another cynical author, check out these woeful stories of misdirected sales efforts and judge for yourself. Suppliers, these may shock you. And planners, you probably already know that it could be oh, so much better out there in the arena.

Robin Eissinger, regional catering sales manager for Lake Tahoe, Calif.’s Harveys and Harrah’s, relays the comments a planner gave her on why she got a booking for 800 people recently.

“The planner sent an RFP to six hotels, and only three responded, with me being the first. He said that I had actually followed his RFP when responding with a proposal, but the other two were just random responses that could have gone to any event planner,” Eissinger says. “It seems many salespeople feel entitled, that they expect the business to come to them.”

Darci Motta, CMP, CITE, conference manager for the Northern California, Nevada and Utah division of AAA, was part of the Tri-Valley (Calif.) CVB’s planner panel that I facilitated recently. She told the story of how she requests replies to RFPs.

“Because I am constantly on the road with our meetings, I don’t have the time to talk on the phone or return calls while traveling,” she says. “I prefer to get them e-mailed to me so I can go back to my hotel room at one in the morning when it quiets down, and look them over on my computer. I kept telling this one aggressive salesperson via email to just send me his proposal. I had a deadline to meet. He kept saying he couldn’t send it without talking to me first. He wasn’t allowed to. We went back and forth, but he wouldn’t listen to me. So ultimately, his hotel didn’t get in the game because they refused to bend.”

At the same planner panel, Motta was teamed with Diane Niggli, regional manager for Helms Briscoe, and Jean Greendyke, senior program Manager for Cappa-Graham. As facilitator, I asked the panelists to mention what the most creative thing they have seen from hospitality salespeople recently. I was dumbstruck by their responses—or lack of them, to be more accurate.

They pushed the microphone back and forth, but no responses immediately came to mind.
Finally, one of them said, “I guess I was sent a room amenity on a site visit.” Not exactly a great commentary on salespeople applying creativity or customization to their sales efforts, is it?

Another sales team leader reports that his goal of having his salespeople reach just three prospects a day via prospecting is under fire by his team for being “too unrealistic—we’re being set up to fail,” they claimed. Three a day!? What are they doing the rest of the time?

At another CVB “sales boot camp” recently, one corporate planner introduced herself as someone who puts on 75 to 100 meetings per year to the audience of approximately 40 salespeople.

Shockingly, after the workshop adjourned, just three salespeople came up to her afterwards to say hello to her, and she already knew them. Not one new salesperson approached her and asked to expound a bit about those 75 to 100 meetings, or at least get an introduction going for future follow-up. Just over 7 percent of the audience made the effort to talk with her, as the rest put their coats on and made for the parking lot. Do they have so much business now that they don’t need to take a shot at some of those 100 meetings she plans each year?

Here’s another example: A golf resort property vice president of sales attended a golf industry trade show. The title sponsor—a resort—reportedly spent over $100,000 for those title rights, and had a large booth in the trade show and a big presence with signage, etc.

This vice president went into the title resort’s booth to check it out, and the large sales team they had brought was nowhere to be seen—smack in the middle of the exhibit hours. There was one person in the booth, sitting down in the back, texting. Even when two planners joined this vice president in the booth and began looking at the brochures on the table, this lone booth representative continued looking at his texts. Finally, he said to them (without getting up, greeting them, or doing anything else even a barely mediocre salesperson learns to do at their first show), “Let me know if you have any questions, Okay?”

Thud. Lost opportunity? You betcha. Why did the title sponsor spend the big bucks if it wasn’t going to put the right representatives in the expensive booth to actually sell? Like the vice president asked, “Where was everyone else, at lunch? It was in the middle of the show, two buyers were in the booth, and this guy just kept texting. Unbelievable!”

We have seen the enemy and it is us.
A wedding prospect located in upstate New York sent out an RFP for her wedding reception to four hotels a couple of months ago. She got one e-mail two days later, and it was a “generic response—had nothing to do with my wedding,” she offered.

It gets better—that hotel never ever followed up with her. From the other three hotels, she got one e-mail from one a week later, and after three weeks she had no follow up from them, either. The other two hotels were absent from the picture altogether. Does anyone want this lady’s business?

A director of sales lost who he thought was his top, most-reliable salesperson to another company. Due to budget cuts, he had to jump in and work that vacant salesperson’s substantial territory. In picking up the phone to prospect, he soon became horrified.

He was hearing things from “B” and “C” accounts like, “Oh, what happened to you guys? We haven’t heard from anyone with your resort in five years. We never think of you any more because we always thought you were way too overpriced for us.”

Of course, this DOS has quite competitive rates going these days.
“Obviously, I was mistaken to think that my former sales guy was doing everything he could do to turn over the rocks,” says the frustrated team leader, “when in reality, he was just picking the low-hanging fruit. It blows me away how many opportunities we’ve missed from the so-called B and C accounts by not staying in touch. We’re correcting that immediately.”

Indeed, necessity is the mother of invention.
I recently received an e-mail from a trade show that I attended back in January, thanking me for “spending time” in their booth—eight weeks later! Nothing about what we talked about (I do not remember whether I went into the booth or not. Maybe they just sent this blast e-mail to everyone registered at the show, which is common, unfortunately.), nor was there any particular item mentioned in the e-mail to inspire me to follow up with them.

“We just have to be more creative on the supplier side,” acknowledges Bill Hoffman, executive director of the North Lake Tahoe CVB. “It sounds simple, but a lot of people miss it. During our annual Un-tournament at MILO (Meeting Industry Ladies Organization), I get sales managers on the same staff  that want to play together in the same foursome, rather than be paired with possible customers whom they don’t know in another foursome. They see each other every day back in the office. I don’t get it.”
Whatever happened to divide and conquer as a sales tool?

On and On…
So, the beat goes on. There are many other examples of weak or nonexistent sales efforts by legions of planners. Our industry likes to say we should be “hunting, not farming” these days, but not all have hit the woods yet.

Let me also say that it’s not ALL bad out there, by any means. There are some truly super salespeople out there really giving it a go and using creativity to soar above the other “birds.” I’m sure their extra efforts are paying off with more business, too. Especially today, finding that nugget where others aren’t hunting enough, or at all, is particularly satisfying. Hooray for those efforts.

But the premise here is that not everyone is doing “all they can,” and boy, the planners know it.  Some salespeople want it like the “olden days” when the phones rang. In my workshops, I see all kinds of learners—some listen, absorb and readily embrace new ideas and methodologies, some give them a lighter touch, and others really think they are above learning anything new, thank you very much.

Well, planners—you have the final say on that! What lessons can both sides draw from these stories?
Face it, planners, you are time-crunched like never before. You are being scrutinized in every aspect of your meeting and event planning process. Strategic Meetings Management and ROI/outcome management is the big dog now. In some cases, you may have to continually justify your existence.

Why would you want to waste your precious time and effort (and funds) awarding your business to salespeople and organizations that don’t get it, don’t help you do your job better, don’t listen or take notes, that just aren’t that easy to do business with?

The Game Plan
Try this game plan to see how quick the idea gets around to salespeople that things need to change. Some of these may seem harsh to certain folks, but that’s the price of glory these days:
  1. If a site or venue can’t show you the courtesy of returning your inquiry, calls, or e-mails, they are out.
  2. If a site or venue cannot address your RFP to the exact specifications you asked for, can’t read it over entirely, be accurate in responding, or be on time with your deadline, they are out, too.
  3. If salespeople and their organizations cannot find ways to make it easy to do business with them, they are out. Go somewhere where they show they care and are willing to make your life a whole lot easier. Your success is important!
  4. If salespeople don’t bother to ask how you prefer to communicate as you begin the solicitation/pursuit process, and they just keep trying to do what THEY are comfortable doing, then they are likely not the consultative salesperson you’re going to need. Tell them what you expect, or how you can both give a little to make it work. Then, if they don’t listen, they are out.
  5. Oh, yeah, the listening thing. I recently asked 10 planner panelists to tell me one piece of advice they would choose to offer salespeople. Eight agreed on “Listen to me.” The other two agreed with this advice but added, “And then get back to me.” No listening skills, no business courtesy, no sale. They’re out.
  6. Salespeople should customize their entire selling approach to you. You and your organization’s needs/goals are not the same as any other planner they will encounter, so why should you be treated the same way? How many planners are sent generic fruit baskets and they don’t even eat fruit? If a salesperson can’t use their creativity and apply it by customizing their approach to YOU, then what hope do you have that your group will get special treatment, either?
It’s All About You
It’s true that salespeople have plenty of creative tools at their disposal to use on site inspections, sales calls, etc.—but do they often think to use them, or where to look for them? If I hear the trite phrase “We think outside the box here” (and it turns into delivering cookies to planner offices as a BIG idea) one more time, I think I’ll throw my fruit basket over the balcony.

Not every creative idea has to cost $10,000, either. Customized room gifts or amenities can be accomplished for a few extra dollars. Customized (and accurate) proposals cost only time. If they won’t make the extra effort to customize for you, they’re either out or down on the list.

Not all is bad. Legions of planners have their favorite salespeople, and vice versa. Our business is founded on, to a large degree, fabulous, long-term relationships between planners and their vendors/suppliers. They might think this list is a bit harsh. It is. But it’s real.

As one planner put it, “You’d think that especially in a recession these things [bad sales stories] wouldn’t happen. They should never happen anytime, but to happen in these times? I don’t get it.”
So planners, take your business to those who “get it.” The only way you as customers can truly affect change is to change your buying habits and thereby send messages loud and clear to your supply-side providers that only the deserving vendors will get your business.

Telling them to “straighten up and fly right” will make your lives easier and your events better. And right now in this economy, you are calling most of the shots.

Sales team leaders, owners, and operators: Please pay attention to these misdirected sales stories. They really happened and are happening today. They may be happening down the hall from you. And it really all can be so much better. You may want to re-evaluate whether your team is truly “doing everything they can,” as these stories bear out that that’s not always the case.

And salespeople; don’t fool yourselves. You can always do a little bit more. Put the mantra “…and then some” into your daily routine with customers. The fruits of victory over your competitors are truly yours for the taking, if you are willing to do the right things. In a sea of mediocrity, anyone who makes the extra effort to do a little more, apply a little more, work a little smarter, be courteous and creative, and hunt the tough hunt has a great chance to rise above the crowd as a shining superstar.

Friday, August 10, 2012

Doctors' woeful lack of training about nutrition dooms millions to early graves 

(NaturalNews) Proper nutrition is vital for maintaining good health and warding off illness. Nutrition can also play a pivotal role in healing illness of all kinds, including heart disease, diabetes and cancer - the three leading illnesses which cause deaths. It is thus shocking that our doctors - whom most people turn to for advice on diet and nutrition - receive little to no training on the subjects in medical schools.

Doctors' woeful lack of training about nutrition

If you "just asked your doctor" how many hours of training they received in medical school on diet and nutrition and they replied honestly, many of them would tell you "none at all." Most of the rest would say they received no more than a couple of hours training.

In the mid 1980s, a landmark report by the National Academy of Sciences highlighted the lack of adequate nutrition education in medical schools and the writers recommended a minimum of 25 hours of nutrition instruction. Two and a half decades later, a 2010 study by researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill found that the vast majority of medical schools still fail to meet the minimum recommended 25 hours of instruction.

The North Carolina researchers found only about a quarter of 100 schools surveyed offered the recommended 25 hours of instruction. In addition, four schools offered nutrition optionally, and one school offered nothing at all. Only a quarter of the schools had even a single course dedicated to nutrition.

"Nutrition is really a core component of modern medical practice," said Kelly M. Adams, the lead author and a registered dietitian who is a research associate in the department of nutrition at the university.

Marcelle Pick, OB/GYN NP, agrees: "Most medical schools fail in nutritional instruction. Doctors tend to underestimate the importance of nutrition in general. No wonder: most doctors receive a mere few hours' nutritional training in med school, and lack adequate time to keep up on the latest research. Their practice is based on disease screening, not prevention, with an emphasis on drug therapies, not nutrition."

Dr. Pick added that "Such doctors naturally think that nutritional supplements have little therapeutic value."

Solmaz Amirnazmi, MD, also agrees: "We as physicians do not receive adequate training in nutrition, healthy lifestyle choices, and disease prevention in general while in medical school or in residency."

Ray D. Strand, MD, author of "Death By Prescription," punctuated the lack of education about nutrition when he reported: "In medical school I had not received any significant instruction on the subject. I was not alone. Only approximately six percent of the graduating physicians in the United States have any training in nutrition."

Dr. Strand said that doctors are mostly taught only about the power of prescription drugs and surgery as treatment for diseases.

The role of the pharmaceutical industry and the AMA

The largest source of funding for medical schools comes from drug companies and medical schools curricula are set by the American Medical Association (AMA). Is it any surprise that doctors are taught to treat patients primarily with drugs and surgery?

Given the power of proper nutrition, doctors' inability to give informed nutrition advice surely dooms millions to early graves due to illnesses which might have been prevented or healed. It is a national health tragedy which begs to be corrected.

"Good nutrition will prevent 95 percent of all disease." - Linus Pauling, two time Nobel Laureate

"Leave your drugs in the chemist's pots if you can cure your patient with food." - Hippocrates, "the father of medicine" whom the Hippocratic Oath for doctors is named after.

 


Wednesday, July 25, 2012

A Woeful State 

Chapter 22 of the Dhammapada for Christians


The Pali title of this section is Niraya Vagga. Some translate it “hell” and others translate it “a woeful state.” Some verses can only mean an after death state, but others can certainly apply to the future in this life or in another incarnation, as well. This should be kept in mind.

Gautama BuddhaPerhaps more important is the need to face the fact that Buddha talked about hell–not in the way of Western religion, but certainly as a reality of which we should be aware. I mention this because in the West so many people think that they can hide in Buddhism from “Judeo-Christian” moral principles and the belief in heaven and hell as consequences of keeping or breaking those rules. They fool no one but themselves. Morality, heaven, and hell are facts understood by all religions, however differently their presentation or attitude regarding them may be. A true disciple of Buddha will not try to blind himself to any part of Buddha’s teaching. So here we go.

Untruth
“He who speaks untruth goes to hell, as does he who, having done something, says, ‘I didn’t do it.’ Men of ignoble behavior, they both end up the same in the next world” (Dhammapada 306)
Thanissaro Bhikkhu: “He goes to hell, the one who asserts what didn’t take place, as does the one who, having done, says, ‘I didn’t.’ Both–low-acting people–there become equal: after death, in the world beyond.”

Basically, lying in any form leads to hell or a miserable rebirth. This is the severest injunction against lying that I have found in any scripture, East or West. The yogis of India believe that speaking the truth literally strengthens and develops the subtle bodies–including that of the mind and the life force in general. Speaking untruth does the opposite, so a liar weakens both mind and body. A habitual liar is actually destroying his body and mind in this life and in future ones.

Buddha does not speak so forcefully because he “hates” lying, but out of mercy for the ignorant who do not realize the terrible effects of falsehood. This is what marks out the morality of East and West. The East enunciates moral principles to warn people and spare them suffering. The West thunders at them thinking to echo God and his anger and sure punishment of sinners. The motives are directly opposite and based on opposing concepts of both man and God. I cast my lot with the East, but again affirm that there is no way to avoid karmic retribution, whether we think we are being punished or merely experiencing the law of action and reaction. The behavior must be the same, even if for different reasons. As the song says: “There’s no hiding place down there.” Only Up There, away from it all.

Hypocrites
“Many of those dressed in the yellow robe are evil and unrestrained, and the evil end up in hell because of their evil deeds” (Dhammapada 307).

This is extremely clear, but I am afraid that many monastics in the various religions do not realize the truth of it. In Eastern Christianity they say: “Lower than a demon is a fallen monk”–but what if they had nothing to fall from to begin with? So many take up monastic life for personal advantage and material gain–it cannot be denied.

Only a few hours before coming to this verse for comment I was vividly remembering two truly unsavory Buddhist monastics–one a man and the other a woman–whom I saw at a Buddhist vegetarian restaurant. They came in, ushered by fawning groupies who began running around making sure everything was perfect for them–and as usual with that sort, just making confusion and disorder. Nevertheless, the “jewels in the lotus” were gratified to see how anxious their dupes were to serve them. The outfits of both were a combination of Buddhist monastic dress and “designer” accessories of varying degrees of pretentious uselessness. They began divesting themselves of these accretions as they stared hostilely at me and the monks I was with. I assumed they were used to being the only monastics and claiming all the attention. Fortunately, a few minutes’ scrutiny convinced them that we were just a rag-tag bunch without enough sense or savvy to be competition. So they settled back to ordering regally and quietly bullying their groupies over this and that. The groupies were in apprehensive delight at such attention.

Buddha had just such in mind when he spoke this verse. There is a spiritual Mafia, and he meant them.
“It is better to swallow a red-hot, flaming iron ball than for an unrestrained and immoral person to eat the alms food of the land” (Dhammapada 308).

One thing that has deeply impressed me about authentic Buddhist monastics is their extreme care in spending the money given to them by the laity. They never spend a mite on something not needed, and they are scrupulous custodians of material objects given to them. This noble behavior puts to shame those who are not so conscientious. Even worse, of course, are the immoral and undisciplined who by wearing the robes insult and dishonor the Buddha and the Sangha. Them I have seen, too.

Buddha shows us the severity of the karma of those hypocrites who plunder the well-meaning and pure-hearted who trust them. Certainly, the merit of those good people is as great as though they gave to the Buddha himself, but the demerit of those false monastics is colossal.

The adulterous
“The thoughtless man who consorts with another man’s wife encounters four things–accumulation of demerit, disturbed sleep, thirdly disgrace, and hell fourth.
“Accumulation of demerit, a bad rebirth and the slight pleasure of a frightened man and a frightened woman–while the authorities impose a severe penalty too. Therefore a man should not consort with another man’s wife” (Dhammapada 309, 310).

What more is to be said? An evil present begets an evil future.

Unworthy monasticism
“In the same way that a wrongly handled blade of grass will cut one’s hand, so a badly fulfilled life in religion will drag one down to hell” (Dhammapada 311).
Narada Thera: “Just as kusha grass, wrongly grasped, cuts the hand, even so the monkhood wrongly handled drags one to a woeful state.”

Having cut myself with kusha grass (it feels like the worst possible paper cut), I understand the simile. You must handle kusha grass just right–or else. Kusha grass is extremely valuable because it insulates from cold and damp. This benefits both the meditator and the sleeper. I have slept on damp ground in the Indian winter and been warm and dry because I was lying on kusha mats. But the yogi must be careful how he handles his treasure. In the same way monastic life is a great boon, a protection, and a fortress of peace if lived rightly. If not, it becomes the opposite, and the destruction of the unworthy.

Worthless behavior
“Lax behavior, broken observances and dubious chastity–these are of no great benefit” (Dhammapada 312).

Buddha was aware that many would be half-hearted in their spiritual life–not outright transgressing but always being borderline and “iffy” in all they did. Not bad people, but not good, either. Jesus, having studied the words of Buddha, perhaps had this verse in mind when he said: “I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spew thee out of my mouth” (Revelation 3:15, 16). Not an appealing prospect.

Such people are so mediocre and meaningless in their life that they do not incur the terrible karmic consequences Buddha has been warning about. Instead they muddle through this life and their future ones, just being nothing much at all.

Do worthy deeds in a worthy manner
“If it ought to be done, then do it; apply yourself to it strenuously. A lax man of religion just spreads even more dust” (Dhammapada 313).

Here Buddha goes directly to the heart of most aspirant’s problems: laxity. If we grasp how crucial it is to seek enlightenment, we should devote our entire life to it, making it the prime purpose of our whole life. Those who just mosey along the path, careful that they take no risks and incur no inconvenience, will never amount to anything. Worse, they will have created the habit of carelessness and neglect that may reach into future lives and retard their progress–or stop it altogether.

If you ever find yourself saying about any aspect of spiritual life: “That is for monks”–know that you are in danger. I have never heard those words spoken in honesty. They are a tragic denial of spiritual realities and the kind of lie that Buddha says in verse six leads to “hell.” It is as harmful to say: “I don’t need to do it” when we should, as it is to say: “I didn’t do it,” when we did. The Buddha Way is the same for all.

Avoid the bad, do the good
“A bad action is best left undone. One is punished later for a bad action. But a good deed is best done, for which one will not be punished for doing it” (Dhammapada 314).

Narada Thera: “An evil deed is better not done: a misdeed torments one hereafter. Better it is to do a good deed, after doing which one does not grieve.”
Karma is the law–pure and simple.

Guard yourself
“Guard yourself like a frontier town, guarded inside and out. Do not let a moment slip you by. Those who have missed their opportunity grieve for it when they end up in hell” (Dhammapada 315).

Harischandra Kaviratna: “As a frontier city, well-guarded within and without, so guard yourself. Do not lose a single moment, for those who let opportunity slip away do indeed grieve when they are born in the woeful state (hell).”

This is an excellent simile. A frontier town is in danger of being invaded by foreign forces. In our true nature we are Buddhas, but we have been invaded–and occupied–for so long by worldly ways and attitudes that we think to seek Buddhahood is some kind of astounding and impossible thing–that it “goes against nature” when just the opposite is true.

We must be guarded inwardly and outwardly against all that is not compatible with who we really are, which in any way dims our awareness of the upanishadic dictum: TAT TWAM ASI–“That Thou art.” Unless we are vigilant against alien invasion (and continued occupation), we render our aspirations completely useless. That is why there are so many Buddhists and so few Buddhas, so many Christians and so few Christs.

Swami Sivananda wrote a song that said: “It is difficult to get a human birth; so do your very best to realize in this birth….” Every moment–literally every waking breath–is an opportunity not to be missed if we would not live in regret later on, whether in this world or another.

Bad rebirth
“Ashamed of what is not a matter for shame, and not ashamed of what is, by holding to wrong views people go to a bad rebirth.
“Seeing danger where there is no danger, and not seeing danger where there is, by holding to wrong views people go to a bad rebirth.
“Seeing a fault in what is not a fault, and not seeing a fault in what is, by holding to wrong views people go to a bad rebirth” (Dhammapada 316-318).

Elsewhere Buddha has said that the ability to feel shame is a sign of awakening. But the feeling must be appropriate. We must know what is laudable and what is reprehensible–in the perspective of a Buddha, not a bound and ignorant samsarin. Consider how may people think that taking up spiritual life and discipline will be a danger (“you can go crazy, you know…people will think you are a kook…what if it’s all a fantasy…”), but that living in a heedless and degraded state will be safe. And how many see all kinds of faults in “organized religion” and its members, but none in worldly endeavors and associations or the deluded people whose company they cultivate and value. Turning from the medicine of immortality they frantically gulp down the poison of false identity and foolish action. They are “inclusive” and “non-judgmental”–but only in relation to evil. The good they shun and denigrate. What, then, can await them in this or any world?

Good rebirth
“Recognizing a fault as a fault, and what is not a fault as not one, by holding to right views people go to a good rebirth” (Dhammapada 319).

This is why Buddha avoided abstruse metaphysics and advocated simple, good, common sense. To know the good as good and the evil as evil is a sure path to the Good and the True.

 

Thursday, June 28, 2012

The Blessed
 and Woeful
(Luke 6:20-26 verse by verse)

If someone said he is blessed, do you think he would use the term blessed for the same reason/s Jesus did? What about the word woe? Do you know how to tell if a person is in a woeful spiritual condition, according to the Lord Jesus? Just how good is the former and how bad is the latter? Are they related to salvation? Should one greatly rejoice over being blessed and make some drastic vital changes, if woeful, to make things right before God?

Jesus spoke about those things to his disciples, telling them about the blessed and woeful. You might be very surprised by the truth. Listen carefully to what he taught:

Looking at his disciples, he said: “Blessed are you who are poor, for yours is the kingdom of God.” (Luke 6:20)

Jesus’ disciples had salvation, but were also poor. NOTE: One does not automatically get salvation because he/she is financially poor, but oftentimes because people are poor (or in great need) they will look to God for help and find his great salvation. Furthermore, some Christian people became poor after salvation due to persecution, giving away their riches to the needy, etc. If one is the Lord’s disciple, he is surely blessed, even if he is poor. Scripture says elsewhere:

Listen, my dear brothers: Has not God chosen those who are poor in the eyes of the world to be rich in faith and to inherit the kingdom he promised those who love him? (James 2:5)

The poor there refers to disciples, who are rich in faith and love God. That equals OBEDIENCE. Hence, Scripture does NOT teach one gets salvation just for being financially poor. Neither does it automatically condemn to hell those who are rich materially, because there were godly rich people (like Job, Abraham, etc.). However, the tendency is for the poor to draw near to God due to their lack and for the rich to disastrously ignore or replace their need for God with their money.

The details in James 2:5 about being rich in faith and loving God are vital. One must have a submissive faith in JESUS, if he is going to have salvation. That describes the Lord’s disciples, who first heard these revealing truths.

Blessed are you who hunger now, for you will be satisfied. Blessed are you who weep now, for you will laugh. (Luke 6:21)

Crushing hardships and lack can and do come to the godly and committed, as Scripture shows. Sorrow to the point of tears occurs to them because of their tender hearts, and their spiritual eyes are open to the many spiritual dangers and casualties around them. Godly Paul is an example of this:

I served the Lord with great humility and with tears, although I was severely tested by the plots of the Jews. You know that I have not hesitated to preach anything that would be helpful to you but have taught you publicly and from house to house. I have declared to both Jews and Greeks that they must turn to God in repentance and have faith in our Lord Jesus. And now, compelled by the Spirit, I am going to Jerusalem, not knowing what will happen to me there. I only know that in every city the Holy Spirit warns me that prison and hardships are facing me. (Acts 20:19-23)

Paul shed many tears and faced persecution continuously because he was persistently faithful to the Lord Jesus. He was blessed:

Blessed are you when men hate you, when they exclude you and insult you and reject your name as evil, because of the Son of Man. Rejoice in that day and leap for joy, because great is your reward in heaven. For that is how their fathers treated the prophets. (Luke 6:22,23)

The Lord’s disciples were poor, would be hungry and weep at times and suffer persecution, as faithful followers of the Lord Jesus. Those things will end one day and their future will drastically change for the better. Theirs is the paradise kingdom of God, where they will laugh, but for now persecution is the norm for the Christian life. It is NOT abnormal, the exception or only for godly people like the Apostle Paul! We know this because ALL Christians live godly and all who live godly will be persecuted:

In fact, everyone who wants to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted, (2 Tim 3:12)

What does persecution include? Years ago a man wrote to us and stated he thought no Christian in the USA has been persecuted for his faith. He felt that only happened elsewhere. I shared Luke 6:22,23. That passage expands the concept of persecution to include being hated, excluded, insulted and rejected as evil. Dear reader, if that doesn’t describe treatment, which has befallen you, then you are not living godly, based on 2 Tim. 3:12. You are not truly blessed.

Jesus’s teaching on persecution also includes getting a great reward in heaven. That is so important it should cause one to not only rejoice, but leap for joy. That implies the great importance of spiritual rewards. Hence, as horrible as it is to get persecuted, it yields wonderful spiritual payment for those who continue to follow Jesus!

In summary: The godly blessed in Jesus’ teaching are poor, hungry, weep and are persecuted as a faithful follower of the Lord Jesus. Such, however, will end one day for the faithful to JESUS. They alone will have a future that is drastically changed for the better. Theirs is the kingdom of God, where they will be satisfied and laugh.

But woe to you who are rich, for you have already received your comfort. (Luke 6:24)

In contrast to the godly blessed are the ungodly woeful. The rich are singled out in v. 24. As one does not automatically get salvation because he/she is financially poor, one is not automatically on the road to hell because he is rich, based on other Scriptures. So who are these rich people? They are contrasted to the [godly] poor. These woeful rich people were not like Job, Abraham, Hezekiah, etc., who were both rich and godly at the same time. Such had money, but the money didn’t have them. They didn’t serve money, trust in it for deliverance, etc. They feared and served God and he was their refuge. That, however, is not the case with the rich in Luke 6:24.

Material wealth can provide many things. That is one of its powerful allurements. Such was also conveyed by Abraham, beyond the grave, to the rich ungodly man, who died and went to fiery torment and agony:

But Abraham replied, “Son, remember that in your lifetime you received your good things, while Lazarus received bad things, but now he is comforted here and you are in agony.” (Luke 16:25)

The ungodly rich are consumed with money, the very thing which enables them to live more of a pain-free natural life. Unfortunately, Jesus is not first in their life. They are rich materially, but poor and dead spiritually! This cursed sin-ridden age is the best they will ever experience, unless they make some serious changes. They are in a woeful spiritual condition, one that should be pitied, as with all on the road to hell.

Woe to you who are well fed now, for you will go hungry. Woe to you who laugh now, for you will mourn and weep. (Luke 6:25)

The well fed and the ones who laugh in this unjust system now are just like the rich man who died and went to the tormenting fires of hades:

There was a rich man who was dressed in purple and fine linen and lived in luxury every day. At his gate was laid a beggar named Lazarus, covered with sores and longing to eat what fell from the rich man’s table. Even the dogs came and licked his sores. (Luke 16:19-21)

The ungodly eat well in the natural, but not spiritually to the vital point of putting into practice God’s word. They have no hope beyond the grave. Their life can end at any time and their money and power will not do them any good. Mourning and weeping are in their woeful eternal unchanging future:

The Son of Man will send out his angels, and they will weed out of his kingdom everything that causes sin and all who do evil. They will throw them into the fiery furnace, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth. Then the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father. He who has ears, let him hear. (Mat 13:41-43)

Hence, the evil better find peace with God while they still can. One day it will be too late.

Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for that is how their fathers treated the false prophets. (Luke 6:26)

In other words, if you are not persecuted (because of godly living) but instead all men speak well of you, then that is a sign you are in great spiritual trouble. You are woeful! The rich, unlike the poor, have many friends, who speak well of them:

The poor are shunned even by their neighbors, but the rich have many friends. (Prov 14:20)

Wealth brings many friends, but a poor man’s friend deserts him. (Prov 19:4)

Usually, the world (and the apostate church of our day) assesses a person much differently from the Lord Jesus. They think being popular and received by all equals success. Hence, being rich, well fed and happy equals a success, while being poor, hungry, weeping and persecuted means one is a failure. That is a darkened inaccurate assessment, being as wrong as possible about spiritual success! Jesus said it is the false prophets (and the ungodly rich) who are popular and praised by all. The true prophets and godly poor are persecuted!

The blessed and woeful are contrasted throughout Jesus’ teaching. Their living experiences here are opposite, as will also be their futures beyond the grave. While the godly need to continue and endure for salvation, the wicked need to repent and follow Jesus.

Friday, June 15, 2012

WOEFUL (adjective)

  The adjective WOEFUL has 2 senses:
1. affected by or full of grief or woe
2. of very poor quality or condition
  Familiarity information: WOEFUL used as an adjective is rare.

WOEFUL (adjective)

Sense 1
Meaning:
Affected by or full of grief or woe
Synonyms:
woeful; woebegone
Context example:
his sorrow...made him look...haggard and...woebegone
Similar:
sorrowful (experiencing or marked by or expressing sorrow especially that associated with irreparable loss)

Sense 2
Meaning:
Of very poor quality or condition
Synonyms:
Context examples:
deplorable housing conditions in the inner city / woeful treatment of the accused / woeful errors of judgment
Similar:
inferior (of low or inferior quality)