Loose That Man and Let Him Go! with Workbook , livre ebook

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Bishop T. D. Jakes offers clarity, healing, and restoration to a generation of men--both believers and nonbelievers--confused about their purpose, vision, and roles in today's complex culture. He urges men to let Jesus take hold of their limitations and bondages and to come forth into the light of all God has planned for them. Now the book and easy-to-use workbook are combined in one volume for individual study and small group discussion.
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Date de parution

01 mai 2003

EAN13

9781441213365

Langue

English

Loose That Man & Let Him Go! Copyright © 1995 T. D. Jakes
Originally published as two books: Loose That Man & Let Him Go! and Loose That Man & Let Him Go! Workbook
Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are taken from The King James Version of the Bible.
Scripture quotations identified NASB are taken from the NEW AMERICAN STANDARD BIBLE,® Copyright © The Lockman Foundation 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995. Used by permission. ( www.Lockman.org )
Scripture quotations identified TLB are from The Living Bible © 1971 owned by assignment by Illinois Regional Bank N.A. (as trustee). Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, IL 60189. All rights reserved.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
Published by Bethany House Publishers 11400 Hampshire Avenue South Bloomington, Minnesota 55438 www.bethanyhouse.com
Bethany House Publishers is a division of Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan. www.bakerpublishinggroup.com
Ebook edition created 2012
eISBN 978-1-4412-1336-5
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
Dedication
This book is dedicated to the memory of my father, Rev. Ernest L. Jakes Sr; to my brother Ernest L. Jr., whose presence in this world has made life richer and fuller for me; and especially to the destiny of my three sons, Jamar, Jermaine, and T.D. Jr., whose lives have been a burning blaze in my heart. I know that they are manuscripts yet to be written and songs waiting to be sung. To the world I say get ready for them; they are being printed at this very moment and soon to be published. They will be well worth reading.
Note to Reader
As you read this book, take time to answer the questions in the workbook beginning on page 209. They will help you get the most out of the material as you go along.
Some of the questions are looking for a personal response that only you can provide. There are not right or wrong answers for these questions.
Other questions pertain to something that was said by Bishop Jakes within the chapter. If you’re not sure what the right answer is, you can look it up in the Answer Key found on page 275.
Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Note to Reader
CHAPTER ONE When I Was a Child
CHAPTER TWO Suffer the Little Children
CHAPTER THREE Confronting the Child in You
CHAPTER FOUR When I Became a Man
CHAPTER FIVE The Party Is in Progress
CHAPTER SIX When the Yoke Isn’t Easy
CHAPTER SEVEN Marriage: Missionaries or Men?
CHAPTER EIGHT Mighty Men Still Need Rest
CHAPTER NINE You Are Still My Son!
CHAPTER TEN Surrogate Fathers
CHAPTER ELEVEN A Man’s Best Friend
CHAPTER TWELVE The Saul Syndrome
CHAPTER THIRTEEN When the Clothes They Make Don’t Fit!
CHAPTER FOURTEEN Knocked No Lower Than My Knees!
CHAPTER FIFTEEN Living Like a Loosed Man
A FINAL WORD
A SELECTION OF PRAYERS FOR MEN
WORKBOOK
ANSWER KEY
About the Author
Other Books by Author
Notes
“When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things.”
1 C ORINTHIANS 13:11
Every man, great and ordinary, famous or forgotten enters this world traumatically and begins to perceive his surroundings through the eyes of a child. It is during these tender years that he experiences the beginnings of his masculinity.
Our development as men is shaped by the things we encounter as children. Our masculinity is defined by our fathers and our relationships. Dysfunctions in our adulthood were also shaped or influenced by the presence or absence of the men who fathered us. What painful childhood memories haunted young Adolf Hitler? Who touched the life of Martin Luther King Jr. or of Abraham Lincoln? What childhood pains or dreams framed the thoughts of Malcolm X and Mahatma Gandhi?
Our father’s absence can form a sustained question in our minds, a haunting thought, Maybe it was something I did or something I lacked that caused him to leave. We learn the art of suppression early, deeply burying the painful questions and the native sensitivity that is so easily bruised. We suppress the natural creativity that springs from a probing mind as we encounter the pain of continually being told, “Shut up! I don’t have the time to listen to you.”
Our fathers are our first definition and demonstration of masculinity. Unfortunately, our fathers’ model has caused many of us to equate masculinity with absence, irresponsibility, sullen silence, or violence. All the fruits of our manhood are rooted in our childhood our self-esteem, our inner awareness of who we are, our sexuality, our preferences. They are all deeply planted in the soil of our early memories, experiences, and definitions.
God plants an infinitely curious mind within every little child and adolescent. As they grow older, many children bend to indifference and ignorance, while others surrender to scorn and punishment, and eventually most will finally succumb to a “formal education” that will quench their natural hunger for knowledge.
Young minds never stop gathering information through their senses, and they constantly process their perceptions. What do you suppose those Judean children perceived the day the young Rabbi, Jesus, rebuked the men who were pushing the small ones away from Him? What went through their minds as the children heard Him say, “Suffer the little children to come unto me, and forbid them not” (Mark 10:14)? How many lives and destinies were changed forever by His tender embrace and unconditional love that day?
Within every man dwells the little child who preceded him. Manhood is rooted in childhood, and many of the thoughts you and I have today come from our early experiences as children. You may read these words with sadness if you are one of the thousands who involuntarily recoil at the mere sight of the words Father, Daddy, Papa, or Dad. They only represent pain and loss to you.
I SPOKE AS A CHILD
My mother used to listen closely to me when I talked. Now I understand that my mother’s attention dignified my opinion. Her actions confirmed to me that I mattered. Her careful (and patient) listening enriched my thinking process with a self-esteem that caused me to believe that my thoughts were important. Regardless of whether she agreed or didn’t agree with what I said, what excited me was that she listened to me.
Jesus spoke when He was a child. According to Luke 2:46-47, He entered the temple and spent five days listening to and speaking with the leading doctors of the Law while He was barely an adolescent! The Bible says these scholars “were astonished at his understanding and answers” (Luke 2:47 TLB ). If you want to know who someone is, listen to what he says! “For of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaketh” (Luke 6:45). Jesus started perfecting the art of expression early in His life, and even the leading teachers of the day listened to Him. What a boost that must have been to His self-esteem! There is something about expressing thoughts that airs out the mind and sorts out the closets of the intellect.
My mother stimulated my creativity by listening to my expressed thoughts. Her attention gave me respect for my own opinion, a respect that still exists today. I am concerned that in the busy world of our day, the children know we are not listening to them, and the pressure is rising.
Sadly, many times our parents did not listen to us. Neither have we always listened to our children or to one another. Thus we have raised a generation of angry young men. They in turn have carried their inner anger into marriages in which they believe no one is listening to them. This consuming anger has surfaced as violence, introversion, perversion, or outright self-destruction! Their self-esteem and integrity have been destroyed because they have felt muzzled all their lives. They suffer like bound and gagged prisoners in a rigid shell of outrage and despair.
As parents, pastors, and leaders, we often seem extremely stretched ourselves, but we need to listen anyway! Men who curse and swear or even become violent are just overgrown little boys having a tantrum because they feel out of control. They are frustrated because “life isn’t listening!”
“When I was a child, I spake as a child” (1 Corinthians 13:11). We all need to be able to communicate our thoughts and express how we feel. Jesus said, “But those things which proceed out of the mouth come forth from the heart; and they defile the man” (Matthew 15:18). If there is anything worse than the rage, the frustration, and the other negative things that come out of us, it is the things that do not come out! Festering wounds are dangerous wounds. A rumbling volcano is a dangerous omen, a solemn warning of a coming eruption that could rain down destruction on everyone living in its shadow.
Many men lose their ability to communicate during childhood. As youngsters we are told what is “appropriate” to do (or is it merely convenient?). “Just sit over in the corner and be quiet!” Now, as adults, we feel the rush of unchecked adult passions, frustrations, and anger coursing through us on the inside, and we can’t speak. We can’t communicate. We’re ready to explode, but we don’t dare cry! We’re hurting too bad to laugh. The only emotion we are allowed to express is anger! (Why is anger the primary emotion attributed to the male gender?)
The raging child who takes a hammer and pounds his toy into oblivion soon becomes the grown man who runs his fist through the wall and batters his wife into an early grave. Many times this kind of rage is fueled by an inability to t

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