Thứ Hai, 25 tháng 9, 2017

Waching daily Sep 25 2017

BETHENNY FRANKEL REACTS AFTER LEARNING LUANN IS USING DIVORCE FOR POTENTIAL FINANCIAL GAIN

Bethenny Frankel was the one who broke the news to Luann de Lesseps that Thomas D'Agostino

had kissed another woman at the Regency Hotel in New York last season of The Real Housewives

of New York.

Perhaps Luann had a feeling that her future husband couldn't be trusted, as she broke

down in tears.

While Luann wasn't upset about being cheated on, she seemed angry that he could do something

so silly – and be caught.

While many of Luann's co-stars warned her about getting married to him, she decided

to go through with the wedding, as it was something she had always wanted.

After eight months of marriage, she realized that the marriage wasn't going to work and

they filed for divorce together.

Now, Frankel is learning what Luann's strategy is and it sounds like it comes down to the

dollar.

According to a new tweet, Bethenny Frankel is now revealing that she's shocked that

Luann is making a comeback son about Thomas D'Agostino.

Of course, Bethenny may have predicted that Luann would use the divorce as a storyline

to come back on The Real Housewives of New York, but she may not have guessed that it

would include a song as well.

Luann has recorded other songs that her fans can get on iTunes.

Perhaps she's trying to profit from her divorce by releasing a song that isn't working

in Thomas' favor.

— Bethenny Frankel (@Bethenny) September 22, 2017

It does seem odd that Luann would create a song about her divorce, just so she can make

some money.

Bethenny Frankel thought she was doing the right thing when she told de Lesseps about

the cheating that her own friend had discovered.

But it sounds like the cheating was something Luann knew about.

Perhaps she knew that she had to deal with it.

On The Real Housewives of New York, one of Luann's friends told her co-stars off camera

that de Lesseps would rather go through with the divorce than call off the wedding.

Perhaps she had an idea that she would be able to make money from the divorce if they

got married, he cheated, and she could call herself the victim.

This appears to be the theory of several viewers who believe everything may have been set up.

Bethenny Frankel hasn't said anything about her thoughts, but she does seem shocked that

Luann would make a song about her failed marriage.

Frankel didn't do anything to profit from her divorce.

She hasn't even revealed why she and Jason Hoppy decided to divorce.

What do you think about Bethenny Frankel's tweet?

Are you surprised that Luann would talk about Thomas in a song, where she could possibly

make thousands of dollars?

For more infomation >> BETHENNY FRANKEL REACTS AFTER LEARNING LUANN IS USING DIVORCE FOR POTENTIAL FINANCIAL GAIN - Duration: 2:56.

-------------------------------------------

Estate Planning for Different Stages of Life- Young Couples - Duration: 3:48.

Welcome again to the Melling Law YouTube Channel where we talk about different estate planning topics relevant to people living here in Utah.

Today we're continuing this video series about estate planning for different types of families in different stages of life.

Specifically, today about young, married couples, or even couples co-habiting or couples who are in serious, long-term relationships.

In 2017, we do have a lot of different types of families, and the law accounts for them in different ways. For married couples,

there are certain rights that are attached to that marriage bond, such as first priority for financial management,

if someone is incapacitated or healthcare decision-making. But if someone is cohabiting or living together or in a long-term relationship

without that marriage bond, there are still ways to make sure that that person can make those decisions for you, even though you don't have the

benefit of that state contract, and that is through the health care directive and Power of Attorney. So the health care directive

is a do-it-yourself option. We'll place a link below for these health care directives and an instructional video on how to fill them out,

but you can make sure that whoever you want, whether that's a parent or a trusted friend or a spouse or a long-term partner

whoever that may be that that person is your first choice for making health care decisions on your behalf, and you can have a backup decision maker on there as well.

And then a Power of Attorney is very similar, but for financial decision-making, so who can manage your finances

if you're unable to do so. For young married couples, another concern is often children. They'll often have children before they're assets

to worry about. So the main concern then is who is going to take care of the child, and not necessarily what's going to happen to assets.

And that is usually done through a will. However, if there are no assets to plan for in any way, so no real estate, bank accounts

under $10,000 or $20,000, then a will isn't necessarily something you'll need, but you'll definitely need something nominating

a caretaker for your minor children. That, once again, is a standard form that you can fill out nominating someone to do that

without going through the formal process of having a will done, and we will post a link to that below as well so that you can fill that out

and appoint someone to or rather nominate someone to take care of your minor children.

Finally, if there are assets for a young couple, then you will want to have some kind of will in place or something to account for distribution

of those assets. That can be something that you do yourself, but once we're talking about real estate or bank accounts

worth more than ten to twenty thousand dollars, we really want to consider getting the opinion of an estate planning attorney

at that point. And finally, life insurance as well. A lot of young couples may not have assets, but they do have life insurance. So making sure

those beneficiary designations are appropriate for your goals if your goal is to take care of the spouse first and then any children

second, that's great, but be aware that there are some problems with leaving life insurance directly to a minor child, and there are ways around that

and we will link the video where we've explained that below as well so that you can watch that. Thanks for watching. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to us at any time.

For more infomation >> Estate Planning for Different Stages of Life- Young Couples - Duration: 3:48.

-------------------------------------------

Saudi Women Allowed to Enter National Stadium for First Time - Duration: 0:52.

For more infomation >> Saudi Women Allowed to Enter National Stadium for First Time - Duration: 0:52.

-------------------------------------------

Some Raiders & Redskins Kneel for National Anthem - Duration: 4:42.

Some Raiders & Redskins Kneel for National Anthem

Week 3 featured a Sunday full of NFL protests.

All eyes were on the Oakland Raiders and Washington Redskins to see how the players would respond to the national anthem prior to the primetime matchup.

NFL Network's Ian Rapoport was one of the first to report the entire Raiders offensive line would kneel for the anthem.

The unit is the only all African-American unit in the NFL.

The offensive line was joined by the majority of Raiders players who sat on the bench during the anthem.

Derek Carr was standing and appeared to be praying during the anthem.

   .

NBC's Michele Tafoya reported the Raiders wanted to stay in the locker room for the anthem as the Steelers, Titans and Seahawks did earlier in the day.

However, they opted not to as the timing for primetime games is different, and the team would have forfeited the coin toss.

Raiders owner Mark Davis told ESPN he changed his stance on prohibiting anthem protests.

Here's what Davis told ESPN's Paul Gutierrez.

About a year ago, before our Tennessee game, I met with Derek Carr and Khalil Mack to ask their permission to have Tommie Smith light the torch for my father before the game in Mexico City.

I explained to them that I was asking their permission because I had previously told them that I would prefer that they not protest while in the Raiders uniform.

And should they have something to say, once their uniform was off, I might go up there with them.

Over the last year, though, the streets have gotten hot and there has been a lot of static in the air and recently, fuel has been added to the fire.

I can no longer ask our team to not say something while they are in a Raider uniform.

The only thing I can ask them to do is do it with class.

Do it with pride.

Not only do we have to tell people there is something wrong, we have to come up with answers.

That's the challenge in front of us as Americans and human beings.

Washington sports reporter Grant Paulsen reported Redskins owner Daniel Snyder made it a point to be on the sideline with the team during the anthem.

Kirk Cousins, Terrelle Pryor and the majority of Redskins players locked arms while standing for the anthem.

Jamison Crowder, Josh Doctson, Brian Quick, Niles Paul, Ryan Anderson and Chris Carter were among the Redskins players who knelt during the anthem.

They were surrounded by their teammates who had their hands on their shoulders.

Redskins linebacker Zach Brown was among a number of NFL players who did not take kindly to President Donald Trump's suggestion that NFL players should be fired if they kneel during the anthem.

"Trump stay in ur [sic] place…football have nothing to do wit u smh," Brown tweeted.

While these are being referred to as anthem protests, ESPN's Dan Le Batard points out the players are not protesting the national anthem, but attempting to use the anthem to point out inequality throughout the country.

For more infomation >> Some Raiders & Redskins Kneel for National Anthem - Duration: 4:42.

-------------------------------------------

Sermon: Fighting for Family - Duration: 55:22.

[Rick Beam] In the 1920s and the 1930s, boxing was the top sport in America.

And personally, I think Mr. Ross must have been a former boxer because he does this,

you know, and he's really good at it.

The heavyweight championship events were the super bowls of their time.

The heavyweight boxing champion set the top of the sports world.

He reigned supreme in both popularity and financially amongst sports figures.

He was the king of sports.

In heavyweight boxing history, James J. Braddock's life story is unique.

A famous sports writer of that time, Damon Runyon said, "In all the history of the boxing

game you find no human interest story to compare with the life narrative of James J. Braddock."

It was this same sports writer, Damon Runyon, who dubbed him "The Cinderella Man."

In 2005, Braddock's life story was chronicled in a movie by the same name, Cinderella Man.

It starred Russell Crowe and Renee Zellweger.

I've seen the movie as I'm sure that many of you in here have and I've also read the

book titled, Cinderella Man.

It's a biographical account by Jeremy Schaap.

The movie did a very good job of accurately presenting the account and on the front of

the book it says this, "James J. Braddock, Max Baer, and the Greatest Upset in Boxing

History.

At odds of ten to one, Braddock was the biggest underdog in heavyweight history."

Max Baer was the world heavyweight champion.

He was a knockout artist.

I've seen some of the film.

He was one of the hardest punchers that have ever been in the game, in the sport of boxing.

Baer and Braddock were the same height, they were six foot two.

But Baer was bigger, stronger, faster, more naturally gifted.

Their historic bout took place on June 13, 1935, at Madison Square Garden Bowl in New

York.

They don't use that anymore but at that time, that was a very supreme place to be with certain

sports.

But first, first we have to back up before their historic meeting.

We have to look at what led up to it and what made their meeting possible.

On the front of the Cinderella Man movie D.V.D. that was released is this statement on the

front of that D.V.D., "One man's extraordinary fight to save the family he loved."

In that statement, there are four words that go to the heart of the matter, "the family

he loved."

In the 1920s, everything was going great.

Remember what they were called?

They were called the roaring 20s.

Prosperity was out the wazoo.

I mean, everything was just wonderful.

And Braddock was a young light heavyweight.

The light heavyweight limit was 175 pounds.

I remember, he was 6'2" and most of the time, he weighed 170.

So he fought in that division at that time.

He was a hard puncher and had great accuracy.

He was known as the Bulldog of North Bergen.

North Bergen, New Jersey.

And like a bulldog, he was tenacious and there was no quit in him.

That carried him to the top in the light heavyweight division.

And so, on July 18, 1929, this was just a few months before the stock market crash.

July 18, 1929, he found himself fighting for the light heavyweight division championship

of the world.

Now, he went all 15 rounds with the champ but he lost.

The champ was a boxer.

Braddock was a puncher.

For those of you who don't know anything about the sport, know there is a difference.

The champ simply up pointed him, won the most rounds and retained the championship.

Now at that time, Braddock was 24 years old and he didn't know it at that time but he

had feat, he had feat as a light heavyweight and it was downhill from there in more ways

than one.

Over the next few years, he would lose more fights than he won.

And to make matters worse, the stock market would crash that fall in October 1929 and

plunged the entire nation into the great depression.

Life became a struggle, a struggle for survival, a struggle just to keep a roof over their

head, just to keep food on their table, to meet the most basic needs.

His manager, Joe Gould, got him whatever fights he could but the few that he was able to get

him during those times was barely enough to the wolf that stood at the door, to keep the

wolf at bay.

And then on September 25, 1933…

1933 in a fight in the heavyweight division, because he had now exceeded the limit and

he was fighting at about 180, he broke his right hand in three places.

He broke it in the second round and from that point on, he could not use it in the fight.

And he had never developed the strength and the skill with his left hand to be able to

do much with it.

He was known as a puncher.

He wasn't a boxer per se, he was a puncher.

And so, at that point, he was pretty well dead in the water.

There was no wind in his sails.

But he wouldn't quit.

He wouldn't quit, he still stayed in the fight.

And in the sixth round, the referee stopped the fight ruling it a no contest.

In those years with boxing being the supreme sport, no contest was bad news.

It just put a bad mark on your record.

And if you got two or three of those, the boxing commission many times would pull your

license and you couldn't box at all.

Anyway, here he was, he had a broken hand.

He had a wife with two boys to feed and take care of and it was at this time that Mae,

his wife, gave birth to their daughter, Rosemarie.

As soon as the hand had healed enough, he walked three miles every morning to the docks

to see if there is any work.

Because of even the great depression, there were ships that were always coming in.

But the crowd needing work always outnumbered the jobs.

Sometimes he would be picked for the day, sometimes he wouldn't.

When he wasn't picked, he walked another two miles to another set of docks.

He was a very familiar figure trudging along in his worn out clothes and shoes.

He also took any work he could get.

He'd shovel snow.

He'd clean out basements.

He would stock firewood.

He would work in the coal yard.

Nothing was beneath him.

On the docks, he often put in 18 hours a day when he got the work.

Because in those years, you simply work until the job was done.

There was no overtime.

And that was for $4.

And he didn't always get to keep the 4…

I mean, all of that.

One of the main and regular jobs that was involved was unloading crossties from ships

coming in from the South.

And they had to offload them off the ships and put them on railroad cars.

Now, I don't know how many of you men in here have ever picked up a crosstie, railroad crosstie.

Just the average man cannot generally pick up a crosstie, they're quite heavy.

And think about standing on a dock maybe for 18 hours unloading one right after another

and it took two of them.

One would be at one end and they worked as a team, one at the other.

And they would each take a crosstie, transport it over to the railroad car and then go back

get another.

And the way they did it, each had a hook and you've seen them.

You've got a handle, you grip the handle and, of course, it comes out and it curves, you

got this big hook that looks like Captain Hook's hook.

And so, what you would do is you take the hook and with a real quick strong uppercut

type motion, you would just slam it up under the crosstie and hook it.

Each of you to each end and you would carry it.

Well, Braddock found he couldn't do it with his right hand because the hand still wasn't

strong enough there was too much pain when he tried to do that.

So he was forced to have to use his left hand.

And in the process, he became ambidextrous.

Hour after hour taking his left hand and with a really strong powerful move, he had to do

that constantly.

And so, he became ambidextrous, he developed a strength and a skill with his left hand

that he had never had before.

And with all the walking and the dock work that he did, he was becoming more nimble and

more graceful on his feet.

The hard work was paying off.

He was growing quicker and stronger all the way around.

But financially, things still got worse.

Finally, Jim had to do something he just desperately did not want to have to do but he had no choice.

He had to go to the emergency relief administration of New Jersey for help and it was a very humbling

thing for Jim.

And later on, when things changed and things were better, he paid it all back.

But he humbled himself to do whatever it took to care for his family.

His love for them drove him.

His love for them humbled him to take care of them, to provide for them.

And then he got an unexpected break.

He was offered the opportunity to fight the number two contender in the heavyweight division.

He hadn't fought for quite some time.

And the number two contender had been a sparring partner for the current champion Primo Carnera

and had given Primo feats.

And the man that was supposed to fight him got injured so they had to find somebody to

fill the spot.

He trained for these fights.

He had no time to train.

He was offered, he said yes.

He went into the ring with no current training for it.

They offered to him mainly just to fill the spot.

Nobody expected him to win whatsoever.

And it would be on the undercard just before the main event.

The main event would be Max Baer challenging the current heavyweight champion of the world,

Primo Carnera who is somewhere around 6'6'' to 6'8", 260 whatever, big man.

Max Baer would win the championship that night.

And Braddock would win the undercard against the number two contender in the third round

by technical knockout.

That was on June 14, 1934.

Braddock was 29 years old, 29 which is getting old for the heavyweight boxing world.

But he wasn't the same boxer.

He wasn't the same boxer.

Those who had seen him box previously they were astounded at the change.

He could box.

He could move.

His left was almost as deadly as his right and his right hand had thoroughly healed.

And so, before he knew it, he found himself in the elimination lineup heading toward the

heavyweight championship bout with the new champion, Max Baer.

And so, on the night of June 13, 1935, at Madison Square Garden Bowl in New York, he

stepped into the ring with Max Baer.

He was 30 years old.

And after 15 rounds, a full 15 rounds with Baer, he had out-boxed him.

He had won more rounds and he hadn't been knocked out and he was the new World Heavyweight

Champion.

Remember the statement I mentioned on the front of the D.V.D. and the phrase that goes

to the heart of the matter, "To save the family he loved."

There's a scene in the movie where a reporter asked him, "What's changed, Jimmy?

Jimmy, what's changed?

Explain your comeback."

And Braddock says, "This time, I know what I'm fighting for."

And the reporter says, "Oh, yeah?

What's that?"

And Braddock says, "Milk."

Milk?

Milk says it all.

Braddock was fighting for family.

He was fighting to provide for them.

You know, I cannot help to think of 1 Timothy 5:8 with this account, 1 Timothy 5:8.

It says this, "But if any provide not for his own, and especially for those of his own

house, he has denied the faith and is worse than an infidel."

And who wants to be considered by God an infidel?

"But if any provide not for his own and especially for those of his own house, he has denied

the faith and is worse than an infidel."

We like titles.

We like to hang things on a title.

"Fighting for Family," that's what this is about, fighting for family.

Think about the Braddock story, the motivation to provide for them.

See in those years, there were men who walked away from their families.

There were men who said, "I'm out of here."

And they hit the road or whatever.

The motivation to provide for them and the course of action that that motivation put

him on, the docks, in particular, caused him to be in the kind of shape that he could go

back into the ring with the strength and the power and the skill needed to win.

And win he did, fighting for family, for his mate, and for his kids, fighting to take care

of them.

With the money that he got all for that fight, he and Mae bought a house in North Bergen

New Jersey.

They raised their children Jay, Howard, and Rosemarie there and they lived there the rest

of their lives.

Jim and Mae had 44 years of marriage together.

Jim served honorably in World War II and he later owned and operated heavy equipment on

the same docks that he had labored on during the great depression.

And then on November 29, 1974, a month before my wife and I started our marriage, at the

age of 69, Jim Braddock died peacefully in his sleep.

In the New York Times, Red Smith wrote this, "If death came easily, it was the only thing

in his life that did."

A pretty good statement about him, he fought for his family surrounded by the hard times

of a collapsed economy.

And his wife stood with him, they were in it together.

His wife and his family motivated him.

They motivated him.

It always came back to their love for each other and their love for their kids.

Fighting for family, when has there ever been a day or time in these 6,000 years of man's

age when there hasn't been a need to fight for family?

And especially so in our day and age now when the family unit is under major assault.

And it's only going to get worse.

The breakup of the family in our society is an epidemic.

It's an epidemic.

And divorce is running rampant.

And the Church is not untouched by it.

Never in our lifetime has marriage and the family unit been under attack like it is now,

the breakage is having a heyday.

Let me clarify and be clear about something.

This is not meant to put a guilt trip on anybody.

It's not meant to make anybody feel bad or lacking.

No one is in control of all the factors that affect them.

Marriage requires both to say "I do."

I guess we could say, "We do."

It requires both to say "I do" and make a marriage but it does not require both to

break it.

Sometimes no matter what one mate does, no matter what one mate does, that mate cannot

stop the other mate from breaking the marriage.

I'm a realist, I understand that.

I understand human nature and I understand, at least like to think I understand spirituality

and carnality.

And sometimes no matter what one mate does, that mate cannot stop the other from breaking

the marriage or doing that which breaks the marriage.

Divorce can sometimes be solely the doings of one mate.

No matter how much one mate want to keep the marriage if the other one is dead set on getting

out, dead set on breaking it, you can't stop them.

I've seen that.

You can't stop them.

Your power and your influence over your mate is limited.

But a great tragedy and shame that I have seen is where one or the other or both will

not fight for the marriage, will not fight for the family, will not fight to keep to

things together.

Some of you here are not married.

Some of you are young and not married and you look forward to the day with anticipation

to when you will be married.

And that's natural and good and God-given and that's wonderful.

And when you do marry, you don't want to lose it.

Some here are in their first marriage, you don't want to lose it.

Some here are on their second marriage, you don't want to lose it.

Some here are on their thirds or more marriage, you don't want to lose it.

And if you're on your second or third or more, apply yourself as fully as you can to make

it work.

The others are history, they're past.

What is gone is gone.

What is now is now.

Do what's within your power to make this one work.

Maximize this opportunity and whatever measure of family you have, fight for it.

Fight for its welfare.

Fight for its well-being.

Okay, how does a husband and a wife fight for their marriage?

How does a husband and wife fight for their family?

Let's pause a minute.

Picture a wedding ceremony in progress.

There stands the bride, there stands the groom before the minister.

Suddenly, there is a pause and everything just freezes stops in motion, just freezes

and a voice is heard, "We interrupt these proceedings to bring you the following special

announcement.

Right now this young blissful couple feel they can't live without each other.

Five years from now, they will feel they can't live with each other.

Right now, they think they'll die if they can't be together.

Five years from now, they'll think they'll die if they can't get away from each other.

Right now, they stand as friends forever before the minister.

Five years from now, they'll stand as adversaries before a judge."

Why?

What will go wrong?

What will be the failure?

How will it go from this picture of joy and ecstasy to a picture of misery and agony?

Where does the fighting for family begin?

I'll tell you where it begins, it starts up front with commitment.

It starts up front… up front with commitment.

See, that's where a lot of marriages are automatically setup of for failure from the beginning.

Too many are set up for failure from the beginning because the level of commitment from the beginning

that should be there, isn't.

The attitude with too many in today's society is this, "Well, if it works, it works, and

if it doesn't it doesn't, I'll just move on.

If I'm not as happy as I deserve to be then I'm out of here."

It's a very cavalier attitude towards marriage.

I overheard a conversation at Waffle House one time a number of years ago and I have

been known to frequent Waffle House but those who know me, I don't frequent it like I once

did.

And I do realize it is grease incorporated.

But I overheard a conversation between a young 21 or so, young 20s, a young waitress and

a customer.

And the customer said to this young 20 something-year-old waitress, he says, "I heard you got married?"

And she responded, "Yeah, but it's no big deal, it's just a piece of paper."

Her exact words, she was totally nonchalant about it and I thought, "Wow, that speaks

volumes with too many in today's society."

Marriage is not taken seriously enough to have the corresponding commitment that's needed.

A friend of mine has two tickets to the 2017 Super Bowl this coming next February.

Box seats plus air fares, hotel accommodations, but he didn't realize when he bought them

that this was going to be on the same day as his wedding.

So he can't go.

If you're interested and you want to go instead of him, it's at Saint Peter's Church in New

York City at 5 p.m.

Her name is Brenda.

She will be the one in the white dress.

Let me know.

Now, obviously, that's a joke but the sad thing is it's a joke that's not very far the

truth.

There is too much truth hanging too close to that.

Let me read you the basic marriage vows.

And we go through this in the marriage ceremony when we perform a wedding.

Do you, you fill in the name, faithfully promise in covenant with God in the presence of these

witnesses to take, you fill in the blank, to be your lawful wedded, you fill in the

blank, in sickness, and in health, in good times and difficult times for as long as you

both shall live.

Could we alter that just a little bit...

Could we go back and scratch through in sickness?

Could we go back and scratch through in difficult times?

I mean, I get it in health and good times, that's wonderful.

But I would like to kind of put a clarifying clause there somehow with sickness and difficult

times.

See the vows are… and you're young and you get married, for instance, just to pick the

time that most have started out.

You don't know what you're going to deal with in terms of your health, your mate's health

or the times that you're going to go through.

But if you're much of a realist at all you realize there are going to be times where

there are some difficulties.

Fighting for the family requires keeping your commitment and that's not always easy.

It can be and often is hard work.

Jimmy Braddock was committed to his family.

And it was the work on the docks that put him in the kind of shape and skill that he

was actually able to go back into the ring with good success.

And when he found himself lined up for the championship fight with Max Baer, he knew

he was outclassed.

He knew that he had to somehow manage to keep Baer from being able to get in on him with

the heavy punching.

He could take a punch, Braddock could take a punch.

He was never knocked out.

During his rise, he had 80 something fights.

He had one T.K.O. against him but it wasn't, actually, he wasn't counted out previously.

But one thing about Braddock, he was never intimidated.

No one ever intimidated him in the ring.

When he stepped in the ring... the night of the championship bout, he got there early

to the dressing room.

And you know what he did?

He went over to an area and he stretched out and he took a nap before the fight.

He was not intimidated.

But he was also a realist and he knew that he had to do his best.

I said that sometimes keeping your commitment requires very hard work.

You know what Braddock did to train for six weeks before the fight?

He and his manager picked four of the toughest, strongest, heavyweight boxers they could get.

They brought them to the training camp.

In an afternoon when it came time to do the boxing part in training, Braddock would go

in the ring, one of those men would step in with him and that man... they all knew this

is not sparring.

You don't hold back.

You give it everything you've got.

And he would fight one of them for one round then that one would step out of the ring and

the second would come in and he would fight a fresh one then he would step out then third

one until he went through all four.

And he did that every day because he knew he had to work hard as he could to have all

in his favor that he when he got in the ring with Baer.

Hard work, you know, too many marry before they have reached a level of maturity that's

needed to handle the responsibility of marriage.

Marriage and family is not all fun and games.

It does involve some hard work, doesn't it?

Maturity is required.

And, of course, where there is a commitment, you can grow on the job, we say.

You know, you're going to have a learning curve, we all do in all areas.

You take on marriage and then later take on family and there's a learning curve, and there's

no avoiding that.

But the commitment and hard work and being willing to stay with it and to mature and

to grow.

But maturity is required.

And happy, fulfilling, satisfying, successful marriage and family requires a lot of maturities

and hard work.

Responsibly keeping your commitment requires hard work but it makes a winner out of you.

Because of Braddock's willingness to work hard for his family's sake, he did grow.

He grew in strength, he grew in agility and most significantly, he developed what he had

to have to become a winner.

He developed his left hand and with the development of that skillful strong left hand, without

that, he can never have gotten back in the lineup, he could never have gone into the

championship.

And one of the things…

I've seen some of the films and I would see Max load up with right and I mean, he was

a puncher.

He would load up to come in with his right and all of a sudden, he's got a left hand

on his face.

And it holds him off, he's held at bay.

And Braddock was smart enough to keep circling to the right away from the power, not into

it.

But he had developed a strong left hook and upper cut and he was able to keep out of the

way plus block that powerhouse right of Max.

And again, Braddock was a hard puncher too.

But again, without that developed left, you never would have heard of Braddock.

The hard work gave a stimulus to growth and growth comes through hard work.

And that's something that sometimes we tend to overlook.

Hard work and no quit.

There's a Proverbs, just reference and I'll tell you what it says and you'll recognize

it, Proverbs 24:16.

Proverbs 24:16 says this, "For a just man falls seven times and rises up again."

He falls seven times and rises up again, no quit, no quit, keep going.

There was no quit in James Braddock.

Two years after he became the heavyweight champion and he held it for two years.

Two years later at age 32 when his championship was on the line with Joe Louis, the Brown

Bomber, Joe was beating him badly.

He knocked Joe down in the first round but after that, it was all Joe.

He was being beat up badly.

He was old for the heavyweight boxing division.

He was being beaten up badly enough that Braddock's manager wanted to throw in the towel.

But the Bulldog of North Bergen told him, he said, "Joe, if you do, I'll never speak

to you again in this life."

Because Braddock intended to lose the fight the way he considered honorable, being beat

but not quitting.

And in the eighth round, he was knocked semi-unconscious for a full ten minutes.

Joe Louis won the championship from him and Joe Louis said, "He is the most courageous

man that I ever faced in the ring."

For the rest of his life whenever Joe would run into him, he called him champ.

And of all the man that Joe Louis ever fought, he didn't call anybody else that but Braddock,

always called him champ.

Braddock never took the easy way out whether it was in the ring or out.

When you marry, when you start having children, when you establish a family, you have stepped

into the heavyweight division.

It's big time.

It's not light heavyweight.

That's the building block of society.

That's foundational and there is big time responsibility that goes with it.

Again, I want to read that scripture that I read a while ago, 1 Timothy 5:8, big time

responsibility that goes with it.

1 Timothy 5:8, "But if any provide not for his own and especially for those of his own

house, he has denied the faith and is worse than an infidel."

Again, that quote, "To save the family that he loved."

You could call the account a love story, but what kind of love story or in other words,

what kind of love?

You know what kind of love?

Two words express it, "sacrificial love," sacrificial love.

And sacrificial love's bosom companion is humility.

Sacrificial love's bosom companion is humility.

That's the kind of love Braddock had for his family.

And humility allowed him to truly exercise it.

They were the beneficiaries of it.

Sacrificial love and humility — if you understand sacrificial love and humility, they can't

be separated.

You cannot truly have one without having the other.

And here's a proportion that is very direct, the depth of love that you have for your mate

and for your children is measured by the sacrifice that you are willing to make for them.

That is in direct proportion.

You will not sacrifice beyond the level of love you have.

Sacrificial love and humility will cause you to contribute what's within your power.

You can't contribute what's outside your power.

But it will cause you to contribute what's within your power to the overall good and

welfare of your marriage and family.

You will put yourself out for them.

Christ has a wife in the making.

The Father has a family in the making.

Christ has sacrificed to have a wife.

The Father has sacrificed to have a family.

A family is being engendered.

In order to carry out such, they have and they are exercising sacrificial love and humility.

It's their sacrificial love and humility that makes it all possible.

Let's read the scripture in Ephesians 5:25.

Ephesians 5:25 and it starts in saying, "Husbands, love your wives," but what I really want

to focus on right here because it tells us the how, the way husbands how to love their

wives.

It gives us the standard but it also makes a point about Christ, "even as Christ also

loved the church and…"

Did what?

"Gave Himself" that sacrificial love, "gave Himself for it."

Another scripture, John 10:15, John 10:15 says, "As the Father knows me even so know

I the Father and" Christ's own words, "I lay down my life for the sheep."

That's love.

It's sacrificial love.

In a section that we're all very familiar with, Philippians 2 beginning in verse 5 and

going through verse 8.

Philippians 2 beginning in verse 5 and going through verse 8, we read this over and over,

over the years in sermons and messages and Bible studies and our own personal studies,

"Let this mind be in you…"

This mind that's being expressed here to us as men and women, husbands and wives, fathers

and mothers, mothers and fathers.

"Let this mind be in you…

Let this mind be in you which was in Christ Jesus."

And then it goes on to speak of that mind, of course, the verses preceding speak of it

too really when you look at it.

Then verse 6, "Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with

God," verse 7, "but made Himself of no reputation, and took upon Him the form of a servant, and

was made in the likeness of men.

And being found in fashion as a man," verse 8, "He humbled Himself…"

You cannot separate sacrificial love and humility.

They go hand in hand.

"…He humbled Himself and became obedient to death, even the death of the cross."

Verse 8, reading it across in King James.

Sacrificial love and humility are a strength, it is a power.

And the two most powerful beings there are, are filled with it.

And because they are, they have addressed the needs.

Because that's what sacrificial love and humility does, it addresses the needs.

And because of that sacrificial love and humility on their part, we have a future.

We desire to live forever.

We desire to have eternal life.

We desire to be happy and joyous and someday be glorious in body and mind forever, and

the kind of existence that we can only begin to imagine now.

And really, it's built into us in one sense as a need.

We need that, we want that.

And because of their sacrificial love and humility, we have a future.

And when we exercise, when they see us, the Father and the Son see us exercising sacrificial

love and humility in our marriages, in our families, and with others, God feels a special

kinship with us.

And if you read through Ephesians 5 and the middle to latter part of that chapter, you

see that woven into the fabric.

And we use just that section in our marriage ceremony.

Now, if I were to ask, it's too big a crowd to do it, I can't do it… and if you spoke,

I couldn't hear you anyway probably unless you're up on the front rows.

But the marriage instruction that's given in Ephesians 5, if I were to ask you which

verse does the marriage instruction begin, which verse begins the marriage instruction?

Maybe some of you will say verse 22 but that's not where it starts.

That's obvious but something that might not be quite as obvious as verse 21 because verse

21 is where it starts.

And verse 21 is also kind of a bridge in terms of a bridge from what has been said.

It kind of forms somewhat of a conclusion of some of the verses leading up to verse

21.

It kind of concludes them but it's not cut off from the marriage instruction because

it's the prefix or intro to the marriage instruction.

It is a bridge verse, in a sense, but it's also the intro to the marriage instruction.

Because what it says in Ephesians 5:21 is this, "Submitting yourself one to another

in the fear of God."

Husbands and wives submitting to one another.

Submitting to one another.

I know some men think, "Well, wait a minute, how do I do that?

I'm the head of the family and I'm supposed to be the head.

How do I submit to my wife?"

They have a little bit of trouble comprehending this.

I said some, not all by any means.

But there are some that don't quite get it so I'm going to be real plain with it.

Submitting yourself one to another, think about Christ, He's the head of the Church.

He submitted to the needs of the Church.

He gave himself for her and He didn't lose His headship, did He?

Submitting requires sacrificial love and humility because in part what it includes is submitting

to the needs.

That's what it's talking.

When it says submitting one to another, it's talking about submitting to the needs.

That's such a big part of the issue.

And if you submit to the needs, if you look inside, what are the needs?

And you submit to needs, that means you're putting the needs first.

Well, what does that mean then with you if you see the needs and you submit the needs,

which means you put the needs first, then you're putting yourself second?

You're putting yourself second.

Now obviously, that starts with the marital level with the mates because that's where

the family starts by way of progression over time and also includes the welfare of the

kids in due time.

He, the husband, the father, he has needs.

He has needs and they don't go away.

And she, the mother, the wife, she has needs and they don't go away.

His needs need to be addressed, her needs need to be addressed and the kids that come

along have needs.

And they don't go away, they have to be addressed.

Braddock submitted himself to the needs and he did the best he could to fill them.

Growing up, I was very fortunate, blessed to have the parents that I had and to come

from the family that I did.

And on my mother's side… and there is a number of us in here today that I'm related

to, on my mother's side, a clan, and just about all of us in the church.

I was very fortunate to have the background I did.

I was very fortunate, blessed of God to have the mother and the father that I did.

Growing up, I heard my dad say, "I'd wade mud for my boys."

He didn't have any daughters so he couldn't wade mud for his daughters because he didn't

have any.

But he had me and my twin brothers and my youngest brother who is here.

There are four of us boys.

"I'd wade mud for my boys."

And you know, it wasn't idle talk and it wasn't a figure of speech because I worked with him.

And when I got old enough to go and work him in construction, I literally saw him wade

mud in order to meet the needs and take care of us.

When I married Angela, I told her father, I said, "I'll dig ditches if I have to, to

take care of her."

I meant it and he knew I meant it.

In submitting to the needs and addressing the needs, you have to put the needs first

and yourself second.

That means you will have to sacrifice self.

You will have to subdue self.

You will have to deny self when self gets in the way of the welfare of your marriage

and family.

Sometimes, a woman marries thinking she's marrying a man only to find out she's married

a beer can.

She finds his covenant and commitment to the beer can is stronger than it is with her.

Fighting for family entails fighting yourself, your own human nature, your own carnality,

your own pride and vanity, and ego.

Like a man years ago told me, he looked me in the eye in a brief moment of humility and

he said, "My pride and my hard-headedness has destroyed my marriage."

And that brief moment of humility, they raised away very quickly.

Fighting our own pride, our own vanity, our own ego, fighting our own human weaknesses

and flaws which we all have, myself included.

These are saboteurs of our marriage and our family.

Self-centeredness is the hallmark… one of the hallmarks, let's say, of our time.

"Getting my way or else!"

That's the mantra of the day.

You will have opponents climbing to ring with you but the toughest heavyweight that will

ever step into the ring with you is already there, it's self.

I want to look at the words of the apostle Paul, 1 Corinthians 9:25.

1 Corinthians 9:25-27, "And every man that strives for the mastery…" the mastery

that controls the self-control, "…is temperate in all things.

Now they do it to obtain a corruptible crown; but we an incorruptible."

Verse 26, "I therefore so run, not as uncertainly; so fight I, not as one that beats the air."

Talking about running, talking about fighting.

"But I keep under my body, and bring it into subjection."

The biggest heavyweight that will ever be in the ring with you is yourself.

"But I keep under my body, and bring it into subjection: lest that by any means, when I

have preached to others, I myself should be a castaway."

In 2 Corinthians 10:4 which is a very encouraging verse, 2 Corinthians 10:4, "For the weapons

of our warfare are not carnal…" weapons of our warfare of the fight, "…but mighty

through God…" we can change, we can grow, we can win, "…mighty through God to the

pulling down of strong holds."

And then it gets into in one sense, one of those areas of strongholds.

Verse 5, "Casting down imaginations, and every high thing that exalts itself against the

knowledge of God," you know, the things of God, "and bringing into captivity every

thought to the obedience of Christ."

Six thousand years have sprinkled throughout them, names that we would recognize as great

conquerors whether it's Alexander the Little, I mean, Great or you know.

His name may be changed in the world tomorrow.

Let's put it that way.

But you want to know who the true champions are? Proverbs 16:32.

Proverbs 16:32, "He that is slow to anger is better than the mighty; and he that rules

his spirit than he that takes a city."

Those are the real champions.

Romans 12:1, and again this apostle Paul who wrote these words which are so fitting and

both encouraging and direct and, of course, the words there in Proverbs from David or

Solomon or maybe Hezekiah.

But in Romans 12:1, "I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that you

present your bodies a living sacrifice…"

Now how about applying that statement to our marriages?

How about applying that statement to our families?

That we present our bodies, our being, our existence, our energies, our time, a living

sacrifice in that realm because that is a realm that God has created, and it's foundational,

"…holy, acceptable to God, which is reasonable service."

And I want to... one final scripture.

I want to take a phrase from 2 Timothy 4:7, when Paul was in a sense signing off to Timothy

and telling him that he was ready to depart the scene of the living, you know, he knew

that he was going to be martyred shortly.

In that verse 7 of 2 Timothy 4, you find this little phrase, very powerful though in what

it contains.

He's come to conclusion basically of his life and he knows it and he says, "I have fought…"

what?

"A good fight."

Does something occur to us?

That's very logical and makes sense that we pick up on a certain connection and parallel.

When we fight for marriage and family, we are automatically at the same time fighting

for the Kingdom of God.

When we are growing in the things that are good for our marriage and family, we're automatically

at the same time growing in the things that are good for the Kingdom.

See, in a very true sense, you cannot separate them.

Fighting for family and fighting for the Kingdom of God go hand in hand.

Love your mate.

Love your kids.

Sacrifice for them.

Yield to the needs.

Fight for family and you'll come out a champion.

For more infomation >> Sermon: Fighting for Family - Duration: 55:22.

-------------------------------------------

Thanks to locals, help is on the way for Puerto Rico and Mexico - Duration: 2:29.

For more infomation >> Thanks to locals, help is on the way for Puerto Rico and Mexico - Duration: 2:29.

-------------------------------------------

Hope For The Homeless | Joy In Our Town - Duration: 27:41.

For more infomation >> Hope For The Homeless | Joy In Our Town - Duration: 27:41.

-------------------------------------------

2017 Go Red For Women BetterU Makeover Challenge in Springfield: Lisa's Story - Duration: 1:15.

For more infomation >> 2017 Go Red For Women BetterU Makeover Challenge in Springfield: Lisa's Story - Duration: 1:15.

-------------------------------------------

'Narcos' Cast Are Afraid For Their Lives - Duration: 1:28.

Hey everyone, for Complex News, I'm Beija Velez.

If you've already binged through "Narcos" season three and are already looking towards

season four, you may have to pump the brakes on your excitement.

According to one star cast member, lives are at risk unless the show makes working in Mexico

for season four filming safer.

Pedro Pascal, who plays DEA agent Javier Peña as one of the show's leads, has spoken out

on how the tragic shooting death of a "Narcos" location scout in Mexico has made him feel

about filming season four.

Just earlier this month, Carlos Muñoz Portal was found dead in a bullet-ridden car.

He was located in a remote area outside of Hidalgo in Central Mexico, which has one of

the country's higher violent crime rates.

Over the weekend, TMZ caught up with Pascal, who voiced his concern in the wake of his

crew member's murder.

In Pascal's mind, lives are at risk unless they make the show safer.

And if they want to actually make it happen—which implies there could be other cast and crew

members who share his grave concerns—Netflix will figure out a way.

Clearly, protection is needed.

Could they film elsewhere, or decide to beef up security around the set?

It'll be the show's call, but in any case, they'll probably need Pascal, and the rest

of the cast and crew's approval to make season four happen.

That's the news for now, but for the latest on "Narcos," subscribe to Complex on YouTube

today.

For Complex News, I'm Beija Velez.

For more infomation >> 'Narcos' Cast Are Afraid For Their Lives - Duration: 1:28.

-------------------------------------------

2 Acupressure Points for Jaw Pain in 2 Minutes - Duration: 2:27.

Hi I'm Katherine McCune, licensed acupuncturist and herbalist here at

healing with Zen. So what I'm going to show you today are two acupressure

points that you can use to help relieve tension in this jaw muscle here, which is

the masseter muscle, it's this big muscle that connects from your cheekbone down

to your mandible or your jaw bone. We are gonna take each finger and find the

angle of the mandible,

come up onto the muscle so you find this sore spot and it should be

right at the corner right in the medius part of your muscle. Push

around and find a nice sore spot there and hold it

for a minute and remember to breathe while you're doing it. Okay, so that's the

first one this is "Stomach 6", the second acupressure point I'm going to show you

is "Stomach 7". "Stomach 7" is located directly above "Stomach 6", right

below your cheek bone called the zygomatic arch, there's a divot and it's kind of

right in front of your ear, so you can find it on each side - I like to do both

sides at once, I feel like I get a better result that way.

Push for a minute and release, and again remember to breathe while you're

doing them. You can do this exercise multiple times throughout the day, first

thing in the morning when you wake up and you're feeling tension, in the middle

of your work day when you're having a stressful day and clenching your teeth,

or right before you go to bed if you find that you clench your teeth at night.

Ultimately though, the best way to treat your neck and jaw pain is to come in and

get regular acupuncture treatments to keep the Chi moving and to keep your

pain at bay. But, while you're at home in between acupuncture appointments make

sure to do your pressure points and your exercises.

Have a great day, thanks for watching!

you

For more infomation >> 2 Acupressure Points for Jaw Pain in 2 Minutes - Duration: 2:27.

-------------------------------------------

Coloring Pages | How to Draw Baby Clothes | Drawing Dress for Kids | Bbkidtv - Duration: 3:27.

Hello guys! welcome to bbkditv channel. I am create this channel for kids watching.

This video I show you how to draw and coloring baby clothes.

after you watching. please comment, like and subscribe my channel.

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét