Omer counting day 45
Week 7: Malchut – Majesty/Dignity:
Omer counting day 45.
Beauty – Majesty (the Beauty/Harmony/Compassion side of Majesty) Gevurah – Malchut in Hebrew.
Investigate and examine the compassion of sovereignty. Being able to instruct others and lead them into the purpose of their lives, you must also have compassion along side your leadership skills.
Compassion is not compromise, but it is an ability of being able to exercise your authority in a way that attracts others to the goal or aim of your vision.
This aspect of your soul called Tiferet (beauty, harmony, compassion) and Malchut which is Majesty and dignity, allows your leadership authority to be able to beautify and purify the weaker points (the emotions of fear, insecurity and bad habits) of your team that you are leading, so that you may create an atmosphere of harmonized compassion.
This type of harmonized compassion will help the team that you are leading to realize and discover the importance of caring for each other, covering each other’s weak points by complimenting them, speaking well about them and helping them in the areas where they need help.
A well balanced and harmonized compassion will eliminate critical harsh judgments of gossip, competition, evil report, and people of the same interests coming together, for the sake of discriminating against other people of different interests in your team that you are leading.
Ask yourself:
Does my family or the people that I lead, work as a team with (harmonized strength) or do we have frequent meetings trying to solve conflicts and arguments of different sort among the people that I lead?
Exercise of the day:
Find something to do, like going out for lunch, or spending time together doing things which will increase the harmony, interest, and fellowship among the people that you lead.
To read more about this week Malchut – Majesty/Dignity;
click on the links below.
Week seven; Day 43 Day 44 Day 45 Day 46 Day 47 Day 48 Day 49
The 50th day – Pentecost or Shavuot.
By: Apostle A. Ngabo, The house of the prophets © 2005.