Guidelines For Living

Harold Sala

Discover The Link Between Sin And A Savior

July 27, 2021

 "If our greatest need had been information," read a Christmas card I received, "God would have sent us an educator. If our greatest need had been technology, God would have sent us a scientist. If our greatest need had been money, God would have sent us an economist. If our greatest need had been pleasure, God would have sent us an entertainer. But our greatest need was for forgiveness, so God sent us a Savior." 

Featured Offer

Shine
In this booklet, you will find devotional readings from each of Guidelines' daily and weekly devotionals: Reset with Bonnie Sala, Guidelines for Living with Harold Sala, and Encouraging Words with Darlene Sala. Let God's Word shine in your life every day!

Archives

There is a three-letter word that spells the difference between happiness and misery, between freedom and bondage, and between heaven and hell.  A generation or two ago, this word was commonly used in our speech, especially by the clergy.  We used this word to describe wrongdoing and human failure. Then, as some words are prone to do, it gradually began to be replaced by synonyms which were more gentle and kind.  That old three-letter word is sin, and in spite of the fact that most people prefer not to think of themselves as being tainted by this word, sin is good news!  "And how can that be?" you might be thinking.  It's simple: There is a solution to the problem of sin, an antidote which neutralizes its effect; and that is good news.
July 26, 2021
It happened frequently. The door of my office would be closed, and I'm would be quietly working or engaged in conversation with someone when suddenly the door would open, and a lean, dignified, rather tall American of German descent—then in his 90's— would come marching in, having done an "end run" around the receptionist and my assistant, much as a defensive tackle would do in breaking through the line of scrimmage in a football game. In his hand would be a magazine article or something encouraging which he wanted me to have. He stayed for only a few brief moments. Then he was gone, often reminding me of Elijah who appeared unannounced in the court of King Ahab.
July 23, 2021
Question:  What drives your life?  "I owe, I owe, so off to work I go," says the message on a car bumper sticker.  But is debt really the drive shaft of your existence?  What are the ingredients of a life worth living?  I'm not a philosopher, but when you live long enough and analyze the mistakes of people you form some opinions.  You see some live into their 90s who are bright and cheerful, and you see others, a third their age, grow bitter and cynical and begin to wither and die.  We don't always bury them, but their brains are short-circuited.  They are the living dead who exist but are living for nothing.   Theirs is the despair which Solomon talked about when he said, "I declared that the dead, who had already died, are happier than the living who are still alive" (Ecclesiastes 4:2).
July 22, 2021
"Happy?  Grouchy?  Could Be Your Genes," says the topic of a article featuring the research of psychologists at the University of Illinois.  Said Daniel Goldman, formerly from the New York Times, "Studies of happiness in several countries have found that money makes little difference to perceptions of happiness, except among the very poor.  Nor do education, marriage and a family, or any of the many other variables that researchers have sought to correlate with contentment.  Each facilitator may make a person a little happier, but it has a minor impact, compared with the individual's characteristic sense of well-being." 
July 21, 2021
How do you find God?  Now, here's a second question.  If you have a child who gets lost, what do you do?  You look for that child.  Right?  Neighbors and friends mobilize until that child is found.  But are the two issues of finding God and finding a lost child the same?
July 20, 2021
"I don't need God; I can handle things myself!"  Occasionally I am confronted with those words.  "Really?" I often say, giving me a moment to think before I respond.  Though I've never actually said it, "I've often wanted to respond: "You are a most unusual individual.  In fact, you are so rare a specimen that you should be the subject of study by the scientists of our day, and certainly, the theologians, who need to know how someone can be so secure, so confident of himself or herself, so absolute.  They need to know what makes you different from all the other creatures which fill the churches of the world, who pray to the Almighty, who christen babies and bury their dead with the hope of eternity."
July 19, 2021
It was one of those strange coincidences of life which took place near the old River Kwai in Thailand.  At this site during World War 2, the Japanese occupation army used slave labor to build a Thai-Burmese jungle railway.  Executions, starvation, cruelty, and tropical diseases resulting from a lack of sanitation and health care took the lives of more than 100,000 people--mostly Asians along with Americans, Australians, Dutch, and some 16,000 British soldiers.
July 16, 2021
About the age of 12, I discovered the author, Zane Gray, whose western books covered several feet of shelf space in the library near my home.  Long before Louis Lamour captured the hearts of western-lovers, Zane Gray was thrilling people with sagas such as The Riders of the Purple Sage and Thirty Thousand on Hoof.  Gray was an author who had a pretty good grasp of human nature and wrote about that age-old battle of good and evil.  The plots were all rather predictable--heroes and villains and a pretty girl who eventually was rescued by the handsome young hero who captured her heart before riding off into the western sunset.
July 15, 2021
Nothing is more frustrating than to wish to communicate with someone but you can't speak the same language.  It's true of marriage as well as the traveler who wishes he had learned French instead of playing sports. 
July 14, 2021
Luke, the medical doctor from Syria, the man who wrote more of the New Testament than even the Apostle Paul, gives us an interesting insight into how Jesus viewed life's interruptions.  He tells how Jesus started towards Jerusalem where the cross was looming on the horizon.  Christ knew the Scriptures.  He also knew what lay ahead.  He had told the disciples that He was going to lay down His life, freely and voluntarily. 
July 13, 2021
See More Episodes
This ministry does not have any series.
Listen to Guidelines For Living on
Amazon Echo
Learn How
Learn How

Featured Offer

Shine
In this booklet, you will find devotional readings from each of Guidelines' daily and weekly devotionals: Reset with Bonnie Sala, Guidelines for Living with Harold Sala, and Encouraging Words with Darlene Sala. Let God's Word shine in your life every day!

About Guidelines For Living

Start your day with hope, confidence, and purpose by listening to the Guidelines for Living daily devotional with Harold Sala! This 5-minute program offers insightful teaching from God’s Word and practical application for living out your faith in the day-to-day. Strengthen your relationship with Jesus by adding this short devotional to your daily routine.  Guidelines for Living is the longest running five-minute program in Christian radio!  

About Harold Sala

Speaker, author and Bible teacher, Dr. Harold Sala founded Guidelines in 1963 and pioneered the first 5-minute Christian program on radio.  Dr. Sala holds a Ph.D. in biblical text and has taught at conferences, seminars and churches the world over.  An author of over 60 books published in 19 languages, his most recent release is 40 Unstoppable Women (Rose Publishing).

 

 

Contact Guidelines For Living with Harold Sala

Mailing Address: 
26161 Marguerite Parkway, Suite F
Mission Viejo, CA 92692
Telephone:
949.582.5001