Life is all about decision-making. Every day. Multiple times a day. Sometimes we’re sure. Sometime we’re unsure. Some of us are quick to decide. Others of us (me included) can’t ever get enough information before we decide.
In the end, we are where we are because of decisions we’ve made. Our futures will be determined by our decisions as well.
Your decisions are about the only thing you can control in life. This means your decisions are how you control your life. Decisions are your steering wheel. Your joystick. Your keypad. Which means . . . and this is big: Your decisions determine your story.
The story of your life.
I know you want to get this right. You want to write a story worth telling. I’m convinced you can. This study provides five questions that, when asked honestly and consistently, will ensure your fingerprints on the future will be worth celebrating.
When you first meet as a group, do your best to let go of all distractions! Start by going around the room and introducing yourselves. Agree to be honest, fully engage, cheer each other on, and keep what’s said in the group confidential. You share a common desire to grow in this area . . . so lean in and let’s learn together.
You can experience a life filled with better decisions . . . and less regret.
In Better Decisions, Fewer Regrets, Andy Stanley will help you learn from experience and stop making bad decisions by integrating five questions into every decision you make, big or small.
Communicator, author, and pastor Andy Stanley founded Atlanta-based North Point Ministries in 1995. Today, NPM consists of six churches in the Atlanta area and a network of more than 90 churches around the globe that collectively serve nearly 185,000 people weekly. As host of Your Move with Andy Stanley, which delivers over seven million messages each month through television and podcasts, and author of more than 20 books, including The New Rules for Love, Sex & Dating; Ask It; How to Be Rich; Deep & Wide; and Irresistible, he is considered one of the most influential pastors in America. Andy and his wife, Sandra, have three grown children and live near Atlanta.