Starting Right
Starting Right is a 5 minute Day Starter to help keep you motivated, encouraged, and focused throughout your day. DannyMac is a pastor, teacher, motivational speaker, husband, and father. His years of leading and training people have given him vast experience in helping individuals to accomplish change in their lives and meet their goals. He can help you set the course for your day by offering practical advice from God's Word in a positive and fun way. There is no better way to begin your day than by Starting Right with DannyMac.
Starting Right
Noah’s Eight Lessons For Today
Start with a cup of coffee and a better compass. We take Noah’s story out of the kids’ corner and treat it like what it is: a field guide for modern life under pressure. In five sharp minutes, I walk through eight takeaways that help you act before the storm, hold steady when critics circle, and spot hope when the clouds finally break.
We begin with the hard truth about timing: meaningful change often starts before evidence shows up. Noah built while the sky was clear, and that challenges us to practice readiness in quiet seasons—preparing skills, habits, and hearts so we’re not scrambling when the rain hits. From there, we talk endurance and teamwork, because big callings can arrive late in life and still require strong hands and steady rhythms. Fitness of body, mind, and spirit becomes strategy, not vanity.
Then we face the noise. Long projects attract skeptics, and ridicule travels faster than results. I share why tuning out criticism isn’t stubbornness but focus, and how choosing the high ground—ethical clarity, disciplined habits, wise constraints—gives you a vantage point for better decisions. We also pause on rest: when you’re stressed, float a while. Recovery isn’t quitting; it’s part of obedience, the space where energy refills and vision clears. And yes, we dig into that evergreen contrast: amateurs built the ark, professionals built the Titanic. Humility, alignment, and careful listening often beat swagger and headlines.
We close with the rainbow—promise after pressure. Hope isn’t a slogan; it’s a sign you carry into the next season. If you’re standing at the edge of a hard choice or a long build, these eight lessons offer a simple map: move when called, prepare before proof, work with courage, rest on purpose, and keep your eyes open for signs of faithfulness.
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Good morning and welcome to Starting Right with Danny Mack. I'm going to be here every Monday to Friday to help you get a great five-minute start to your day. So grab your cup of coffee, sit back, relax, and let me help you start your day right. Now this is the account of Noah and his family. Noah was a righteous man, the only blameless person living on earth at that time, and he walked in close fellowship with God. That's how the story of Noah begins in Genesis chapter six. Most of us know Noah's story. We were taught it multiple times in Sunday school, and it seems a shame that his story is sort of relegated to that of children's stories of the Bible. In fact, I don't remember the last time I heard a sermon about Noah, but there are many lessons that we can learn from his life and from what he did. When God spoke to Noah to tell him to build this boat, the Ark, it really was a set of crazy instructions for Noah. He had never seen anything like it, he never knew anything like this, and yet God told him exactly how to do it. At that point, little did he know that it was going to take him seventy five years to complete the project, but he still did it. And in verse twenty two it says that so Noah did everything exactly as God had commanded him. When Noah completed his work on the ark, the animals arrived just as God had said they would, and two by two the animals loaded into the boat. Then Noah and his family got into the ark. The scripture tells us that the door on the ark was closed by the hand of God Himself, and then the rain came for forty days and for forty nights. The ark continued to float until the waters receded and then came to rest on top of Mount Ararat, where Noah worshipped God and praised him for saving him and his family. It's an amazing story. It's a fantastic story. There are some important lessons that we can learn from that story that can help us today. Simple lessons, but powerful lessons. And I'm going to give you eight of those lessons this morning. First one is this don't miss the boat. When God speaks to you and tells you that you need to do something, uh you don't know how important that is. What he is asking you to do may be a lifesaver for yourself or for someone else. And we need to make sure that we are doing what God asks us to do. Secondly, we need to obey what God tells us even when we can't see the need for it right now. When Noah started building the Ark, it wasn't raining yet, but the rain was coming, and Noah had to be prepared for it when it arrived. Number three is we need to stay fit. You know, when you're sixty years old, someone may ask you to do something really big. And here's Noah at sixty with his sons building this enormous ship. We need to make sure that we keep ourselves ready and able to do whatever God asks of us. We don't want to miss out simply because we are not prepared to do what God asks us to do. Fourthly, we must never listen to our critics. Just get on with a job that needs to be done. There will always be critics. There will always be those that will make fun of you, there will always be those that diss you or cut you down. Just do what God's called you to do. five, build your future on the high ground. Remember that the Ark settled on the top of Mount Ararat, and from there Noah could look out and he could see the vastness of the world beneath him and see the fulfillment of God's promise of the newness that was to come. At times we're going through the valleys, and in those valleys we can't see what's ahead. We have to struggle through the valleys, but then we get to the place where we're on the mountaintop. And on the mountaintop there is a refreshing, and it gives us the strength to go forward. Number six, when you get stressed, float a while. Never forget that Jesus said that when we come to Him, He will give us rest. And there are times that we need to float and be refreshed in the presence of Jesus so that we can be rested up and refreshed, and then be able to go on and do what we are supposed to do. Number seven, remember that the Ark was built by amateurs and the Titanic was built by professionals. You don't have to be a professional to do what God has called you to do. You just have to do it God's way. The Titanic, when it was built, was declared the safest ship to ever sail the seas. In fact, they said that God Himself could not sink the Titanic. And there are those who believe that is why it struck the iceberg because they tempted God. Yet the ark survived the flood of the earth. And finally, number eight, no matter what the storm, when you're with God, there's always a rainbow waiting. At the end of the story of Noah, he worshipped God and he looked into the sky, and God placed the rainbow in the sky as a sign of God's promise to mankind that he would never allow this to happen again. That's the true meaning of the rainbow. The rainbow is God's sign to us. That's the meaning of the rainbow. There are some lessons for you today from Noah and his story. Be blessed, my friends. We'll talk again tomorrow. Thank you for listening today. And I invite you to join me Monday to Friday right here on Starting Right with Danny Mack.