Courage
Edison invented the light bulb not by trial and triumph, but by
trial and error (over 1600 errors, Im told). During his life,
he didnt stop at mere failures. He made some spectacular blunders
like when he was meant to be selling newspapers and ended up
setting a train on fire. (I must look into this: Edison and I
might be related.)
Mistakes are rarely the black ogre they seem. Failure can be
a valuable asset, cleansing us of ugly pride; correcting and
directing us; barricading enticing avenues that meander away
from heavens best, or purging us of reckless independence and
pushing us deeper into the heart of God.
Out of control, however, the fire that warms can destroy. When
failure piles on top of failure, the hideous shadow of a psychological
barrier slithers across our mind. As failures mount ever higher,
we all begin to quake. Yet Edison refused to be intimidated, though
the dark mountain grew every day. With a mere three months of
formal schooling and considered to have had a learning disability,
Edison eventually became one of the most prolific inventors of
all time. In his struggle to invent a method of storing electricity
he is said to have had tens of thousands of failures. Attempt
50,000 or thereabouts worked.
We can cower in defeat like the mass of humanity, afraid of shadows,
or we can become Edisons.
The way to succeed, said Thomas J. Watson, is to double your
failure rate. Watson isnt your average crack-pot. He founded
IBM.
What often distinguishes successful people is the uncommon number
of failures they suffer. The rest of us give up before experiencing
our full quota.
If failures are rungs on the ladder to success, we reach the top
not merely by seeing failures, but by mounting them.
One rejection from a publisher would send me reeling. How many
blows could you sustain before forever abandoning the idea of
becoming a writer? Ten? Fifteen? Fifty? Would-be novelist John
Creasey received an unbroken succession of 743 rejections. Id
be throwing in the towel, the soap, the bath water, my rubber
duck, my little red tugboat, everything I could lay my hands on.
Few people would ever expose themselves to such devastating failure.
Thats why so few enjoy the renown he finally achieved. While
unsuccessful, he was forced to write deep into the night. He came
late to his paid employment so often that he was fired from twenty-seven
different jobs. Undaunted, he continued to perfect his writing,
striving to be so good that his skill could no longer be ignored.
Shy success crept near, then swept him to fame. Over sixty million
of his books have been published.
The chilly winds of rejection can ruffle our feathers or carry
us to new heights. Sag in doubt or stretch wings heavenward and
soar: the choice is ours.
It is not arid persistence that success finds irresistible, but
a dogged resolve to improve. Dont huddle in self-pity. Harness
rejections power. Let it spur you to a greater commitment, inspiring
you to new levels of excellence.
We often let God down. It is even worse if Satan persuades us
that the resulting failure is Gods fault, rather than our own.
(Proverbs 19:3) But we must not let past fizzlers paralyze us.
Although living below the best God has for us can be agonizing, the
greatest horror is when the pain subsides. We begin to feel safe in
our hole and imagine all sorts of horrors are poised to savage us should
we step into the security of Gods will. Such fears are largely Satanic
bluff, (Take comfort from Philippians 4:6-7 and 2 Timothy 1:7)
doomed never to materialize.
Nonetheless, heavens assignments arent always a piece of angel
cake. There are times when the only thing more frightening than
doing the will of God is not doing his will. We have as
Leader and Supreme Example, One who suffered immensely. (John
15:20-21; Hebrews 12:2-4; 1 Peter 2:19-21)
When people came to Jesus desiring to serve him, youd think he
would have smothered them with praise. But he knew the human heart.
His blunt response shocked would-be followers into a painful realization
of the great cost involved. (Luke 14:25-33; Matthew 10:21-22)
Sell all you have and give it to the poor. (Luke 18:22) Wild
animals will better shelter than youll have if you follow me.
(Luke 9:57-8, loose paraphrase)
To serve me, he declared, you must take up a cross. (Luke
9:23) Two thousand years later, it is easy to romanticize that
brutal statement. Carrying ones cross involves nothing less than
anguish and devastating humiliation. It is suffering inflicted
as a direct result of serving God; torment you could avoid by
compromise. Jesus wasnt looking for adherents; he was looking
for martyrs. He wanted not admirers but imitators volunteers
who could shoulder a gibbet of pain. (Matthew 20:22-3) The person
more concerned about his neck than the exaltation of God, is unworthy
of ministry. (Luke 9:23-6)
Many are called, but few rise to the challenge. Let me first
establish my business. Let me first raise my family. Let me
first ... Not surprisingly, few are chosen. (Matthew 22:14; Luke
9:59-62)
Those who shrink from hardship or danger shrivel up inside; dead,
long before their hearts stop. Dont throw your life away, enslaved
by the allure of opulence; lazing while suffering humanity floods
past your door. The easy path leads to destruction. (Matthew
7:13)
How would you like the incomparable thrill of being greeted by
the strains of native voices singing All hail the power of Jesus
name on the very spot where twenty years before you had been
driven off by a frenzy of spears aimed at your heart? Imagine
savoring the ecstasy, the satisfaction, the triumph. That was
George Grenfells reward for putting his life on the line; for
boldly defying a hostile government; for suffering bereavement
after bereavement until finally his young wife and four of his
children were buried; for serving in a place so dangerous that
three out of every four missionaries died before completing their
first term.
Count the cost, ordered Jesus, using parable after parable to
hammer the point. (Luke 14:28-33; Matthew 13:45-6) Will you pay
the price and take the risks, or become a laughing stock, melting
away when the heat is on?
The cost is exceeded only by the glory. So immense is the glory,
in fact, that the cost fades, totally eclipsed by the reward.
(2 Corinthians 4:17; Revelation 7:16,17)
Why should serving God involve humiliation, hardship, and toil?
Writing is the work of a slave! lamented C. H. Spurgeon the
man who wrote 135 books, edited 28 others and whose 3,500 sermons
were published as 75 additional books. Why must missionaries waste
years wrestling with a language that God could miraculously impart
to them? Why does uplifting music demand hours of irksome practice?
Why do church floors get dirty? Why ...? Because it frees us to
express the depth of our devotion. Moreover, its the cost that
produces the exhilaration, the fulfillment, the honor. Look at
any field of endeavor: we admire heroic achievements; people
who overcome the odds, who endure hardship and succeed where others
would have slunk away. Thats the glory of Christ-likeness. Theres
no honor in being swept along by a godless throng; no satisfaction
in fleeing at the sight of a challenge; no glory in being dominated
by fear or frozen by doubt. Limp-willed, lily-livered pretenders
turn Gods stomach. (Revelation 3:16) We either walk through the
curtain of fear or end up a broken shell of the person we could
have been. To choose the soft life is to turn our back on our
bleeding Savior and lose ourselves in Satanic deception. Its
those who sow in tears who reap in joy; (Psalm 126:6) those who
endure who win the crown. (1 Corinthians 9:24-27; James 1:12;
Revelation 2:10; 3:11) Insipid, half-hearted Christianity is
sickening to God, the world and the devil.
Thats not for you. You belong in heavens hall of fame. You were
born with the desire for it; born-again with the power for it.
You were made for daring persistence, stunning triumphs, awe-inspiring
excellence. While others wallow in the mud of mediocrity, sentenced
to eternal obscurity by their half-heartedness, youre changing
the face of the planet, bringing honor to the One who redeemed
you.
If youre crazy, they say you ought to be committed. I reckon
if youre not committed, youre crazy.
Fired by the love of God, live life to the full.
In a heart-stopping display of skill, Blondin pushed a wheel-barrow
along a tight-rope over Niagara Falls. Who believes I could carry
someone across the falls? he asked. The crowd went wild. Of course
he could. So he asked for a volunteer.
Shocked silence.
Serving God is like that. Anyone can slip into Christs embrace and
be carried to startling conquests, but when the call comes, knees
begin to quake. The weakest saint who dares follow Christ will
excel; the strongest who stays behind will be crushed.
There are many different callings, but no one is called to be
a spectator. There is a cost and a degree of involvement in being
a spectator, but higher things are expected of you.
Spectators pay at the gate. They have read their subject until
theyre self-declared experts. They clap and cheer. They view
the victory celebrations. But theres seldom sweat on their brow.
They know nothing about bruises and aching muscles. They are foreigners
to the thrill of personal achievement, the exhilaration of record-breaking
performances, the satisfaction of a job well done. Their greatest
accomplishment is to guzzle a drink in the midst of a jostling
crowd without spilling it. They are potential champions pouring
their lives away; non-achievers who love their bed more than success.
Theres a world of difference between these Walter Mittys and
players on the bench. Players kept in reserve are red hot in a
tepid world. They dont flinch at pain. They have toughened their
minds and hardened their bodies; drilled to spring into action
the instant they are needed. They are champions in the making.
The last time I flirted with danger was when I decided against
a double knot to tie my shoelace. I have a heart of gold yellow
to the core. Yet Christ died that I might rule. Yield to my old
nature and I cower; yield to my Christ-bought nature and I conquer.
Fear will come. I cant avoid it, but through Christ I need not
bow to it. Victor or victim: its my decision.
The tragedy is that we are often enslaved by forces that are meant
to be our slaves. Rather than being tyrannized by fear,
we should rise up and let it serve us. Fears duty is to impel
us to prayer. Deprived of this faithful servant we might foolishly
expose ourselves to danger without activating Gods wall of safety.
Ensure your plans are in the will of God. Then list every fearful
possibility. Pray through each point for as long as it takes to
muster the faith that God has taken control. Now you have divine
protection, the highest conceivable security. Fear has done its
work. Bid it farewell. Like a naughty puppy, fear may still tag
along, but ignore it. Reciting the fear-crushing promises of Scripture,
fix your eyes on the goal and stride toward it.
Waiting for fear to fade before advancing is like Peter waiting
for the lake to evaporate before stepping out of the boat. Faith
is the defeat of fear not usually by fears removal, but by
moving us to proceed despite fears yelps.
Where acceptable, take small steps. If the torment is intense,
the support of experienced counselors can be valuable. Be prayerful
about your choice of help, however. Unwise counselors can wound.
When the pressure is on, there are just two types of people: those
who cling to Christ and those who run away. Heavens heroes are
natural weaklings who are willing to let Christ make them supernaturally
strong.
All of heaven is on red alert when you follow Fathers orders.
Help is a prayer away. Heavens resources infinitely more than
you will ever require are available the instant you need them.
(Matthew 21:12-19; Luke 10:19; 21:12-19) As you march forward
in obedience success is certain.
Whereas we deserve nothing from God, he deserves everything from us. If Jesus suffered for us when we didnt deserve it, how can we refuse to suffer for him when he deserves the highest sacrifice?
To snuggle into the will of God is to be enveloped in the fiercely
protective love and infallible wisdom of the Omnipotent One. Outside
that warm cocoon lurk genuine reasons for fear, but inside the
Almightys perfect will, fear no matter how intense is ultimately
an illusion. The pain is transitory; the fulfillment, eternal.
Paralysis
The cost
Christs champions
Conquest
Not to be sold. © Copyright 1996-2000, Grantley Morris. May be freely copied in whole or in part provided: it is not altered; this entire paragraph is included; readers are not charged; if used in a webpage, the new page is significantly different to this one. Many more compassionate, inspiring, sometimes hilarious writings available free online at www.net-burst.com Freely you have received, freely give.
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