A wealthy woman phoned the manager of a concert hall and asked, “Have
you found a diamond pendant? I think I lost it in your building last night.”
The manager replied, “No, we haven’t found it, but we will look. Please hold
the line.” During a quick search, the valuable diamond was located. When the
manager returned to the phone, however, the woman was no longer on the line.
She had hung up. She never called again, and the expensive jewelry went unclaimed.
We will fault that woman for her
impatience and lack of persistence, but we sometimes act just like that when we
pray. And in doing so we give up something much more precious than diamonds (OUR
DAILY BREAD, JULY 8, 1992).
DON’T SIT THERE. DO SOMETHING
One of life’s greatest tragedies
occurs when someone dies at 30 and is buried at 60—much like the school-teacher
who applied for a new job. Her resume indicated 20 years of experience. But
when the principal spied her old, yellow class notes, he called her former boss
for a recommendation. He offered this assessment: “She doesn’t have 20 years’
experience. She has one year’s experience 20 times.” When a person ceases to
grow, learn, dream, and progress, something inside him dies—regardless of his
age (Paul W. Powell, Building an Evangelistic Church).
A TESTED LIFE IS A PROVEN LIFE (PSALM 66)
A talented violinist was scheduled to
play before a very critical audience. Although she had a fine instrument, she
was not satisfied with the quality of its sound. She said to her father, “This
violin must yield its full resonance and vibration of tone. I’m going out to
buy some tested strings.” When her father asked what tested stings were, she
replied, “First they are put on a rack and stretched and strained to take all
the vacillation out of them. Then they are hammered and put through an acid
test. This is what enables them to produce a perfect and full tone.” When she
attached the tested strings and tuned the instrument, the music was noticeably warmer
and richer than before.
If our lives are going to produce
beautiful music for the Lord, testing is imperative. We all tend to vacillate.
Sometimes we are up; sometimes we are down. Sometimes we are hot; sometimes we
are cold. This hinders the spiritual tone God desires.
When difficulties come our way, we
want to run and hide, But God will give stability to those who have been tried.
The trials of life are intended to make us better, not bitter (Anonymous).
ENLARGE YOUR VISION
Bad will be the day for everyman . . .
when he becomes absolutely contented with the life that he is living, with the
thoughts that he is thinking, with the deeds that he is doing . . . when there
is not forever beating at the doors of his soul some great desire to do
something larger which he knows he was meant and made to do (Phillips Brooks).
THE PROPHET JEREMIAH
He was one man against an entire
nation!
He was one man with an unwanted
message!
He was one man with the God-given courage to use a
much—despised term!
LOOKING UP (PSALM 119:65-72)
Shortly
before Scottish missionary John G. Paton died, a friend said to him, “I am
sorry to see you lying on your back.” Smiling, Paton asked, “Do you know why
God puts us on our backs?” After his friend answered no, the missionary
replied, “In order that we may look up.”
When
life’s afflictions batter you like waves upon the sand, remember to look up to
God and take His outstretched hand.
When
you look out, it may be night, but when you look up, it’s always light (Our
Daily Bread).
HAVE DREAMS AND VISIONS
Napoleon declared, “men of imagination rule the world.”
Thomas
Jefferson expressed it aptly; “I like dreams of the future than I like history
of the past.” In other words, where you are going is far more important than
where you have been (Paul Powell, Building an Evangelistic Church).
HEAVEN-BOUND
“If you
read history you will find that the Christians who did most for the present
world were just those who thought most of the next. . . Aim at heaven and you
will get earth thrown in; aim at earth and you will get neither” (C. S. Lewis).