MY PART ? (1 of 3) – – – “HURRY UP AND WAIT”

Many people and situations in life tell us to “hurry up.”

But “the race is not always to the swift.”

And what might we miss while we are hurrying?

And just what’s with the “up” part?

Get up the ladder—get it done—and then what?

Often, after we hurry up, we have to wait.

Many people in a hurry can’t wait, so . . .

. . . so they hurry to the next rush, and miss more .

And, they miss more of the more important.

The most important things in life take time.

The most important things in life can’t be done in a hurry.

The most important things in life require undivided attention.

The first step in overcoming “the tyranny of the urgent” is to choose some urgent thing that is not going to get done, while choosing some valuable thing to do instead.

 

God.

Family.

Love.

Faith.

Serving.

And,

Waiting.

 

God—“Pray without ceasing (no rush)?”

Family—Sacrifice yourself, and give.

Love—Spelled “Time.”

Faith—“Trust in the Lord, and wait patiently for Him.”

Service—“He humbled Himself, and became the Servant of all.”

Waiting—Doing nothing.  “Stand still, and see God save the day.”

 

So the more Biblical mandate would be:

Instead of “Hurry up and wait,”

Wait first, on God, and then you will have plenty of time to do something that counts—something that He counts.

HURRY UP IS AN OXYMORON

Oh well, it works for me, lately.

THANKFUL FOR SLOW ?

Perspective changes over the years.

Here is my paraphrase tribute to “Hee Haw:”

“If it weren’t for slow speed, I’d have no speed at all.”

I guess that’s worth something, because people laugh heartily when I share it.

END TIMES, SIMPLIFIED

“He’s coming—I’m going” —–Ed Vitagliano (American Family Radio, afr.net)

Me too!

“DOCTRINES OF DEVILS” ?

Two Bible verses:

“A bishop [pastor, priest, church leader] must be blameless, the husband of one wife, vigilant, sober, of good behavior . . . ”

“. . . some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils, . . . forbidding to marry.”

No wonder we see the consequences.

FROM “HOMEY DADDY” TO “HOME BODY”

When my children were little and eagerly begged me to pick them up when I came home, they would repeat, “Hold me, Daddy,” which actually sounded like, “Ho’ me, Daddy.”

Now, many decades later, I am very close to my wonderful border collie dog, Buddy.

When I come home, and he is eagerly waiting for me at the gate, I hug him dearly and say, “I’m home, Buddy.”

And so, that is how I’ve come from being a “HOMEY DADDY” to a “HOME BODY.”

I still love being home—I am blessed.

TEN COMMANDMENTS—POSTED? OR FORBIDDEN?

I heard today that the Ten Commandments are posted for visitors to see at Auschwitz.

Over four decades ago the U.S. Supreme Court declared the Ten Commandments forbidden in American public schools, because “. . . children might see them and read them and obey them [do what they say].”

I hesitate to comment, because the effects in history and the present are so obvious.

Why are we so bent on repeating the evil, when we have such a time-tested blueprint for the good?

“GIVE ME YOUR TIRED, YOUR POOR . . .”

The Statue of Liberty inscription invites those “yearning to breathe free,” looking for a better life, to the land of opportunity—America.

“Our Statue of Liberty does not say, ‘Give me your moochers.'”—–James Dobson