Into Thy Word![]() |
Print | Back |
The Character of Diligence For the week of January 6, 2003 Into Thy Word - The Character of Diligence Is the Character of Diligence working in you? Here is how you can find out. Take a careful look at this character and fruit of Diligence from Gods most precious Word by examining the passages below. Now ask yourself:
Diligence allows us to operate with our best for His highest with excitement and passion in order to complete our work and call from the Lord. It is practical obedience in action, which is the loving of our call and the pursuing of our work so we are doing our best for His glory. Diligence also helps facilitate us to develop a good attitude as well as confidence, patience, forgiveness, values, loyalty, integrity, and be in a place to build and develop a positive and attractive disposition to those with whom we work (Proverbs 10:4; Ecclesiastes 10: 10; Luke 16:10-12; Romans 12:11; Colossians 3:23). Carelessness, neglect, and laziness are the opposites. When we stay in a rut or in a bad situation with continual weariness and fatigue, we will lose our primary focus, be ineffective, become a stumbling block to others, burn out, or go into a depression. We will miss out on other options and opportunities, start to disintegrate into a person with a bad attitude, and even become ill! Physical and emotional fatigue have bad attitude at their root, which can turn into spiritual fatigue. Thus, frustration, stress, worry, anger, guilt, indecision, unrealistic expectations, resentment, and many other negative emotions will accumulate and then compile upon us to bring us down in our personal relationships, relationships with family, and our relationship to God. We, therefore, will not be able to function as He called us, nor will we be able to worship Him effectively. · Here are positive examples from Scripture (Prov. 6:6-11; 31:10-31; Ruth 2:1-13; Mark 13:32-36; Acts 9:36-39) · Here are negative examples from Scripture (Prov. 24:30-34; 26:13-16; Matt. 25:1-13; Mark 14:32-42) Further Questions
Initiative takes the lead and diligence keeps up the pace. These two characters converge to form industriousness, which is the principle work ethic of the Puritans that challenged America in the direction to make it the greatest and most successful county in history. Other counties have far more resources and better climate, but they bowed to forms of government that oppressed the people instead of creating industrious activates to inspire growth and development. Diligence is the essential ingredient to being an entrepreneur and success from business, to sports, to building a church. It is the number one key essential source of greatness. No great person in history lacked this character. The dark side is that over-industriousness can also fuel pride, even to the point of promoting megalomania personalities such as Hitler and Stalin. A Christian will also be disciplined in the faith and have the other characters in place to safeguard against such tendencies. When we see work as drudgery and demeaning, something not worthy of our time, we will fail our Lord and miss out on many opportunities. There is no work too small, as our Lord worked as a tradesman, a carpenter. Paul made tents, Luke was a doctor, Philemon was a slave owner who saw diligence to free a slave. They, and all, did it with supreme excellence. The authentic Christian should not wait to get to the practice of their talents in service for God as well as others, even if it is cleaning toilets. We all should strive to find what we are good at and then do it. We are to make ourselves better in our employment and service to God. We should always seek to be better through reading, seminars, schooling, listening, training, and study. Whatever task we do, even if it is way outside our gifts and talents, we must do it, and be our best-- period! And, when we have the attitude that our life depends on it, well it does. At least our livelihood and how we are with others determine that we will most likely succeed. The true disciple will endure to the end (Matt. 24:14)! A champion athlete will work with controlled frenzy (John Wooden, UCLA basketball coach, considered the greatest coach ever). Great character is developed in the Crucible (Rom 5:1f). In Gods plan, He has a reason for our dry lands--the times of our waiting and confusion, and for our loss and pain in life for the Crucible (what Christ did on the cross on our behalf). We gain persistence and proven character from this! © 2003 R. J. Krejcir Into Thy Word Ministries www.intothyword.com |
|
|
|