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October 2009 Issue
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Coiffed
by Charles Lowery
I like the story of the young man
who, eager to make it to the top, went to a well-known millionaire
businessman and asked him, what the number one reason for his
success was. The businessman answered without hesitation, "Hard
work." After a lengthy pause, the young man asked, "What
is the SECOND reason?"
Three young boys were bragging about who had the fastest father.
The first boy said, "My dad can run a mile in only five minutes."
The second boy countered, "My dad can mow the whole lawn
in only ten minutes." The third boy jumped in, "My dad's
the fastest of all. His job ends at 5 p.m. and he's always home
by 3 p.m."
Pastors talk a lot about church, family, and the spiritual
life (prayer, Bible Study, etc.), but when is the last time you
heard a sermon about work? Most people spend the majority of their
time working. It may be going to school, caring for a family,
or going to an office, but it is our job. We are designed by God
to do some type of work. Even in paradise, God had a job for Adam.
No matter what you've heard, the oldest profession is landscaping.
In creating our world, God worked for six days before He rested.
Jesus spent most of His life working at a vocation. The home of
Jesus was the home of a working man. Jesus, whether he was restoring
furniture or souls, was doing the work of God. God does not have
secular business people and spiritual church people. He has one
people. Our work is our personal mission field. Jesus spent little
time in synagogues or meeting with religious leaders. Most of
His time was spent in the marketplace or the public square.
Work, like all human experience, took on a ragged edge when
sin entered the world. Therefore, it takes a renewed mind to turn
mundane work into worship. It also takes a higher purpose to make
every day a holy day and every job a holy job. One of the most
pathetic personalities in the Bible is the proverbial sluggard
the one who avoids work by using any excuse he can concoct.
It reminds me of the robber who was brought before a judge.
The judge noticed that, in addition to stealing money, the robber
took a lot of valuable jewelry. "Yes, your honor," the
thief replied happily. "You see, my mother taught me from
childhood that money does not bring happiness." I have heard
many excuses that are just as pathetic from church members. Are
we cheating, lying, "fudging," and rationalizing that
we give our best effort doing God's business at church? Once you
label yourself a believer, those at work watch to see if you are
real. The Bible says that Daniel's fellow government workers watched
carefully to find fault with his work, only to discover that he
did more than was asked and better than was expected.
You can turn work from drudgery to delight by understanding
that God has placed you there as His representative. Most unbelievers
won't come to our churches. Therefore, they are not influenced
by our sermons or our songs. We will get their attention by living
a life that cannot be explained. It's an attitude of joy while
working for a jerk. It's not grabbing them by the collar and asking
if they're ready to meet God it's your life grabbing them
by the heart. It's their grabbing you and asking you what's the
secret to the life you live.
President Grover Cleveland dedicated the Statue of Liberty
on October 28, 1886. It is over three hundred feet high and weighs
254 metric tons. It was designed by Fredric-Auguste Bartholdi.
Oscar Hammerstein noted in his book Lyrics some information
about the Statue of Liberty that you may not know:
"A year or so ago, on the cover of the New York Herald
Tribune Sunday magazine, I saw a picture of the Statue of
Liberty ... taken from a helicopter and it showed the top of the
statue's head. I was amazed to see the detail there. The sculptor
(Bartholdi) had done a painstaking job with the lady's coiffure
(hair arrangement), and yet he must have been pretty sure that
the only eyes that would see this detail would be the uncritical
eyes of sea gulls. He could not have dreamt that any man would
ever fly over this head. He was artist enough, however, to finish
off this part of the statue with as much care as he had devoted
to her face and her arms and the torch and everything that people
can see as they sail up the bay ..." (from Illustration
for Preachers, Larson, p.74).
That's a pretty good example of a commitment to doing your
best work. Our motivation to do our best should be from a desire
to glorify the Lord. We know that He sees everything we do, not
just the parts visible to people.
Every day is the Lord's Day, and it may be a good time to start
taking what is in our mind on Sunday to work with us on Monday.
Pastors, this also may be a time for one of those paradox sermons
that Jesus was always preaching. Something like: It's time to
stop merely working at church to impact the world and start working
at work to impact the church.
Charles Lowery is a member of First Baptist
Church, Bossier City, Louisiana, founder and president of LIFE,
Inc., and is in a fulltime speaking ministry. You may contact
LIFE, Inc. at 903-881-9422 or www.charleslowery.com.
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© 2010 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
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