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There is an old
adage in the printing business that says ”The quality of your
proofreading will be appreciated long after your speed has
been forgotten.”
Many a parent has
tried to instill in their children the principle that ”a task
worth doing, is worth doing right.” In spite of this, many
people go through life doing many things poorly and never
really doing anything to the best of their ability.
Paul told the Philippians,
”This one thing I do.” Solomon told us that ”whatsoever thy
hand findeth to do, do it with thy might.”
If we are proofreading
a page of type, then we should proofread it to the very best
of our ability. There never was a typesetter who could set
type without making a mistake. Solomon said, ”there is no
man that sinneth not.” The purpose of a proofreader is to
find the mistakes before going to press so that the finished
product will be correct. The sins we commit need to be recognized
and forgiveness sought before the judge of all the earth calls
us to give an account of our stewardship. Are we in such a
hurry that we pay no attention to details? This is a common
mistake of those who are trying to cover up rather than correct
their errors. Do we think that by our much hurrying and scurrying
around we may be able to ignore the fact that we have corrections
that need to be made? Do we think they will go unnoticed?
We need to remember
r that we cannot skim over a page of type because the eye
will play tricks on us when we hurry and it sees what it wants
to see. The mistakes we miss will be there for all time. By
slowing down and taking time to read carefully, we will pick
up the difference between immortality and immorality. In life,
we also need to pay attention to the little details of our
lives because haste can often make waste and a job poorly
done might just as well not have been started at all.
The person who
lies a little because he feels there’s no time to stop and
explain the whole truth, the one who cheats just a little
bit because it was the fastest and easiest way to get the
job done, the one who takes something without paying for it
because the line was too long (and besides, they make plenty
of money off of us anyway) are all examples of justifying
sin in our own minds.
Let us stop and
take stock of our lives to make sure that we are not hurrying
so fast that we are failing to do what is right. Do we have
the good sense to do what ought tn be done when it ought to
be done whether we want to do it then or not? God does not
ask us to do more than we can do, but He does ask us to do
all that we can to the best of our ability.
Our life is being
proofread By one who knows our downsitting and our uprising,
who understands our thoughts afar off, and ”there is not a
word in our tongue, but lo. the Lord knoweth it altogether.”
He is not in such a hurry as to overlook our little indiscretions
and we must all stand before the judgement seat of Christ;
that everyone may receive the things done in his body according
to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad.”
Let us heed the
old adage of the printing business that ”the quality of our
proofreading will b appreciated long after our speed has been
forgotten” and apply it to our lives that it may help us to
remember that the quality of what we do for the Lord Jesus
Christ will be remembered long after our speed has been forgotten.
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