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J.P. Morgan once
said, ”A man always has two reasons for doing anything, a
good reason and the real reason.”
We recall the parable
that Jesus told about those who had been invited to a great
supper. He said that, ”they all with one consent began to
make excuse.” The excuse that they gave was, they thought,
the ”good reason” but not the ”real reason.” We have all been
guilty of giving the ”good reason” when it was not the ”real
reason.”
Picture this scene.
The father wants his teen-age son to attend the Sunday evening
Bible lecture but the son begins to give his father all the
reasons he cannot go. He has some homework that simply must
be done, he has to get up extra early for a special project
at school, and, besides all that, he has a headache. The father
then just happens to mention that Suzy Belle Whatshername
has just arrived in town to visit her aunt and she will be
there.
Suddenly, the young
boy’s eyes light up and he begins to think of a number of
good reasons why he really should go to the lecture. The subject
is one that particularly appeals to him, it really is important
to support the ecclesia’s preaching efforts, etc.
None of the boy’s
reasons for not going or going were the real reasons. We usually
do what we want to do and do not do what we don’t. He did
not want to attend until he learned that Suzy Belle was going
to be there and then suddenly he had a burning desire to go.
Just how many things
do we do that we do not like to do? Just how many things do
we not do that we really want to do, but we refrain, because
of our love for our Lord?
If we only please
ourselves, are we pleasing the Lord? Paul told us that, ”even
Christ pleased not himself.” We will never get into the kingdom
just going around pleasing ourselves.
For this reason,
Paul exhorted us that we ought to ”bear the infirmities of
the weak, and not to please ourselves.”
It might be a
very interesting exercise to keep a log of the things we do
that we really don’t want to do, but we do them to help ”bear
the infirmities of the weak” and also a log of the things
we really did want to do but refrained from doing because
it might offend one of these little ones.
Keep this log faithfully
for a week or two and see how many items we record. If there
are few to none at the end of our trial period, does this
tell us something?
Some people only
think of themselves. They are only concerned with their own
personal likes and dislikes, their own comforts and pleasures.
These people are not really happy, but they sure do spend
a lot of time working at it.
True happiness,
even in life, comes from forgetting ourselves and becoming
wholly and totally engrossed in service to others.
Paul’s advice to
us is, ”Let every one of us please his neighbor for his good
to edification.” His wish for us was that the ”God of patience
and consolation would grant us to be like minded one toward
another according to Christ Jesus: that we may with one mind
and one mouth glorify God, even the Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ.”
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