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There is an old
saying that says, ”Trifles make perfection but perfection
is no trifle.”
When we contemplate
this for a moment, we perceive its truth. In great works of
art, it is that added touch that makes the ordinary painting
a master- piece. In athletics, a runner may win every race
by a foot, and a foot certainly is a trifle in a run of a
mile, yet winning is no trifle. In business, management is
constantly looking for the employee who is just a little better
than the crowd. It is the trifles that make perfection.
It is sad to see
those who make a half-hearted effort. Mediocracy seems to
be the rule these days. Anything worth doing at all is still
worth doing right, yet few, when doing a job, take time to
tend to the trifles that spell the difference between a so-so
job and one of perfection.
When it comes
to things divine, we dare not give God our second best. We
read of those in Laodicea to whom Jesus said, ”I know thy
works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert
cold or hot, so then because thou art lukewarm, and neither
cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth.”
James tells us,
”For whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in
one point, he is guilty of all.”
We are to strive
for perfection, for Jesus declares, ”Be ye therefore perfect,
even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.”
Absolute perfection
is beyond our reach, but the more we strive for it, the closer
we will become. We are told that when we have done all those
things commanded, we should say ”we are unprofitable servants:
we have done that which was our duty to do.”
No one believes
in lying, cheating or stealing, yet many feel that a little
white lie is all right, while they cheat just a little on
their income tax and take small souvenirs from restaurants,
hotels and public places. These things may be just trifles,
yet whosoever shall keep the whole law and yet offend in one
point is guilty of all.
It is heartbreaking
to run a mile and lose by only a foot. The loser expended
almost as much energy as the winner, but he lacked that extra
push, that trifle that made the other man the winner.
Knowing that trifles
make perfection, let us turn it around, for the reverse is
also true. The absence of these trifles causes rejection.
A parts inspector
in a factory must reject every part that does not fall within
the allowable tolerances. The labor expended on the imperfect
part is just the same as the acceptable one and no one but
an expert could tell the difference, yet the one is rejected
and the other passes.
Some of our faults
are known only to us and the judge of all the earth. Our outward
appearance may not reveal our inward faults, but when we stand
to be judged, our Lord will know who lacked the trifles and
who will be accepted into the glorious Kingdom of God which
certainly will NOT be a trifle.
We are told that
there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth at the judgment
seat of Christ. Some will be rejected because of their flagrant
sins. Is it not possible, however, that there will be some,
who kept most of God’s commands, but did not attend to trifles?
Their neglect of trifles caused them to offend in one point,
thus causing them to become guilty of all.
Let us be wise.
We must strive for perfection. God knows the allowable tolerances,
but we don’t. Remember that trifles make perfection but perfection
is no trifle.
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