Dear Friends,
The other day I listened to a podcast where the speaker used the
word “grit” in describing a key quality of successful people. I thought to
myself that is a great word. It’s a core strength of leaders, and it often
determines whether you will fail or succeed in life.
Angela Duckworth, a leading expert on grit, says that “Grit is
passion and sustained persistence applied toward long term achievement, with no
particular concern for rewards or recognition along the way. It combines
resilience, ambition and self-control in the pursuit of goals that take months,
years and even decades.”
If you possess grit, you are the kind of person who has tenacity,
and determination (nothing will keep you from achieving your goals). Grit will
help you get up no matter how many times you get knocked down. Grit will
overcome a lot of deficiencies in your life. You won’t always be the smartest
and most gifted person in the world, but if you have grit, the chances are you
will be successful for grittiness will almost always overcome giftedness.
You may possess exceptional talent, gifts and ability, but without
grit, others less talented and with less ability will pass you by. I used to
tell my son as he was growing up that “slow and steady wins the race." You
may not be the first one out of the starting blocks, but life is not a sprint,
but a marathon, and if you possess grit, you’ll eventually outdistance the
seemingly more gifted in the race.
If you have grit, it means you will work a little harder, last a
little longer, fight a little tougher, and in the end your grit will win over
other’s giftedness. I would rather have a lot of grit with fewer gifts than a
lot of gifts with little grit.
One has no farther to look than the Apostle Paul to find an
example of one who possessed grit, and I believe it was this quality that made
him the spiritual giant he was. He was steadfast, a great synonym for grit. He
never quit or gave up. He never backed down no matter the challenge, and even
when death stared him in the eye, death always blinked first. He writes to us,
“My dear brothers, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves
fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor in the Lord is
not in vain” (1 Corinthians 15: 58).
In relating challenges believers would face in the last days when
they would come face to face the dangers of spiritual compromise, he exhorts
his disciples “To stand firm and you will gain life.
Call it determination, endurance, steadfastness, or grit, we need
this quality in our professional and spiritual lives. Like the banking
commercial says, “Don’t leave home without
Yours in faith and friendship,
Tom
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