Leadership Thought: Have You Ever Been Infected with Destination Disease?
Dear Friends,
I hope none of you ever contracts 'destination disease.' It is particularly
prevalent among believers. You know you have it when you start coasting through
your spiritual life. Your quest for learning and growing slows its pace or
worse yet, even stops. Someone describes the symptoms this way: “If you’re
green, you’re growing; if you’re ripe, you rot.” Not a good way to end
your spiritual life.
William Barkley, in one of his commentaries writes, “We should
count it a wasted day when we do not learn something new and when we have not
penetrated more deeply into the wisdom and the grace of God.”
Paul recognized the dangers of stagnation sickness that infects us
when we miss opportunities for personal growth and development and possess
little or no desire to improve and become what we could be.
One writer says when this happens, “We may begin to feel regret,
and if we go long enough without growing, we begin to feel like we have had an
unused life. And that is not unlike an early death.”
Paul writes these words to Timothy in 1 Timothy 4:15-16: “Be
diligent in these matters; Give yourself wholly to them, so that everyone may
see your progress. Watch your life and doctrine closely, persevere in them
because if you do, (you) will save both yourself and your hearers.”
Another translation expresses it this way: “Take pains with these
things, be absorbed in them, so that your progress may be evident to all."
Believer, do you have a spiritual growth plan designed to keep you
growing, and if not, why not? Maybe today would be a good day to do a little
spiritual ‘self-care.’ You might begin by assessing your bible study and
devotional life and evaluate the condition of your prayer time and your service
to others. If there are some changes needed, why not develop your own
spiritual growth plan?
It has been said that there is only one place where a believer
must never stay; he must never “stay put."
Thinking we have arrived spiritually, and that all there is left
for us to do is to go through our own religious motions, while waiting
for the rapture to take us home, is one sure way to die an early death, for
death always begins where growth ends.
Yours in faith,
Tom
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