Daily Excellence: Excellence Part 4

Excellence begins with the little things. Booker T. Washington once said, “Excellence is to do a common thing in an uncommon way.”

Tom Peters, in his book A Passion For Excellence notes that in business excellence is decided

by the way a secretary answers the phone, by the way the clerk handles your package, by the way some people — who may seem unimportant in the whole scheme of the company — treat you as a customer. The author keeps implying all through the book that it is excellence in small things, in the minor details, that makes a picture of excellence for the whole company.

If you are diligent with the way you spend your minutes at work, your supervisor will more than likely trust you with more and greater responsibility. If you are honest with your pennies, nickels and dimes, you will never steal fives, tens and twenties. If you are too honest to cheat on a math exam, you are no doubt too honest to cheat the government out of it’s taxes.

This is oh so true for a church as well. How are the children treated? Are the grounds kept up? Do we keep the trash emptied? Are phone calls diligently returned? Excellence is realized inch by inch!

Is it any wonder that the Bible speaks of God’s concern for:

one little lamb?

one lost coin?

one fallen sparrow?

the dot above the letter “i” and the crossbar in the letter “t”? The little things; the things that others might miss or ignore.

Without attention given to the little things, the big things eventually cease to matter.

This has been Pastor Michael Jackson of Janesville’s New Life Assembly of God with today’s LIFELINE!

- New Life Assembly of God church in Janesville, WI

Daily Devotional: Excellence Part 3

“How long did John Smith work for you?” a former employer was asked.  “About four hours” was the quick reply. “Why he told me that he had been there for some time.” “Oh yes”, answered the gentleman, “he was here for two years but you didn’t ask that, you asked how long did he work.”

Someone else observed that many people quit looking for work as soon as they find a job. This is true. On the other hand, some people would do anything to be able to do nothing.

One of my favorite examples of sheer laziness is contained in the story of an old mountaineer and his wife who were sitting in front of the fireplace one evening just whiling away the time. After a long silence, the wife said: “Jed, I think it’s raining. Get up and to outside and see.” The old mountaineer continued to gaze into the fire for a second, sighed, then said, “Aw, Ma, why don’t we just call in the dog and see if he’s wet.”

Excellence requires hard work. The lazy need not apply.

Genesis 1:31 states, God saw all that he had made, and it was very good. Not just ”good”; very good!. The word “good” is found seven times in Genesis 1. It seems as if the Lord not only wanted it recorded that He worked, He also wanted it known that His work was GOOD. Actually the word translated “good” means “rich, better or excellent.”

The word “work” is no stranger to Scripture. In fact, the word is found 372 times in The New International Version. Solomon also wrote in Proverbs 18:9, “One who is slack in his work is (a) brother to one who destroys.” Ecclesiastes 9:10 adds, Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might….

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- New Life Assembly of God Church in Janesville, WI

Daily Devotion: Execellence

What is the difference between excellence and mediocre?

Excellence is going beyond the expected, the normal. The word speaks of one
going beyond or further than the average.
Mediocre speaks of that which is of ordinary or of moderate quality; neither good
nor bad; barely adequate. Rather poor or inferior.

Jesus illustrates what I mean by excellence. He taught, “If someone forces you to
go one mile, go with him two miles”. In those days the law allowed a Roman soldier
to draft someone to carry his pack for him for one mile. The pack was heavy. The
roads were rough. The job was always an imposition. Then, too, these soldiers
were, as a rule, hated. These men enforced the iron-fisted rule of Rome. Jesus was
simply drawing for us a picture of a hated, evil and demanding boss who was
wanting more than he justly deserved. Jesus said, “don’t just go the one mile, go
two!” Tell the fellow, “this second mile is on me. I’m into excellence. My faith in Jesus
Christ demands that I do more than is expected.

Jim Conway writes that some people feel “a weakening of the need to be a great
man and an increasing feeling of `let’s just get through this the best way we can.’
Never mind hitting home runs. Let’s just get through the ball game without getting
beaned.”

Those who want to be excellent cannot afford to have that kind of attitude. They
need to do the job, and then some.Mediocre is never good enough for children of God. Never.

God didn’t call us to
just be average, run-of-the-mill Christians. No. He called us to change our world.
To make things better. You should never be satisfied with mediocrity either. As
saints, we such discipline ourselves to work harder. Dream bigger. Desire to
excel. That is the language of excellence.

Check out our devotions database HERE

- New Life Assembly of God Church in Janesville, WI

Daily Devotion: Excellence Part 2

Are you willing to be more than you presently are? Are you anxious to excel? Is striving for perfection a nice thought or a living reality with you? Excellence for a Christian should be more than some distant dream. It should rather be our daily aim; our lifelong pursuit. Simply put, the Apostle Paul told the church of Corinth to “aim for perfection” (2 Corinthians 13:11).

Tim Hansel wrote, “Our hearts beat excitedly over stories of people like Abraham and Moses, yet we fail to recognize that they were as frail and nervous as we are. We stand in awe of Moses at the burning bush: “Now there is a bush that burns,” we say. “I would like to be a bush like that, but I’m just a heap of ashes.” And that’s as far as we get. We discuss the phenomenon of what God can do in a life, tell amazing stories about it, praise it–but then resign ourselves to being nothing more than what we think we are, a mere bystander, resigned to sitting in the balcony among the spectators. But it is not the bush that sustains the flame. It is God in the bush, and so, any old bush will do!

The shocking message of the Bible continues to be that God has chosen the least suspecting of all vessels to do his greatest work. What counts most is who and what are you willing to become? See that scruffy-looking bush over there? That bush will do. See this funny-looking bush over here? It will do, too.”

Hansel, Tim. 1987. Holy Sweat. Waco, Texas. Word Books. p. 31

The point that Hansel attempts to make is this, God is still on the lookout for bushes. He is on the lookout for anyone/anything through which He can manifest His excellence. Again, are you willing to be such a person?

Check out our devotions database HERE

- New Life Assembly of God Church in Janesville, WI