Seven Words

Overcoming Procrastination

Paul’s sermon was powerful. The Roman ruler had to deal with it. He found the perfect answer. It has been nearly 2,000 years and his solution is still the favorite one for those who do not wish to deal with a decision.

Felix spoke up and said, “That’s enough for now! You may leave. When I find it convenient, I will send for you.” (Acts 24:25).

We have a word to describe this behavior – procrastination. I love the words of the poet:

Procrastination is my sin.
It gives me endless sorrow.
I have decided to give it up
And I will begin tomorrow.

We live in a society that rewards procrastination. We really do not give the early bird the worm. When is the best time to get great deals on Christmas gifts? The answer is: “On the first day after Christmas.” We do not reward the early, but rather we punish the tardy. If all taxes that were filed during January had an automatic 10% rebate, there would be little need to provide extensions to tax payers.

Why do we procrastinate? There are several reasons:

(1) Fear. We are afraid we will not succeed so we delay trying.
(2) Busyness. We stay busy doing good things but let that busyness crowd out the important things we ought to do.
(3) It works! By putting off hard tasks till tomorrow we really don’t have to deal with them today.

Unfortunately a lot of our hard work is just the easy work that we did not do when it was still easy.

Here are some ways to overcome procrastination.

1. Quit lying to yourself.
Some people tell themselves that they work better under pressure and looking down the barrel of a deadline. No you don’t, it is just that you have waited till the last minute so often and now you have come to associate yourself with pressure. We work best in a calm environment.

2. Break it down.
Don’t put off the task because it is too big. Start with something, even if it seems insignificant. There is an old proverb that says, “The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.”

3. Make a list and be accountable to it.
Better yet, make the list the night before. It is always easier to think we will get up early the next morning to do the task that we could have done the night before.

The tragedy of life is not that it ends too soon, but that we wait too long to begin it!

Lonnie Davis

A Twig and a Rose

August 3, 1492 – October 11, 1492

To see the dates listed in this way make it appear as the days of a brief life, but it is not. They are 70 days that changed the world.

Setting out to reach the east by sailing west, the world thought Christopher Columbus was crazy. On August 3, 1492 three ships sailed into history. Few expected that they would find anything but the end of the earth from which they would fall as though going over the edge of a great waterfall. 70 days into the trip, the ship was near mutiny. Fearing for their lives, the crew argued passionately for turning back. Columbus promised them that in three days, if they had not found land, they would turn back.

Hours from failure, someone spotted a reed and a carved piece of wood and soon thereafter a twig and roses. It was a hopeful sign. These things indicated land and civilization. The crew now knew that if they would just bear a little longer in their journey, they would succeed. Within hours, they found the new land. The rest is history that we all know.

Anyone of thousands of sailors could have discovered this new land. Reaching the new land required no skill that other sailors lacked. Greatness is usually not the result of great skills, but rather the result of great faith. Others could have made the trip, but they lacked faith to start. If other sailors ever did start, they quit before they succeeded.

Faith comes in degrees. Others may have had the faith to start such a journey, but lacked the faith to last to the end. They lacked the faith to persist till they could find a twig and a rose.

The challenge for Christians today is to start the journey before you see the end. Any old heathen can walk by sight, but a Godly man or woman can start in faith and spot the twig and the rose along the way.

As the Bible says, “We walk by faith, not by sight,” but along the way God sends us a twig and a rose to encourage us.

Lonnie Davis

The Story of the Cannibal Cows

Have you ever heard the story of the cannibal cows? The story is found in Genesis 41. The rule of Egypt had one of those puzzling, troubling dream. It was the story of the cannibal cows. He tells us the story,

Gen 41:17-21

“In my dream I was standing on the bank of the Nile, when out of the river there came up seven cows, fat and sleek, and … After them, seven other cows came up — scrawny and very ugly and lean. I had never seen such ugly cows in all the land of Egypt. The lean, ugly cows ate up the seven fat cows that came up first. But even after they ate them, no one could tell that they had done so.” (Genesis 41:17-21).

After the dream, the king turned to his wise men but they could not tell him the meaning of the dream. Only a man of God named Joseph could tell them the meaning of the dream. The seven fat cows were seven good year. The seven scrawny cows were seven years of famine. The famine followed the good times. The lesson for the king was that he needed to use the good times to prepare for the hard times.

Because he got the point, Egypt was spared from ruin. Because he used the good times to prepare for the hard times, they made it through the famine.

As you read this story, learn the lesson of the cannibal cows, the seven fat cows and the seven scrawny cows. Their story is one for all times. It is one for all lives. It is one for your family. As night follows day, life is a series of cycles. Good days follow bad days and bad days follow good days. If you will observe the lesson of the seven fat cows and seven scrawny cows, you will be prepared when seven scrawny cows come into your life. This is a hard lesson to learn, but ignoring it will lead to hard years.

As you read the story in Genesis 41, remember that the lesson of the cannibal cows came from God.

Lonnie Davis