Tuesday, October 4, 2011

"Consider Your Heritage."

"Consider Your Heritage."

By: Pastor Jack Schneider

“I will utter things hidden from of old -- things we have heard and known, things our fathers have told us.  We will not hide them from their children; we will tell the next generation the praiseworthy deeds of the Lord.”  [Ps.78:2b-4a, NIV]


Tragedies and world events have a way of challenging us to ask, “What’s important enough in your life to pass on to your children?”  Ultimately our kids [and others] will remember us not because of what we’ve accomplished but for being the person we are in Christ.  If you don’t believe it, just ask who it is you admire and consider a model for your own life.  Seldom is it someone known for his/her worldly success.  Instead, those of the most significance in our lives are those who model specific principles worth living -- living examples of Christ. 

Here are some of those principles, with definitions added.

1.                 Responsibility.  Pick up your own toys, help with family chores, and learn to cooperate.  Don’t blame others for your own failures.
2.                 Work ethic.  You don’t get something for nothing.  Do a job right. Take time to play, but finish work first. Work to live, not live to work.
3.                 Determination.  Stick to it! If at first you don’t succeed, try again. A stone can be broken by drops of water. Genius is 10% inspiration and 90% perspiration.
4.                 Attitude.  Have a good one; the world doesn’t owe you anything. A positive person has stronger friends and more success than a negative person.
5.                 Potential.  Build up others, encourage them, and instill a desire to be all God would have them be.  The best leaders are encouragers.
6.                 Stewardship.  Malachi 3:10 says to bring the whole tithe to God.  Manage the remaining 90% wisely to His glory. Children learn miserliness by example.
7.                 Relationships.  Use things and love people, not the other way around.  When people come first, circumstances follow. Better to be hurt than not know love.
8.                 Honesty.  Thomas Jefferson called it “the first chapter in the book of wisdom.” Let words and actions be consistent. Avoid lies and manipulation; live with integrity and transparency.
9.                 Generosity.  The richest people are those who give, expecting nothing in return.  True generosity depends not on the amount but the attitude in heart.
10.              Dependence on God. This is the most important of the ten.  “Cast your cares on the Lord, and He will sustain you.” “My salvation and my honor depend on God.” [Ps.55:22; 62:7]

Consider your heritage.  Do others see Jesus Christ in you?  Are these ten principles
evident in the way you live, or do your actions negate the witness of your life?  To use the tag-line old sermon from years ago, if you were on trial for being a Christian, would there be enough evidence to convict you?  Think about it…or, better yet, ask your children.

- Jack

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