I observed that the basic
motive for success is the driving force of envy and jealousy! Ecclesiastes 4:4
(LB)
"The man without a purpose
is like a ship without a rudder-a waif, a nothing, a no man" ~ Thomas
Carlyle
EVERYONE'S LIFE IS DRIVEN BY
SOMETHING.
Most dictionaries define the
verb drive as "to guide, to control, or to direct." Whether you are
driving a car, a nail, or a golf ball, you are guiding, controlling, and
directing it at that moment. What is the driving force in your life?
Right now you may be driven by
a problem, a pressure, or a deadline. You may be driven by a painful memory, a
haunting fear, or an unconscious belief. There are hundreds of circumstances,
values, and emotions that can drive your life. Here are five of the most common
ones:
Many people are driven by
guilt. They spend their entire lives running from regrets and hiding their
shame. Guilt-driven people are manipulated by memories. They allow their past
to control their future. They often unconsciously punish themselves by sabotaging
their own success. When Cain sinned, his guilt disconnected him from God's
presence, and God said, "You will be a restless wanderer on the earth”
That describes most people today-wandering through life without a purpose.
We are products of our past,
but we don't have to be prisoners of it. God's purpose is not limited by your
past. He turned a murderer named Moses into a leader and a coward named Gideon
into a courageous hero, and he can do amazing things with the rest of your
life, too. God specializes in giving people a fresh start. The Bible says,
"What happiness for those whose guilt has been forgiven! ... What relief
for those who have confessed their sins and God has cleared their record."
Many people are driven by
resentment and anger. They hold on to hurts and never get over them. Instead of
releasing their pain through forgiveness, they rehearse it over and over in
their minds. Some resentment-driven people "clam up" and internalize
their anger, while others "blow up" and explode it onto others. Both
responses are unhealthy and unhelpful.
Resentment always hurts you
more than it does the person you resent. While your offender has probably
forgotten the offense and gone on with life, you continue to stew in your pain,
perpetuating the past.
Listen: Those who have hurt you
in the past cannot continue to hurt you now unless you hold on to the pain
through resentment. Your past is past! Nothing will change it. You are only
hurting yourself with your bitterness. For your own sake, learn from it, and
then let it go. The Bible says, "To worry yourself to death with
resentment would be a foolish, senseless thing to do."
Many people are driven by fear.
Their fears may be a result of a traumatic experience, unrealistic
expectations, growing up in a high-control home, or even genetic
predisposition. Regardless of the cause, fear-driven people often miss great
opportunities because they're afraid to venture out. Instead they play it safe,
avoiding risks and trying to maintain the status quo.
Fear is a self-imposed prison
that will keep you from becoming what God intends for you to be. You must move
against it with the weapons of faith and love. The Bible says,
"Well-formed love banishes fear. Since fear is crippling, a fearful life
fear of death, fear of judgment-is one not yet fully formed in love."
Many people are driven by
materialism. Their desire to acquire becomes the whole goal of their lives.
This drive to always want more is based on the misconceptions that having more
will make me happier, more important, and more secure, but all three ideas are
untrue. Possessions only provide temporary happiness. Because things do not
change, we eventually become bored with them and then want newer, bigger,
better versions.
It's also a myth that if I get
more, I will be more important. Self-worth and net worth are not the same. Your
value is not determined by your valuables, and God says the most valuable
things in life are not things!
The most common myth about
money is that having more will make me more secure. It won't. Wealth can be
lost instantly through a variety of uncontrollable factors. Real security can
only be found in that which can never be taken from you-your relationship with
God.
Many people are driven by the
need for approval. They allow the expectations of parents or spouses or
children or teachers or friends to control their lives. Many adults are still
trying to earn the approval of unpleasable parents. Others are driven by peer
pressure, always worried by what others might think. Unfortunately, those who
follow the crowd usually get lost in it.
I don't know all the keys to
success, but one key to failure is to try to please everyone. Being controlled
by the opinions of others is a guaranteed way to miss God's purposes for your
life. Jesus said, "No one can serve two masters."
There are other forces that can
drive your life but all lead to the same dead end: unused potential,
unnecessary stress, and an unfulfilled life.
This forty-day journey will
show you how to live a purpose driven life-a life guided, controlled, and
directed by God's purposes. Nothing matters more than knowing God's purposes
for your life, and nothing can compensate for not knowing them-not success,
wealth, fame, or pleasure. Without a purpose, life is motion without meaning,
activity without direction, and events without reason. Without a purpose, life
is trivial, petty, and pointless.
Nothing matters more than
knowing God's purposes for your life, and nothing can compensate for not
knowing them.
THE BENEFITS OF PURPOSE-DRIVEN
LIVING
There are five great benefits of
living a purpose-driven life:
Knowing your purpose gives
meaning to your life. We were made to have meaning. This is why people try
dubious methods, like astrology or psychics, to discover it. When life has
meaning, you can bear almost anything; without it, nothing is bearable.
A young man in his twenties
wrote, "I feel like a failure because I'm struggling to become something,
and I don't even know what it is. All I know how to do is to get by. Someday,
if I discover my purpose, I'll feel I'm beginning to live."
Without God, life has no
purpose, and without purpose, life has no meaning. Without meaning, life has no
significance or hope. In the Bible, many different people expressed this
hopelessness. Isaiah complained, "I have laboured to no purpose; I have
spent my strength in pain and for nothing." Job said, "My life drags
by-day after hopeless day" and "I give up; I am tired of living.
Leave me alone. My life makes no sense." The greatest tragedy is not death,
but life without purpose.
Hope is as essential to your
life as air and water. You need hope to cope. Dr. Bernie Siegel found he could
predict which of his cancer patients would go into remission by asking,
"Do you want to live to be one hundred?" Those with a deep sense of
life purpose answered yes and were the ones most likely to survive. Hope comes
from having a purpose. If you have felt hopeless, hold on!
Wonderful changes are going to
happen in your life as you begin to live it on purpose. God says, "I know
what I am planning for you.... `I have good plans for you, not plans to hurt
you. I will give you hope and a good future."" You may feel you are
facing an impossible situation, but the Bible says, "God ... is able to do
far more than we would ever dare to ask or even dream of- infinitely beyond our
highest prayers, desires, thoughts, or hopes."
Knowing your purpose simplifies
your life. It defines what you do and what you don't do. Your purpose becomes
the standard you use to evaluate which activities are essential and which
aren't. You simply ask, "Does this activity help me fulfil one of God's
purposes for my life?"
Without a clear purpose you
have no foundation on which you base decisions, allocate your time, and use
your resources. You will tend to make choices based on circumstances,
pressures, and your mood at that moment. People who don't know their purpose
try to do too much-and that causes stress, fatigue, and conflict.
It is impossible to do
everything people want you to do. You have just enough time to do God's will.
If you can't get it all done, it means you're trying to do more than God
intended for you to do (or, possibly, that you're watching too much
television). Purpose-driven living leads to a simpler lifestyle and a saner
schedule. The Bible says, "A pretentious, showy life is an empty life; a
plain and simple life is a full life.” It also leads to peace of mind:
"You, LORD, give perfect peace to those who keep their purpose firm and
put their trust in you.”
Knowing your purpose focuses
your life. It concentrates your effort and energy on what's important. You
become effective by being selective.
It's human nature to get
distracted by minor issues. We play Trivial Pursuit with our lives. Henry David
Thoreau observed that people live lives of "quiet desperation," but
today a better description is aimless distraction. Many people are like
gyroscopes, spinning around at a frantic pace but never going anywhere.
Without a clear purpose, you
will keep changing directions, jobs, relationships, churches, or other
externals-hoping each change will settle the confusion or fill the emptiness in
your heart. You think, maybe this time it will be different, but it doesn't
solve your real problem-a lack of focus and purpose.
The Bible says, "Don't
live carelessly, unthinkingly. Make sure you understand what the Master
wants."
The power of focusing can be
seen in light. Diffused light has little power or impact, but you can
concentrate its energy by focusing it. With a magnifying glass, the rays of the
sun can be focused to set grass or paper on fire. When light is focused even
more as a laser beam, it can cut through steel.
There is nothing quite as potent
as a focused life, one lived on purpose. The men and women who have made the
greatest difference in history were the most focused. For instance, the apostle
Paul almost single-handedly spread Christianity throughout the Roman Empire.
His secret was a focused life. He said, "I am focusing all my energies on
this one thing: Forgetting the past and looking forward to what lies ahead.'
If you want your life to have
impact, focus it! Stop dabbling. Stop trying to do it all. Do less. Prune away
even good activities and do only that which matters most. Never confuse
activity with productivity. You can be busy without a purpose, but what's the
point? Paul said, "Let's keep focused on that goal, those of us who want
everything God has for us."'
Knowing your purpose motivates
your life. Purpose always produces passion. Nothing energizes like a clear
purpose. On the other hand, passion dissipates when you lack a purpose. Just
getting out of bed becomes a major chore. It is usually meaningless work, not
overwork that wears us down, saps our strength, and robs our joy.
George Bernard Shaw wrote,
"This is the true joy of life: the being used up for a purpose recognized
by yourself as a mighty one; being a force of nature instead of a feverish,
selfish little clot of ailments and grievances, complaining that the world will
not devote itself to making you happy." Knowing your purpose prepares you
for eternity. Many people spend their lives trying to create a lasting legacy
on earth.
They want to be remembered when
they're gone. Yet, what ultimately matters most will not be what others say
about your life but what God says. What people fail to realize is that all
achievements are eventually surpassed, records are broken, reputations fade,
and tributes are forgotten. In college, James Dobson's goal was to become the
school's tennis champion. He felt proud when his trophy was prominently placed
in the school's trophy cabinet. Years later, someone mailed him that trophy.
They had found it in a trashcan when the school was remodelled. Jim said,
"Given enough time, all your trophies will be trashed by someone
else!"
Living to create an earthly
legacy is a short-sighted goal. A wiser use of time is to build an eternal
legacy. You weren't put on earth to be remembered. You were put here to prepare
for eternity.
One day you will stand before
God, and he will do an audit of your life, a final exam, before you enter
eternity. The Bible says, "Remember, each of us will stand personally
before the judgment seat of God.... Yes, each of us will have to give a
personal account to God." Fortunately, God wants us to pass this test, so
he has given us the questions in advance. From the Bible we can surmise that
God will ask us two crucial questions:
First, "What did you do
with my Son, Jesus Christ?" God won't ask about your religious background
or doctrinal views. The only thing that will matter is, did you accept what
Jesus did for you and did you learn to love and trust him? Jesus said, 'clam
the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through
me."
Second, "What did you do
with what I gave you?" What did you do with your life-all the gifts,
talents, opportunities, energy, relationships, and resources God gave you? Did
you spend them on yourself, or did you use them for the purposes God made you
for?"
Preparing you for these two
questions is the goal of this book. The first question will determine where you
spend eternity. The second question will determine what you do in eternity. By
the end of this book you will be ready to answer both questions.
THINKING ABOUT MY PURPOSE
Point to Ponder: Living on purpose
is the path to peace.
Verse to Remember: "You,
LORD, give perfect peace to those who keep their purpose firm and put their trust
in you." Isaiah 26:3 (TEV)
Question to Consider: What
would my family and friends say is the driving force of my life? What do I want
it to be?
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together grow in holiness and grace. We would love to hear from you.
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