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During
the California gold rush a prospector named R. U. Darby helped his
uncle mine a vein of gold that his relative had discovered. It
appeared at first that they had a prosperous find. Yet the vein soon
disappeared, and Darby and his uncle searched frantically for the spot
where it continued. Finally, they concluded their prospects were
hopeless and sold their equipment to a junk dealer. The junk dealer
consulted an engineer, then began mining the shaft again. He quickly
discovered the elusive vein and a supply of gold worth millions of
dollars--just three feet from where Darby and his uncle had stopped
digging.* The
story brings to mind how our important battles in life are often won
by simple persistence. It reminds us equally that we can give up on a
goal too easily and are sometimes much closer to hitting our mark than
we realize. When we look at what
made the accomplishments of notable individuals possible, we usually
find persistence that went beyond the ordinary. Thomas Edison invented
the incandescent light bulb only after thousands of failed attempts.
He remarked, “The trouble with other inventors is that they try a
few things and quit. I never quit until I get what I want.”* Ernest Hemingway’s
writing communicates so naturally that we might assume the Nobel
laureate always got it right the first time. In truth, Hemingway
reworked his material extensively, revising most novels five times,
and The Old Man and the Sea more than two hundred times. Soichiro
Honda was also a master of persistence. The founder of Honda Motors
and perfecter of the catalytic engine explained to a Michigan
graduating class: “To me success can be achieved only through
repeated failure and introspection. In fact, my success represents the
one percent of the work that resulted from the ninety-nine percent
that was called failure.”* We might imagine that
underlying important accomplishment is usually dogged, backbreaking
effort. More typically, the secret lies in consistent effort.
Victory comes to those who stay with a dream long enough to reach it.
End of story. In so many cases this patient plodding overrides serious
limitations in ability, education or resources. Honda developed his
automotive company and pioneered major engineering innovations with
only eight years of formal education and meager financial backing. Persistence plays such
a compensating role in endless areas of human achievement. Research
shows, for instance, that drilling companies which discover the most
oil are not the ones with the best equipment or the most talented
personnel--but those that
dig the most wells. In real life as most of us lead it, we often find we’re unable to accomplish a goal within the time period we’ve envisioned. Yet when we’re willing to revise our assumptions about time--or to let go of any deadline at all--we succeed. I’m often moved by the examples of people who find a good opportunity for marriage well into their adult years. In every case they are those who, in spite of many disappointments, have stayed hopeful and open to new opportunities well beyond a point that many would consider reasonable. Often they continued doing the same things they had been doing for years to meet people--attending singles meetings and accepting blind dates--until they finally found a relationship that worked. Most will admit the temptation to give up had been strong. They are now exceedingly glad they persisted and never fully lost heart. Healthy and
Unhealthy Persistence This isn’t to say
there is magic in persistence per se. We’ve got to persist at doing
the right things. If our goal or our approach isn’t sound to begin
with, persistence will work against us. Saul of Tarsus persecuted
Christians with merciless persistence; only in time did he discover
that he was kicking “against the goads” (Acts 26:14). Yet Paul’s
tenacious personality remained strongly intact as a Christian and
contributed immensely to the spread of the gospel. Paul opened more
new regions for the gospel than anyone else--far and away--simply
because he tried and never gave up. If one group or city wouldn’t
receive his message, he moved on to the next, and kept knocking on
doors till one opened. While Paul’s success
in evangelizing demonstrates the value of persistence, his persecution
of Christians before his conversion shows its negative side and offers
us a caution. If we’ve made an earnest effort to accomplish a goal
yet are failing at every turn, we ought to look carefully at whether
the goal isn’t right for us or if there is a fatal flaw in our
approach. Occasionally we’ll find that, like Paul, we need to make a
radical change in direction. At other times we’ll find that an
incremental change in approach makes all the difference. In other cases--a
surprising number for some of us--we’ll discover that we’re wisest
to stay the course. The most important step we can take in resolving
this question is to get the best counsel available to us. Had R. U.
Darby merely sought expert opinion, as the junk dealer did, he would
have found that he didn’t understand the fault lines in the mine
shaft, which indicated that gold was present just a short distance
away. Through the help of others’ counsel, we often make this same
gratifying discovery: The problem is neither with our goal nor our
approach, but we’re misreading life’s “fault lines.” If
we’ll keep doing exactly what we’re doing, we’ll succeed; we
only need to revise our expectations about time. Persistence is often
preached as a virtue--an obligation of maturity: “Stick with your
studies, son, and you’ll earn that degree and make something of your
life.” Yet, much more important, we ought to understand persistence
as a benefit to our life as God has designed it. It is often
the key to reaching cherished goals and to solving “impossible”
problems. While it may seem undramatic to say that slow and steady
wins the race, the truth is that many more battles in life are won by
patient plodding than through ingenious solutions or miraculous
breakthroughs. Vertical and
Horizontal Time The
point is encouraging to keep in mind not only when we face obstacles
in reaching goals but when we’re establishing them in the first
place. We often write dreams off as infeasible for us that we actually
could accomplish with enough time. In The Magic Lamp,
an outstanding book on personal goal setting, Keith Ellis makes a
distinction between “vertical time” and “horizontal time.”*
Vertical time is that period just ahead of us--the day we are in and
our immediate future. Horizontal time is the period that extends
indefinitely into the future. We can accomplish certain goals in
vertical time; with heroic effort of will, we may occasionally do
impressive things--run a marathon in an afternoon, write a major term
paper in one day, respond to a crisis that requires sacrificing sleep
for a night or two. Yet we’re unable to run at such high velocity
indefinitely; we carry out most of our important accomplishments in
horizontal time, and not through spectacular effort but one half-step
at a time. The distinction on the
one hand is maddeningly simple. Of course we all realize we can
accomplish more through patient long-term perseverance than through
manic effort in the present; we’ve known that ever since reading The
Tortoise and the Hare in kindergarten. Yet having this fresh
vocabulary for speaking of the time available to us is helpful, for it
aids both our self-talk and our visualization. It inspires us to think
more creatively about what our possibilities might be if we allowed
ourselves the luxury of no deadline at all, and all the time
necessary--even with very small steps--to accomplish a goal. We need
all the incentive we can get for such long-range dreaming, for the
emphasis on instant gratification in our culture inclines us to do the
opposite--to focus on what we can accomplish quickly, then to grow
discouraged over how limited our options seem to be. It is often stunning to
realize what we can accomplish with the benefit of horizontal time, by
breaking a goal down to manageable steps. Need to write a book of two
hundred pages? Sound impossible? One paragraph a day for a year will
do it--or several sentences a day for two years. Need to take a
graduate program with twenty courses? Two courses a year for ten years
will get you through--or four courses for five. Ellis
is a prophet for horizontal time, enamored with what we can achieve in
life without grueling effort, by merely moving along at our own pace.
The concept is a redemptive one, for it helps us to appreciate the
time available to us in one lifetime as an unspeakable gift of God and
to see practical possibilities for our life we would otherwise miss. In Ellis’s own words:
“Given enough horizontal time, you can learn to play a musical
instrument, master a foreign language, read the collected works of
William Shakespeare, dig yourself a swimming pool, earn a college
degree, build an addition on your house, learn a trade, write a book,
land a new job, start a company, or all of the above. It might take
you a year, or it might take you twenty years--so what?”* Going the
Distance--At Your Pace Appreciating our
potential in horizontal time gives us the courage to set goals, even
very long-term ones. By setting a carefully conceived goal and
embracing it wholeheartedly, we vastly increase our potential for
success. Paul succeeded in his
mission and found the heart to persevere through shipwrecks and
stonings, because his intention to be a groundbreaker for the gospel
was so clearly focused. “[I have made] it my ambition to preach the
gospel, not where Christ has already been named,” he explained (Rom
15:20 RSV). Paul wasn’t implying that every Christian must have his
specific ambition of bringing the gospel to unevangelized peoples; his
was an intensely personal one, springing from an understanding of his
gifts and God’s unique plan for him. When Paul taught on individual
mission, he stressed that Christians should look to the gifts, desires
and opportunities that God has given them personally (Rom 12:3-8, 1 Cor 12,
Eph 4:4-16). Yet he demonstrated by his example the extreme benefit
that comes from having clear goals based on these distinctives. It helps us too, in
finding the heart to set these goals, to remember assurances Jesus
gave about our potential for being productive as his followers. He
taught emphatically that he intends us to be productive, and that he
gives us special help when we seek to invest our life constructively.
He went as far as to assure us that we will do “greater works”
than he did (Jn 14:12). We seldom think about this astounding promise
Jesus made, nor experience the motivation he intended it to inspire,
for it is puzzling. How could any of us come close to matching the
quality of his accomplishments? Keith Ellis’s
distinction between the two types of time available to us helps in
explaining what Jesus must have meant. Jesus certainly didn’t mean
that any of us could surpass the works he performed in vertical time.
Even the most gifted healer among us could not match his degree of
miraculous healing--which included raising the dead--nor could the
most gifted evangelist impart salvation. Yet most of us have far more
horizontal time available to us than Jesus allowed himself during his
earthly mission. It’s within this context that we have the
possibility of a more substantial quantity of accomplishments--plus
the potential for achievements that require substantial time and focus
to carry out. It’s this
thought--that God intends our life to be uniquely productive in
horizontal time--that, more than anything else, can give us the
courage to dream big and set challenging goals. With the special
benefit of the summer months ahead, let me encourage you to give some
generous time to personal planning. Set aside time to be alone with
Christ--an afternoon, a day, a weekend perhaps--for the purpose of
gaining his perspective on your life. As best as you can, peer into
the future and ask yourself this question: What things would I most
like to accomplish with my life if I could take all the time needed
and deadlines are not required? Among the possibilities you entertain,
consider whether one seems uniquely to fit your life as God has
designed it. If so, then embrace that aspiration as a life dream.
Commit your dream to Christ, and prayerfully establish a strategy for
reaching it--step by step by step. Continue to seek his guidance and
provision as you move forward. Just one further word
of encouragement. If no meaningful long-term vision emerges, wait for
it--give it a fair opportunity to develop. The dreaming process takes
time, and we must patiently persist with it like everything else.
It’s to this end that Scripture tells us to seek God’s insight as
we would hunt for hidden treasure (Prov 2:1-6). The good news about
searching for treasure is that sometimes our effort seems futile--yet
by digging a bit further . . . Go for the gold, my
friend. |
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