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Our ancestors were patient and relentless. We are the opposite. Where are you the most impatient in your life? And where does this impatience show up in our spiritual life the most?
Good morning.
Welcome to The Morning Motivation brought to you by the Patriot Gold Group and the Public Square app. One thing that has really struck me in the Bible recently, at this time in my life for some reason, is time. And I just read a great article from Jacob Crouch, who put it into words better than I could. It really put me in the direction I needed to make sense of what I was sensing. He calls it our microwave culture. And the essence is, we all, I think we all, let me speak for me, I am so impatient. I think things should take a day. Why does this thing take longer than one day? Let's go people. What are you doing? Hurry up. But nothing takes a day. Everything takes longer than a day. Things take time. Was it here where we talked about this cathedral in Barcelona? And it took 600 years to build. Talk about patience. Can you believe that? Like we built a building today and we're like, oh, it'll be four years before. It's like, oh, geez, four years. Hurry up! Meanwhile, they're like, well, let's build this cathedral. How long is it going to take? 600 years. And let's say like we're gonna build this mosaic floor. How long is that gonna take? Three lifetimes. Maybe four. So not only, I'm not even gonna be close to done, but maybe my grandkids will finish, probably their kids, and let's just have a contingency in case it's their grandkids. My grandkids' grandkids will finish this thing that I'm working on. That's incredible. They were patient and our ancestors also, they never quit. There's a cathedral outside of Paris in a town called Chartes, C-H-A-R-T-E-S, Chartes. Five cathedrals that we know of have stood on one site. Each one replaced an earlier cathedral that was damaged by war or fire. And the one that's there currently was completed in 1252. Our ancestors were relentless. They were patient and relentless. Today we are impatient and give up in about two seconds. So Jacob called it microwave culture. I'm sure there's many other metaphors you can choose. Maybe one more relevant to you, but he said he can microwave a potato in eight minutes. I don't even know if that's the best metaphor because eight minutes seems like a long time to do it. That's, geez man, who's got eight minutes? There's things you can do in much shorter amounts of time that we're still impatient about, but where we get used to this impatience in our life, our desires need to be met instantly. I think we also tend to transfer this to our spiritual life. It's like why isn't my spiritual life better right now? I said I wanted it to be better. I put my mind to it and it should just voila be better. What's going on? Where are you God? I prayed for this thing for like six seconds and then my mind got distracted. I started thinking about things I got to do today but for those six seconds I was really focused on this thing I really wanted why isn't it happening I want to get to some scripture here let's save it for tomorrow because I think this is worth reflecting on this for the day where in your life are you the most impatient and if you can identify the thing it's worth digging there it's worth digging why why are you so impatient why do you expect so much so quickly with such little effort in this thing. What's that about? Why is there so much impatience? What else are you feeling about? What else is going on? It's worth diving into, right? So what is it? Where are you most impatient?
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Your work?
Your kids? Oh, that's one. Tying into last week's theme. Hey, everyone. Thanks for all your parenting advice. I implemented it all for three whole days and my child is not a perfect angel yet. So your advice was all wrong. You don't know what you're talking about. Three whole days, wow, did you Slater? Wow, good for you. I'm impatient there. Where are you most impatient? Work, kids, family, the garden. This is why gardening is so important to the soul. My kids, they thought, and I don't blame them for thinking this based off the world they've grown up in, they think you plant a seed and it just grows. Like plant a seed and then boom, there's a tree. Like they would take an avocado seed and they're like, I want to bury it. Well why? I want an avocado tree. I think it takes three years for an avocado to grow. I don't even know why. Hold on let me look that up. Avocado seed to tree. I think it's... hold on. So you know you just press pause on the podcast and come back. Plant a tree and you'll wait three to four years for fruit. Start with a seed you wait 13 years or more. All right son, so you plant this seed and you'll be a freshman in college before you get an avocado from it Huh, I thought it would this afternoon they didn't think they thought right away And that's how we all are in so many things gosh, it's hilarious. That's why gardening is so important to the soul That's why farming is so important to the soul. It teaches you to be patient. There's seasons to it Obviously lots of references to that in the Bible. We can do a little of that. Let's explore a little of that this week as well. But let's focus on that today. Where are you most impatient? And then we can pray about why. But let's focus on that today. Where are you most impatient? And then we can pray about why. And tomorrow, we'll share the story of Jeremiah.