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Work is not a curse. Good works include good work. We need to be, as Willaim F. Buckley said, "on the side of excellence"
Good morning. Welcome to Morning Motivation brought to you by Patriot Gold Group and the Public Square app. This week, we're talking about sanctifying your work, inspired by Labor Day that was on Monday. By the way, Mondays off are way better than Fridays off. Why would you want to take Friday off, you want to take Monday off. What's the worst day of the week? Monday, everyone hates Monday. So you want to take Monday off and then you get the benefit for the week to come. Because you think it's, like it's Wednesday but it's really Thursday, you're like, oh, it's even closer to Friday now.
0:00:42
Stop with this Friday off nonsense. No more Fridays off, it's Mondays off is what you want. Anyway, final point we'll share this week. This is from the book by Douglas Wilson, Productivity in a World Gone Mad. Slater, you stumbled there, you should have edited that out. Nope, productivity in a world gone mad. So first point, everyone gets the same amount of time. Everyone gets 24 hours a day, rich, poor, doesn't matter. God gives everyone one token that is a day. So the question is how can one use it efficiently without becoming a maniac, without losing your mind or wasting the time away?
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So you have productivity and then plod-activity. He says there's two kind of traps that people can fall into in the productivity scale, intensity and extension. So intensity is we got to do this by tomorrow, go, go, go, go. Got to leave it to the last minute thing. And then the extension is you're working late all the time, every night, late at the office, you know 80 hour weeks, it's too much. And both those people can fool themselves into thinking that they're really hard workers. But in reality, they're probably, not always, but probably just really bad managing time. If you're always leaving things to last minute, you're always in intensity mode, or if you're always working late, you're probably not being efficient.
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So his point is you need to plod. Not prod activity, but plod activity. You need to be more plotting mentality, like a rower. Smooth, consistent strokes over time. Plot along, tells a story of, he needed to write a review for a book. And he got the book and it was a big thick book. He's like, oh geez, how am I gonna do this? So it was, okay, well I need to get the review by this time. I'm gonna take a week to write the review.
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Okay, so I have four weeks to read the book. It's this many pages, divide the pages by the days. 10 pages a day, boom, done, there you go. Plot along. So some good secular advice. But I like this line. He said, Work is not a curse. The curse affects work. Oh, that's so good. We talked, I think it was in the first day, we talked about how there was work in the garden before the fall. So work is not the curse. The curse affects the work. But work remains a gift from a gracious God. We were created for work. And we were created for work in an astoundingly fruitful world.
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In short, the grace of God leads to salvation, and salvation leads to good works. As we consider this, we ought not to limit the phrase good works to helping little old ladies across the street or volunteering at soup kitchens. Those are included certainly. But good works also include good work. That's very good. Good works also include good work. Good works include turning a table leg on a lathe or solving a mathematical problem or shoveling out the barn. And some necessarily the blessing of good work. I hope this has been encouraging, this idea of sanctifying your work, about being intentional with it, about stepping up our game for the glory of God. I forget if I even mentioned this this week, but every kid, you know, we started our homeschooling, so this question's already come up a few times. Why do I have to do this? Why do I have to know this? And I think, and please correct me if you have a better answer, because I know there is a better answer, but this has been working in my brain right now. It's something like God gave you a brain. We are to use it to its fullest potential so that we can fully glorify Him. God made the world and He wants you to know it and know about it and learn about his creation.
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So do the math problems so you can be smart. Something like that. And it's so that you can be excellent in what you do, so that you can do good work in your good works. Read a quote from William F. Buckley the other day. He was talking about education and the arts and talking about the conservative position and he had this line he said we are without reservations on the side of excellence rather than newness. Newness being like new ideas, new modern art, modern architecture, this nonsense right? Although it gets all the attention because it's new. He's like no no no we're on the side of excellence. Excellence as worship not to the self but to the Creator Mike Slater locals calm reversal free night before transcript Mike Slater locals calm