A goal for this week, or let's just start with today, is to eliminate hurry. Hurry only impedes our work. It never advances it.
Good morning. Welcome to the Morning Motivation brought to you by the Patriot Goal Group and the Public Square app. Today, before we get back to the gospel and Genesis and the business of the week, I want to start off with this. I saw a cartoon the other day. It was a picture of a gravestone and it said, I hate being busy. I've done better, but not really. I've done better from the secular perspective of not complaining about it. I don't complain about being busy all the time. I've done a good job from a secular way of fitting everything in and not looking busy, I think. but there's still no not busy time. Does that make sense?
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I still haven't carved out not busy. I'm still addicted to busy. If there happens to be a spare second to come up, I'm quick to fill it with something, even if it's just to try to get ahead on next week's certain busyness to come. So I'll fill up now with busy, and it doesn't really take away much busyness from next week either. So I just messed it up even more. So the story goes that a man called Dallas Willard to ask for some advice because things weren't going well and he was leaving this church and he was losing his soul. And he asked for advice and Dallas Willard said, you must ruthlessly eliminate hurry from your life. That's the famous line, you must ruthlessly eliminate hurry from your life. And the guy's like, anything else? He said, no, there's nothing else. Hurry is the great enemy of spiritual life in our day. You must ruthlessly eliminate hurry from your life. So hurry is just another word for Satan. I shouldn't say it's another word for... Hurry is a tool of Satan's. Hurry or hurriness isn't its own thing. It's one of Satan's tools to distract you, make you exhausted, or to forget about God or miss God in your day to day. And we just live in this busied state and you just cannot live a spiritually rich and vibrant life in a state of hurriness. So let me quote from this book called The Ruthless Elimination of Hurries. It's a good book to pick up every once in a while and just pick a page here or there.
So this is the gentleman from the Charleston Southern University School of Business, Michael Zigarelli. His hypothesis is it may be the case that one, Christians are assimilating to a culture of busyness, hurry, and overload. I think that's right. Which two, leads to becoming more marginalized, God becoming more marginalized in Christians' lives. Sure. God gets the crumbs. Which leads to three, a deteriorating relationship with God, of course. Which leads to four, Christians becoming even more vulnerable to adopting secular assumptions about how to live. Absolutely. Just thinking of Peter, right? Taking his eyes off Jesus, then drowning. So we all, that's what hurriedness feels like, feels like drowning. Which leads to five, more conformity to a culture of busyness, hurry, and overload, and the cycle begins again. I think that's right. There's a book called Three Mile an Hour God by a Japanese theologian. Three mile an hour God. I haven't read the book, but I imagine the idea is we're walking. We walk with God. You don't run with God. He said God walks slowly because he is love. If he is not love, he would have gone much faster. Love has its speed. It's an inner speed. It's a spiritual speed. It's a different kind of speed than the technological speed to which we're accustomed. It's slow, yet it is lord over all other speeds because it is the speed of love. So this is one of the theses of John Mark Homer, who wrote this book, The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry, is that the main commandment is to love, but you can't love and hurry. They're incompatible with each other. You can't, you never, if you're on a date with your wife, you're not like, hurry up, all the time. That's not gonna work. Or the best times with your kids are not the time when you hurry.
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If you look back, it's the time you regret the most is when you're hurry. Get on, let's get moving. Go, go, go, go. That's not it. That's not love. Those two things are incompatible. But if we don't accommodate, if we don't make time for slowing down, for always in a hurry, this is Walter Adams, the spiritual director to C.S. Lewis. To walk with Jesus is to walk with a slow, unhurried pace. I don't remember Jesus ever hurrying or rushing. In fact, quite the opposite. Like, hey, my son is dying. Okay. They're like, what?
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Don't you? He's like, that's good. Hurry is the death of prayer and only impedes and spoils our work. It never advances it. That's right. So, this week, let's do the best we can to not hurry. Now, maybe you can even be just as busy and not hurry. Or maybe we need to make some drastic life changes to eliminate that hurry from our life and to do it ruthlessly. Ruthlessly. Ruth means pity. So do it without pity. Just mercilessly eliminate hurry because it is Satan. It's a tool of Satan. And replace that hurry with peace and calm and slow and love. The goal of the week. Start with the day. Let's start with the goal of the day. Mike Slater. Locals.com is the website. Up there we put the show the transcripts commercial free and we put it up the night before Mike Slater. Locals.com is the website. Up there we put the show the transcripts commercial free and we put it up the night before Mike Slater dot locals