Cast Your Lot with the Lord and be not deterred. (Determination)
Galatians
6:9 And let us not be weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap, if
we faint not.
Different
people have different levels of determination. Concentration for one is deep
and intense; for another it is fleeting and difficult. Watch the eyes of a professional golfer, they
“Lock-in” and very little of what is going on around them enters their train of
thought. “Lock-in”, that’s a great phrase
for those who have great concentration.
Is being able to “Lock-in” an innate trait or is it something that is
learned? To some extent I am convinced
it’s a bit of both.
The
individual who has Attention Deficit Disorder can have an impossible time
concentrating on the simplest thing. According to the Mayo Clinic:
(ADHD) is a chronic condition that
affects millions of children and often persists into adulthood. ADHD includes a
combination of problems, such as difficulty sustaining attention, hyperactivity
and impulsive behavior.
ADHD and
other conditions although not necessarily attributable to a physical malady are
understood to be a conditions inherent in an individual and not learned or
caused by the residential environment.
Try reading
the book of Leviticus or First Chronicles sometime to test your concentration
skills. One of the reasons I find
cutting the lawn so therapeutic is for this very reason, I can cut the grass
and feel as if I’m accomplishing something and my mind can be a thousand miles
away.
Feel like
I’m accomplishing something; there’s a lot said with that statement. Environmental pressures contribute to a lack
of concentration. Today we must be doing
or our time is wasted. We get caught up
in doing and don’t spend enough time letting.
Our focus is thrown into the worries of this world until we are
consumed. Jesus said in Matthew 6:34, Do
not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own. Martha in Luke Chapter 10 is a great example.
From a
Christian perspective, “casting our lot” means relying and in many cases
waiting on the Lord. It means
concentrating on the Spiritual and spending less time doing or obsessing about
the physical. We must remember that we
are only passing through, this is not our home (Hebrews 13:14, 2 Corinthians
5:1). The song, “Turn your eyes upon Jesus” has a great line in it. The line
says, “Turn your eyes upon Jesus, look full in His wonderful face and the
things of earth will grow strangely dim,
in the light of His glory and grace”. I
think that is what Paul was talking about when he said to live is Christ, to
die is gain Philippians 1:21.
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