Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Stones and Bread: How to be Humbled


Today in my entrepreneurship class we had a guest lecturer. His name was Jeff Peterson. Jeff was there to teach us about using the web in business and the business side of his presentation was very good. I learned some very useful things from him that I am excited about trying to implement. However, there was one part of his lecture that really caught my attention for a different reason.

Jeff started out his lecture by telling the class about the time that Jesus Christ spent fasting in the wilderness, and how Satan came up to Him and tempted Him to turn stones into bread because He could and He was hungry. His point in this story was to illustrate how there are countless people on the internet trying to get others to pay for, in essence, nothing; that these people are turning stones into bread and that Jeff didn't believe in that. He said that he felt that God had guided him into his line of work and that everything he did in business was a deeply spiritual matter.

This so impressed me! Being a religious person I am very used to people who are of my same religion saying things like this. I am very used to talking with people of my religion about spiritual matters and trusting God in our lives. I am so not used to hearing people who are not of my religion speak of these things. I don't know why, but I'm not. Because of this, I feel that it is very easy to, as a member of any religion, fall into an attitude of “it's us against the world” and feel that only other members of your religion are doing things in life that are worthwhile, from a religious perspective. This is especially true if you are a member of a religion or belief that does things differently, or completely opposite, from what everybody else seems to do.

My lesson that I learned today is this: There are wonderful people in this world! It really is a very heartening and uplifting thing to learn. Of course, I “knew” this principle already, but I have never experienced it in this way. I am grateful for Jeff Peterson's testimony of God in his life, because it is true. God is a part of everyone's life, whether they admit it or not. It doesn't matter that we are members of different religions. We are both good people. So here is my challenge; it goes along with my lesson: to look at all the people I know who believe differently than me and start listing the qualities that make them good people, instead of feeling unsure or uneasy about things they do or say simply because we are different. I challenge anyone who reads this to do it too.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Wake-up Call

It is amazing how you can be going along through life thinking that you are doing great, and then wake up one day and realize that you're not. You realize that you aren't completely living up to and fulfilling the standards that you believe in and espouse. You realize that there are so many little things you have stopped doing; that they have added up; that they are going to cause big problems if you don't change soon. You realize that, despite good intentions, you have let yourself slip.

A wake-up call like this can really be demoralizing. It is hard to admit that we are not perfect and that sometimes we have been living an example of “do as I say, not as I do”. But I am grateful for the wake-up call I recently had. I am glad that I realized what was going on and why I was starting to become a lot more unhappy with many things in my life. I am grateful for the opportunity I now have to focus and re-commit to the things I hold dear. The downs I experience are necessary if I truly want to be able to appreciate the ups in life. I hope to have enough humility to be able to stop and consider myself and my actions, instead of going through life being unable to admit wrongs because of fear. So here I go again, feeling like I have to re-start on goals I committed to a long time ago, but excited for the positive effects that the changes I make will bring!