“6 Be strong and courageous, for you shall cause this people to inherit the land that I swore to their fathers to give them. 7 Only be strong and very courageous, being careful to do according to all the law that Moses my servant commanded you. Do not turn from it to the right hand or to the left, that you may have good success1 wherever you go. 8 This Book of the Law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate on it day and night, so that you may be careful to do according to all that is written in it. For then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have good success. 9 Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be frightened, and do not be dismayed, for the LORD your God is with you wherever you go.” (Joshua 1:6-9)
The posts these days seem to be preoccupied with little things these days. That may be because I often feel little to the point of insignificance. Probably we all, even the most “successful” (whatever that means), feel that way a good bit of the time.
So, I was thinking about courage in little things this morning. I have never thought of myself as being particularly courageous, but maybe I’m ignoring courage in little things. Today, I sent my sponsor the following affirmation:
“Today, by God’s grace, I am living courageously in small things. If big courage is called for, I pray that I will meet the challenge. However, courage in little things will certainly be called for.”
I am not sure what “courage in little things” even means. Maybe that will unfold as the day goes on. Perhaps I will need to be on the lookout for chances to exercise courage.
I do know this much: All muscles—whether physical, emotional, mental or spiritual—are developed with exercise.
In the Scripture that led off this post, Joshua is being told that he is to lead the children of Israel into the promised land, a huge task. Worse yet, the former CEO of the company was Moses. How would you like to follow that act?! Did you notice that, in that brief quote, Joshua was repeatedly told to be courageous? Why so much repetition? I suspect there are two possible explanations for God saying the same thing over and over. Either God was being very emphatic, or Joshua wasn’t listening real well. Perhaps both are true.
When I was growing up on the farm, I kept waiting to develop big, bulging, impressive muscles in my arms. It never happened. No matter how much I worked, my muscles never impressed me. I threw bales of hay up on the wagon by adrenaline and determination, more than by muscles.
But the fact is that I did develop some muscles, even though it might not seem so. Little by little, I was firming up my muscles.
I’ve never felt very courageous. Perhaps I don’t need to feel courageous at all. But if I exercise in little ways, I am where I need to be, and doing what I need to do.
One final thought: Joshua 1:6 comes right after Joshua 1:5. It’s strange how that works! And in Joshua 1:5, God promises that he will be with Joshua, just as God was with Moses. Our dog is much more brave when my wife and/or I are with her. Being courageous with the God of the universe is a whole lot easier than being courageous without God.
Today’s blog deals with breaking bad habits. The thesis is simple: We can’t!
I have sometimes (often?) fallen into a simple but deadly trap—trying to be good by not being bad. It doesn’t work. Process precedes product.
In a book entitled, Self-Knowledge and Self-Discipline: How to Know and Govern Yourself, B.W. Murin writes the following wise and helpful words:
“The oftener we choose anything the easier it is to choose it again. The Law of habit reigns in the moral order as truly as the law of gravitation in the physical. The most difficult things become easy in time. It would be as difficult for a saint after long habits of virtue suddenly to fall into mortal sin, as it would for a man living for years in habits of vice suddenly to become a saint” (115).
Concerning bad habits, Murin writes, “. . . [H]abit can only be conquered by habit” (116).
“The prodigal who wakens to find himself a swineherd in a distant land cannot get back to his father’s home, however much he longs for it, save by treading step by step the road which he journeyed in leaving it” (117).
“The result of a great battle does not depend upon the moment’s struggle, but upon the discipline and training of the troops in the past. Before a blow is struck or the first shot fired the issue of the conflict is practically decided.
The conflict, therefore, must be unceasing; the opportunities of training the will present themselves every hour” (124).
Murin goes on to note that a merely negative approach to the mind and thought-life does not work.
“There is a better way. The positive rather than the negative way. Let not your mind be overcome with evil, ‘but overcome evil by good.’ The emptying the mind of evil is not the first step towards filling it with good. It is not a step in that direction at all. If you succeeded in emptying your mind of every undesirable thought, what then? You cannot empty it and then begin to fill it with better thoughts. No, you must empty it of evil by filling it with good. Nature abhors a vacuum. You drive out darkness by filling the room with light. If you would fill a glass (150) with water you do not first expel the air, you expel the air by pouring in water. And in the moral life there is no intermediate state of vacuum possible in which, having driven out the evil, you begin to bring in good. As the good enters it expels the evil” (151) (150-151).
I am still camping on little things. A friend and loyal reader of my posts, sent me the following e mail that points out another case of the bigness of little things:
“Your story reminded me of a real life small thing (actually two).
While I was at Gettysburg, a guide told about a fence and 3 degrees. Before Pickets Charge, the south bombarded the North’s lines all night but they could have done a simple thing that would have been more effective. When the men charged and got to a low area on the field, they had to cross a simple wooden “stacked” fence. They were showered with rifle fire. The problem was, they couldn’t return fire because the rest of the field to the north lines was about a 3 degree up-slope. The north’s fire could reach the South army, but the slope kept the south fire from reaching the North army. 40% of the casualties were found on the road by the fence. Had the South removed the fence during the night, we might be living in the Northern States of America.”
In trying to run down the precise source of the saying, “He who despises little things, shall fall little by little,” I ran across an author with whom I was not at all familiar. One of the nice things about looking for something is that you might find something else!
Charles George Everard was a physician, land speculator, and minister, who lived in Australia in the 1800’s. He was a Unitarian, but I try to grab wisdom everywhere I can find it, whether I believe the same beliefs or not. The rest of this blog post consists of quotes from Mr. Everard. I hope that they inspire you and me to attend to small, but important things today! (I still don’t know precisely where that quote comes from! That is going to be a splinter in my mind, until I can dig it out and hold it up the light!)
Here are the Everard quotes:
“Reader, beware of neglecting to exercise this universal principle in little things. Great occasions for serving God occur but seldom; lesser ones arise every moment. Little things are not to be despised. “He who despises little things, shall fall little by little.” Little omissions of duty, little acts of disobedience, as they may seem to us — may prove a great hindrance along our path. A few grains of dust, or a small insect in the eye, will often cause great pain and annoyance. A little stone in a horse’s foot will make it stumble again and again.
The Christian will find much the same thing from the indulgence of apparently trivial sins. They will . . .
harass the mind,
destroy the peace and comfort which he might enjoy,
prove a stumbling-block to him as he endeavors to run the heavenly race” (George Everard).
“The tiny hair, the spark, the screw!
(George Everard, “Little Foxes, and How to Catch Them!” 1878)
“Catch the foxes — the little foxes that spoil the vines.” Song of Songs 2:15
Solomon is very emphatic here. It is “the little foxes” which do the mischief. If the vines are injured, if the beautiful clusters are destroyed — he warns us that it is the little foxes which have crept in and have been the culprits.
I want to linger over this thought. I want every reader to lay to heart the importance of little things.
“Is it not a little one?” is the excuse of many a soul when entering upon a course that will be fatal to all peace and happiness.
Yes, it may look a little one, but for that very reason, be the more on your guard. A man’s life is made up of little things. “He who despises little things, shall fall little by little.”
A tiny hair has in some way found an entrance into the works of a watch. It touches one of the inner wheels, and so again and again the watch stops or goes irregularly. Much valuable time is in consequence lost, and only after its removal, does the watch prove useful to its owner.
A spark of fire has fallen upon some inflammable materials. It is but a spark at first, but it soon kindles into a flame. By-and-by through that one spark, a group of valuable warehouses is burned to the ground.
A small screw has not been carefully fastened in the boiler of an engine. For a time, no harm comes of it; but after a while, the defect loosens other parts of the machinery. An unlooked for catastrophe shortly afterwards occurs. The boiler explodes and spreads devastation and death far and wide. Many lives are lost, and valuable property is destroyed.
The tiny hair, the spark, the screw — have often their counterpart in the Christian life. A permitted inconsistency stands in the way and hinders the working of the Savior’s love in the heart. A harsh word does a world of harm. A neglected duty brings evil to thousands.
Catch the foxes, yes, the little ones — let not one of them escape! If you would be secure, you must be determined to spare none — not even the very smallest!
Bear in mind “the little foxes” are especially dangerous, because they creep into the vineyard so secretly. They often get in unobserved. Even so, little sins and faults have a peculiar power to beguile the conscience. They often pass unchallenged. They make but little noise or show, and therefore they deceive the heart, and do their deadly work while we are unaware.
Bear in mind also, that little foxes will soon grow. Week by week, month by month, very insensibly to yourself — the little one is growing stronger and larger! The one you thought at first a mere plaything because it was so small — becomes an over-bearing tyrant!
Is not this true of every sin? It grows by use and habit. Its strength and power is constantly on the increase.”
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