True Success
True Success

True Success

IMVU_jxt_•

3 min0 play0 paborito
Religion
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Paglalarawan

<p>My interview guest politely answered my questions. I had a feeling, though, that something lurked beneath our interaction. A passing comment brought it out.</p> <p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re inspiring thousands of people,&rdquo; I said.</p> <p>&ldquo;Not thousands,&rdquo; he muttered.<em> &ldquo;Millions.</em>&rdquo;</p> <p>And as if pitying my ignorance, my guest reminded me of his credentials&mdash;the titles he held, the things he&rsquo;d achieved, the magazine covers he&rsquo;d graced, the millions of lives he&rsquo;d touched. It was an awkward moment.</p> <p>Ever since that experience, I&rsquo;ve been struck by how God revealed Himself to Moses on Mount Sinai (Exodus 34:5&ndash;7). Here was the Creator of the cosmos and Judge of humanity, but God didn&rsquo;t use His titles. Here was the Maker of 100-billion galaxies, but such feats weren&rsquo;t mentioned either. Instead, God introduced Himself as &ldquo;the compassionate&nbsp;and gracious God, slow to anger,&nbsp;abounding in love&nbsp;and faithfulness&rdquo; (v. 6). When God reveals who He is, it isn&rsquo;t His titles or achievements He lists but the kind of character He has.</p> <p>As people made in God&rsquo;s image and called to follow His example (Genesis 1:27; Ephesians 5:1&ndash;2), this is profound. Achievement is good, titles have their place, but what really matters is how compassionate, gracious, and loving we&rsquo;re becoming.</p> <p>Like that interview guest, we too can base our significance on our achievements. I have. But our God has modeled what true success is&mdash;not what&rsquo;s written on our business cards and resum&eacute;s, but how we&rsquo;re becoming like Him.</p>

Mga Creator

cameron_91

cameron_91

Creator