New Year Resolutions
I never make New Year's Resolutions, anymore," the man told me, "I
never keep them, anyway." I can remember all too many resolutions I've
made and let slip away, too. But I believe New Year's resolutions are
worth making. Let me tell you why.
First, we all need changes. Some we find very hard to admit to
ourselves. I've heard people who say, "I have no regrets about my life.
If I had it to do over, I'd do it the same way again." But that attitude
is way too blind and self-serving so far as I'm concerned. There is
great power in confession--to ourselves, to God, to others. Owning up to
our failures is the first, painful step on the road to something better.
Second, when we change calendars is a good time for reassessment. How
did last year go?
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What do I want to do differently this year? This time of year always
reminds me of a passage of scripture, better understood by farmers than
suburbanites: "Break up your unplowed ground, and do not sow among
thorns" (Jer 4:3). It makes sense. The more land you put into
production, the more prosperous you'll be. But some of us are stupid
enough to try to sow seeds in land overrun by star thistle without
breaking up the soil and taking care to root out the thorns as they come
up. Call it laziness. Call it stupidity.
How much "unploughed ground" do you have that ought to be broken up
in this coming year and made useful? Reassessment. The brink of a new
year is a good time for reassessment.
Third, New Year's is an excellent time for mid-course corrections.
Sure, we might fail in what we set out to do, but if we fail to plan,
the old saw goes, then we plan to fail. If you're so fearful of failure
that you never set up your row of tin cans to shoot at, you're not very
likely to hit any at all. Failure is not the end. For the person who
determines to learn from it, failure is a friend.
One of my heroes in the Bible is the Apostle Paul. Talk about
failure! Throughout his life he was opposed, persecuted, shipwrecked,
stoned and left for dead, deserted by trusted co-workers, slandered, and
scorned. Sometimes it seemed that projects to which he had devoted years
were turning to dust before his eyes.
But during from one of his stints in prison, we can see from one of
his letters an unwillingness to quit. "Forgetting what is behind," he
wrote, "and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal
to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus"
(Phil 4:13-14, NIV) No wonder he made a mark on his world. He stopped
looking back, and looked forward instead. He didn't let the fear of
failure keep him from trying again.
Fourth, New Year's is a time to learn to rely more heavily on the
grace of God. Now I've met a few self-made men and women and so have
you, but so often these people seem proud and driven. There is another
way: beginning to trust in God's help.
One more secret from the Apostle Paul: "I can do everything through
Him who gives me strength," he said
(Phil 4:13, NIV). And God's strength
saw him through a lot--through pain, through joy, and through
accomplishment.
If this last year, you didn't practice relying on the Lord as much as
you should have, there is no time like the present to make a New Year's
resolution. In fact, why don't you say a short prayer right now--use
these words if you like: "Dear God, I want the new year to be different
for me." Now spell out in prayer some of the changes you'd like to see.
Now you've got a much better chance of a Happy New Year. |