Last week, my brother and I went to the Indianapolis 500. At the start of the race, one of the announcers said, “Today, one of these thirty-three drivers will do something that no one will ever forget. They will win the Indy 500!”
So,
who
won? Do you know?
Ok,
maybe you are not a sports fan, so here are some different
questions: Who won the
Noble Peace prize in 1979? Who
won the Oscar for best actress in
1940? Who was the King of
France in
1744?
When
I
asked those questions on Sunday morning, no one came up with the
correct
responses. (Just in case
you are
curious, the answers are: Simon Pagenaud, Jimmy Carter, Vivien
Leigh and Louis
the XV).
Fame
is
fleeting. What seems
important right now
will lose its luster. Eventually,
our
biggest successes will be forgotten.
King
Solomon understood that truth. He
was
one of the most powerful and wealthy people of his day, yet when
he surveyed
all he accumulated and had accomplished, he summarized it with one
word: Meaningless! “I have
seen all the things that are done
under the sun; all of them are meaningless, a chasing after the
wind”
(Ecclesiastes 1:14). In
other words, you
can spend your whole life running after material success only to
find that it
does not make your happy anyway. We
are
never satisfied. As the
old saying goes,
“Much wants more!”
We
need
a different goal.
When
Jesus walked the earth, his goal was to point others to God and
glorify him
(John 17:1). Paul
encouraged the church
in Corinth, “Whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God” (1
Corinthians
10:31). Peter wrote, “Live
such good
lives… [that others] may see your good deeds and glorify God” (1
Peter 2:12).
Do
you
see the shift? Instead of
shining the
spotlight on myself, I am supposed to underline and highlight
God’s goodness. Rather
than chasing accolades that will not
last, I should focus on eternal rewards (Matthew 6:19-24). Instead of hoarding what I
have, maybe I
should share and bless others.
Earthly
success comes and goes. Real
joy is
found when we live for something bigger than ourselves.
“Glorify
the Lord with me” (Psalm 34:2).
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