It wasn’t until I got married that I learned of my poor sense of judgment.
What I mean, is that I invariably pull out a container far too small to hold dinner’s leftovers. Mike chalks it up to a false sense of economy. He has me nailed correctly. For this is how my flawed thinking goes: “If all this will fit into a smaller pot/bowl/storage unit, then there will be LESS to clean (I’m lazy!)“
I have learned, over the years, NOT to trust my judgment, but to automatically select a receptacle LARGER than I think necessary. I’m sure you can point to similar circumstances where you have learned not to trust your intuition, but to go with your training. Pilots routinely navigate this way.
Picture an airplane that has to crab into the wind, in order to fly straight. This means that the pilot POINTS the nose off-center (not in the direction she wants to go), so that the body of the plane will actually TRACK in the intended direction.
So it was with a sense of recognition for this principle of purposeful über- sizing that I read the following quote:
In this world, you must be a bit too kind to be kind enough. –
Pierre Carlet de Chamblain de Marivaux, dramatist and novelist (1688-1763)
I suppose we should not be surprised. It’s like when you SMILE for a photo, and you think you have pasted on a cheesy monkeyish grin. But in seeing the picture, you just look…well..happy! I don’t think we are very good judges of what IS enough! After all, ‘they’ say it takes 10 deposits into a student’s ‘LOVE BANK’ to balance out 1 correction.
And the Bible affirms that what draws ANYONE to us is not how smart we are, how together we look, how neat our homes are, how successful we are in business, school or raising kids. What attracts others to you is your kindness:
Prov 19:22 – What is desirable in a man is his kindness.
Wow! God through Solomon, the King who was known for his wisdom, is instructing us about the most desirable character trait. This kindness or ‘chesed’ is also translated as MERCY. Mercy is when you don’t give someone what they deserve; instead you give them something they don’t deserve, like grace. And in order to do that, it’s going to cost YOU a lot. For God to give us mercy when we deserved punishment, He submitted His Son to our sentence.
The price you and I are going to have to pay to be kind enough and merciful enough is far more than we think we should or even for which we can SEE we have the resources. (But God is more than happy to supply us!) And just like in my silly but frequent misjudging of the large-enough storage container, we will have to be MORE kind than we think necessary.
What a thought: that the only thing someone will really remember about me, if they remember me at all, is that I was kind to them. And for them to notice kindness, it’s going to have to be MORE than I think I should have to GIVE.
What were the circumstances of someone’s extravagant kindness to you?
Leave a Reply