
Gain personal momentum by taking steps - big and small - toward life and God. Do that with an attitude of loving generosity and abundance.
Seeding Action with Attitude Builds Personal Momentum
The point is this: whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully. – 2 Corinthians 9:6 ESVNavin is hardly “planting a seed” when he accepts the 3-4 second ride as he seeks to begin his personal journey. He’s taking action. Not just thinking about it, he’s actually doing something. Your action - and even your inaction - affects the outcomes of your life. Most often, inaction leads to regret and keeps you stuck in present circumstances. Navin wastes little time in determining the short ride will get him moving forward, which is his goal. Never mind that he could have been well past that same spot if he had started walking during the many hours he had been standing at waiting. His action got him closer. His inaction provided only stagnation. Personal momentum is about movement; about what you do, Not what you mean to do. A farmer expecting a bountiful harvest needs much more than his or her good intentions to get that harvest. Like, anything in life, we must sow well the seeds of our intentions and take action in faith to nurture the outcomes.
There May be Big Blessings from Small Seeds
In Ecclesiastes 11:1 we are told to cast our grains across many waters. This is obviously a ship metaphor. Though, I think it can apply to seeds as well and both have application for building personal momentum. You see, we don’t know the fate of any one seed. God does. He knows if the seed will produce the greatest and most magnificent tree the world has ever known,,or it it’s a dud that is destined to never even sprout. Regardless, we trust in his divine order. This is why we must sow many seeds to gain personal momentum. As God reveals those that germinate - some call it opening doors - we must be ready to embrace what is beginning to prosper and take action to see it through.You lazy fool, look at an ant. Watch it closely; let it teach you a thing or two. Nobody has to tell it what to do. All summer it stores up food; at harvest it stockpiles provisions. So how long are you going to laze around doing nothing? How long before you get out of bed? A nap here, a nap there, a day off here, a day off there, sit back, take it easy—do you know what comes next? Just this: You can look forward to a dirt-poor life, poverty your permanent houseguest! - Proverbs 6:6-11 (MSG)




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