"If you lose your sense of humor on the way to Mars, you're finished."
Robert Zubrin
Living successfully requires a great deal of teamwork. Although we believers should be highly qualified to labor together as a unit, we too oftensuccumb to the natural tendencies of self-reliance.
Isn't it easier just to do things myself? If I trust someone else, they may drop the ball, do it wrong, differently, or possibly better than me. It is also much easier than dealing with conflict. I mean, what if we butt heads or just don't like each other?
Life doesn't work that way (and we know it). We are symbiotic creations. God designed us to be interdependent and social beings and we must learn to not only survive together but succeed together for the good of the kingdom.
Popular Science magazine quoted Robert Zubrin, author and president of "The Mars Society", as saying that extended mission astronauts had to be "tough, cheerful, and team spirited". We too are on an extended mission; and a much more valuable one at that. How much more important is it that we maintain our "sense of humor".
Toughness doesn't mean just enduring criticism and bottling up our emotions but is a willingness to work through difficulties in our relationships by forgiving, mending broken fellowship, and learning from and building on failures. Cheerfully content with what we can't change, not grumbling or sinking into depression but displaying the joy of our salvation. In our current culture "plays well with others" is on too few Christians' report card; how disappointing. May each of us, for the cause of Christ, take the initiative to learn the lessons of humility and unity.
Do nothing from selfishness or empty conceit, but with humility of mind regard one another as more important than yourselves; do not merely look out for your own personal intrests, but also for the intrests of others. Have this attitude in yourselves which was also in Christ Jesus. Philippians 2:3-5
No comments:
Post a Comment