Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith. For the joy set before him he endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. Hebrews 12:1-2
“I worked with a particularly high-performing business unit whose leader was renowned for driving hope and sustained movement in his troops. He did it through a daily, fifteen-minute morning meeting to cast vision, give information, share stories of success, and infuse strategy, thus giving a daily dose of energy that kept it all moving. He used these short meetings to make sure everyone was aligned around the goal, to catch problems early, and to give his team a space in which to share lessons and acknowledge progress. This daily infusion of energy kept the team and the process moving. It’s worth noting that the meetings were short, and they didn’t require preparation, so they weren’t distractions from the real work of change; instead, they became moments to mark forward progress and even to celebrate those incremental steps in the right direction.”
Henry Cloud in Necessary Endings: The Employees, Businesses, and Relationships That All of Us Have to Give Up in Order to Move Forward (San Francisco: HarperCollins, 2011) 93.
Today marks my last post from this book. If you want the PDF copy, reply to this email or download it here.
I chose this post as it provides a great transition to Lent which starts tomorrow. We build and maintain momentum in the primary disciplines of the Christian faith – in prayer, fasting, and giving – during Lent.
Since most people don’t realize Lent is 40 fasting days and 7 feast days, I will structure my next 47 posts featuring the significance of 40 and 7 in Scripture (to see why the early church picked those numbers) and build a Lent devotional one day at a time.
I will release it in published form for you to share with others next year entitled, Forty and Seven. I have not sorted the subtitle yet.
But today Cloud reminds us of the impact a small commitment over many days can have. You can imagine his high-performing business unit illustration. It reminds me of how I built GTP and how I pray they sustain momentum on my sabbatical.
But I picture this as Lent in each of our lives. We fast for 40 days, perhaps from choice foods like Daniel or from things that desire to control us like sweets, caffeine, alcohol, or other things.
Others will fast from technology, games, social media, or other practices that dominate their time. Regardless, I encourage you to choose a food as fasting in Scripture links to food.
We enjoy these items on the seven feast days leading up to Easter, the seventh of seven feast days. And hopefully we have been transformed in the process. We have built momentum to sustain life after Lent.
I pray this resonates with you. I pray you join me in observing Lent this year to fast to detach from the world, to pray to connect to God, and to give to play your role as a conduit of blessing to the world. That’s Lent. It starts tomorrow.
And for the record, today marks Fat Tuesday (or Shrove Tuesday) which is the day of indulgence before the fast. Enjoy, just don’t go overboard. Do it as a celebration to enter the journey of Lent.
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