Jump Start # 4102
Philippians 4:8 “Finally, brethren, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is of good repute, if there is any excellence and if anything worthy of praise, dwell on these things.”
Years ago someone special gave me a large framed poster of baseball legend Mickey Mantle. There was a quote from Mantle on that print. I have admired this very much. He was asked, “When you come up to bat, do you ever think about hitting a home run?” Mantle’s reply was, “Every time.”
Among we preachers, we often use the expression of “hitting one out of the park,” when a sermon was preached well. Mantle’s quote is a great reminder for all of us preachers to try our best every time. Hit one out of the park each time.
But, this is a thought that ought to run deeply within the congregation. Everything we do for the King ought to be our best. Bring excellence every time. When leading singing, do the best that you can do. When praying, do the best that you can do. You may not be the best out there, but you are striving to do your very best. That’s the standard in excellence. Do your best. Try to hit a home run every time you come to the plate. Bring excellence each time.
Now, some lessons for us:
First, we much too often forget who we are serving. It’s not each other, but it’s the King. He deserves our best because He always gave His best. Sloppy services can hinder and disrupt the worship for others. Song leaders, get those songs picked out by Friday and practice them on Saturday and get to the church building early on Sunday. That’s not hard. That’s trying to hit a homerun everytime you come to the plate. Preachers, look over your printed material and bulletins and power point slides. Check for typos. Check the references to passages. Do your best every time.
Now, someone just starting out in these things will make more mistakes. Be patient. Encourage. Help him. Share tips that you have learned. Teach him the valuable lesson of excellence.
Second, establishing these things as the norm is the way a congregation changes it’s culture. It takes time. But, the casual, indifferent, sloppy way soon becomes obsolete and not the norm. Once a congregation’s culture changes to excellence, you’ll find people arriving really early for services. You’ll see more people volunteering to help out. You’ll find others wanting to be a part of something exciting. Standing for excellence is so rare these days in any venue.
Third, the culture of excellence begins in the heart before it can fill the congregation. Trying to change the church’s culture without changing my culture usually doesn’t go well. Excellence in the home. Excellence in the work place. Excellent attitudes. Excellence in generosity. This spirit of trying to hit a home run every time, will touch every thing we do. It will change how we see things. It will bring out better behavior from us.
Try to hit a home run every time you come to the plate. Great quote. Great reminder for all of us.
Roger
