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Success is about persistence, timing, and attitude


It has been almost 40 years since I left the pastorate to become a child care executive. I have spoken in many different kinds of churches – about 1,000 since 1983. Today, churches face a happy, scary, exhilarating, depressing, encouraging, and frightening time. But more than anything else, clergy and laity face a time of opportunity.


Ask yourself two questions: What has brought me to this point in life and what will it take for me to continue?


I believe the world is divided into those who plan to succeed and those who don’t—and the ultimate question becomes which are you? I have never met a clergy person who wants to fail. One may often feel lonely and depressed, but down deep, clergy are called to serve well—we all want to succeed. But sometimes we get derailed. I have three words to consider for both clergy and laity:

persistence, timing, and attitude.


First, persistence. One of my heroes is Winston Churchill. He was the greatest war leader Great Britain ever had. During the dark days of World War II when Adolph Hitler’s Nazi forces were virtually destroying London, it was Churchill who kept the people’s hopes alive by determination, inspiration, and rhetoric. In the early 1960’s

after Winston Churchill had already turned 90, he made a final commencement address. It may be the most dramatic commencement address ever. Churchill, by this time an overweight, bent and aged man, shuffled slowly to the microphone. He raised that big head of his and said to his enraptured audience: “Never give up, Never give up, Never give up.” With that the old man turned and ambled back to his seat. The crowd sat stunned in silence before giving him a thunderous standing ovation.


Never give up.


Persistence has been a key to your success and persistence will be a key in the future. Persistence has brought you to this point but this is only the beginning. As clergy and laity, I suggest you need

to do three things: be totally, absolutely dedicated; be convinced that what you do is in God’s will; and believe in yourself more than anything else. Persistence is part of the foundation for success.


My second word is timing. One who succeeds knows what to do and then does it, understanding that life is a challenge, that church work isn’t easy. But the successful person is one who also knows

that life is an adventure and that the journey is worthwhile.


Reinhold Niebuhr offers this on timing. “God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.”


A high achiever knows how to seize opportunities. The brass ring comes around only a few times. Reach out and grab it. Life without

risk is a life of sheer boredom. No one wants to look back with regrets in their yearbook of life and say “why” while one focused on success always looks ahead and asks “why not?”


Too many church members have stopped growing. They go to their graves with their music still inside them, with their poetry yet to be written. Between the City of Reality and the City of Dreams, many people exit at the Town of Compromise and lead lives boring,

dull, and frustrating. Successful clergy and church members continue to help people dream dreams and see visions.


This Bible story illustrates my point. Many of Jesus’ disciples were fishermen. In His day, all good fishermen knew one fished only from the left side of the boat. One night the men fished all night and caught nothing. Jesus told them to fish off the right side of the boat. They did and their boats began to sink because they caught

so many fish. Jesus reminded them that success in life is much closer than often realized. With the disciples it was just a boat’s width away. Don’t stop too soon on the way to your dreams.


My third word is attitude. It’s trite but true, a person with the right attitude takes a lemon and makes lemonade out of it. One who refuses to fail comes to the end of his rope, ties a knot, and hangs on. A successful person keeps purpose and direction near. The question isn’t whether you accept life, the question is how you accept it.


The Chinese word for crisis is comprised of two characters. The first

represents danger and the second opportunity. When Chinese see the word, they interpret it both ways: danger and opportunity. I have found that is the way life is. If you view life as an opportunity

for fulfillment and service, then it will become a self-fulfilling prophesy. If you view life as filled with danger, that will become

the measure by which you live. It all depends on your attitude.


There’s nothing stopping you. Start planning today for your next success!


Written by Dr. Michael C. Blackwell, president/CEO of Baptist Children's Homes

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