In
a book entitled ”The Widow O’Callaghan’s Boys,” Jim, one of the
boys, wants to know if his mother thinks he can have a bank one
day. ”There you go, Jim,” says his mother. ”If you’ve got a bank
in your eye, you’d best pay attention to your dustin’ and dishwashin.’
That’s your first two steps. The Lord never puts little boys and
big jobs together. He gives the little boys a chance at the little
jobs, and then as they do the little jobs faithfully get to be the
big men that do the big jobs easy.”
This
was good advice the Widow O’Callaghan gave her son but a greater
than she said, ”He that is faithful in that which is least, is faithful
also in much.” Moffatt’s translation adds, ”He who is dishonest
with a trifle is also dishonest with a large trust.”
Jesus recognized that which we so often forget: that life is made
up of small things. Life is not a little bundle of big things, but
a big bundle of little things. What a multitude of little things
compose our day! From the time we get up in the morning until we
retire at night, our energy is consumed in the doing of a thousand
little things. How well and accurate are we in all these little
things we do?
Jesus’
point is, ”If, then, you have not proved trustworthy with the wealth
of this world, who will trust you with the wealth that is real?”
Today most people do not think that it is wrong to take small things
that belong to another. Those who would not think of robbing a bank
or stealing a car think nothing at all of using company stamps for
personal mail or xeroxing their favorite recipes on the boss’s machine.
Unless we have received specific permission from. someone who has
the authority to give it, we should be careful not to take anything
that does not belong to us, no matter how small it may be.
Only
recently we heard a business man remark that cheating no longer
bothered him since the government was making crooks out of everyone
and it was the only way he could get ahead. This feeling is common
today but it must not affect Christ’s true brethren and sisters.
We need to be faithful and truthful no matter what.
Since we are all children in God’s eyes, he is now giving us the
little jobs to do as Mrs. O’Callaghan gave her boy dustin’ and dishwashin’
chores. God is watching to see how faithful we are with the things
of this world. If we have cut corners here and there how can we
expect Christ to give us the wealth that is real when he comes?
There is a true story about an elderly business man who hired a
bright young fellow to learn the business fully intending to turn
it over to him upon retirement. The young man was caught tapping
the till and promptly discharged. For stealing a few paltry dollars
he lost the entire business.
Whatever
we might do that would keep us from receiving Christ’s approval
at his return is much too high a price to pay for whatever we might
gain immediately. Let us all resolve to be faithful in the small
details of this life so that Jesus when he returns will say to us,
”Well done, good and faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over
a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things: enter thou
into the joy of thy Lord.”
|