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Mary Pickford is
reported to have said, ”To fall is not to fail, unless you
fail to get up again.” The wise man Solomon said this by inspiration
many years before. ”For a just man falleth seven times and
riseth up again.”
The people who
never fall never do anything. How can you fall sitting down?
A young girl practicing figure skating to compete in the Olympics
was told by her teacher, ”If you don’t fall while practicing
then you are not learning enough to be a true champion.” People
who do things will fall but if they are true champions then
they will get up again, for to fall is not to fail, unless
you fail to get up again.
David told us that
”the LORD upholdeth all that fall, and raiseth up all those
that be bowed down.’
What a great comfort
it is to know that the Lord will help when we fall, but how
can He help those who won’t try?
Can we imagine
a little baby wanting to learn to walk saying, ”I’m not going
to walk until I can do it without falling down.” That little
child would never walk. We learn by doing, by trying and falling
and trying again. Nothing worthwhile was ever done without
falling over and over again. Thomas Edison is reported to
have told a discouraged employee who had complained that ten
thousand experiments had failed, that it was not failure at
all because they now knew ten thousand ways that didn’t work
and so they were that much closer to the one that would.
Babe Ruth is remembered
as the ”king of swat” because he hit so many home runs but
he struck out more times than any other player in his day.
When Carl Yastrezemski was honored for having collected his
3,000th hit, he recalled that he had been up to bat over 10,000
times. That meant, he said, ”I’ve been unsuccessful over seven
thousand times.”
An average major
leaguer hitting 250 gets three hits for every twelve times
at bat. He will probably make a salary of somewhere between
$100,000 to $200,000. The superstar who bats 333 gets four
hits for every twelve times at bat. He makes over one million
dollars a year. Yet he only gets one more hit every three
games. That may not be much more but he makes ten times more.
He probably gets more hits because he swings more often.
Going back to Solomon’s
description of a just man, he falls seven times and gets up
seven times. The failure falls seven times and gets up only
six times. Do we qualify as just persons or failures? Do we
keep trying even after we have fallen? Do we put our trust
in God and realize that He will always help us up if we will
just try again?
Again it is Solomon
who tells us how we can be of help and encouragement to one
another. He says that ”two are better than one; because they
have a good reward for their labour, for if they fall, the
one will lift up his fellow: but woe to him that is alone
when he falleth; for he hath not another to help him up.”
Are we conscious
of the needs of others and always willing to help them get
up again when they fall? Our father-in-law is now 101 years
old and he falls frequently. He cannot get up without help
once he is down. Are we conscious of the needs of others and
anxious to stoop down to help lift up our fallen brethren
and sisters?
If the ”Lord upholdeth
all that fall, and raiseth up all those that be bowed down,”
how conscious we should be of one another and ready to extend
our hand to lift up those who are down.
The lesson we need
to remember is that we all fall but only failures stay down.
Keep on swinging, keep on trying, keep looking to help others
when they fall and ”humble yourselves in the sight of the
Lord, and he shall lift you up.”
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