By definition, something is said to be latent when it exists and capable of
developing but not yet visible, obvious or active. When you put a grain
or seed into the soil, the first few
days, weeks, months or even years are period of intense activities
(metabolism) within the seed. These activities necessary for germination and
growth though not visible to the external environment. That's the latent
phase. I'm not a farmer, but am sure the the seedling takes root first before
putting forth its shoot and finally starts producing fruits. Note the
sequence. Most times, the longer it takes to germinate, the deeper the
root. And the deeper the root, the stronger ( and may be longer) the
shoot. And most times, the stronger the shoot the longer the life span.
Friday, 21 March 2014
Wednesday, 6 March 2013
Life Is Business
“Life is business”, this was
the thought that cropped up in my mind while meditating on some scriptures
yesterday morning. It got me thinking and the more I thought on it, the more
the truth about it dawns me.
Life is business
and until we understand this to be the case, we may not really make the most of
it. No matter what you do, you are involved in one sort of business or
another. Entrepreneurs are not the only
ones in business, we all are- whether students, athletes, employees, civil
servants or politicians.
I am aware that
many definitions exist for business.In the midst of this multitude of
definitions, they all seem to agree on some fundamentals- that business is
about meeting needs whether through buying and selling or through the provision
of services with the aim of making profit.To the conventional and myopic mind,
profit is all about money. So when you tell them about life being business,
they see you as being materialistic, money conscious and carnally minded. What they
don’t know is that some profit (rewards) come in terms of satisfaction derived
from meeting needs or experience gained from rendering services, others come as
greater opportunities for jobs well done and yet some others come as
recognitions (awards) for services rendered. In other words, profit could mean
different things to different persons. However, whatever profit means, it comes
in response to the activities you have engaged in. In other words, “profit” is
the consequence, wages, rewards, gain (or loss), recompense, result, or outcome
of the (business) activities one has engaged in and how those activities were
done.
Personally, I define
business as harnessing resources to achieve set goals, targets or objectives. You
are in business if you know how to harness available resources (time, money,
people, materials) to achieve set objectives. If as a student you know how to
harness your time, money, network of friends, materials to achieve academic set
goals, then you are already in business. The same goes for pastors,
politicians, athletes etc. The entrepreneur, whom we all know and agree to be
in business,does no different! The earlier we start being business minded in
our approach to whatever we do in life, the better for us. The call for
business mindedness is not a call to be greedy, selfish, materialistic,
capitalistic or crafty. All these are some unhealthy practices people carry
into business. To view business only from such perspective, and thereby
discouraging business mindedness is myopic and counter-productive. It’s like
viewing life only from the prism of sin, wickedness and unrighteousness and
thereby, refusing to be involved with life. To be business minded is to be
serious in our approach to issues; to be result oriented; to be solution driven;
to be opportunity sensitive and investment minded. It means to be creative. Whether
we like it or not, so long as we are on this side of eternity we are either
consciously or unconsciously buying or selling something both tangible and
intangible things. Business minded mindset is what will
help you plan and set goals for your life, invest your resources and seize and
maximize opportunities in pursuit of these goals. It will help you reduce
wastages as much as possible. Imagine what will happen if civil servants
approach their work with this mindset. Whatever you don’t approach with this
mindset is leisure or pass time. And I don’t think that’s how you want to
approach your life. Shrewd businessmen would always tell you it’s “business
before pleasure” “business instead of games” or that “time is money”. “Let’s
mean business” is yet another business terminology we often employ whenever we
want the other party to get serious in whatever we are doing.
It may surprise
you to know that the Almighty God is business minded. HE’s always result
oriented and HE expects us to be as well. HE never does anything just for the
fun of it. When HE sent HIS Son to the earth, it was with the specific
objective of harvesting souls. HE “invested” HIM as it were, and harvested (and
still harvesting) millions in souls.When God calls a man, HE sets out
objectives the man must endeavor to achieve. As it is with the Father, so it is
with the Son- HE was business minded (result oriented) while on earth. No wonder
as a child, HE asked HIS earthly parents when they came looking for Him if they
knew not that HE must be about HIS Father’s business?( Luke 2:49). He further
declared, “My meat is to do the will of Him that sent me, and to finish His
work” (John 4: 34).In another place HE said, “My Father worketh hitherto and I
work”. That was HIS approach to HIS
Father’s business and no wonder HE was very productive ‘cos HE never joked with
it. HE expects nothing less from us. “…I have chosen you, and ordained you, that
ye should go and bring forth fruit…and every branch that beareth not fruit HE
taketh away…(John 15: 16, 2) “And now also the axe is laid unto the root of the
trees: therefore every tree which bringeth forth not good fruit is hewn down,
and cast into the fire” (Matthew 3:9). We have been called to a life of
productivity. One scripture amongst othersthat really underscores this fact is
the parable of the talents in Matthew 25: 14-30. Those servants who traded with
their talents and gained other talents were commended and rewarded by the
master. On the other hand, the servant who refused to invest and utilize his
was condemned.
Life indeed is
business and God is interested in how you run the business of your life. HE is
not pleased when you not productive. “He spake also this parable; a certain man
had a fig tree planted in his vineyard; and he came and south fruit thereon,
and found none. Then said he to the dresser of his vineyard, Behold, these three
years I come seeking fruit on this fig tree, and find none: cut it down; why
cumbereth it the ground?” (Luke 13: 6-7).
Your life is
business and in fact, a serious one for that matter. Please don’t let it fail. Be
serious about this business- Learn, plan, strategize, and act-because in the
final analysis, you shall be rewarded both here and in eternity on how well (or
badly) you’ve handled this business of life. To live otherwise is to live a
frivolous and wasteful life. Selah!
Thanks for your
time and please let me know what you think about this article.
Wednesday, 20 February 2013
Checkpoint

“Examine
yourselves, whether ye be in the faith; prove your own selves. Know ye not your
own selves, how that Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates?” (2
Corinthians 13:5)
It is obvious
from the above scripture that the onus of probing and searching ourselves lies
with us. Although it admonishes us to examine ourselves in relation to our walk
and relationship with the Lord Jesus, self-examination, on a broader scale,
applies to other areas of our lives as well. It was Socrates who said, “an unexamined
life is not worth living”. Call it whatever you wish to call it;
self-examination, self-evaluation, stock taking or self-audit, the truth is, no
man ever makes progress in life without a habit of periodically evaluating his
life. Highly successful people do this as often as possible either daily,
weekly, monthly or yearly as the case may be.Even companies and organizations
know the importance of this hence they hold periodic meetings and carry out
audits to review progress and ascertain the health or otherwise of their firms.
When you fail to
examine or evaluate your life/activities, even nature and circumstances have a
way of compelling you to. Some have been forced to re-examine their diets and
eating habits after some bouts of health challenges. There are also those who
were offered the opportunity to re-examine their activities within the “comfort”
of police cells. Activities they never spared a thought about until it landed
them behind bars. It reminds me of the case of the prodigal son in Luke 16 who
at a point in his life, the Bible said, "came to himself" and did some thorough
evaluation of his life. His decision at that point was the beginning of his
restoration. Thanks to the consequences of his wayward and promiscuous
lifestyle or else he would have continued headlong in them to his eternal
destruction. Friends, there comes a time (or times) in a man’s life when he
needs to be alone and reflect on his life and activities. Such times are what I
call personal checkpoints. If you don't have or observe them, you are done for. Do this regularly; don’t wait until crisis forces
you to do it. It will help you plot a graph of your life and measure your
progress. Before you start pointing fingers at imaginary enemies as being
responsible for your stunted growth, do a self-examination first to be sure
yours case is not self-inflicted. Most times we (our habits and
activities) are our greatest enemies.
Apart from
helping you know your bearing per time, self-evaluation is the first step to
personal development. Even failure could be a blessing if we would re-evaluate and take stock. Whenever you sincerely engage in this, you tell yourself
some home truths about your life vis-à-vis the issue under review- be it
spiritual, financial, marital, business, academic etc. It helps you come to
terms with your strength and weaknesses. In other words, self-examination helps
you carry out a personal SWOT (strength, weakness, opportunities and threats)
analysis. Some far reaching personal decisions are often taken during such
exercise. Doing this also helps you pray effectively and intelligently about
the issue. The often you do this, the greater your chances for progress and
development.
What are your
goals this year? How often do you evaluate your life and
activities in relation to these goals? If a graph of your activities so far
this year is plotted, will it show movement towards or away from these goals?
Do you have checkpoints: pointers that alert you whenever you are drifting off
your plan for achieving your goals? If you do a self-audit of your life, it may
stun you to discover that you have not really made progress towards your goals
this year, your tight schedule of activities notwithstanding.
What kind of
relationship and associations do you keep? How healthy are they? If “an
unexamined life”, according to Socrates, “is not worth living”, I dare say, an
unexamined relationship is as meaningless and purposeless as an unexamined
life. Don’t let crisis force you to have a rethink on that relationship, 'cos the
experience may leave a sour taste in your mouth. Be wise!
How is your
relationship with God? Take an audit of your work and walk with HIM. Or are you
so busy that you don’t find time out to do some spiritual stock taking? Are
there worrisome signs and signals that suggest that all may not be well with
you spiritually? Will I be right in saying there was a time you prayed more,
studied more, evangelized more and love more than you do now? The Lord Jesus
told us in Revelation 2:5 to “Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen
and repent”. But to do this, calls for self-examination or else we won’t know
from when we fell. Do it now! The Bible says if we would judge ourselves, we
should not be judged. Let’s not fool ourselves; if there wasn’t a possibility
of derailing, there wouldn’t have been any need for the call to examine
ourselves whether we be in the faith. “Wherefore let him that thinketh he
standeth take heed lest he falls” (1 Corinthians 10:12). Selah!
Thanks for your
time and pls, remember to drop your comments.
Labels:
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Thursday, 17 January 2013
Don't Take Grace for Granted.
"And Saul armed David with his armour, and
he put an helmet of brass upon his head; also he armed him with a coat
of mail. And David girded his sword upon his armour, and he assayed to
go; for he had not proved it. And David said unto Saul, I cannot go with
these; for I have not proved them. And David put them off him"- I Samuel 17: 38-39.
One scripture we have often misquoted or, at best, quoted out of context is Philipians 4:13 "I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me."
I don't intend to take anything away from it, but truth is, you cannot
do what you have not learn to do. No matter how often you quote and
claim this scripture even with a faith as high as mountain Everest, you
cannot fly an aeroplane if you are not a pilot. Neither can you operate
on a patient if you are not a surgeon no matter how anointed you are.
These are basic facts of life, we don't pray them into being. We learn
and master them! The good new is that, going by that same scripture, we can learn to do whatever we desire to learn. Failure to learn, breeds mediocrity even in the Church.
When you expect "grace" to do for you what you should do for yourself,
you set yourself up for mediocrity or outright failure. That's taking
grace for granted. Please, don't! Don't get me wrong, anointing,
prayers, faith and grace have their places, but there is also the place
of learning, mastery and development of whether a skill, a profession, a
trade or a talent. The Church is littered with folks who have refused
to sit down and learn before embarking on the voyage of
destiny/ministry. This is has not been the practice in Bible days, even
The Lord Jesus spent years preparing for a 3 1/2-year ministry.
In our opening text, we read about what transpired at the battle front. David said, "I cannot go with these; for I have not proved them".
In other words, he was like saying "I've not used them before, I'm not
skilled in their usage, therefore I don't know how effective they are".
"Let me use what I've mastered over time while I trust God for victory",
I imagine him saying. We know the outcome of it- a resounding victory.
Pls don't tell me that God directed the stone to Goliath's forehead.
While this MAY be the case, I believe David's mastery of the use of
slings played no small rule. David understood that no man learns to use a
weapon at the battle front. The best time to do that is in training.
When Abraham set out to rescue Lot, the Bible said he armed his TRAINED
servant, three hundred and eighteen of them (Genesis 14:14). When you
arm a man who has not been trained, you set him up for failure. Whether
you arm him with position, money, people, or opportunity, if he is not
prepared or trained, forget it! No wonder Paul cautioned about ordaining
novices as Bishops in the Church. The rod with which Moses lead the
Israelites (and parted the Red Sea) was not picked up by the road side,
rather it has been his rod right form his days in exile. He however,
surrendered it to the Lord, and it was later referred to as "the rod of
God". That's what happened when we yield our ability (skills, talents
etc) to God. They become HIS and you can imagine what happens when God
takes over our abilities, skills, talents etc. Under such arrangement,
you can expect the Holy Ghost to teach you things never before known by
man. You can expect HIM to amplify the effect; that was how a David
could kill a Goliath with a sling.
In Matthew 25:15 on the parable of the talents, the Bible said, the lord of the servants gave talents "to every man according to his several ability".
It was not their lord's responsibility to develop or use these talents
for them even though he was the one who employed them for the task.
That's my point! What are those deposits of grace (gifts, talents) in
you begging for development. God won't develop them for you, that's your
responsibility. There are challenges and opportunities lurking in the
corner, they don't need your permission to present themselves. And when
they present themselves, what you make of them is a function of your
level of preparedness. How many times have we messed up opportunities
simply because we were not prepared for them?May this not be the case
with us this year in Jesus' name! Amen!!
What
assignment has God given you, what task has He called you to do? Develop
and master the use of that "rod" or "sling" in your hand. Go for the
necessary training. Failure to do this will not be an excuse at the end
of the day if you failed in this assignment or task. What have you set
as goals this year for which you are currently fasting and praying,
believing God for? Whatever you are asking for will not drop from the
skies, they more often come as opportunities. But are you prepared for
them? Are you a student? Study as if it all depends on studying. Don't
take grace for granted, God is not a magician! Are you in ministry, in
business, or a career person? Don't be a jack of all trade and master of
none. Let people know you for your expertise and skills. When you do
your part, coupled with the grace and anointing of God not even satan
can stop you. #Selah!
Thank you for your time!
Labels:
insights,
inspirational,
motivational,
self-development
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