Friday, March 01, 2019

Exceptionalism ≠ Excellence


Marshall Goldsmith, in his book “Triggers,” refers to a study that shows an almost complete eradication of central line infections in intensive care units when doctors follow a simple 5-point checklist (p.17). The problem is, doctors resist using this checklist. Why? Because it is so simple. Perhaps they believe they are above such things as a simple checklist. They think they are exceptional. 

The author goes on to describe three human tendencies: 1) our contempt for simplicity; 2) our contempt for instruction and follow-up; and, 3) our faith that we can succeed all by ourselves.

We regard ourselves to be pretty smart people. Simplicity is below us. We can figure things out for ourselves (for instance, recall how often you have avoided using the instructions. We persist in an attitude that we learned when we were age 2: “Mother, I’d rather do it myself.”

Let’s apply this to the Christian life. Do we make the pursuit of following Jesus more complex that it really is? There is a hymn that goes “Trust and obey, for there’s no other way to be happy in Jesus, but to trust and obey.” Take Him at His Word; do what He says. That’s pretty simple. I think we add complexity, with studies and seminars, simply to allow us to avoid submitting to the simple.

We live in a world that celebrates the new. And what’s new is pushed at us in a variety of ways. We feel dumb and irrelevant if we don’t keep up. But the old patterns of devotion and diligence are proven, though often forgotten. Consider this: those two “d’s”, devotion and diligence, actually restrain us from flirting with the newest fads. Devotion demands focus and close attention. Diligence involves a faithful practice of established patterns. If we were to follow these, we would have to admit that spirituality is not so much discovered, as practiced. 

Scripture consistently refers to followers of Jesus as little children. We want our biological children to grow to adulthood and independence. Not so “children of the heavenly Father.” We will forever live in dependence upon Him, though we often resist it the present. 

Maybe it really is true that those most “happy in Jesus” are those who simply “trust and obey.”

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