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“Competitive to the Extreme: King Herod” Christmas
has come and gone… now what? How should we respond as the New Year
begins? For answers we look to the story of the wise men. “About that
time some wise men from eastern lands arrived in Jerusalem asking,
‘Where is the newborn king of the Jews? We have seen his star as it
arose and we have come to worship him.’ Herod was deeply disturbed by
their question…” (Mat 2:1-3) Why was Herod so “deeply disturbed” by the questions of the wise men? Why did he feel so threatened? Answer: Herod was fiercely competitive… to the extreme. |
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For
the first twelve years, Herod competed to establish his reign by
eliminating hundreds of potential opponents including his wife and her two
sons. During the next dozen years, Herod would rebuild the cities and
towns and establish himself as one of Israel’s greatest kings. But it
was the final nine years when Herod was at his worst. Hundreds, maybe
thousands of people were executed including his brother. It was here that
Herod received the wise men announcing the Messiah’s birth. Shortly
after that visit Herod sent soldiers to Bethlehem to murder every boy in
the community under two years old. Confession
time: I am also competitive… too competitive. My sister and I spent a
lot of time together playing board games such as Monopoly, Scrabble and
Life. It took her awhile to catch on to why her big brother was winning so
frequently. Eventually she realized, the rules were subtly changing from
one game to the next. (Larry, that is so low! I know. I know!) Whatever it
took: I wanted to win. Ouch! A
competitive personality can be an asset of course. Competition fosters
harder work and greater creativity. The success of our economy is driven
by our competitive nature. The most exciting sporting events are those
where the competitive rivalry between opponents is at its highest. Our
democratic political system is based on at least two competitive office
seekers slugging it out before voting day. A
competitive personality can also be treacherous. When you twist the rules,
use unethical business tactics, deliberately injure an opponent or slander
a rival you are being competitive to the extreme. At this point you cross
a fine line that separates aggressiveness from brutality. If you feel
compelled to lie, cheat or steal to get to the top of the heap… to stay
at the top your brutality will only get worse. Of
course, none of us would ever be this competitive or feel this
threatened… would we? When
a new employee is hired and they display extraordinary enthusiasm for
their job do you rush to learn from him or encourage her? (Get real,
Larry!) I doubt it. More likely, you feel threatened. You may even find
yourself in a few back room discussions to find ways bring him/her back
down to size. When a new member joins the church and suggests ways the
church can improve or shows interest and talent in the area of the church
you serve, do you look for ways to be supportive? Do you pull them aside
and tell them we don’t do things that way around here? Do you talk
behind their back? Before
I sound too smug, I attended a local pastors meeting recently and one
particularly gifted new minister was enthusiastically sharing ideas for
church growth. I remember leaning over and whispering to one of the other
old fogy’s… oops, I mean ministers and whispering, “He’ll burn
out in ninety days.” Let’s
be honest. We are all competitive to a degree. We occasionally feel
threatened by new talent and fresh ideas. We all possess a little bit of
apprehension that our position will be eliminated and we will no longer be
needed. It is natural and
very human to feel this way but competition taken to the extreme is a form
of paranoia and is still very, very wrong. There is a little bit of King
Herod in all of us. The
Christ child was born and soon the family was forced to flee to avoid
Herod’s competitive fear. How many talented people do companies lose
because other employees refuse to offer support? How many churches lose
their young and gifted because long-time members refuse to adjust to new
ideas? The question is: What should we do next? How can you learn from Herod’s tragic mistakes? What will enable me to be more supportive of new people and ideas? Next devotion: Answers from the wise men. Click Here: Competitive to the Extreme: King Herod – Conclusion Last modified January 10, 2001. Would you like to subscribe each week? It's free. Click here and type subscribe. Other Recent Devotions: I love M & M's and New Year Resolutions
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Do you have a question or concern? Write me at this address: LarryDavies@SowingSeedsofFaith.com Prayer Requests Weekly Devotion Devotional Aids Ministry Devotions Breaking the Peanut Butter Habit Hot Issues Turning Points Divorce Prayer About Sowing Seeds of Faith |
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