U.S. News & World Report reported
some disappointing findings about resolutions. They revealed, “By the second
week of February, some 80 percent of those resolutioners are back home with a
new kind of remorse staring back at them in the mirror — the remorse of
disappointment.” Great expectations embedded in our resolutions often only
yield great exasperations! There are certainly many reasons for this happening.
Psychology Today suggests that there are some contributing factors to this
lack of success. They propose that there are “… four common ways you are
standing in the way of your success… Your goals aren’t clear… You feel
overwhelmed. You feel discouraged… You’re not ready to change.” It appears
there are more barriers blocking our resolutions than there are bridges to our
success.
With this disappointing news it probably
comes as no surprise that many have determined such intentions are futile and simply
say, “Why bother?” On one website (discoverhappyhabits.com) they share a
plethora of statistics concerning resolutions that they amass and update from
year to year. They reported that only “31% of survey participants plan on
making resolutions for 2021 while 19% are still undecided.” It appears that a
majority of people have concluded, “Why create undue frustration? I’ll just forgo
this whole process.” In that same website they discovered that about “one in 10
people who failed said they made too many resolutions.” In essence they spread
themselves too thin. They tried to address all the issues needing to be tackled.
Their divided attention was such a distraction that they failed in their goals.
One biblical character who I admire is the
Apostle Paul. He had a healthy way to look at life and this enabled him to
accomplish much. He was a preacher, a church planter, a theologian, a disciple
maker, a defender of the Christian faith before the secular world, an
encourager and exhorter of people, and a traveler throughout the Roman world. He
expended tremendous energy and effort (2 Corinthians 11:23-28) to carry out the
mission he believed he was given by Jesus Christ. In Philippians 3:12-14 he shared
the philosophy energizing his life. While he did many things, he was single
focused “this one thing I do.”
How did he carry out that single focus? First,
he did not see himself as having arrived. He knew he had lots of growing to do to
be all that God wanted him to be. Too often a person thinks so highly of themselves that they do not consider that there is room for improvement. Such an
individual will be slow to make changes, if they are even willing to make them
at all.
Second, he did not focus on his past
failures or successes. When our focus is on failures of the past we can be weighed
down in discouragement. Focusing upon successes may cause one to think there is
no more to accomplish. Paul focused ahead and envisioned how God might work in
him. Such a forward-looking vision keeps one seeing the future as the place of
potential as one moves ahead.
Third, he realized that energy must be merged
with vision for the future. He says he was “straining forward to what lies
ahead.” Too often great intentions die because energy and effort are not
propelling us in the direction we believe we need to go. I remember watching
the salmon in Alaska expending great effort to swim upstream in the mighty current
of the Copper River to their spawning grounds. They were motivated to lay their
eggs and produce the next generation of salmon. If I saw a salmon floating downstream
with the current, I knew it was dead. It takes a live fish to swim against the
current. Any dead fish can simply go with the flow. People can learn a powerful
lesson from those salmon!
Paul also shared he was pressing “on
toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.” He
knew that he was living life not for himself but for God. Living for something
bigger than ourselves is a great motivator in our resolve to accomplish great
things.
Perhaps we need a restart in the new year.
Resolve to learn from the words of the Apostle Paul and do the one thing that
needs to be done to see your life transformed to impact the world around you.