I was talking with one of the graduates of IMPACT 360
yesterday. He has finished college and is now working with another of our
worldview programs, Propel My Life. He told me that he learned something from
his dad who learned something from me. I certainly had no idea of what he was
talking about, but he refreshed my memory. A few years ago Cheryl and I were
with his mom and dad at a MLB game, and in our conversation his dad was talking
about his ministry and was saying “my program” and “my staff,” and I interrupted
him and said that those were not his programs, but they belonged to many other
people also. I told him that he should be saying “our program” and “our staff.”
Thinking about it now, it was rather rude that I said that. But
now that I know it helped my friend I am happy I did it. Now my friend is
reminding his children of the same principle: use we, our, and us more often
than the first person personal pronouns.
A pet peeve of mine is to hear people referring to their
work or ministry as if that person was the only one involved in the effort. Have
you ever heard your pastor say “my deacons” or “my Minister of Music?” Have you
ever heard your supervisor at work say “my staff” or “I did so-and-so” when you
know that it took the whole team to get it done?
Many skills and talents we can master during our lifetime,
but working on not promoting me is one that I will work on until my last
breath.
To help me, I am regularly challenged by my favorite Bible
verse: ”He must increase and I must decrease.”
John 3:30. Plain enuff!
2 comments:
Though we both use many "Larryisms" in our lives, this is one of the fundamentals that really stuck.
Did Jason tell you he was using this one just this week with a new friend/colleague?
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