Jonathots Daily Blog
(4101)
Jesus Is Jesus
(tap the picture to see the video)
art by smarrttie pants
The producers of jonathots would humbly request a yearly subscription donation for this inspirational opportunity
Jonathots Daily Blog
(4101)
art by smarrttie pants
The producers of jonathots would humbly request a yearly subscription donation for this inspirational opportunity
(1,862)
Because I had seven sons come through my household, I ended up becoming a regular watcher of the cartoon show, GI Joe. Although the program had the drawback of presenting testosterone-driven solutions via muscling your way to often-violent conclusions, in the commercial breaks, they offered practical little scenarios, where children could learn the value of good manners, eating vegetables or helping little old ladies across the street. At the end of the lesson, one of the steroid-juiced characters would intone in a deep voice, “And now you know. And knowing is half the battle.”
So if knowing is half the battle, what’s the other half? If we go ahead and concede the notion that knowledge takes us halfway towards maturity, success and progress, what is needed to complete the journey?
Truthfully, I was unable to ascertain the answer by watching any additional episodes of GI Joe, but I offer to you that the other half of the battle, after we have admitted the power of knowing and learning, is allowing ourselves the opportunity for trying.
Yes, I will say it aloud: most people fail because they discuss and acquire information, but then freeze up, frightened to attempt a new idea because they are greatly terrified by the prospects of failure.
Failure is our friend. Failure confirms two wonderful facts: (1) we are trying; and (2) our latest attempt did not work.
As long as something exists in theory or is stuck in committee or is being overly debated, we never have the satisfaction of sensing that we are trying and we are never given the reassurance in our souls of discovering that something does or does not work.
Our government, our churches, our corporations and our entertainment in this country are presently frozen–in a state of limbo–because we continue to accumulate knowledge without ever trying anything.
Trying is the other half of the equation, which is initiated by knowing.
When we pursue spirituality or even intelligence without adding the dimension of experimenting–trying the principles we believe in–we end up with a form of Godliness that denies the power that is available. And what is the power?
“Try it–you’ll like it.”
That is when we all learn. That is how we grow.
I know there is a God because when I apply who He is, what He is, and what I’ve learned about Him, and try … it works.
The producers of jonathots would humbly request a yearly subscription donation of $10 for this wonderful, inspirational opportunity