When
I was growing up my father would occasionally put his hand on my shoulder, grin
at me with his deep dimpled smile and say, “You’re as handy as a pocket on a
shirt.”
My
father never went to college. He spent
his career with Southwestern Bell, who sent him to tech school where he learned
electronics and tracked the latest technology of his day, from vacuum tubes to
transistors. He died of cancer of the
bone marrow when he was 53, just as fiber optics and the microchip were being
developed and years before the internet and cell phones. He was
a blue -collar worker who grew up in the 1930s and married my mother in
1941.
In
his world, few things were as useful as a “pocket on a shirt.” He carried his pens in his shirt pocket and a
pack of Camel cigarettes, which was common for his generation. When he told me that I was handy as a “pocket
on a shirt,” he was giving me a high compliment for being useful.
Over
the years I have learned the value of that compliment. Few things are as important in life as being
useful. We all want to know that our
lives matter, that we count.
Even
King David worried about becoming useless in his old age. After all of his accomplishments, he turned
his eyes to heaven and made this plea: “But don’t turn me out to pasture when I’m
old or put me on the shelf when I can’t pull my weight,” (Psalm 71:9, The
Message).
One
of Paul’s greatest desires was to live life in such a way that he was
considered useful to others. To this end, he compared himself to an athlete who
endures the rigors necessary for victory.
“Therefore
I run in such a way as not to run aimlessly; I box in such a way, as to
avoid hitting air; but I strictly discipline my
body and make it my slave, so that, after I have preached to others, I myself
will not be disqualified,” (1 Corinthians 9:26-27).
Peter gave us the
prescription for living a useful life regardless of our profession or circumstances. “Now for this very reason also, applying all
diligence, in your faith supply moral excellence, and in your moral
excellence, knowledge, and in your knowledge, self-control,
and in your self-control, perseverance, and in your perseverance, godliness, and in your godliness, brotherly
kindness, and in your brotherly kindness, love. For if these qualities are yours and are
increasing, they do not make you useless nor unproductive in the
true knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. (2 Peter 1:5-8).
A
useful and productive life is not determined by our length of days on the
earth, or the extent of our fame and fortune.
Each of us can live a useful and fruitful life when we pursue the
qualities outlined by Peter with the discipline described by the Apostle Paul. If
we do this, some day we will see the smiling face of God and hear his words, “Well
done, my good and faithful servant,” (Matthew 25:21).