“Living life is like playing a violin solo in public and learning to play the instrument as we go along” naked. We would never rationally believe that we should be able to play a musical instrument perfectly the first time we tried or bowl a perfect game the first time we stepped on the lanes. Yet in our spiritual life, we often expect perfection and then become disillusioned when our expectations are not met. The level of our serenity is directly proportional to our expectations of perfection. To be clear: We should expect great, marvelous things to arise in our lives when we Live on the Spiritual Basis, but we must remember that our lives are works in progress. We seek “spiritual progress, not perfection.”
We only see a great artist’s final product, not their preliminary attempts. How many versions of Beethoven’s masterpieces did he discard before the final versions we know today were presented to the world? How many canvases did Rembrandt paint over? How many failures did Thomas Edison learn from on the way to his great discoveries? The perfection in their lives, and ours, is in being willing, willing to go on in the face of fear and doubt, trusting the inner voice.
Living on the Spiritual Basis, we trust infinite God rather than our finite selves. Keep your eyes on God and capitalize those seeming missteps in your spiritual growth as opportunities to demonstrate His omnipotence, for in truth “…it is the final goal that matters.”
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