GUEST
ARTICLE
Learning
Self-Discipline Self-discipline
is important in any endeavor of life. It's best defined
as the ability to regulate one's conduct by principle and
sound judgment, rather than by impulse, desire, or social
custom. Biblically, self-discipline may be summarized in
one word: obedience. To exercise self-discipline is to
avoid evil by staying within the bounds of God's law.
I'm grateful for
my parents, coaches, professors, and the others who helped
me develop self-discipline in my own life. People who have
the ability to concentrate, focus on their goals, and consistently
stay within their priorities tend to succeed. Whether in
academics, the arts, or athletics, success generally comes
to the self-disciplined.
Since self-discipline
is so important, how do you develop it? How can parents
help their children develop it? Here are some practical
tips that I've found helpful:
Start with small
things. Clean your room
at home or your desk at work. Train yourself to put things
where they belong when they are out of place. Make the
old adage "A place for everything and everything
in its place" your motto. After you've cleaned your
room or desk, extend that discipline of neatness to the
rest of your house and workplace. Get yourself to the
point where orderliness matters. Learn how to keep your
environment clean and clear so you can function without
a myriad of distractions. Such neatness will further
develop self-discipline by forcing you to make decisions
about what is important and what is not.
Learning self-discipline
in the little things of life prepares the way for big successes.
On the other hand, those who are undisciplined in small
matters will likely be undisciplined in more important
issues. In the words of Solomon, it is the little foxes
that ruin the vineyards (Song of Sol. 2:15). And when it
comes to a person's integrity and credibility, there are
no small issues.
A famous rhyme,
based on the defeat of King Richard III of England at the
battle of Bosworth Field in 1485, illustrates the importance
of concentrating on small details:
For
want of a nail, a shoe was lost,
For want of a shoe, a horse was lost,
For want of a horse, a battle was lost,
For want of a battle, a kingdom was lost,
And all for want of a horseshoe nail.
Get yourself organized. Make a schedule,
however detailed or general you are comfortable with, and
stick to it. Have a to-do list of things you need to accomplish.
Using a daily planning book or a personal information manager
program on your computer would be helpful. But get organized,
even if all you do is jot down appointments and to-do items
on a piece of scrap paper. The simple reality is that if
you don't control your time, everything (and everyone)
else will.
Don't constantly
seek to be entertained. When you have
free time, do things that are productive instead of merely
entertaining. Read a good book, listen to classical music,
take a walk, or have a conversation with someone. In
other words, learn to entertain yourself with things
that are challenging, stimulating, and creative. Things
that are of no value except to entertain you make a very
small contribution to your well-being.
Be on time. If you're supposed
to be somewhere at a specific time, be there on time. The
apostle Paul listed proper use of time as a mark of true
spiritual wisdom: "Be careful how you walk, not as
unwise men, but as wise, making the most of your time,
because the days are evil" (Eph. 5:15-16). Being punctual
marks a life that is organized. It reveals a person whose
desires, activities, and responsibilities are under control.
Being on time also acknowledges the importance of other
people and the value of their time.
Keep your word. "Undertake
not what you cannot perform," a young George Washington
exhorted himself, "but be careful to keep your promise." If
you say you're going to do something, do it—when you said
you would do it and how you said you would do it. When
you make commitments, see them through. That calls for
the discipline to properly evaluate whether you have the
time and capability to do something. And once you've made
the commitment, self-discipline will enable you to keep
it.
Do the most difficult
tasks first. Most
people do just the opposite, spending their time doing
the easier, low priority tasks. But when they run out
of time (and energy), the difficult, high-priority tasks
are left undone.
Finish what you start. Some people's
lives are a sad litany of unfinished projects. In the words
of poet John Greenleaf Whittier,
For of all sad words of tongue or pen, The saddest are these: "It might
have been!"
If you start something,
finish it. Therein lies an important key to developing
self-discipline.
Accept correction. Correction helps
you develop self-discipline by showing you what you need
to avoid. Thus, it should not be rejected, but accepted
gladly. Solomon wrote "Listen to counsel and accept
discipline, that you may be wise the rest of your days" (Prov.
19:20); and "He whose ear listens to the life giving
reproof will dwell among the wise. He who neglects discipline
despises himself, but he who listens to reproof acquires
understanding" (Prov. 15:31-32).
Practice
self-denial. Learn to say no
to your feelings and impulses. Occasionally deny yourself pleasures that are
perfectly legitimate for you to enjoy. Skip dessert after a meal. Drink a glass
of iced tea instead of having that banana split that you love. Don't eat that
doughnut that caught your eye. Refraining from those things will remind your
body who is in charge.
Welcome responsibility. Volunteer to do
things that need to be done. That will force you to have
your life organized enough to have the time for such projects.
These practical
suggestions may not seem to involve any deep spiritual
principles. Yet you cannot split your life into the secular
and the spiritual. Instead you must live every aspect of
your life to the glory of God (1 Cor. 10:31). And self-discipline
cultivated in the seemingly mundane things of life will
spill over into the spiritual realm.
--John MacArthur
Adapted from The
Pillars of Christian Character by John MacArthur. © 1998
by John F MacArthur, Jr. Used by permission.
• Grace to You
(Monday, December 15, 2008)
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