Habits are very powerful things. Someone has rightly observed you are the accumulation of all your habits. I've discovered six habits that allow you to go from good to great. In our last broadcast, I covered three of them.
Now I'm going to cover the last three, so fasten your seatbelt. Here we go. Thanks for joining us for this Edition of Living on the Edge with Chip Ingram. Chip's our Bible teacher for this international teaching and discipleship ministry focused on helping Christians live like Christians. Today he'll pick up in our series Good to Great in God's Eyes with part two of his talk, Develop Great Habits. But before we get going, if this is your first time listening to Living on the Edge or you want to learn more about what we do, go to livingontheedge.org. You'll find resources on tons of topics and countless programs to enjoy. Or if you prefer, the Chip Ingram app is also a great way to get plugged in with our ministry. Well, with that, Chip begins the second half of his talk by continuing to highlight the six great habits that cultivate grace.
Let's dive in. Notice what it says in Luke 16 10. Now if you study Luke 16, it's a financial passage, but I believe it's a timeless axiom about the issue of responsibility. I'll never, ever forget where I learned this.
I mean, this was mind-boggling to me. During the summer, I went with a parachurch organization. We all went to this big city to learn how to do ministry.
We stayed in a sorority house, and then we all got jobs. And then at night, we did evangelism. We took faith trips.
And so we're on this faith trip, and we're out to just find people we could serve and love. And there's five guys in a car, and my team leader is a guy named John, and we're at a gas station out in the middle of somewhere in Ohio. I don't know where it was, and it wasn't very nice. And I love Ohio.
I was born in Ohio, but this gas station wasn't very nice. And so I'm going in to wash my hands, put some gas in the car, and take this right. I'm not trying to be too graphic or anything, but a guy is coming out of the stall, and I notice he pulls toilet paper, and he wipes the seat and flushes it and then comes out.
And he's my team leader. I'm thinking, ooh. And then he washes his hands, and he takes a couple paper towels, and he wipes off the sink, and it takes him about six or seven seconds. And then many people have dropped junk, and he just takes another three seconds, gathers it up, puts it down. And I'm the mouthy, arrogant young guy, so I'm thinking, so John, looking for work, huh?
A little janitorial here? And he stopped me, and he got real serious. He said, no, Chip, not at all. He said a disciple of Jesus Christ always leaves everything better than they found it. Someone's going to sit on that seat later. I don't need to know them. I need to serve them. Someone's going to wash their hands in that sink later.
I don't know them, but I know that if Jesus was here, he would want it better for them. You know what? I don't know who owns this gas station, but if I owned it and there was paper all over the floor, I would certainly want someone to pick it up so the next people coming in. And I mean, it was like, you talk like a paradigm shift.
I never thought of that. See, what John taught me was you not only do your own dishes, a servant, you do other people's dishes. You take responsibility for your life. You take responsibility for your actions and your choices and your messes, and you become the kind of person that other people can count on.
And I will never, ever forget. And so I went into practicing that. So I learned when you borrow a car from someone, when you return it, it's clean and you fill it with gas. When you get something out of the refrigerator, you put it away. When you take off your clothes, you hang them up. It's amazing the number of marital problems that can be solved if you just do your own dishes.
But when you begin, it's just a habit. I mean, I had many, many and still have plenty of good marital issues to work through, but my wife would work and she would do all the clothes and I would come in and I have more important things to do because I'm so important, and I'd take all the clothes that she's done and I'd put them on the dresser and they might be there for two or three or four days. Because you can't leave them on the bed because I have to sleep in the bed because that's where I sleep and that's very important. You know what I was communicating to her?
She worked for how many hours doing all those clothes? I communicated. It must not be very important to me. And you know what I've developed a habit? We'll get to this one, but it's kind of do your own dishes and do it now. I just have developed a habit. When I walk in, the clothes are there, I put them away now. Very simple. I just put them away now.
It's as easy to do in 30 seconds now as it is three days from now, but do you see what I'm saying? You can cultivate habits of being kind, of being faithful, of being a steward, and so what you want to do is, hey, you know what? You buy an alarm clock, you take out the trash, and then are you ready for this one? Every single one of us, you do your own dishes. You own your messes. You own your future.
You own your money. You own your problems and your relationships. And by God's grace, you cultivate the habit of not expecting anything or anyone, no blaming, no excuses, saying, Lord, I'm desperate. I need help.
My Bible says that's when grace comes. I can't do this. I need your help. Fourth habit is the principle of clarity.
Proverbs 20 says, the purposes of a man's heart are like deep water, but a man of understanding draws it out. And this is habit, write it down. Write it down. Now this may sound kind of crazy, but this may be one of the most important tools. Right here. Are you ready for that? Write it down. You'd be surprised how many people. Nothing is clear until it's written down.
It's a habit. Look what it says. The purposes of a man, the thoughts, the dreams, the purposes, the things that are in a man or a woman's heart, they're like deep water.
How do you get things that are of great value out of deep water? You have to draw them out. How do you know in this complex world whether you said your kid to this school or that school? How do you know whether you ought to do plan A or plan B? How do you know whether you need to respond to this person now or wait and give God some room to work?
How do you know whether the issue is really them or the issue is you and your own arrogance and your own pride? How do you get clear about life? You know, I'm going to buy an alarm clock and I'm going to say, Oh God, I'm going to put you first and then I want to take out the trash and deal with that so that you can transform me. And then Lord, what I want to do is I want to take responsibility for my own life. Well then, proactively, where do you go? What do you do?
How do you know? And I'm going to suggest that when you get in the habit of writing things down, and let me give you some very specific examples that I've found very helpful and I wish I could deliver them. But the first is three by five cards, the power of clear cut objectives.
It's the power of clear cut objectives. Who do you want to be? Where do you want to go?
What do you think is important? I was in a prison sharing Christ with a guy named Bill Glass. And we were in the prison and went around and we had a dinner. And Bill just off the cuff shared how he wrote the desires of his heart or some specific goals on three by five cards. And he said, don't try and memorize them. I just want to keep them out there so that my mind and my heart can gravitate toward them. And in 1986, I began to do that. And I thought, I want to write things down that I know for sure I want. So I wrote on a card, I want to be a man of God and walk before God in integrity all the days of my life. I would like to love Teresa in a way that makes sense to her each day in some specific way. I would like to help each of my children discover their spiritual gifts and God's will for their life. I'd like to work out on a regular basis and not feel guilty about it and stay in good shape.
I'd like to pray for extended times and learn to become habitually thankful about all things because of God's goodness and sovereignty. And you know what I did with the three by five cards? I just read them over a couple, three times a week. In the early years, I did it every day. I didn't try and memorize them.
I didn't try and work something up. But you know something? It got clear. This is who I want to be. This is where I want to go. This is what I want to do. Here's the kind of man I want to be, the kind of husband I want to be, the kind of father I want to be, the kind of person I want to be.
And if you write it down, you will unconsciously gravitate. How many of you have gone out and looked for a car before and decided on a model? I'm going to get a Jeep or I'm going to get one of those new Volkswagen types, whatever it is. But the moment you decide that that's the kind of car you're going to look for, what begins to happen on the road? They're everywhere, right? Guess what?
They've been there. When you begin to write down what you really want, your mind and God's Spirit will begin to move and gravitate you toward those goals. The second power of writing it down is, and I hate these. I'm a very spontaneous, undisciplined person by nature. And the calendar is the freedom of structure. And what I mean by that is that what I understand why I need a calendar, and I don't think the method is all that important. But you know, I know that I really want to do, just my heart of hearts, I want to do whatever I want to do whenever I want to do it. And so I don't like writing things down because then I feel hemmed in.
Anybody else feel like that? Now some of you don't. Some of you, you just love, you put a color-coded and you know. Tomorrow at 11-11, I'm going to brush my teeth in 11-14. And you write those down so you can check them off, different personalities, it's good. But the freedom of a calendar is, what I begin to do is I took these cards and I said to myself, okay, you know what, I've been living a long time with the to-do list.
And then, you know, I had this amazing aha moment. I never get my to-do list done. Do you?
I mean, you just keep adding to it, it goes longer, longer, longer, longer. And then I thought, well, let's see, do I want to be a doer or a be-er? What's more important?
Is it the be-attitudes or the do-attitudes? And you know what I did? It's so simple.
Is I transformed. Do I make a to-do list? Yeah, I'll talk about it. But I write it down, but I took the goals that I knew were God's will and I put them in my calendar first. Okay, so you want to have a good marriage? Okay, I wrote down, meet with Teresa every Friday on my day off for three hours. You want to have a good relationship? I want to be this kind of dad? Okay, I wrote in my calendar time with my kids.
You want to work out and stay in shape? I wrote in my calendar. Before I wrote my to-do list, I wrote my to-be list. And I put my to-be's in my calendar. And I decided, you know, with a lot of struggle, they were just as important as all these important meetings and phone calls and urgent things that are so important today.
And then three months later, I can't figure out what they were. And if you will put your to-be's, who do you want to be? You want to be a woman of God? You want to be this kind of single person? This kind of mother?
This kind of ministry? And you write in the structure and then I write a to-do list. And I do as many of the to-do's and I prioritize them as best I can. And I still don't get done.
But you know what's neat? For twenty-some years, I've been working out a couple, three, four times a week. For twenty-eight years, I've been having a date with my wife. And I'm not going to tell you that we had three dates and this wonderful relationship. But because it's been built in as a habit, guess what's happened in twenty-eight years of having three and four hours alone together where you really process life? It's built a really good relationship.
You know, it was like taking a string and putting it through that pearl. And little by little by little. See, the problem with habits is you never reap in the same season that you sow. And so what we tend to do is we want the quick fix. And that works both ways, you know? You put some junk in your mind in your life and you wake up five or seven years later and you begin to reap what you were sowing. And it's painful. Or you meet and put some good things in. And you know, sometimes I haven't seen the fruit of some things for five, ten years.
But I'm very, very grateful. And the final is a to-do list. The calendars of the freedom of structure, the to-do list for me is the necessity of focus.
And I don't know how you live without it. But this is my journal because I kind of put it all together. And I just make my to-do list. And near the beginning of every week, I write in my knowns. Then I write my to-dos. And then I put stars by the ones that are going to have the greatest impact that I know I really want to do. And then I put stars next to the ones that I'm going to get in big trouble if I don't get done. And then I prioritize them and I write out and ask God for help. And then the final thing in terms of writing it down is journaling. And this is the need for reflection. When you begin to write things down, you get clear. You get structure that produces freedom.
It gives focus about what you're going to do. And then you need to write out your dreams and your thoughts and your fears. I pray that no one ever reads any of my journals ever, at least like 50 years after I die.
Because people would be just, you know what? How many times are you going to start your journal with, Lord, I'm really tired today. I feel really overwhelmed. I don't know how I'm going to do it. I've got six things on my mind and I can tell I must be angry about something, but I don't know what it is. And you know how I figure out what it is?
I keep writing until he shows me. Lord, I've got a dream on my heart. Last night, this thought came to me.
And I don't know if you'd ever allow me to do it, but as I think about this, if there's anything you could ever give me as I was sitting around the table with my kids, Lord, would you please? And you begin to reflect. We get so busy doing, doing, going, going, clarity. The purposes of a man or a woman's heart are like deep water, but a man of understanding, a woman of understanding draws it out. You're listening to Living on the Edge with Chip Ingram, and he'll be back to finish his talk in just a minute. But first, if you'd like to learn what it really means to be genuinely great in the eyes of God, join us after the message. Chip will highlight a resource we've developed from this study that will help you dive deeper into these habits and put them into practice in your everyday life. Stick around to learn more.
But for now, here again is Chip. Habit number five is do it now. I've never had a coach, and I ran a little track. It wasn't very good, so I changed sports. Those other guys were way too fast. But when I ran track, you know, the coach has this thing, and you line up for a race, and everyone gets right like here. Okay, on your mark. Now get set.
And he's got the stopwatch, and I've never heard him go, later. You know, there's certain things what you need to understand is do it now. Notice what it says.
This is the principle of inertia. A lot of things don't get done because you never get started. There's a power, tremendous power in getting started with things. Listen to what it says in Proverbs 24, 30 to 34. I passed by the field of the sluggard. That means the lazy person. That's one of those Bible words. And by the vineyard of the man lacking sense. So he's walking by, and he sees the field of a lazy person. And behold, it was completely overgrown with thistles, its surface was covered with nettles, and its stone was broken down, the stone wall.
What are all those things a sign of? Neglect, right? I went by the field of a lazy person, and I can tell no one's done anything here as evidenced. When I saw it, what did he do? I reflected upon it. I pondered. See, God's going to speak to him from this picture. I looked, and then I received instruction. By the way, God wants to speak to all of us every day beyond just the Bible. Reflect, receive instruction. And here's his instruction. A little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to rest.
Then your poverty will come as a robber, and you'll want like an armed man. Notice, a little, a little. I'm just going to take a little nap. I'll do that later. This is just a little thing. I think I'll watch just a little bit of this game. Oh, we'll discipline the kids later.
We'll do our bills later. Anything that's hard, anything that's difficult, the great majority of people that walk on this planet end their life filled with good intentions and broken promises. The great majority of people, they intended to be this. They intended to do this. Someday they were going to go here. They were going to invest in their kids this way.
They were going to someday, someway, somehow. And you know what? Do it now. Do it now. Stop procrastinating. Attack life.
Does that sound crazy? Attack life. Build into the habit of certain things. Do the hard things now.
Have the unpleasant conversation now. Do the most difficult, unpleasant, I hate to do it, early in the day. The only way I made it through the languages in Seminary is I got up at 4 o'clock in the morning, and if I didn't get my Greek done by 7 in the morning, I didn't have it in me.
I mean, I'm glad I learned all that stuff, but I mean, the Hebrew was like chicken scratch backwards and Greek was like, oh my lands, and you had three years of it. And I'm thinking, I've got a wife. I've got three kids.
I've got a job. I've got to read all these books. I'm supposed to learn this language. And the only window of time I could, okay, and I get up early and there was an all-night coffee shop and I get there about 4.30, and for the next two and a half hours I'd study my Greek. And I mean, by 8 o'clock, if I had to do one more assignment in the day, I mean, it's just not in me.
Attack the hardest things first, and then cultivate the habit of doing it now. As silly as it sounds, it's just a habit, and when you do it in little things, it carries over. My wife had done the laundry. I had my bag. I set down my bag. I took the things. I put it in the drawer. I then went into the closet, opened it up, and I've done a lot of different ways because I took off my clothes, and guess what?
It takes seven seconds. I hung up my pants. I took the dirty clothes here.
I put them here. It's just a habit. I don't think about it. But you know what happens? You cultivate the habit in little things.
Do it now. Because isn't it a different world to come in and have two or three days of clothes laying on the floor, of having a dresser that has a pile of papers over here, six calls to return over here? It's completely demotivating. So I get depressed, right? I get discouraged about it. So when you're depressed and discouraged, what do you do? Watch TV and eat.
That will solve the problem. So then you gain weight you don't want, put stuff in your mind that is more demotivating, then you go look in the mirror and say, I don't like this person that I'm becoming. So what are you going to do? I'll eat some chocolate and watch more TV.
I'll go out to eat now and take a vacation. And guess what you're doing? You're creating and developing habit patterns about how you face difficulty, how you face rejection, how you face hurt, how you face disappointment, and you just play out that habit for the next 10, 15, or 20 years, and that is a person you'll become.
And it's a small little thing to say. Do I feel like doing it now? See, we're into the feeling, feeling, feeling. If I did what I thought, I'd never get anything done. Feelings are the caboose, not the engine.
Tell you what, you do it now, you make the hard conversation, you take the initiative, guess what? Don't you feel better? Isn't it nice to have a, and this is, by the way, those of you a little perfectionistic and obsessive, take this in stride, okay?
Some of you, you got color-coded hangers, all the shirts go the same way. You know, this is a little balance here. Do it now. Finally, turn it off. This is the principle of restoration.
Turn it off. Hebrews chapter 4, 9 to 11 says, for there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God, for the one who has entered his rest has himself also, notice, rested from what? Rested from his work, as God did from his. Therefore, let us, circle the phrase, be diligent. This does not come easy, especially for us. Let us be diligent, what? To enter that rest, why? So that no one will fall through following the same example of disobedience. If you study that passage carefully, what you find is that the Sabbath was always a faith issue.
In other words, it was that feeling, oh, we can't stop, all those other people are working. You know, they're open seven days a week, we're only open six days a week. This could never work, right, Chick-fil-A?
This could never work. See, the Sabbath was all about trusting God. The Sabbath was like a ring on Israel to say, they belong to me, and you know what?
I take care of them, and they learn to trust me. Now, Jesus will come back and say, the Sabbath is a gift to man. It's not a list of rules and regulations. In Colossians 2, we'll learn that, hey, you know what? It's the principle that's in practice in New Testament believers. You want to make your Sabbath on Monday, you can make it on Friday, different people have different days, but you need to honor the Sabbath principle. The early church would begin celebrating on the first day of the week on Sunday.
And so there's no law for the Sabbath, but the principle of rest. One out of seven days to do what? Are you ready? This is going to be scary. Lean back, lean back, this is going to hurt.
One out of seven days, are you ready? Watch this. It does turn off. My cell phone's off. I'm not indispensable. The world can go on without me. I can turn off my mind, turn off my gifts, not have some religious set of rules, but to stop and look back like God did on his work and say, Lord, what have you done this week?
To reflect, to go outside and let the sun hit your face, to take a walk with people that you love, to be refreshed, to spend additional time with God, and if it works on Sunday, great. Is there an occasional day, an emergency? Well, of course.
Jesus said if an ox gets in the ditch, don't get legalistic about it. But I got to tell you that it has saved my life. And some of you can probably imagine that I was a workaholic in my early years. And see, there's a huge difference between having drive and being driven.
And the only way to not be driven is to stop and develop the habit, go home and be a man, be a woman, be a husband, be a mother. You don't have to be on call all the time and turn your gift off. Turn your gift off and don't always have to produce something.
Be restored and renewed and refreshed. And are you ready? Enjoy great moments. You're saying you don't have time. God commands you to take one-seventh of your life and enjoy great moments.
Enjoy him, enjoy others, enjoy a great meal, enjoy the beauty of nature, enjoy a little trip. How? Write it down, plan it in.
Application for you is very, very simple. It's this. I'd like you to identify the one bad habit that you think carried out over a number of years is really going to come back and bite you. And I'd like you to get that written on a sheet of paper and say, I got to break this. And then I'd like you to take one of these six, not all six, one of these six where the Spirit of God says to you, this is the one I want you to develop. This is the one for where you're at in your life right now with the issues that you're facing. And just sit quietly.
Lord, show me. And then you need to find a person that will help keep you accountable. And then you need to come up with a little plan. And then don't get discouraged. You have been working on these bad habits for a long time.
They're hard to break, right? So don't get discouraged. But begin to arrange your life to break the most difficult one and then go into training to develop these habits. And as you do them, just one at a time, whatever one that you think will help the most, you know what you'll find? I've developed a lifestyle. I'm meeting with God. Well, as I meet with God, I pray great prayers and I think great thoughts and I'm reading great books. And, you know, I'm taking out the trash. And as I take out the trash, you know what? I just see God is beginning to help me to make great sacrifices and pursue great people.
And I'm doing my own dishes. And you'll just find all the things we've talked about will become a reality, a part of just the rhythm of your life. They won't happen overnight.
Great Christians are oak trees, not weeds. It takes time. It takes purpose. It takes intentionality.
It takes discipline. And it all comes from God's grace. You're listening to Living on the Edge with Chip Ingram. And the message you just heard, Develop Great Habits, is from our series, Good to Great in God's Eyes. Chip will join us in studio to share some insights from today's talk in just a minute. Now, you may be thinking, what separates a good Christian life from a great one? And is wanting to be great a little prideful? Well, join Chip in this series as he explains our ambition to be the best Christian isn't an ego trip, but stems from a desire created in us by Jesus himself.
Discover the habits that will deepen your intimacy with God, ignite your passion for his word, and empower you to live a life of impact. So if you missed any part of this series, catch up any time through the Chip Ingram app. Well, Chip's here in studio now to share a quick word.
Chip? Thanks, Dave. I'll be right back with some application to today's message. But before I do, I want you to consider something. What if I told you there is a way to renew your mind, build great relationships, expect the impossible, and begin to build a legacy that would last forever? Now, don't get me wrong. This is not a TV ad.
This is real. There's no catch. I want you to know that the Bible clearly teaches that there are habits that we can develop that don't earn God's favor, but habits from scripture that allow us to go from good to great in God's eyes. In other words, he's designed life in such a way that as you practice these things, just like practicing music or the piano or ballet or athletics, you begin to get better and better and better. And so there's 10 characteristics of great Christians that will help you grow spiritually and relationally and begin to change your thinking, then change some practices, and what you experience is God working in your life like never before. You begin to pray great prayers.
You begin to have great relationships. So let me encourage you. Let's find a small group of people that could be just your family and do this small group series together, developing the kind of habits that allow you to draw near to God, become who God made you to be, really care about other people, and get connected in relationships the way you want to. It's not just the antidote to busyness. It's the antidote to a life without purpose.
I think you'll love it. Thanks, Chip. To order the Good to Great in God's Eyes small group, go to livingontheedge.org or call 888-333-6003. This is the perfect tool to jumpstart your faith and live a more God-honoring life inside the comfort of authentic community. So order this insightful small group resource today by visiting livingontheedge.org or calling 888-333-6003.
App listeners, tap Special Offers. Well, Chip, as we wrap up, take a minute and talk to those who really want to be a great Christian but are a little overwhelmed with some of the practices you've taught on and don't know where to begin. Well, Dave, these are tools that God has given us not to prove that we love Him, not to get ahead of other people. These are ways or means that God has provided to shape our hearts, transform our minds, that cause our character, our love, our peace, our relationships to improve first with God and then with others. This is not a new bar that you have to jump over to become a great Christian. This is the grace of God. This is Jesus calling out to you, coming to me, all you that are weary. Let me show you a pattern of living, a rhythm, if you will.
In ancient times, it was called a rule of life. Get involved in living out these practices in a calm, loving way to develop intimacy with Christ and love for others. And you're going to find a very gentle Savior that will change you from the inside out. Good word, Chip. As we close, are you looking to get even more plugged in with Living on the Edge and our resources? Then let me encourage you to check out the Chip Ingram app. You can listen to our most recent series, sign up for Daily Discipleship, and more. We want to help you grow in your walk with Jesus. And the Chip Ingram app is a great way to immerse yourself in Godly, enriching content. Well, from all of us here, I'm Dave Druey, thanking you for listening to this Edition of Living on the Edge. And I hope you'll join us next time. .