TOP PRIORITIES-IMPERATIVE FIRSTS
During the war we all became familiar with the term
priorities. We met it in relation to
automobiles, steel, food, and
transportation. Several times I was "bumped off" an air flight
because some top military "brass" had to get to some strategic place
or conference and possessed a priority. He came before I did, was more
important -- and rightly so.
In addition to priorities there were top priorities. Even
among those who possessed
importance there were others who were
more important than the important, and a few top persons who were most
important. The rating depended upon rank and relative significance in relation
to speeding the war to victory.
Whether you have ever thought of it or not, is it not true
that life itself sets up priorities and top
priorities? If one would succeed in the battle of personal living he must
designate some things as important and other things as most important. There
must be top priorities, imperative firsts.
Probably the number one danger of modern living is to
substitute secondary matters for
primary, nonessential for essential,
incidental for fundamental, and peripheral for the central.
The Old Testament records a classic example of this human
tendency. A prisoner was put
in custody of a keeper, with this charge: "Keep this
man, guard him, watch him. If for any reason he
escapes -- be missing thy life shall be for his life." There was a top
priority, an imperative first. But what happened? The custodian or keeper
became occupied with other matters -- secondary, incidental things -- and
forgot his top charge. The prisoner escaped. And then what?
The warden cried out to the king, "As thy servant was busy here and there,
he was gone." Did that excuse him or absolve him from blame? The king
decreed: "You knew the charge. You knew the penalty. Thou thyself hast
decided it. Thy life shall be for his life." So he was condemned, not
because he was busy doing sinful, evil things necessarily, but because he
betrayed his top priority -- his imperative first (I Kings 20: 38-42).
The classic New Testament illustration of this same
principle is commonly designated
"The Story of the Rich Fool."
Jesus himself related it. In essence it is this. A man's business prospered; he
had to build larger barns to care for his bounteous crops. He sat back smugly
and complacently and said to himself, "Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years; take thine ease, eat, drink, and be
merry." But God broke the silence and said, "Thou fool, this night
thy soul shall be required of thee." What a pathetic tragedy! Here he was
at the triumphant apex of his career, just ready to live life to the full. But
now his number was up. He must die. He ignored top priorities. He put sensuous
satisfaction ahead of his soul. He gave all of his time seeking for gold and
none searching for God.
Successful living must recognize top priorities, imperative
firsts.
Permit me to suggest what they are:
1. God's will for your life must be
first -- your personal desires second.
2. Make the kingdom
of Heaven first in your activities.
Jesus commanded, "Seek ye first the kingdom
of God, and his righteousness, and
all these things [needful things] shall be added unto you" (Matt. 6: 33).
Here is the top priority. It must transcend even home,
friends, school, work, and pleasure.
In all things Jesus must have pre-eminence (Col. 1: 18).
3. Give God the first hour of every day. It is recorded of
Jesus, "And in the morning, rising up a great while before day, he went out,
and departed into a solitary place, and there prayed" (Mark 1: 35). Early prayer and Bible reading each
day is an imperative first.
4. Give God the first day of the week. Here is another top
priority. The Sabbath must be a
holy day and not a holiday. Its
observance is so important that it is included as one of the Ten Commandments.
You must not ignore it or shove it to a secondary place. It rates top priority
in God's requirements and thus of necessity must be an imperative first in
man's observance.
5. Give God the first portion of your income. Under the old
Jewish order the first fruits --
the first of the flocks, herds, and material increase --
were the Lord's. One-tenth was the minimum. Offerings were to be over and above
the tithes. It is still God's plan for financing His Church. So give Him the
first tenth, top priority, and He will bless your nine-tenths.
So here are the top priorities, imperative firsts.
1. Give yourself to God.
2. Give the Kingdom first place in your activities.
3. Give the first hour of every day to prayer.
4. Give the first day of every week wholly to God.
5. Give the first portion of your income to His Church.
If you give God and His kingdom top priority, He will give
you top blessings here and
eternal life hereafter.
I propose this personal question: To what do you give top
priority in your life?