ARE YOU MAJORING IN MINORS?
Scripture:
Philippians 3:12, 13; Matthew 6: 33; Matthew 16:26
One of the great dangers of our fast, modern tempo is that
we will become so occupied
with incidentals, nonessentials, and
minors that we shall neglect the fundamentals, essentials, and majors.
It is not enough to be busy or to be active or to be alive.
We must be busy for a purpose,
active for a cause, and living for an
ideal.
A person riding a merry-go-round and whirling a
hundred times travels three miles but he gets nowhere. He merely takes a ride
for the ride's sake. In reality, he is taken for a ride." For millions of
people, life is one continuous merry-go-round -- going but never arriving --
moving, but nowhere.
There are other millions who are preoccupied with the
incidentals of life and allow the
essentials to slip away. Such are
"penny wise but pound foolish." They save a dime and lose a dollar.
Others spend so much time and energy on nonessential things
that they lose the fundamental items of value. Such keep the peelings and throw
away the banana or potato or apple; or, to use another figure of speech, they
keep the shells and throw the pearls back.
In brief, such persons are majoring on minors. Everyone
majors in something. Some
interest or project or activity becomes one's primary
concern. It is his major even though it may be minor.
A well-known nursery rhyme conveys the truth of this sermon
"Pussy cat, pussy cat, where have you
been?
I've been to London
to see the queen.
Pussy cat, pussy cat, what did you there?
I frightened a little mouse under a chair."
Poor little pussy cat started out to see the queen but
instead merely saw a mouse. Too many people start out with worthy ideals and
noble ambitions but end up chasing mice, killing mosquitoes, executing gnats,
or exterminating bats. They major on minors. For them the little thing becomes
big, the means becomes the end, or the incidental becomes the essential.
Here is a talented young man who has the ability to become
an outstanding surgeon, but he is too wrapped up in burning the midnight gasoline to have a good time rather
than burning the midnight oil in
preparation for a life of usefulness. He is majoring on minors.
Here is a woman with outstanding qualities for leadership
but she has so many little things to do -- card parties, dances, and the like
-- majoring on minors.
Here is a minister who could be a spiritual giant in leading
a needy flock to the green
pastures of inner satisfaction but he is obsessed with some
nonessential -- fiddling on one string -- majoring on minors.
Here is a young woman who could be a leader of youth toward
the high plateaus of moral
achievement but she is flitting her time away like a
butterfly in one little episode of fleeting pleasure after another -- majoring
on minors.
After all, what is the major thing in life?
Is it my body and the satiation of its sensuous demands for
pleasures and thrills?
Is it my mind and its desire for knowledge?
Is it my social self and its craving for friendship and
fellowship?
Is it my position in society and its resultant place of
influence and prestige?
Is it my ambitious desire for power?
Is it my abnormal urge for popularity and wide social
approval?
No, all of these are minors.
The number one fact of my entire personality is that I am a
spirit possessing a body and a
mind, and living in a social environment. I have appetites,
instincts, desires, and emotions. When I major on my body or my mind or on the
satisfaction or satiation of any appetite or instinct or desire, I am majoring
on minors.
What should be the major concern of every person?
The welfare of his soul and its
relationship to God. Everything else is incidental,
nonessential, and minor.
The wisest man who ever lived said: "Fear God, and keep
his commandments: for this is
the whole duty of man. For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret
thing, whether it be good, or whether it be evil" (Eccles. 12: 13, 14).
St. Paul proclaimed:
"This one thing I do . . . I press toward the mark for the prize of the
high calling of God in Christ Jesus"
(Phil. 3: 13, 14).
Jesus commanded: "Seek ye first the kingdom
of God, and his righteousness; and
all these things shall be added unto you" (Matt. 6: 33).
In other words, Solomon, St. Paul,
and Jesus are agreed in saying, "Seek the majors, and
the minors will be added."
Seek the all-important, necessary, essential major and the
needful, desirable minors will be yours as well.
But the man who majors on minors will never find the major
and eventually will lose the
minors also.
It is the major that gives the minors meaning.
Jesus asks: "What shall it profit a man, if he shall
gain the whole world [minors], and lose
his own soul [major]?"
If you major in minors, you will soon be a minus sign
yourself. But if you seek the major,
you will find it and also have added the minors.
So, permit me to exhort every listener --
Reorient yourself!
Put first things first!
You are more important than your body.
God is all-important.
Relate yourself to Him and His will, and He will relate
himself to you and your needs.
Don't -- whatever you do -- don't major in minors.
ENDNOTES
1 Printed Book Copyright 1936, by the Rodeheaver Co.
International copyright secured.
2 Printed Book Copyright 1952, renewal by
Hall-Mack Co. International copyright secured.
3 Printed Book Copyright renewal
1940. John T. Benson, Jr., owner.
4 By F. M. Lehman. Printed Book Copyright renewed 1945.
Assigned to Nazarene Publishing
House.
5 copyright 1942. Renewal. The Rodeheaver Co., owner.
6 Hope Publishing Company, owner.
THE END