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Entry #2 for today, but I think it's important enough not to wait until tomorrow. 10,005 - 1 does not equal -10,006. That’s an obvious statement above, but it’s something I think we all tend to forget. I’m not talking about numbers, but negative critiques or harsh comments. My pastor last Sunday did a sermon on The DaVinci Code. Now I wasn’t there, so I don’t know exactly what happened, but this is the gist of what I heard: After Kermit gave his sermon, a congregation member approached him and commented at how it wasn’t appropriate to do a sermon on a fictional book. Whether the person meant it harshly, I don’t know. But Kermit’s reaction is important. He took the comment so hard, in between the 8am service and the 9:30am service he kneeled before the altar and wept. I know he had to be thinking he made a terrible mistake by preaching on that subject. I'm sure he completely forgot any positive comments people gave him. Top that off with having to do the same sermon two more times. I don’t think I could have pulled it off like he did. I then read in Nada ’s blog that a comment made in David McClain ’s blog highlighting a new David McClain and ccstring adventure had the same impact. Why is it so easy to wrap our entire beings around one negative comment and ignore all the other 10,000 positive comments as if they never happened? I wish I had an answer to that, because I do it all the time. It’s a grueling mental wrestling match to convince me otherwise. So I use my own blog entry to encourage you to ignore the comments that hurt and embrace the ones that uplift. I bet the positives outnumber the negatives in almost every case. |