"...My cup overflow with blessings."
I've had many an employee in my career who has been one of those people
who are always asking for something. If you have never met someone like
this (and I would be surprised of you haven't) they are quickly
identified as the "squeaky wheel". They are the first people to be in
the office wanting to know why someone else was promoted, or why another
department got the larger budget, or why they weren't involved in a
meeting or asked to travel on a trip. They are usually also the first
people who point at others for problems and are not quick to take
responsibility for their own action. I might add that they are usually
the most immature. I once had a employee who would ask me regularly
about when would they be promoted to the next level. When I got down
underneath these incessant requests it had nothing to do with needing
more salary or that their career was suffering from being in their
current position too long, etc. What it boiled down to is that this
person had a sense of entitlement that grew out of insecurity and fear
that they were going to miss out on something that they wouldn't get
unless they asked. I contrast this employee with a very senior
executive who I worked with in the early 1990's who kept getting
promoted over other people because he kept his head down, never
expressed his career desires when not asked, trusted "the system" and
when promoted would show a level of humility and gratitude that was far
beyond anyone's expectations. As such, it was fun to see this person get
promoted and rise through the ranks all the way to the top. How often
are we more worried than trustful in what happens to us? Yes, that is
right...too much.
When we stop trusting and we stop letting others and
God do what they would like to do with us and instead try and take
control of the situation, we miss out on the gifts that want to be given
to us. With my employee, I got to the point that I knew when the
conversation was coming and I didn't look forward to those talks. Our
God is a God who wants to give so much more to us than we could ever
ask. Our God is the God of David who as we know wrote in Psalm 23:5;
"...My cup overflow with blessings." With a little more trust and little
more faith and a lot less trying to tell God what to do, we can expect
our cup to flow over. But, if we keep asking God to fill the cup in the
way we want it filled, He will fill it, but maybe only to our definition
of the top which could be far from His definition of what He wants to
give us.
Reference: Psalm 23:5 (New Living Testament)
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