“Let us go right into the presence of God with
sincere hearts fully trusting Him...Let us hold tightly without wavering
to the hope we affirm, for God can be trusted to keep His promise."
There are some people at work who are better at negotiating than others.
These are the people who know how to get the best deal from the other
side of the table and they have learned how to find the last dollar or
cent in savings from a project or a vendor. These are also the best
people to negotiate contracts as they know how to ensure that as much
risk has been removed before signing the deal. And if they are really
good they do all of this with the other side of the negotiations feeling
good about the deal. All big companies now have this skill set
resident within the organization. It just makes sense today to have
these experts on hand. Long gone are the handshake and gentleman’s
agreement. There was a time that business ran on such but over the
years as relationships, integrity and trust eroded and these values
became less integral to getting done what needed to get done, business
leaders have had to rely on the contract for assurances of what to
expect. And even then on both sides of a contract still look for
loopholes and omissions so that they can attempt to gain the upper hand
or a better deal. In today’s world it seems we are always negotiating
and seldom in a moment of peace and productivity.
Isn’t it great though
that we have a much higher authority that we can count on and trust to
never break the contract that was given to us? As long as we enter into
the relationship with sincerity and earnestness then we don’t have to
worry about the other side trying to take advantage of us. We read
about this in Hebrews; “"Let us go right into the presence of God with
sincere hearts fully trusting Him...Let us hold tightly without wavering
to the hope we affirm, for God can be trusted to keep His promise. "
This assurance is the best of all contracts. This is a contract that
will not be broken. While we have to protect ourselves and our
organizations in the work we do with written agreements and contracts,
it does not mean that we can’t live and work as personal examples of the
promise that God gave us. If we can become known as a person of
integrity who means what she/he says and says what he/she means, then we
are role-modeling the behavior and actions of the One we follow.
Today, you will be asked to “contract” with others. It will likely not
be sitting down to write out what is expected of you, but rather it will
be someone requesting assistance, or sending a question over email, or
leaving a simple request on your voice mail. How you respond and live
up to the contract of your own performance could be the determiner of
how someone sees our Christ through you. Let us all strive to stay
close to God and be the same example as one who delivers and keeps out
promises.
Reference: Hebrews 10:22-25 (New Living Translation)
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