By George Grant

The race really does go to the tortoise and not the hare.  It is perseverance that ultimately will win the prize, not knowledge, not talent, and not connections.  It is that undying tenacity that sets itself on the end, that finishes the race, that completes the task, and that fulfils the responsibility.

As Calvin Coolidge sagely observed, “Nothing can take the place of persistence.  Talent will not.  Nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent.  Genius will not.  Unrewarded genius is almost a proverb.  Education will not.  The world is full of educated derelicts.  Persistence and determination alone are overwhelmingly powerful.”

So, how do we train ourselves to finish what we start?  How do we cut across the grain of our instant-everything culture?  How do we subdue our got-to-have-it-now appetites so that we can undertake our tasks with forbearance and resolve?  First, we must come to the realization that such a virtue is hardly easy:

  1. To see things through to the end demands courage.

Though we tend to admire courage, we often have to admit that there is in it an unexplainable admixture of boldness and madness in it.  Concerned with our own health and welfare, we find it more than a little extraordinary when anyone is willing to risk life and limb for the sake of others—much less for the sake of some principle.  Indeed, we have become an age with a dearth of heroes.  Bravery has practically become a forgotten virtue—a lost cause.  Nevertheless, its allure retains as strong a grip on us today as it has each of the many generations that have preceded us.

According to C.S. Lewis, “Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point, which means, at the point of highest reality.  A chastity or honesty or mercy, which yields to danger, will be chaste or honest or merciful only on conditions.  Pilate was merciful until it became risky” (The Screwtape Letters).

We will have to come to the place where we realize that to see things through, to finish what we start, and to fulfill all our responsibilities is going to require genuine valor.  We will have to face down tremendous obstacles, fierce opposition, jeering criticism, and perhaps even physical danger.

To finish well will cost us something.  It may cost us everything.  Just ask anyone who has ever run a marathon or competed in a triathlon.  Starting is easy.  It is finishing that is hard.  It is finishing that requires blood, sweat, and tears.  It is finishing that requires courage.

  1. To see things through to the end demands wisdom.

We admire knowledge.  We covet understanding.  But, we tend to be more than a little suspicious of wisdom.  It is a notion that seems to carry with it the taint of dusty ideals and musty aspirations.  It has the appearance of advanced age—and all the out-of-fashion traits of reticence, hesitation, caution, recalcitrance, and anachronism that goes with decrepitude.  Even so, throughout ages past, men and nations have cherished wisdom as more that mere wishful thinking or hopeful yearning.  They have acknowledged its vital role in stable societies and healthy cultures.  And they have comprehended its essential role in enabling us to finish what we start.

The great English etymologist, novelist, and essayist Samuel Johnson said, “There are, indeed, many truths which time necessarily and certainly teaches, and which might, by those who have learned them from experience, be communicated to their successors at a cheaper rate: but dictates, though liberally enough bestowed, are generally without effect, the teacher gains few proselytes by instruction which his own behavior contradicts; and young men miss the benefit of counsel, because they are not very ready to believe that those who fall below them in practice, can much excel them in theory.  Thus the progress of knowledge is retarded, the world is kept long in the same state, and every new race is to gain the prudence of their predecessors by committing and redressing the same miscarriages.”

Likewise, Shakespeare wrote, “This is a practice as full of labor as a wise man’s art, for folly that he wisely shows is fit, but wise men, folly-fall’n, quite taint their wit.” If we are going to finish the race set before us, then we will not only need to run with endurance, we will need to run with discernment.  This is precisely why William Butler Yeats argued that, “Education is not the filling of a pail but the lighting of a fire.  Of such is wisdom.”

  1. To see things through to the end demands work.

According to Richard Weaver, “Exertion, self-denial, endurance, these make the hero, but to the spoiled child they connote the evil of nature and the malice of man” (Ideas Have Consequences).  Alas, most of us do not have the stuff of heroism—such virtues have been bled out of us by our modern devil-may-care culture.

Indeed, most of us do not much care for work.  We complain about it.  We chaff against it.  We will do just about anything to get out of it.  Nevertheless, we probably would all reluctantly admit that nearly everything in life worth anything at all demands of us a certain measure of labor and intensity.  And though this might appear at first glance to be a plight of woe and hardship—perhaps a deleterious effect of the Fall—it is in fact a part of the glory of the human experience.  The good news is that work is good.  Work is the means by which we achieve, at long last, our destiny.  It is the means by which we attain to our calling.

And the even better news is that the lost cause of diligent labor, strenuous industry, and purposeful calling may be reclaimed, restored, and reinstituted—as the example of so many wise men and women who have gone before so ably and aptly demonstrate.

The remarkable Helen Keller once said, “I long to accomplish a great and noble task, but it is my chief duty to accomplish humble tasks as though they were great and noble.  The world is moved along not by the mighty shoves of its heroes, but by the aggregate of the tiny pushes of each honest worker.”  Every time we simply put our nose to the grindstone and do our work, every time we put our shoulder to the plow and undertake our labor, every time we push through our exhaustion to the end of the day, we move the world along with our tiny pushes.

It was for precisely this reason that Teddy Roosevelt asserted, “I wish to preach not the doctrine of ignoble ease but the doctrine of the strenuous life; the life of toil and effort; of labor and strife; to preach that highest form of success which comes not to the man who desires mere easy peace but to the man who does not shrink from danger, hardship, or from the bitter toil, and who out of these wins the splendid ultimate triumph.”

Clearly, endurance is one of the basic building blocks of maturity. As the Apostle Paul declared, “Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. Through him we have also obtained access by faith into this grace in which we stand, and we rejoice in hope of the glory of God.  Not only that, but we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us” (Romans 5:1-5).

May the Lord therefore give us the courage, the wisdom, and the stick-to-itiveness to endure in our calling to bring Gospel reformation to this poor, fallen world. May He find us faithful, from beginning to end.

 

George Grant will be speaking at the Missions Conference in Moscow, Idaho, Feb 8-9, 2019. Register to attend here.