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The Battle For Success Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 6, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Paul is convinced that failures can become successes. He knew this for he was one of the most successful failures in history. One of the great themes of literature and the Bible is this theme of success out of failure.
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In the 35 years following the Civil War 3 success writers towered
high above all others, and they became successful by writing about
success. All 3 were ordained men. One of them was Russell Conwell
who was the pastor of the Baptist Temple of Philadelphia. He
delivered his famous lecture over 6000 times, and raised several
million dollars with which he built a large university. The title of his
lecture was Acres Of Diamonds, and this is the story behind it:
One day as he was jogging down the banks of the Tigress and
Euphrates on a camel, led by an old Arab guide, he was told this story.
There once lived in ancient Persia a wealthy and contented farmer by
the name of Ali Hafed. One day an old priest visited him and told him
about diamonds that had been discovered. He told of the wealth and
power that came with their possession. That night the farmer could
not sleep. He was discontent with what he had. The next day he sold
his farm and went off in search of diamonds. After wandering through
Asia and most of Europe he had become a wretched man in rags and
in despair. He threw himself into a great wave and was drown.
The man who bought his farm was one day leading his camel
through the garden, and the camel desired a drink. As the camel
nosed the water the owner noticed a flash of light from the sand in the
brook. He picked up a stone and took it home. A few days later the
old priest came to visit. He recognized that stone as a diamond. They
rushed together to the brook, and thus was discovered the famous
diamond mine of Golconda, the most magnificent of all history. Ali
Hafed had lived on acres of diamonds, and died a failure because he
didn't recognize what he had, and was off looking for it all over the
world.
Russell Conwell was impressed with this story, for he had seen a
similar thing happen many times. Numerous poor people sold their
land to go off to improve their lot only to learn that their had been oil
or gold on their land. He had been a poor farmer, and had run away
at 15 to make a better life for himself. He went to Europe, but
returned and fought in the Civil War. It was while lying in a hospital
tent dying from his wounds that he received Jesus as his Savior. He
entered the ministry and raised millions to build up a church and
school to meet the needs of working class people. His conviction, like
that of most success writers, is that every person can be successful if
they recognize and practice some basic principles. Our purpose is to
show that Scripture in general, and Paul in particular, support this
idea that all of us can be successful. We want to examine the basic
principle that Paul stresses to the Corinthians that applies to all of us.
Let's consider-
THE ARENA WHERE THE BATTLE FOR SUCCESS IS WON.
Jesus said that the kingdom of God is within you, and Paul made
this same point to the Romans when he said that the kingdom of God
is not meat and drink, but righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy
Spirit. The Corinthian Christians were failing in the Christian life
because they were like Ali Hafed. They were looking for success
somewhere out there in the world. But success is not found in
externals says Paul. All their search for success in following men, and
getting excited about gifts with the most external display, is taking
them far afield. Their acres of diamonds are not out there in the
world, but they are within them.
In verse 16 Paul writes, "Do you not know that you are God's
temple and God's spirit dwells in you?" Their greatest resource was
right within them. They were wasting their lives in the futile search
for what was already theirs.
Paul tells them in vv. 21-23, "For all things are yours, whether Paul or
Apollos or Cephus or the world or life or death or the present or the
future, all are yours; and you are Christ's; and Christ is God's. In
4:8 Paul writes, "Already you are filled! Already you have become
rich." Yet, with all of these resources they were failing. Paul is
constantly telling them where they are failing. They were successes
living as failures when they should have been failures living as
successes. If we recognize that the arena where we battle for success
is within, we can learn to fail successfully.
History has some great examples of failures being the key to
success. The famous atheist Robert Ingersall was once traveling by