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Robert H. Boll
Truth and Grace (1917)

 

THE STANDARD OF SUCCESS

      How thoroughly everything is reckoned from a money basis is evident from the very expressions we have unconsciously adopted. "Is so and so doing any good?" "O, yes; he is making two hundred a month," or, "No, not much; he gets about a dollar a day where he works." "How much is Mr. B worth?" "Fifty thousand;" or, perhaps, "He is worth nothing at all." Now I say that these unconscious idioms betray subconscious thoughts. We must watch that. A man's worth is not measured by the money we may have, and his doing good is not to be gauged by his cash receipts. According to such talk, Jesus was "not worth anything" and "doing no good."

      "Twenty years ago," says a little clipping from a good paper, "a discouraged young doctor in one of our large cities was visited by his father, who came up from a rural district to look after his boy.

      "'Well, son,' he said, 'how are you getting along?'

      "'I'm not getting along at all,' was the disheartened answer; 'I'm not doing a thing.'

      "The old man's countenance fell, but he spoke of courage and patience and perseverance. Later in the day he went with his son to the free dispensary, where the young doctor had an unsalaried position.

      "The father sat by, a silent but intensely interested spectator, while twenty-five poor unfortunates received help. The doctor forgot his visitor while he bent his skilled energies to this task; but hardly had the door closed on the last patient when the old man burst forth:

      "'I thought you told me you were not doing anything!' [257] he thundered. 'Not doing anything! Why, if I had helped twenty-five people in a month as you have in one morning, I would thank God that my life counted for something.'

      "'There isn't any money in it though,' exclaimed the son, somewhat abashed.

      "'Money!' the old man shouted, still scornfully. 'What is money in comparison with being of use to your fellowmen? Never mind about the money; you go right along at this work every day. I'll go back to the farm and gladly earn enough money to support you as long as I live.'

      "'That speech,' I said to a friend of mine--one who has spent many years as a conspicuously successful teacher--'went into the bones of the young doctor's life, and strengthened him for a life of unselfish usefulness.'

      "'Ah,' said the professor, 'that one speech was worth years of text-book reading. And yet it was made without an instant's preparation. Is that not so?'

      "'Far from it,' I answered quickly. 'It had taken sixty years of noble living, struggling against sin and self, pressing forward in the paths of righteousness, bearing the cross, following hard after the perfect man, to prepare that old Christian to make that speech. Then the moment came, and he was ready to teach the glorious lesson.'"

 

[TAG 257-258]


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Robert H. Boll
Truth and Grace (1917)