The thing
I remember most about Harry, aside from his rare ability to catch those huge
Henry’s Lake trout, was his dog, Dingo. Now there was a dog! Dingo used to sit
alongside Harry in his boat and watch intently while he fished. When the old
fisherman hooked a trout, Dingo would bark furiously until the fish was netted
and released.
Dingo’s
enthusiasm taught me something: It’s better to get more excited about what
others are doing than what we are doing.
So, as I
read Philippians 2:4 and think about Dingo, I ask myself: Do I spend time
thinking about “the interests of others”? Do I get as excited about what God is
doing in and through a friend as I do about what He is doing in and through me?
Do I long to see others grow in grace and find success, though it may have been
my efforts that made them prosper?
This is
the measure of greatness, for we are most like God when our thoughts for
ourselves are lost in our thoughts for others. Paul said it best: “Let each
esteem others better than himself” (2:3). Is that how we live?
A life
filled with love for the Lord and for others is a fulfilling life. (RBC)