Do you feel lucky? No? Well you should. You just made it to another week. Many others didn't, so don't leave the house without a prayer of thanks.
Anyway, you're amongst the living and that's nice, but do you ever wonder why? Do you wonder why you're here, what your purpose is? Why did God keep you alive one more week?
I like to think it's because you are supposed to make a difference. No matter who you are or what you do, a God like ours, who always has a plan, would never keep you alive for no reason whatsoever. So if there's a reason why you woke up this morning, you'd better make sure your week is spent fulfilling that purpose.
Now, for some of us, the tough part is figuring out exactly what that purpose is supposed to be. You see, the modern world is not like the Old Testament when God would appear to His children and explain with diagrams exactly what they must do with their lives.
Today's "Anno Domini" world works differently. As Paul said to the Philippians in Chapter 2, Verse 12, these days, you have to "work out your salvation". So too must we work out our purpose on earth, and create our own opportunities to make a difference.
Now, if you don't know where to start, allow me to tell you a story my pastor once told me.
A woman was walking along the beach one day. The tide was strong, and every time it washed over the shore, it would leave loads of starfish stranded on the sand. The whole beach was littered with thousands and thousands of dying starfish, as far as her eyes could see.
Suddenly, up ahead, she noticed a man dashing back and forth, in and out of the sea. As she got closer, she noticed that he was frantically picking up the starfish and flinging them back into the ocean.
Overcome with curiosity, she asked the man: "Why are you wasting your time like this? There are thousands of starfish dying on the beach. How many can you save? What difference does it make?”
Without breaking his stride, the man picked up another starfish, and turned to the woman. "It makes a difference to this one". With that, he threw the lucky starfish into the sea, and went back for another one.
My people, it may not be so clear to you what your purpose is in life, or whether you're actually fulfilling it from one day to the next, but I can assure you that you were put on this earth to make a difference.
In a world so vast, it is sometimes the little things we do that make a big difference to somebody. Don't spend ages today, trying to figure out your grand purpose in life - just do little things.
This week, smile at the office cleaner and ask him/her about their weekend. Reply that email you received from those annoying fundraisers. If you use the motorway, pay the toll for the car behind you. Every day, tell one person to keep the change.
Give some old clothes to the homeless guy you drive past on your way to work. Spend one lunch break reading to children at a hospital. Send any amount at all via momo to help the thousands of devastated Ghanaians whose lives and livelihoods have been washed away by the northern floods. Call your mother. Do the little things that make a big difference to someone's life.
You may not know why you're alive today, and God certainly doesn't charge us rent for the space we occupy on earth, but don't let that stop you from showing your gratitude with little acts of kindness that will make a big difference to someone. This is an important part of everyone's purpose here on earth, and that includes you.
My gift to you this wonderful new week, is a poem, by Emily Dickinson:
If I can stop one heart from breaking,
I shall not live in vain;
If I can ease one life the aching,
Or cool one pain,
Or help one fainting robin
Unto his nest again,
I shall not live in vain.
My name is Kojo Yankson, and I'm fulfilling my purpose, one starfish at a time.
GOOD MORNING, GHANAFO!
Latest Stories
-
Prof Opoku-Agyemang donates to Tamale orphanage to mark her birthday
46 mins -
Don’t call re-painted old schools brand new infrastructure – Prof Opoku-Agyemang tells gov’t
1 hour -
Sunon Asogli plant will be back on stream in a few weeks – ECG
2 hours -
ECOWAS deploys observers for Dec. 7 election
2 hours -
73 officers commissioned into Ghana Armed Forces
2 hours -
Impending shutdown of three power plants won’t happen – ECG MD
2 hours -
Ghana shouldn’t have experienced any ‘dumsor’ after 2017 – IES Boss
3 hours -
Lamens flouted some food safety laws in re-bagging rice – Former FDA Boss Alhaji Hudu Mogtari
3 hours -
Afcon exit: Our issue is administrative failure and mismanagement, not lack of talent – Saddick Adams
4 hours -
WAPCo to commence major pipeline maintenance and inspection from November 25
4 hours -
CEO of Oro Oil Ghana Limited Maxwell Commey listed among the 100 Most Influential People Awards, 2024
4 hours -
Power crisis: Amandi is off due to maintenance, not debt – ECG Boss
4 hours -
Votes cast for late Akua Donkor to be declared invalid – Electoral Commission
4 hours -
You can’t keep “incompetent” Otto Addo for the long term – Countryman Songo
5 hours -
Joy FM holds 2024 Prayer Summit for Peace
5 hours