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We had an awesome training event in our company yesterday. The team brought their goals (personal, professional, relational, financial & spiritual) and discussed them with one another. Then I fleshed out a couple of our key corporate goals. There was a great energy in the room; not a fizzy excitement, but more of a determined yet upbeat resolve and assurance that yes, what had been written would come to pass. You see in our company we know that the first step to achievement is writing it down, and our team has learned how that works. 2009 was an incredible year. Profits were up ten fold. Accomplishment was everywhere. I can hardly wait to see what 2010 will bring.
Will every goal be achieved exactly as it was written down? No. And that’s not the point. The purpose of the goal is progression—forward motion toward the desire. But any variety of things will then come to bear on that goal that might change it’s measurement, it’s time frame, or even its exactly purpose.
In pursuit of your goals there’s gonna be some hiccups. Call ’em failures if it makes you feel more comfortable. And I’m a big fan of failing early so you can get it out of the way and get on with pursuing that which is most important. That’s why I believe you should never exercise, read your Bible, or pray on January 2nd, and you should always eat chocolate cake on that day. Each of those things represent failures.

Hundreds of millions of people established diet and exercise goals for the new year. Tens of millions of people make spiritual resolutions. By this time…..writing on the 6th day of the year….many of those goals and resolutions are already weakened because we’ve already faltered or failed. Somewhere deep in our psyche is a warped, perfection-based notion that any failure to execute the goal activity or resolution blows up the whole goal. But that is nonsense. All it did is delay it by a day. Since such delays are inevitable—it’s not realistic to think that you’ll execute your eating or exercise, or devotional intention perfectly—-I advocate failing early. January 2, is a good day. Then, on January 3, get right back in pursuit of the thing that was so important that you wrote it down in the first place.
For years I was hampered by perfection. I didn’t know that was what it was, but that was it. I remember my spiritual mentors encouraging me to read the Bible and pray daily, and if I really wanted to do it right, I’d do it “a great while before day” because the Bible told of Jesus going out to pray “a great while before day.” (Notice it wasn’t just “before” it was “a GREAT while before”—apparently the effectiveness of prayer diminishes with each extra ray of light as the sun rises.) If I wanted to be like Jesus, I needed to emulate Him in rising early to pray. But that didn’t work really well for a college student who stayed up until all hours of the night. I’d feel guilty that I wasn’t disciplined enough to get to bed early so I would have enough sleep that I could get up and pray “a great while before day.” Then one day I realized that God didn’t keep time. It’s always day in Heaven. There was no need to focus on the WHEN of my devotions, and that frees me to focus on the WHO—Jesus. I’m released from my perfection, which—in reality—I didn’t have to begin with or I wouldn’t have needed Jesus to come and die for me in the first place.
The mantra of my mentors Lee Brower and Dan Sullivan is “Progress, not Perfection.” That’s a good way to think about it. You haven’t achieved your goal yet? So what? Are you closer to it now, than you were before? If the answer is “yes” let’s celebrate that progress and figure out how we can get more of it—moving ever closer to the goal.
I really don’t care what your failure, sin, or shortcoming was yesterday. What’s really important is your tomorrow. Make tomorrow’s achievements your total focus, and make sure the steps of today are pointed toward them.

