(1) Refuse to settle for yesterday's accomplishments If what you did yesterday still looks big to you today, you probably haven't done enough today. Paul celebrated his accomplishments, but he focused on what God had for him in the future: '...Forgetting the past and looking forward to what lies ahead, I press on...' (Philippians 3:1314 NLT)
(2) Refuse to sit around waiting for tomorrow's opportunities Between the great things we can't do and the little things we won't do, the danger is that we'll do nothing. The world is blessed most by those who do things, not by those who merely talk about doing them.
(3) Refuse to let your beginning dictate your end. George Washington Carver spent his early years shuffled between foster homes until Maria Watkins, a washerwoman, found him asleep in her barn. She didn't just take him in; she took him to church and introduced him to Jesus. When he eventually left her home, he took with him the Bible she'd given him. Maria left her mark on his life, and George left his mark on the world. This father of modern agriculture was a friend to three presidents as well as Henry Ford and Gandhi. He is credited with over three hundred different inventions. And the remarkable thing is, despite his disadvantages, he never became bitter. Instead, he went into his lab every morning and prayed, 'Open my eyes that I may see.' How could God fail to bless someone with such an attitude?
Psalm 119:18
Open my eyes, that I may see wondrous things from Your law.
- Bob Gass (Word for Today)