Be Prepared.
That's the motto of the Boy Scouts.
"Be prepared for what?" someone once asked Baden-Powell, the founder of Scouting,
"Why, for any old thing." said Baden-Powell.
The training you receive in your troop will help you live up to the Scout motto. When someone has an accident, you are prepared because of your first aid instruction. Because of lifesaving practice, you might be able to save a non-swimmer who has fallen into deep water.
But Baden-Powell wasn't thinking just of being ready for emergencies. His idea was that all Scouts should prepare themselves to become productive citizens and to give happiness to other people. He wanted each Scout to be ready in mind and body for any struggles, and to meet with a strong heart whatever challenges might lie ahead.
Be prepared for life - to live happily and without regret, knowing that you have done your best. That's what the Scout motto means.
Excerpted from page 54, Boy Scout Handbook, 11th ed, (#33105), copyright 1998 by BSA, ISBN 0-8395-3105-2
The above motto from the boy scouts also applies to us as Christians.
We should be prepared for “any old thing”.
The training we receive from studying, worship, and fellowship with each other will help us live up to this motto. When someone gets into trouble we are prepared because of the training we have received. Because of frequent study and application, we might be able to save a soul that is in “deep water”.
We should be productive Christians and should “give happiness to other people.” We should “be ready in mind and body for any struggles, and to meet with a strong heart whatever challenges might lie ahead.”
We should “Be prepared for life - to live happily and without regret, knowing that you have done your best.”
Monday, May 21, 2007
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