BUILDING A CATHEDRAL
“It’s a constant, continuous, spectacular world we live in, and every day
you see things that just knock you out if you
pay attention.”
Robert
Irwin
American
Artist
We all see our work
differently. Several people can have the same job and yet see their work from a
very different perspective. There is an old story that you most likely have
heard before about three bricklayers. The first was asked what he was doing. “I
am building a wall,” he answered. The second was asked the same question. “I am
building a church,” he said. The third mad was also asked what he was doing. “I
am building a cathedral,” he proudly stated.
Here is the
difference. All three men were doing the same work; it was a job to the first
man, nothing more. To the second, it was his career. He took pride in his work
and intended to do this for his life’s work. To the third man, however, this
was a calling. He was not doing a job; he was part of something far more
significant than himself. He knew this would last long after he was gone, and
the quality of his work mattered.
Which of these three
men do you think paid more attention to details. The third, of course. Why?
Because it mattered to him. When we do things that matter, we work hard to do
them well. Our work, our attention to detail speaks about us and who we are.
The Spanish philosopher Jose Ortega y Gasset (1883-1955) said, “Tell me to what
you pay attention, and I will tell you who you are.”
Paying attention to
details does not just happen on its own; we have to make it happen. It is a
deliberate act on our part of the focus. Inventor Alexander Graham Bell
(1847-1922) put it this way: “Concentrate all your thoughts upon the work at
hand. The sun’s rays do not burn until brought to a focus.” Likewise, our
creative abilities are not at their most potent until they are brought into
focus.
In October 1886, the
Statue of Liberty was dedicated in New York. The colossal statue created by
sculptor Frederic Auguste Bartholdi (1834-1904) was unlike anything seen
before. Now fast forward to 1909 when Wilbur Wright flew his Wright Flyer
around the statue. As he did, he made a remarkable discovery. Wilbur Wright
noticed that the hair on top of Lady Liberty’s head was done in every detail.
Bartholdi did not
know that someone would invent the flying machine one day and see the top of
her head. So why did he bother to do all that work? Because Lady Liberty was
his calling. Detail mattered to him, even if no one ever saw it for themselves.
Do you want to do
something that will outlast you? Do you want to leave your mark on the world?
See all you do as your calling. Pay attention to detail – no matter how small
or if no one may ever see them by you. If you pay attention, you can do the
most beautiful things. As educator Booker T. Washington (1856-1915) said,
“Success in life is founded upon attention to the small things rather than to
the large things; to the everyday things nearest to us rather than to the
things that are remote and uncommon.”
You can learn more about Personal
Development from the author and speaker, John Patrick Hickey. To get his books,
training material, or book him to speak to your church, business, or group,
visit our website at www.johnpatrickhickey.com.
© 2021 John
Patrick Hickey. No part of this material may be reprinted or published without
the written permission of the author.
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