Words from Dic(tionary)

Akin: (adj) of similar character: e.g. genius and madness are akin.
One of my favorite quotations from the Good Book is: “Wisdom is justified by all her children.”
What that means to me is that great ideas, noble causes and desirable notions are not always spawned from altars and pulpits.
Wisdom bears children which point to certain parents. What is the mother and father of great wisdom? What is akin to divine understanding?
I’ve discovered there are three great uncles who let me know when I am in the presence of lasting promises and golden principles. Everything akin to these three entities is worthy of our time and eternal in prospect:
1. Nothing is going to happen without me.
Every time someone tries to convince me that good things can occur without human involvement, I quietly slip out of the room to avoid the pending disaster.
2. It’s not about what I deserve.
Actually, what I deserve is not relevant. If it were balanced, I would also have to accept the times when I deserve punishment and instead am granted grace. The word “deserve” should be eliminated from the English language and replaced with “get.”
3. Nothing acceptable is accepted until it is rejected and continues to insist on being accepted.
Please understand, I do not think human beings are devoid of intelligence, but our intelligence suffers from blindness. We seem incapable of catching a vision for anything that isn’t immediately in the spectrum of our present doings.
So when I run across anything that submits to, aligns with or honors these three ideas, I realize I just may be sitting in the presence of greatness … because greatness is always the blending of need, sensitivity and curiosity.