W
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orking in a restaurant provided dozens of opportunities to
learn about people. You get to know their likes and dislikes, their
preferences, their quirks, their attitudes, and their moods. Every time I
waited tables, I always learned something new about my customers and,
invariably, something new about myself as well.
Everything I learned was useful but not everything was pleasant or easy
to accept.
One of the most difficult things to master was the concept
of the tip. Most people figure up a
certain percentage of the bill and leave that as a tip. Depending upon the level of service, the tip
may be more or less. In extreme cases,
customers refuse to leave anything, expressing their dissatisfaction with the
service or representing their desire not to leave a tip at all. The danger for a waiter or waitress is
judging people according to the amount of money left on the table. I’ve seen this happen repeatedly. Servers would become upset because a customer
left a smaller tip than they anticipated and the end result was anger and
bitterness on the part of the waiter or waitress.
However, if the server considered the amount of the tip as a
percentage of the whole bill, he might be pleasantly surprised to discover he
was well compensated for his service. I
learned this from a wonderful customer I used to wait on. No matter what the amount of his bill, he
always tipped at twenty per cent. If he
ordered a cup of coffee, he tipped twenty per cent and if he ordered a large
meal, the tip was the same fraction of the ticket. No matter what, he remained consistent in his
giving and he was generous. When I
finally realized that I should look at my tips as a percentage of the ticket
instead of a fixed amount, I became more encouraged and humbled.
In Malachi 3:6a, God teaches us a very important
principle about himself. This passage of
scripture reads, "I the
Lord do not change.” Yes, you read that
correctly. God does not change. No matter the circumstances, no matter the
need, no matter how small or how large our burden, God always provides
generously for us.
Our problem lies in how we perceive his gift. We fall into the trap of assuming we know how
God should address our needs and how he should resolve our difficulties. When he doesn’t follow our line of thinking,
we become bitter or angry, essentially believing He has refused to honor our
request. However, we must change our
perspective and see that God’s giving is always consistent, always generous,
and always available. It is not based on
our actions, works, or on our belief that we deserve it. Our actions are never good enough, we can’t
work enough to earn it, and we never deserve it. But God gives anyway, and He
always gives at one hundred per cent.
The cross of Jesus Christ is proof of God’s grace and generous
giving to us. While we were still
steeped in our sins, incapable of having a relationship with God, He gave His
son so that we might have forgiveness and eternal life. This must become our perspective. We must understand that God has given us His
best and that He continues to do so based on our relationship through Jesus
Christ. God did not calculate the
smallest percentage needed to offer us salvation. Instead, He gave us His all, one hundred per
cent, holding nothing back. What kind of tip are you giving God today? Is it all you have or just a mere percentage?
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