The Truth Shall Set You Free Indeed, Part 2

The | Truth Shall Set You Free | Indeed | Part 2

The Truth Shall Set You Free Indeed, Part 2

Courage that stems from your constitution (temperament or makeup) is very weak. It will leave you stranded.

What is courage? It’s overcoming and taking action steps while you’re in fear.

Here’s the answer:

  • It’s courage that comes from duty.
  • It’s reliable and consistent.
  • Add faith to your courage you become very powerful.

Faith is knowing the sun will come up tomorrow even when you’ve just seen it go down. You don’t doubt that it will rise again tomorrow. No one would ever bet on that.

So how do you find that type of constitution?

Know that the constitution of your human body is very good at coming up with excuses. We’re not looking for perfection here but hey… Let’s be dependable so that people can count on us.

While in the military, I’d run, do push ups, chin ups, all that – until I’d groan and say, “I can’t do this any longer!” This was the hardest I’d ever worked in my life and I’d think to myself, “I don’t need to do this; I’ll never be as good as the other guys.” I was so tired that even the thought of lifting a finger was unimaginable. Many excuses popped into my head.

Then, I’d hear, “Man Overboard!”  You never knew if it was a real emergency or just an exercise. I’d hear those words and as adrenaline shot up my body, all of a sudden my courage was no longer based on my constitution or temperament. Not even on my physical body’s feelings.  Duty was calling and my body jumped to attention. Just the thought that someone was dying gave me all the strength I needed to overcome.  No way was I going to just sit there and let things happen. A sense of duty overcame any excuse I could have come up with and I shot into action.

I’d never have to rely on my constitution or temperament to guilt me the rest of my life for inaction when I could have made a difference.

You see, our constitution will never run out of excuses.  “I’m a jerk.”  “My wife will do it.” Or “I worked late last night,” or “I’m lazy by nature.” Not even, “It’s just the way I am.”

Why are you overweight? “It’s just the way I am.”

Why are you a jerk to your wife? “It’s just the way I am – it’s the way I was raised.”

If courage is based on your makeup, your constitution or your temperament, it will forsake you. It’s totally unreliable and will let you down… again and again.

You need to build up your sense of duty.  The The 8 F’s of Leadership provide you with more than enough for you to find where your duty lies.  Your duty to your spouse; your family, friends, faith, and more. It will build character into you so strong that it will allow you to follow through on your decision long after the feeling in which you made the decision is gone. Character is STRONGER than any constitution you may have.  Never wait for the right mood to push you forward into your success. Do not trust your feelings and just do it.

You know this is true; that is why you can be doing this business for years and keep your sense of duty. Each time, at an event or a meeting, you are imparted with your sense of duty and you’ll do what you need to do. That is awesome and it will change your life.

The rewards are immeasurable. Can you change your life right now – within this community without impacting others around you? No.  It’s the qualification.  You change your life and the domino effect rolls out to those in your circle of influence. Don’t rely on courage from your constitution. Rely on something way more resilient and make quality decisions based out of your sense of duty. It will come from your character and from what you believe in your heart.

If your goal is to make $2000 next month, that is good but it’s considered the most shallow form of motivation. Love for your spouse, your children, love for your country – the 8 F’s are bigger. Duty to your family, your team, your Maker… look at whatever is important to you.

Then, the peace will come as you simply do what you know you should do.  As you act from duty, you allow God to take care of your results. Only doing it for the money makes it hard and the time will come (yes, it will) that money will no longer motivate you.  But sense of duty?  That will.

If you’re looking to your constitution for courage, you won’t do what you need to do.  You see, your constitution and your temperament needs to be trained.  Being in the military has helped train and build mine a bit stronger; it’s become more reliable.

This business is great. It helps you become the person you need to be as you continue to attract the circumstances you’re looking for.  Let me repeat that: If you want your circumstances to change, become the person you need to be so you can attract what you need.  Did you hear how powerful that was?  Most people stay the way they are, thus attracting the very circumstances they are running away from. To me this is very sad.

Believe the RIGHT truth. Running away from problems and going by your feelings on commitments is foolishness. It does not work!  Phillip Brooks says it well: “Do not pray for easier lives, pray to become stronger men.”

Begin to pray for more strength in your duties.  Pray that you might invest all of yourself UNTIL you make it. Do not despise humble beginnings or hard times.  It’s okay to cry every now and again.  I know that.  Even if your sense of duty is born out of shame, take hold of it.  Strong commitment doesn’t always come through joy but it certainly comes with plenty of humility.  Pray for strength to move mountains, for even more than you need.  We serve a God of more than enough.  Moses and Joshua were told time and again to stay strong and be of good courage.  Good courage?  Is there even such a thing as bad courage?

Yes.  I can see how our temperament and our constitution could err our courage.  This is what I believe:  I know I’m a sinner.  How far could I really go if I based my decisions on my sinning temperament? I need a higher compass. I need that sense of duty I’ve been sharing with all of you. Good courage is based on God’s promises, on his duty… or responsibilities.  Imagine taking the 8 F’s and growing a sense of duty through them.  Are you getting the idea of this sense of duty?

I so want you to get it.  To grab it with both hands. We are guarding your back all the way, we’ll help you. We’ll run with you if you run. We’ll serve you.

I leave you with this: Be strong. Be of good courage. Now go do it.

God Bless.

Claude Hamilton

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32 thoughts on “The Truth Shall Set You Free Indeed, Part 2

  1. Wow! What an awesome article. We are privileged to be able to follow leaders like you and Lana. The wisdom of your words keeps our sense of Duty alive when we tend to fall back on our constitution. Thank you!

  2. WOW! Thanks again – part one was great, part two was incredible! I constantly tell people that we need to base our entire lives on a Standard (a higher compass) and that we need to measure all of our thoughts and actions by that Standard. You can’t go wrong by following the Designer’s set of plans!

  3. Wow ! I would love for everyone I know get to see you give that talk from stage. And than, put out The CD, :-) so I can listen to it over and over again.
    Usually (almost always) Joe shows “the plan” i but the few times I’ve had to do it.. you yelling “you better get your hopes up” from a cd has really helped…
    Your Awesome ! Thanks.

  4. And Part 2 did not disappoint!! Love the topic of duty…it is so rarely discussed in our culture of entitlements!! And thanks for serving your country, bud,…then and now!

  5. What a great post. This blog should be on anyone’s must read list. The information and perspective that it gives me on my daily journey through life has given me courage to become better and believe that I can make a difference. Thank you Mr. Hamilton for having courage to help others.

  6. So many awsome points. Claude you nailed the importance of doing what God made us to do and letting Him lead the way. Thanks for sharing.

  7. Love this article Claude! I just heard a WWII vet talk about his experience as a tail gunner on a Lancaster bomber. His crew didn’t try to get to know him because the average life expectancy of guys like him was only 4 missions. He flew on 38 missions, each one tempting the law of averages to work against him. Courage is in such short supply today and I really respect anyone who steps out of their comfort zone because they have a sense of duty to make a difference or defend freedom.

    Thank you Claude & Lana and the rest of the Policy Council for the courage that you demonstrate daily.

  8. Claude,this blog reminded me of your audio about good courage, one of my favorites. I’m so glad the Military have courage based on duty and not feelings. Thank you for being such a good example to all of us of exhibiting dutiful courage even when no ones yells “Man Overboard!”

    Trevor Long

  9. Claude, This was an outstanding article….thinking I need to print it off and read it daily:) I admire your courage..thanks

  10. Very good!
    When all other forms of motivation fade away, the sense of duty remains. (Hopefully, for some in America not so much though)

  11. Claude thank you for writing this blog…wow!..is all I can say…I will print this and read it over and over …Take care…

  12. Once again you are spot on. Growing up (51 yrs. now) my father taught me one lesson that I have never forgotten. My father with immense common sense and life skills vs scholarly achievement, imparted this to me at a very young age: “No matter what happens in your life, no matter what the circumstance, never forget you have two things that can never be taken away from. “In good times and bad times you can always count on your character and your name.” To this day his character is impeccable, his name is spoken of well. His Constitution never changed. I can only wish the same for my sons too. Thanks for the reminder Claude.

  13. Strength and Courage..something that we all have, and something that we all need. Fantastic Blog as always!

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