Two hundred words of goodness spew from Seth Godin everyday. How someone could be so brilliant everyday is beyond me; but I’m grateful for his insight, intellectualism, and information. In a recent article he stated many people are being brainwashed into being average. Moved yet immobilized at the same time, I thought of Clare Booth Luce, the playwright, journalist, and Republican Member of Congress.

In 1962, Luce met with President Kennedy, who was, at the time, pursuing an ambitious agenda domestically and overseas. She worried about his thinly spread priorities. A great man, she advised him, is one sentence. President Lincoln’s sentence was obvious: He preserved the union and freed the slaves. So was Franklin D. Roosevelt’s: He lifted us out of a great depression and helped us win a world war. What, Luce challenged the young, impatient president, what do be his sentence?
What a powerful question–not just for great presidents, but for normal folks, too. What will our legacy be? How will our one sentence change history? As you prepare for another year (probably as tough and trying as last year), remember what Clare Booth Luce asked of a president: What’s your sentence?
Please pray for Haiti. If that is all you can do, it’s the most you can do!

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