Are you doing more and enjoying it less? Growing up, I often heard, “Idle hands are the devil’s workshop.” It took me a while to realize the devil also uses busyness to steal, kill, and destroy. The 1947 Christmas movie The Bishop’s Wife challenges the idea that more work, higher status, and impressive achievements mean a better life.

[bctt tweet=”Are you doing more and enjoying it less? We often hear, “Idle hands are the devil’s workshop.” Did you know the devil also uses busyness to steal and destroy? #RechargeWednesday @DebbieWWilson ”  username=”PatHolbrook”]

After being promoted to bishop, a clergyman, played by David Niven, loses his joy and sacrifices almost everything else in the pursuit of success. In trying to leave his mark and please his wealthy benefactor he obsesses over building a great cathedral. He neglects his wife, daughter, life’s simple pleasures, and the other important relationships in his life in order to accomplish what he thinks will glorify God.

In desperation, the bishop prays for help. The angel Dudley, played by Cary Grant, appears, offering to lighten the bishop’s workload. The bishop refuses his help.

Since the bishop won’t let Dudley help him, the angel engages with the people the bishop has neglected. He accompanies the bishop’s wife on errands and throws in some serendipitous fun along the way. He tells Bible stories to the bishop’s daughter and teaches her how to throw snowballs. His simple acts of kindness to the hired help, interest in the inner-city ministry, and visit with the bishop’s old friend restore faith and bring joy to those who’ve lost it.

Seeing the happiness of his wife and everyone else Dudley touches only amplifies the bishop’s grouchiness. Dudley, whether intentionally or not, makes the bishop jealous for what he already has, what he has forsaken in order to prove himself as a bishop. The bishop resents Dudley and can’t see how he’s the source of his own misery.

I won’t spoil the ending. But the story reminded me that worldly success can rob us of true riches when we assign the wrong value to it. Before his promotion, this minister and his family happily served a poor church together. In his elevated post he forgot Whom he served. The expectations of a wealthy benefactor drove him. He replaced his calling to love God, his family, and those he was sent to serve with a less important but more striking accomplishment.

[bctt tweet=”Worldly success can rob us of true riches when we assign the wrong value to it. #RechargeWednesday @DebbieWWilson” username=”PatHolbrook”]

Building tangible monuments brings a fleeting sense of accomplishment, but lunching with your spouse, playing with your child, and showing kindness to a stranger garner heaven’s applause. I may always fight the refrain, “After I finish this, then….” I appreciate the reminder not to sacrifice true treasures for glamorous facades of success. Some “successes” aren’t worth the price they inevitably cost.

Jesus said, “Do you gain anything if you win the whole world but lose your life? Of course not!” (Mark 8:36, GNT).

[bctt tweet=”Building tangible monuments brings a fleeting sense of accomplishment, but lunching with your spouse, playing with your child, and showing kindness to a stranger garner heaven’s applause. #RechargeWednesday @DebbieWWilson” username=”PatHolbrook”]


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