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“The kind of doctor who gets sued least often is a doctor who is likable.”

A thought by John Ortberg, (2015-02-24) from his book. All the Places to Go . . . How Will You Know?: God Has Placed beforeYou an Open Door.  What Will You Do?   (p. 153). Tyndale house publishers, inc.. Kindle edition. (p. 158). Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.. Kindle Edition. (Click on the title to go to Amazon.com to buy the book.)

John says, “There was a study on lawsuits recently. What kind of doctor is least likely to be sued? The correct answer surprised me. The kind of doctor who gets sued least often is a doctor who is likable. The particular specialty or field is irrelevant. A lot of times in our legalistic world we don’t think this way. We forget about the nature of the human condition. But the number one determiner of who gets sued is not who is most or least brilliant. It’s not whether there’s genius; it’s whether there’s humanity, just simple humanity.”

Do other people matter to you?  If you see an open door do you run as fast as you can to get through it knocking people out of the way to get there first? 

John says, “Jesus says, ‘As the Father sent me, so I send you. I want you to go like a sheep among wolves. I want you to be as shrewd, canny, clever, and wise as a serpent, but I want you to be as innocent as a dove. I want you to allow God to work on your character, because the main thing you take into the world is not the stuff you do; it’s who you are.’ Better to go through the wrong door with the right heart than the right door with the wrong heart.”

He also said, “The main thing Jesus sends into the world is not what we do; it’s who we are.”

And those around us notice.  How you treat people tells a lot about who you really are.

So how important are people to you?

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