Two friends told me similar
stories of being on the operating table and knowing they were dying. Both came
to a very serious crossroad: “Do I stay or leave?” Fortunately for me and for
many others, they both made the choice to stay. But was this the only crossroad or life-changing
decision they’ve faced in life? I don’t think so.
They say cats have 9
lives. But I think we have several lives too, here on earth, as we come to
those crossroads, those precipice points where we have to make the hard choices
that alter the future: career choices, marriage, divorce, where to live, children,
medical choices, religion, and so many others. Not every choice may be a
life-altering one, but as we look back on our lives, we can see the ones that
really did make a big difference.
I had one of those in
college.
Carbondale University of
Illinois May 1970. I stood in the crowd of protesters chanting, “Ho Ho Ho Chi
Minh, NLF is going to win.” I picked up a rock and threw it as hard as I could.
The minute it flew from my hand I was jolted! “What am I doing?” I’d gone too
far.
I was throwing a
baseball-sized rock into a line of policemen, not even thinking who or what it
could hit. I quickly backed out of the crowd of protesters and retreated to the
trailer. I waited for my friends. I was silent on the trip home.
When I got back to my
dorm, I had some real soul searching to do. I’d come to one of those
crossroads. If I stayed with the friends I had at the time, my whole life would
have been a totally different story. I was afraid of the person I’d become. I
didn’t recognize her. I had to abandon my protester friends and began to look
inward and to the Bible for answers. The next semester at school was awfully
lonely.
At some point we all come
to crossroads where we honestly have to ask ourselves, “Why am I doing this?”
And then we have to answer ourselves just as honestly.
Second Kings 7 tells us
about four lepers who were in that predicament. The enemy was coming from
without the city and there was a great famine within the city. They just sat
there. Finally they woke up and “they
said one to another, ‘Why sit we here until we die?’” They realized they were
being foolish just sitting there and waiting to die. Instead they were
motivated by a tiny spark of hope.
They decided that they’d make a move toward the enemy camp and just
maybe there was a very slight chance something good would happen. As it turned
out, their hope was rewarded. As the lepers went out, the enemy thought they
heard a great army coming against them and they fled.
“And when these lepers came to the uttermost part of the camp, they went
into one tent, and did eat and drink, and carried thence silver, and gold, and
raiment” (2Kgs. 7:7). There was so much food and wealth, the whole city was
able to prosper from it.
The lepers’ action was motivated by hope and they were rewarded.
Hope is a great attitude
to have. Psalm 146: 5 tells us a person
can stay happy if he stays in hope. “Happy
is he that hath the God of Jacob for his help, whose hope is in the Lord.”
Even if we don’t always make
the right decisions, we can pray like David did, “Create in me a clean heart, O God” (Ps. 51: 10), because we
know that “the Lord looketh [is looking] on the heart (1 Sam. 16:7).
When our hearts are right
with God, we can be assured that things will work out, no matter what they may
look like now. We can smile with hope, “Being confident of this very thing, that he which hath begun a good work
in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ” (Phil. 1:6).
And we do like it says in Philippians 2:12, “work out [our] own salvation [wholeness]
with fear [reverence] and respect toward trying to do our absolute best for the
Lord” for we have to trust it really is, “God which worketh [is working] in [us] both to will and to do of
his good pleasure” (Phil. 2:13).
We are loved by God Almighty,
the creator of all things, and we can trust Him to help us, especially at those
life-changing crossroads.
Like me, when I decided to
drop my protestor friends, or like the four lepers who made the scary move
toward the enemy, if our heart is cleansed and our hope in the Lord, the future
is a very bright and happy one for us.
Love, Carolyn
One reader said this about
my WINGS book: “It’s like reading a spiritual reality show!”
My stories are entertaining and reflective at the same time.
Take a look:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/search?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&index=aps&keywords=WINGS%20Carolyn%20molica&linkCode=ur2&tag=jmbcsds-20&linkId=XQMVLVZYNBLYAGEM
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