You can believe something to be true, can work very hard at following that truth through, and you can still be completely wrong or off course.
A couple of weeks ago, we had a glitch with our church website. We couldn’t post recordings of messages to the site any more. The file size had to be so small that our sermons couldn’t be uploaded.
I remembered that this was an issue a year or so ago.
And, I remembered I had fixed the problem by going into the guts of the website and creating a file I didn’t understand, in an environment beyond my comprehension, using code that superseded my cognition. I thought I was hypnotized.
I figured I had to dive in and do that again. But a year had passed and I was grasping to remember what I had done.
One thing I was sure of was that this was a problem I needed to fix and not something I could ask the nice techie dudes on the support site about.
I tried three different times to correct the problem. Each time took about an hour or more of looking at the inside of our website – it’s the side of the site that nobody sees, with files and folders.
Finally, I exhausted all hope that I could figure out how to correct the problem. I decided to go to the people who live inside computers and beg them to help this poor dense sod solve his problem.
I made my request, left my computer and went to a meeting. When I got back from my meeting, the problem was fixed!
It turned out that I couldn’t have fixed it. This problem was something the support people needed to correct. I was thinking it was something I had to do, but I was wrong.
And that reminded me of a time I thought a plane I was to catch left at 2 pm in the afternoon, and I was cutting it close to make it before take off.
So I went to the front of a long line of people and asked to butt in because my plane was leaving in 15 minutes … only to find out from the ticket agent that my plane had left 45 minutes ago!
I was sure I knew the time, and I had made my plans based on what I was sure of. I never actually checked the ticket. I thought I knew the time, but I was wrong.
Here’s the thing: I thought I needed to figure out my website problem, so I worked hard to come up with a solution. I thought I knew when my plane left so I showed up at the airport at the appropriate time. I actually worked for nothing and showed up too late! We can do the same when it comes to the end of our life. We can work hard to be prepared for the end, but if we work at the wrong things, it’s for nothing. Or we can think we have more time than we really do, and so we are not prepared. Make sure you have a clear understanding of the relationship you need to have with God. You can only get that by knowing what God says in the Bible.
That’s Life!
Paul
Question: What have you been sure of only to find out you were dead wrong? I’d like to hear from you; leave your comment below.
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Paul, I’ve been enjoying your blogs. You’re a good writer. This last one is fresh and personal. Super stuff. Enjoy the day. John Healey
Hi John,
Thanks for your kind words. I enjoy writing them.
Paul