Sometimes our minds surprise us; sometimes they let us down.
It is a rare occasion when I’ve finished writing my sermon before about 6 pm on Friday night. But this past week I finished writing my sermon at 1:40 pm.
I can’t tell you how good it felt to be done that early in the day. It was like a burden had been lifted from me.
There is a weight that preachers carry with them as they prepare sermons. It feels heavy like a backpack that you can’t take off until you get to your destination.
But when the sermon is done, the backpack comes off and you feel light again.
I celebrated by going for lunch. I decide to try a new chicken fast food restaurant close by and I even got myself a pop. I was feeling good.
The crazy thing was, though I finished my sermon in record time for once, I still had more writing to do. So after a not-so-inspiring chicken lunch celebration, I was back at it. This time writing a funeral message.
The amazing thing was I was still focussed and by 6 pm I had finished that message and I was really done for the night.
I was feeling great, mentally exhausted, but ecstatic that I was all done.
In the evening, Lily and I went to a store and saw someone we knew from a distance. About two minutes after that I realized how my mind had let me down despite how focussed I’d been in writing messages that day.
Seeing that guy reminded me that I had forgotten to do something very important earlier in the day.
My message had flowed out of me like a tap turned all the way on, but I had forgotten to fill the baptistry tank in the sanctuary!
You see, another church had asked to use our church for a baptism service on Sunday afternoon and the guy I saw Friday night while shopping was from that church. Seeing him triggered my memory.
For a Sunday baptism, the tank must be filled and the heater turned on by Friday so the water will be warm enough.
I was ripped, upset at myself for not remembering. I was devastated that I would have to spend the rest of the evening babysitting a baptistry tank (it’s a 2 hour process).
How could my mind be so sharp that day but still let me down so badly?
I wanted to blame someone, or something, for how my day turned out. But in the end I had no one to blame but myself.
Here’s the thing: When something goes wrong, we want to blame someone else. It doesn’t change the outcome, but we feel justified being angry at whomever we pin the fault on … even if it’s God. However, accepting responsibility enables us to see how God works things out. I normally have a long day writing a sermon. This week God enabled me to write both messages in the time it usually takes to write one. Though the baptistry issue cost me time Friday night, God used that guy I saw to remind me about what I’d forgotten. When I put the blame in the proper place I can see how God helps me even when my mind lets me down.
That’s Life!
Paul
Question: How has your mind amazed you and failed you in the same day? Leave your comment below.