I got myself way too involved and didn’t realize it until I was deep into it.
The other day we changed our phone and internet service at work.
We had been with the same internet company for 23 years but they couldn’t offer us any faster service than we were getting even though it was no longer adequate.
I still wouldn’t have made the change but the price point was almost the same for 10 times faster internet.
Even then I was still sceptical that the new company could give us increased service, knowing that the phone wires in our building were ancient.
I was assured by the salesman that it would be a very simple change over … no trouble; it would be seamless; I wouldn’t notice a thing.
Salesmen are all about the sale. They will tell you what you want to hear. I, on the other hand, knew our building and didn’t think for a moment that it would be seamless.
But I was curious.
When the installer came, he realized about five minutes after he arrived that this was not going to be a simple change over.
In fact, just getting a new cable to our building took all morning. Then there was all the inside work.
The installer had help in the morning, but in the afternoon he was on his own.
He asked me if I wanted to see where things were going to go down in the basement and I said, “Sure.”
Costly reply.
In the process of showing me where things were going, he also got me to hold something … then pass him something else and help him follow a wire.
I then located a hole in the ceiling where he could feed a cable up through to the main floor of the building – a significant deal because we have reinforced concrete floors and he would have otherwise had to drill through it to get the wire up.
But by this time, my sermon writing had been abandoned and I was helping him trouble shoot some of the other things that needed to be negotiated.
It was like offering to help someone move who tells you he just has a small apartment and that one truckload will do it. But when you show up, nothing is packed in boxes and there is no truck. You are left lugging carloads of items piled throughout you car and trunk.
… And the one trip it was going to take ends up being four or five trips back and forth.
We’ve all been there.
This time I got roped in by just wanting to see where the installer was going to put things … and, from that point on, he had a lackey he could count on.
The seamless change, that I would barely even notice, cost me my sermon writing time, and an afternoon of being an assistant.
The work that had been scheduled for 8:00 am – 12:00 pm, ended up being from 8:00 am – 4:30 pm, with me deeply involved in it.
But you know what? The new internet speed is amazing!
Here’s the thing: Like anything in life, your relationship with Christ will take you deeper than you realized or thought it would at the start. Are you able to say “yes” to going deeper with Christ than you thought you would or could? Christ will always call you to deeper levels of relationship. Don’t ever settle or try to minimize the work you will be called to do. It will all be worth it.
That’s Life!
Paul
Question: What in your life has taken you deeper than you thought it would? Leave your comments below.