Do your
work with enthusiasm. Work as if you were serving the Lord, not as if you were
serving only men and women.
--
Ephesians 6:7
John Glenn accepted challenges
that few would dare to even consider. The Ohio native joined the Marines,
became a fighter pilot and completed nearly 150 combat missions in World War II
and the Korean War. Glenn also set a world speed record as a military test
pilot and later became an executive at Royal
Crown Cola. Years later and still hungering for the challenges of public
service, he successfully entered the cutthroat world of national politics
through his 1974 election to the United States Senate.
Such accomplishments alone would
shine bright on any resume or job application. But Glenn is best known for
something else: saying yes
to the challenge of becoming the first American to orbit the earth.
Asked later what he was thinking as he sat high atop the NASA rocket that would
blast him into space, he replied, "You're
thinking you're sitting on top of the most complex machine ever built by man,
with a million separate components, all supplied by the lowest bidder."
John Glenn's willingness to
accept great challenges made him a national hero. But while most of us will
never become a senator, travel to outer space or run a corporation, we'll still
face crucial tests in life. They're challenges that demand hard answers. Are we
willing to sacrifice our own short-sighted plans in favor of God's will and
direction?
God's call comes in many
different forms and often touches our career, family, money--or just about
anything else we hold dear. And it can also defy human logic. Let's consider
the familiar Old Testament story about Abraham and Isaac. After years of fervent
prayer, Abraham's wife Sarah finally became pregnant and gave birth to
Isaac--even though the couple was very old. Abraham and Sarah were thrilled and
grateful for their long-awaited child. But soon came God's call.
"Take your son, your only
son, Isaac, whom you love, and go to the region of Moriah," God told
Abraham. "Sacrifice him
there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains I will tell you about."
It was a shocking demand. But it
also seemed senseless to Abraham because God would never ask for something so
precious. (Or would He?)
Even so, Abraham obeyed God in
faith, took Isaac to Moriah and built a sacrificial altar. But there's a happy
ending to the story. Just as Abraham raised his knife to slay Isaac, one of
God's angels called out.
"Don't hurt the boy or harm
him in any way!" the angel said. "Now I know that you truly obey God, because you
were willing to offer him your only son."
Sacrificing our perceived
self-interests by venturing into the unknown can be scary under any
circumstance. We need to remember, however, that God's plans and
promises--the "Big Picture"--always extend beyond our immediate line
of sight. Human knowledge is limited. But what we do know is that He'll
always provide for us when we say yes to Him. And not necessarily
with what we want or expect, but with what we really need.
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