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Do you want to know what I’m thankful for? I’m grateful iPhones and social media did not exist when I was young. I performed far too many brainless activities that would have been recorded and still floating around the internet for the world to see.
One of those foolish ideas went something like this:
1. Go to an amusement park with my college friends.
2. Strap myself into a contraption that resembles a straightjacket.
3. Attached to a cable, willfully allow myself to be raised 300 ft in the air, dangling like
an old sneaker from a telephone wire.
4. Over a megaphone the attendant yells four words that still haunt me in my
dreams: “3-2-1 FLY!”
5. At this cue, pull a ripcord and fall to my death.
6. Moments before hitting the ground, the cord catches and I swing
like a pendulum through the air sobbing like a baby.
7. When my feet hit solid ground, I run to my friends exclaiming, “Woohoo! What a ride!”
This is the perfect picture of faith.
Faith is irrational.
Faith is uncalculated.
Faith is messy.
Faith makes you want to throw up and scream “Woohoo” simultaneously.
Faith is risky business.
There is a verse in the Bible that makes me cringe. Hebrews 11:6 states,
“It is IMPOSSIBLE to please God without faith. Anyone who wants to come to him must believe that God exists and that he rewards those who sincerely seek him.”
We all want to be used by God but no one wants to step out in faith. Yet this verse reminds us that FAITH and ACTION are like a two-sided coin. A quarter with Washington’s face erased from the front, would be null and void. It would have no value and should be thrown in the trash. It is the same with faith. What we BELIEVE bleeds into all we DO. Likewise, our actions convey to the world what we believe.
Here is the dilemma. It’s easier to live a safe life, only attempting to do things we know we are capable of. My husband says, “Being capable is our greatest curse!”
I’m capable of working a nine-to-five job and earning a reasonable living. I’m capable of being a halfway decent spouse, parent, and citizen. But when we are capable, we don’t really need God and we never step out in faith. And you know what else? Life gets really BORING!
You might be thinking, I wish I could be brave like you, Jess.
Let me set the record straight! When I step out in faith I do not feel brave. Not one bit. I feel queasy. I feel like I have lost my mind. I doubt if God really told me to do what I’m attempting to do. But the one thing I don’t do…turn back. I take one petrified baby step after another because all I want to do is please my Father. The best part? An attendant was strapped in beside me because I was so terrified. I knew I would never pull the ripcord. He pulled it for me when I was dangling 300 ft in the air. He did all the work. I just had the pleasure of going along for the ride.
“Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming, “Wow what a ride!”