Want to discover what is holding you back? Take the limits quiz now.
I’m cheap and blind—a bad combination.
I have been walking around for a month wearing one contact.
This is not a new thing. As a young adult, I purchased contacts—wore them longer than directed—and did not buy new ones until I won the lottery. Those tiny pieces of plastic are expensive!
One time, I gave a girl a ride home from a youth event. It was late. It was dark. And you guessed it,I only had one contact in. She lived in the middle of nowhere.
“Are you sure you’re going to make it home Mrs. Hurlbut?”
I assured her I would be fine. Approaching the intersection, I strained to read the street sign. No luck. I shifted into park, climbed out of the car, and examined the sign. Standing directly in front of the guide post, I squinted as if my life depended on it, and was still was unable to make out a single letter.
I climbed back into the car—only to discover the gas gauge was on E.
I told you I was cheap.
I was lost and running on empty.
Isn’t this how we feel? Stuck at an intersection, trying to figure out which way to turn, yet we can’t see ten feet in front of us.
I have no idea what next month is going to look like.
Heck, I have no idea what tomorrow may look like. Maybe my kids will be quarantined. Maybe I’ll be working from home. Maybe I'll be looking for another job. Maybe someone I love will be sick.
Maybe. Maybe. Maybe. Maybe.
How do we make life-altering decisions with all those maybes hanging around.
1. PHONE AN EXPERT.
Do you know who I called when I was stranded? My husband. Why? Because he was a mailman and could drive those back roads in his sleep from the passenger seat of the car (that’s what rural carriers do).
Instead of calling one your friends for advice—most of which are as blind as we are—what if we cried out to Jesus for direction? He created the roads after all.
I’m not talking vague prayers like, “Bless my day”. I mean crazy specific prayers:
“End this relationship if it’s not of you.”
“If this job is right, open doors.”
“If I’m suppose to move, confirm this.”
I spent years praying vague prayers, which resulted in me continually feeling lost and believing God didn’t care.
2. MOVE.
God can't move a parked car.
How many years have you wasted squinting upward, studying a street sign—paralyzed by fear—unable to move?
Once you sense God is leading you, although your vision will still be hazy, you have to turn at the intersection. You can’t stay put because you’re worried you might make a wrong turn. Move already!
3. YOU MIGHT STILL FEEL LOST—BUT YOU’LL GET THERE.
God’s word is a lamp to our feet. Do you know how far you can see with a flashlight strapped to your head? I do. I run with a headlamp. I can only see enough to take one more step. So I take one step. And then the next. And then the next. Do you know when I stop seeing anything? When I refuse to move.
My blurry vision never improved, but guess what? I made it home. Why? Because the reassuring voice on the other line would not hang up until he knew his bride was safe in his arms.