Heroes
You are no stranger to trials. The lab report came back
malignant. The school called, demanding that you pick up your child who has
just been expelled. Your husband informed you that he no longer wants to be
married to you. Your boss called you into his office to let you know that you
are being fired. Financial disaster seems certain while dependable friends seem
to vanish. Yes, storms will come, and bad things will happen – even to fully
devoted followers of God.
No one would call George Smith a coward. Smith was a daring
jet test pilot in the 1950's when the sound barrier was first being broken. He
could face anything - until he had to bail out of a jet going 805 miles per hour.
Smith survived, but was hospitalized for weeks. Smith shared his fear of ever
flying again with one of the nurses who had become a friend. The nurse smiled
and said, “I have an antidote to fear. It is courage. To have courage is to
know the worst, and to discover that, in God's economy, the very worst can't
really hurt you." Exactly!
God's Heroes
Few
of you were wise in the world's eyes or powerful or wealthy when God called
you. Instead, God chose things the world considers foolish in order to shame
those who think they are wise. And he chose things that are powerless to shame
those who are powerful.
—1 Corinthians 1:26–27
I liked what Greg Laurie talks about heroes.
In many ways, we have
lost the meaning of the word hero. We throw it around so casually. If you can
put a ball through a hoop, you're a sports hero. If you can play eight chords
on a guitar, you're a rock and roll hero. If you can pretend to be something
you're not, you're a Hollywood hero. We have a strange concept as to who our
heroes really are.
I remember watching a well-known journalist interview an
actor about his recent movie, which featured a politically troubled region of
the world. When the journalist asked the celebrity what he thought should be
done about the political situation there, the actor responded, "Who cares
what I think?" and went on to point out that he was just an actor. All too
often, we mistakenly think actors really are the people they portray. We think
they are heroes when, in fact, they're just people like you and me.
A hero is someone who does something sacrificial, something
courageous. There are heroes today, of course. We saw many of them in action on
9/11 and in the days that followed. But often, today's heroes are operating
behind the scenes, and we never know about them.
As we look at heroes of the faith, those in Scripture and in
contemporary history whom God put His hand on, one thing stands out: it seems
that God has always gone out of His way to find individuals who did not
necessarily look like heroes. And that is precisely the point. God isn't
looking for a strong man or woman per se. Rather, He's looking for someone who
will walk in His strength. (1)
(1) Today's devotional is an excerpt from Every Day with Jesus
by Greg Laurie, 2013
Blessings,
Raj Kosaraju
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