FIND
A “THINKING STATION”!
James 1:6
For
he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed.
Isa 57:20
20
But the wicked are like the troubled sea, when it cannot rest, whose waters cast
up mire and dirt.
I
lived near the Chesapeake for about nine years. It was a singular blessing
because of the geography and the faithful rotation of four very definite
seasons. One could always tell whether it was spring, summer, fall or winter.
You didn’t even have to ask, you just knew.
Because
there was water,
pronounced “wooter” by the locals, all around us there was ample opportunity to
observe the waves driven by the wind and tossed. Calvert, pronounced “Culvert”
by the locals, was nine miles wide at its widest point. Bounded on the west by
the Patuxent River and on the east by the magnificent Chesapeake, one could not
become truly lost on the neck of land that was our county. All you had to do
was drive till you found water and then turn around. Eventually you would once
again find state route 4 which, if you travelled far enough north would become
Pennsylvania Avenue after you crossed the D.C. line.
But
if you could not easily become lost on the peninsula neither could you
easily escape and escape was desirable from time to time. The Baptist church I
pastored was twice removed from Methodism. The Methodist church had split and
formed the Bible Church. Later the Bible Church had split and formed the First
Baptist Church. It lounged alongside Maryland route 4 just about mid way
between north and south. It was not always comfortable living in such a rich
tradition and being from anywhere else. After nine years, I left the county
still a newcomer.
Change
was stubbornly resisted in Calvert County. Why, the first day we were there
we saw bumper stickers that read: “Keep Calvert Country!” At first I thought
the county had been offered to someone who had summarily refused the gift! It
didn’t take long to realize that the locals thought their county to be perfect
just like it was. They had successfully blocked the construction of a Walmart
along with the sprawling blight it might bring but later failed to stop
McDonald’s from building near the elementary school. Predictions of riot and
ruin, of traffic congestion and teen violence accompanied the new golden
arches.
Every
now and then I simply needed to escape! I soon located several “thinking
stations” along the abundant shores where I could be alone with God. One such
“listening station” was along the Patuxent, another at the Cove Point
Lighthouse, and yet another at the southernmost tip at the sea wall of
Solomon’s Island. I would go to observe the mood of the “wooter”!
I
often marveled
how the waters spoke to me. Sometimes they whispered as they foamed along the
sand and at other times they shouted as they sprayed and splashed over the sea
wall but they always talked to me. Very often the waters mirrored my own mood
and sometimes they offered an alternate perspective. The waters provided both affirmation
and stern advice and I never knew which I would receive. Sometimes the waters
and I would simply enjoy each other’s company as we both laughed while the
water tickled my feet. At other times the waters cried her salty tears and
mingled them with my own. I sometimes miss the waters. I know she is still
there.
It
is amazing
that people, when confronted with undeniable truth, will measure that truth by
their tradition and choose tradition every time.
It
is God’s desire that
… we henceforth be no more children, tossed to and fro, and carried about with
every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby
they lie in wait to deceive; But speaking the truth in love, may grow up into
him in all things, which is the head, even Christ: Eph 4:14-15
Dear
Lord, although my traditions may be rich and of long standing, help me to see
the truth clearly and to choose truth. AMEN
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