Imagine that you’re relaxing by the pool on a warm summer afternoon. You’re watching a child play when suddenly the smile vanishes from his face. He’s no longer splashing and having fun. He’s thrashing in terror. He drifted into the deep end, and he can’t swim. He’s drowning.
What would you do next?
Option One: Run inside, grab a copy of “The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Swimming,” and bring it to the pool and throw it to the child so he can learn how to swim.
Option Two: Yell at the child, “You should really stop drowning! You’ll die if you don’t quit that! Start swimming!”
Option Three: Jump in the pool and carry the child to safety.
Option Four: Do nothing and watch.
Which option did you choose?
If you anything but number three, never offer to babysit our kids!
There are scenarios in which each of the options might be correct.
There are times that we need instruction. “The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Swimming” might have been useful to prevent this situation, but in the moment of panic, it is totally useless.
There are times we need correction. A reminder of the consequences of our actions can be really helpful. But once we’re in over our heads, it serves as little more than a self-righteous “I told you so.”
There are times when we sit by and let people learn lessons from the natural consequences of their actions. This story isn’t one of those times, the stakes are too high.
Sometimes, the only option is to jump into the mess and pick someone up and hold them.
It can be messy, dangerous, and hard, but sometimes that’s the only way. Jude says that some people need a gentle act of mercy, but we “save others by snatching them out of the fire” (Jude 1:23).
When people around you are drowning—spiritually, emotionally, financially, relationally—make sure to help in a helpful way.
Memorial Day is bigger than backyard barbeques. Our nation has set this day aside to remember the men and women who died in the military. The sacrifices of these brave soldiers deserve to be remembered. It causes us to think of the painful consequences of war. It inspires others towards the virtues of sacrifice.
God.” (Hebrews 13:16)
Almost every time that an angel meets a human, the angel says the same thing: “Do not fear.” I assume there’s good reason for that, because almost every time an angel meets a human, the human is face down on the ground, trembling in terror.
Thursday was the National Day of Prayer. People from all sorts of backgrounds met together to pray for our nation and our communities.
Five hundred years before Jesus, Herodotus wrote about a mysterious place with water that rolled back the effects of age and restored youth and vitality to the aged. Ever since his day, explorers have scoured the globe in search of the fountain of youth or the fountain of life. French explorer Ponce de León continued the search in the new world, believing for a while that he found it in what is now called St. Augustine, Florida.
There’s a story about an old man who died and met St. Peter at the gates of heaven.
When celebrities walk the red carpet outside the major award shows, there’s always a reporter who is commenting on “who” everyone is wearing.
“God! You are so stupid!”
Frankly, one of the reasons that families, nations, and even churches struggle with unity is that it just isn’t easy.