This Week’s Thought

rest

By Brad Campbell –

Just a thought to help start your week.

We arrived first thing that morning at the dock in Ketchikan, Alaska.  Ketchikan is known both as ‘Alaska’s first city’ and as the ‘salmon capital of the world.’  As a matter of fact, the ship had a few tense minutes wait for some random fishing boats who meandered entirely too close as the ship attempted to near the dock.

We eagerly awaited our time to disembark the ship and spend the day exploring the city on foot.  We did just that, too.  We walked along the water, went shopping, ate an amazing meal, admired many hundreds of different beautiful flower beds and arrangements, and enjoyed the great weather.  We walked here, we walked there, we walked everywhere we went.  Then, as time began to near for us to settle aboard the ship, we did just that, beat most of the heavy crowds, walked back and went straight up to our cabin where we kicked off our shoes and rested our weary feet.

Because we remained at the dock for a little while and the town was bustling below, I chose to sit on our balcony, prop up my feet, and read a book I’d not had a chance to begin, one by my friend and wonderful storyteller Sean Dietrich.  I greatly enjoyed those quite moments reading and people watching at several times on our trip.

Life is busy.  I don’t have to tell you that.  Many of us have jobs, schedules, calendars, events, meetings, activities, and family responsibilities that keep us busy most waking hours.  That isn’t necessarily a complaint or a bad thing.  It’s just the truth.  We run throughout the days and weeks going here, going there, and squeezing in yet another something at which we must show up and appear to be on top of our game.  We desperately need to stop, prop up our feet, and focus on other things.

Maybe we need to do just as I did and take a break from it all.  Even from my perspective on the balcony, I could see that the world remained busy, people were still going about their business, things didn’t stop or cease to exist simply because I chose to take a break for myself and my sanity.

Oh, that we each could learn to do that very thing.  The thing is, the world will continue to operate without us running ragged thinking we are the ones who have to keep it going.  The Bible reminds us, as I’m sure I have repeated from time to time, to “be still and know that I am God.”  Be still.  Be still.  Be still.  And in that stillness that certainly can exist even with the world bustling around us and below us, know that He is God, He is in control, and He is all you need.

Just a thought.

This Week’s Thought

By Brad Campbell –

Just a thought to help start your week.

These little sea planes fascinate me.  They take off from the water, and they land on the water.  We walked around the downtown port area of Juneau, Alaska, not only taking in the amazing scenery all around us, but watching these planes coming and going.  We had not arrived by plane, but by ship, as had many others.  The boats of all sizes were lined up very near the planes.

Juneau, Alaska, is known as the only U.S. state capital city that cannot be reached from the outside world (or even the rest of the state) by car.  One must arrive by another method of transportation.

In today’s world we are given many transportation options.  On this trip to Alaska, my wife and I traveled in some way or other by private car, bus, airplane, ship, train, monorail, sky-lift, and taxi.  We encountered many different people of different races, cultures, and religions.  Travel is what we all had in common.  But to arrive in Juneau, we were all limited by the travel options.

For the Christian travelers of this old world, we look forward to our final destination – Heaven.  But the thing is, there are not all those options for transportation to that wonderful place.  Heaven is even more limited than Juneau.  There is only one Way to get there.  And that is through a relationship of saving faith in Jesus Christ.  He reminds us in His Word that He is the only Way.  The uninformed worldly individual might argue that we Christians belong to an exclusive group, limiting our inclusion, and even the means to get there.  Well, the truth sometimes hurts, doesn’t it?  

The only way we were to get to Juneau was by the ship on which we traveled, or by an airplane.  The only Way we are to get to Heaven is through Him.  So, yes, it requires exclusive membership in the family of God, a group to which I’m honored to belong, as we all should be.

But let us not forget the other weary travelers who need to be reminded of the limited transportation.  One road.  One Way.  And His name is Jesus.

Just a thought.