To sleep under the
stars, to drink nothing but well water and to live chiefly on nuts and wild
fruit, was a strange experience for Caspian after his bed with silken sheets in
a tapestried chamber at the castle, with meals laid out on gold and silver
dishes in the anteroom, and attendants ready at his call. But he had never
enjoyed himself more. Never had sleep been more refreshing no food tasted more
savory. -- Prince Caspian
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I have suggested on this blog from time to time that the big problem with Western societies is that they lack a
great adventure and therefore their populace lacks a great adventure. In
actuality, I do not believe that most people want to live lives of quiet
desperation; They want a great purpose to latch on to, a sense the life is worth
living in such a way that their deaths will have meaning.
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On this day in 1874 the famed explorer Ernest Shackleton was born. In 1914. Shackleton led an expedition to Antarctica, aboard a ship
appropriately named Endurance; for
the crew would need all the perseverance it could muster. Shackleton and the
twenty-seven man crew set out on a harrowing two-year journey in which they were
stuck in ice and living for months in temperatures so cold they could hear the
water freeze. When they had sailed 1,200 miles from the closest civilized town,
the Endurance sank. They were
perpetually soaked, eating whatever, and I do mean whatever, they could get
their hands on. They made their way back to England in a raft through
treacherous, icy seas, returning to London in 1916. Not one member of the crew
was lost, even though everyone back home had decided long ago, that they had
died. Of course, all anyone could do was speculate, since there were no radios
that allowed anyone to keep in touch with the expedition.
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How
in the world did Shackleton get twenty-seven men to volunteer for such a
dangerous journey? Several months prior to departure he put the following ad in
the London paper:
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Men
wanted for hazardous journey. Small wages, bitter cold, long months of complete
darkness, constant danger, safe return doubtful. Honour and recognition in case
of success.
.
Now,
what kind of individuals in their right mind would volunteer for such a trip, particularly if this ad
were seen right below other more attractive ones in the classifieds! The fact of
the matter is that so many men volunteered for the trip, Shackleton had to turn
hundreds away.
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Human beings long to give
themselves to a great cause. It may not be a hazardous trip to the South Pole,
but most human beings desire to be part of something that makes their lives
count for something more than living the routine. We want our lives to be spent
for something important. Only this can explain why so many would volunteer to go
on what was likely, at the time, a one-way trip.
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St. Paul knew that he was part
of something big, and it was something so big and so important, that no
sacrifice was too much; and what Paul was a part of was something much bigger
than an icy trip aboard a fate-bound boat. Paul believed that he was the bearer
of a message, indeed the bearer of the only message that could save the world.
He tells the Corinthians that in spite of all the trials and tribulations he
continues to encounter in his ministry, he does not lose heart. We are hard
pressed on every side, but not crushed; perplexed, but not driven to despair;
persecuted, but not abandoned; struck down, but not destroyed (2
Corinthians 4:8-9).
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We the church must confess
that we do not dream big enough. We serve a God who has raised Jesus Christ from
the dead and, who in that Jesus is going to save the world. Yet, we dream so
small. If we could catch the vision of St. Paul, who knew that no matter what
happened to him, he would never lose hope because God would make the future come
out right. If we could instill in our very being Paul's "whatever it takes"
attitude, there is nothing that the church cannot do through the power of the
Holy Spirit. The problem is not God's ability, the problem is not Jesus'
adequacy, and the problem is not the Holy Spirit's power. The problem is our
lack of vision, our inability to see what is not now, but what God wants to
bring to pass.
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But, if we can capture the
vision of God’s salvation of this world, and if we can muster up the courage to
continue on in spite of the adversity, and if we can keep from losing hope
because we know that God will keep his promises to save this world, then we
truly will be willing to do whatever it takes to make disciples of Jesus Christ
for the transformation of the world.
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