TAKE CARE WHAT YOU HEAR
As a young child, I passed through Morgan Avenue on my way to the
Bass residence located on Schoonmaker Avenue in our hometown of Monessen,
Pennsylvania. The late Mr. James Wade, Sr. was standing on his porch, and he
offered some intriguing advice which at the time seemed somewhat arbitrary.
“Wayne,” he admonished, “believe none of what you hear and only half of what
you see.” Although I did not understand his meaning at that point in life, now
it makes much more sense.
Dr. Isaac Clark, my seminary adviser and an accomplished professor
who taught two important subjects, “Homiletics” and “Communications,” insisted
that more opportunities are won by effective communication (or lost by
inaccurate communication) than anyone could possibly know. He often warned us
of the inherent dangers that live in the land of “MIS-communication.”
It reminds me of an important battle in European history, between
England and France. On the evening of June 18, 1815, an anxious man stood in
the tower of England’s Winchester Cathedral gazing out to sea. Finally he found
what he had been looking for – a ship sending a signal with the use of lantern
lights. As the young man strained to see the message, all of England held its
breath, waiting for news of the outcome of a decisive battle between their
military leader, the Duke of Wellington, and the French dictator, Napoleon
Bonaparte. Having ruled most of Europe, Bonaparte saw England as a threat, and
now the decisive Battle of Waterloo was just coming to an end.
That man stood in the Winchester Cathedral tower, waiting to convey
news that would determine England’s future. As heavy fog rolled in, the signal
arrived. It just barely made it through, but how he wished it hadn’t, for the
signal read: “WELLINGTON DEFEATED.”
This bad news was communicated quickly across the countryside,
bringing great gloom and sadness. But then there was an unexpected reversal.
The fog lifted, and the message was sent again, this time in full: “WELLINGTON
DEFEATED THE ENEMY!” There was great joy in that nation for Wellington had won!
Likewise on Good Friday, the apparent message was simply this:
“CHRIST DEFEATED.” But three days later, they discovered that the message had
not been received in its totality. The resurrection reversed every initial
impression and confidently declared the full gospel: “CHRIST DEFEATED THE
ENEMY!”
So just like Joshua and Caleb, two Israelite stalwarts of faith,
you must steadfastly refuse to give an audience to ‘The Majority Report’ that
is only published by doubters, detractors and deceivers. After all, YOU and GOD
actually (and always) constitute THE SPIRITUAL MAJORITY, appearances
notwithstanding. (Numbers 13:27-33)
Although conditions might SEEM to be carrying you into the fire or
underneath the water, here is what the Lord declares about you. “When you pass
through the waters, I WILL BE WITH YOU; and through the rivers, THEY SHALL NOT
OVERFLOW YOU. When you walk through the fire, YOU SHALL NOT BE BURNED, nor
shall the flame scorch you.” (Isaiah 43:2, NKJV)
Winner-believer, HEAR HIS VOICE and attend to none other. (John
10:27)
Sisters and brothers, be continually blessed, and please (above all
else) MAKE SURE YOU ARE READY TO MEET OUR SOON COMING KING. Maranatha!
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