The story.,,
My best friend and I were sitting behind home plate at our son's baseball game. The female umpire was making some questionable calls - I made a few critiques to my friend that I hope the umpire didn't hear. Then the big slide occurred at home plate. Coaches from both teams thought they had the better vantage point and argued for their positions. People were either right or wrong and nobody wanted to be wrong. The umpire cried...
I knew both of the coaches and was surprised to hear how differently they perceived the same situation. It was like we saw different events at home plate - our conclusions were different too.
Later, the baseball organization held a meeting to review the altercation(s). I assume that witnesses told them what they perceived to have happened - maybe the umpire and coaches were provided an opportunity to tell "their side of the story." They decided that my son's coach was no longer allowed to coach in the league - he made the umpire cry.
Do we have a comprehensive view or vantage over any situation that we participate in or witness? Our perspectives are based on how we view life, our past experiences, our bias, our personality, our perspectives, our feelings, the power of God worked out, the need to agree with or please other people . . . the list is endless.
The only church in town will study and trust the book where God's perspective of us and history is revealed. God's Word says that there is a spiritual reality in life's situations. King David described what he perceived to be God's work in delivering him from his enemies in Psalm 18 - David was writing about the most important reality that was unobserved by most of the scene's participants. David paints a picture, in song, of what was actually going on. Yes, I hope you'll find out more of what is "really going on" within the only church in town.
Just for today...
"I see that miracles frequently touch my life. Maybe they always have, but I didn't see them." Courage to Change (p. 282)
"We may magnify disagreements about money for instance; we expand minor slights into huge grievances. Without realizing it, we're looking for trouble and are ready to fasten on little things that we could easily pass over if we really wanted our own peace of mind." One Day at a Time (p. 282)
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