The story...
I heard that a part on my car was likely to fail and potentially leave me stranded. So, one Saturday I went to AutoZone to buy the replacement part and install it, in my driveway, that afternoon. I imagined a fulfilling experience while listening to the Detroit Tigers - the repair would go the way I planned. I could do it by myself.
"If it ain't broke don't fix it" I turned around and met a man who'd given me this unexpected advice while waiting in the AutoZone line. He heard me explain to the guy at the counter what I wanted and why I wanted it. "When you loosen bolts, free it with a hammer, and take the wiring clips apart you change the system, create new problems, the unexpected happens..." I thanked him, and the guy at the counter too, and left without the part. I don't know if the part eventually failed, if I truly avoided the repair cost, or if other problems might've truly been averted.
I'm so thankful that this man intervened in my life - he could have remained silent. He also explained why he and his friends owned S10 pickups - they're a simple design, easy to understand, and easy to fix. His friends worked together to solve their common problem - everybody needs a vehicle to get them from here to there. He said that they got together most Saturdays to maintain their trucks and live life together too.
The group of guys, working on their S10s, was an "ecclesia." Ecclesia is the Greek word for "a called out group of people." The New Testament word, ecclesia, is translated as church in my Bible translation. Does that mean that this guy and his friends were a church that met regularly and cared for each other? How might the only church in town be better off if it were more like this group of S10 owners? It sounds much better than working on my car by myself in my own driveway - hoping that things go well and relying on myself.
Just for today...
"When I put my experiences into words, they seem more real and I am less likely to push them aside. As a result, I can often face problems when they are still only slight irritations and deal with them before they grow and take over." Courage to Change (p. 121)
"On the rare occasions, I get a negative comment, I consider what I can learn and turn it over to God as something over which I have no control." Hope for Today (p. 121)