Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Inevitability?

I read an article this week by Charles Swindoll that really caught my attention. It was entitled "Stop the Revolving Door". In the article, he chronicled the rise and fall of civilizations from the Babylonian Empire to the Athenian Republic. The article suggests that there is historical evidence to suggest that there is a certain "inevitability" to the ultimate decline of human efforts. The evidence is compelling. Here is the course of decline Swindoll quoted in his article:

From bondage to spiritual faith


From spiritual faith to great courage


From great courage to strength


From strength to liberty


From liberty to abundance


From abundance to leisure


From leisure to selfishness


From selfishness to complacency


From complacency to apathy


From apathy to dependency


From dependency to weakness


From weakness back to bondage


As I read this description of human decline, I couldn't help but be taken by the sense of inevitability in the flow. Yet, I wondered if it really has to happen this way. Isn't there room for something distinctively contrary to this commentary upon history? Swindoll's article concludes with a plea for individuals to take up the challenge and he suggests, rightly I believe, that it is only through the power of personal response that the tide can be turned.

So, I want to issue a challenge to those who have ears to hear and who will take up the challenge of writing new history into the future. What if we moved ...


From bondage to spiritual faith


From spiritual faith to great thankfulness


From great thankfulness to personal humility


From personal humility to spiritual discipline


From spiritual discipline to personal blessings


From personal blessings to blessing others


From blessing others to greater abundance


From greater abundance to greater thanksgiving


From greater thanksgiving to greater faith


From greater faith to greater humility


From greater humiliy to greater spiritual discipline


From greater spiritual discipline to greater blessings


From greater blessings to greater blessings for others ...

Why couldn't that be the way the story goes? I just believe it could work that way. I think the key lies in staying anchored in a humility that only faith can produce. Arrogance will forever be our fall. And yet, it is not our inevitable conclusion. We have seen it lived differently before and for over two thousand years we have been invited to follow His lead. I for one believe His way to be the answer to the this question of inevitability history seems to demand. I personally choose to follow His lead. Do well, my friends. Our future depends upon it!

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