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April 23,
2002 -- Issue #563 "Go
ye therefore, and teach all nations, We're here.
The final plague.
God has taught me truth after truth.
I thought I knew it all.
I thought I could just sit back and breeze through
life until the Lord called me home... ... I was
wrong.
Plague #10,
as those who know Old Testament History can verify, was the
worst of all.
In my case, the same is true. Let me put
things into context for you.
The final plague that I am going to share with you
ACTUALLY CAME FIRST.
Plague #10 actually occurred just a few short weeks
after I graduated high school. During my
high school years I shared most of my "homeroom"
classes with a guy named Jack Bryant.
(Name has been changed).
Since Jack's last name was alphabetically found near
my last name, we often sat near each other.
Jack was a
really nice guy.
He was muscular guy, our best football player.
He was also tough as nails...no one wanted to tangle
with him.
But, despite his macho exterior, inside was a seldom
seen, soft-hearted guy.
I got to know him pretty well through the years we
spent together in high school and although we didn't
"hang out" together, I thought a lot of him.
He had a lot of things going for him, I thought maybe
he would end playing football at some Junior College. I remember
the excitement of
graduation night as we stood near each other, smiling
and generally enthusiastic about finally receiving our
diplomas.
It was an exciting time, filled with hopes and dreams
and great expectations of what the future would hold for us
all.
Summer kind
of crept along - you know the kind of summer I'm talking
about.
Right after graduation, things seemed to go at a
breakneck speed as things began to change for all of us, but
they also seem to move at a snail's pace as wives, children
and careers still seemed so far away. It was one
of those humid, sticky, Arkansas summer nights when my
sister entered my bedroom and woke me.
When I saw the tears streaming from her face, I knew
something bad had happened.
I instantly sat up and asked, "What's
wrong?"
With a
shaky voice, and amidst sobs, my sister said softly, "Jack
Bryant committed suicide tonight." was
stunned.
I tried to pull myself together and hoped that it was
all just an ugly nightmare...but it wasn't.
Jack was dead.
A self-inflicted gunshot wound claimed his life at
age 18. IT SEEMED
LIKE AN ETERNITY as I lay there in my bed that night.
I tried to remember when we last had talked together.
Had he gave any signs?
Was there any indication?
Could I have helped?
And the big question, why?
Why did he do it?
Why?
Why?
Why? The reason?
Jack Bryant didn't have the peace and joy found only
in Jesus Christ.
A girl breaking up with you isn't a reason to die.
An argument with parents isn't a reason to end your
life.
Even unhappy circumstances don't warrant suicide. Jack
died because he didn't have the peace, he didn't have the
joy...he didn't know about the love of Jesus Christ.
He wasn't a Christian. I want you
to think about something, my friend.
During the past nine devotionals you have read the
words "IT SEEMED LIKE AN ETERNITY."
During each of the previous nine plagues
time seemed to stand still.
Each brought its share of hurt and pain.
It just seemed like they would never end.
Through each and every one of those plagues that
seemed like an eternity, through the past few weeks as you
have read through each daily devotional, through the time it
has taken you to read today's devotional, through every
second of the past twelve years, my friend Jack Bryant,
presumably, has been in torment in a place called hell.
And he's
never getting out.
One million years from now he'll still be suffering. Does that
scare you?
Does it hurt and pain you?
It does me and I hope it does you too, because there
are Jack Bryant's all around us... ...People
who are hurting.
...People
who are dying.
...People
who are going to hell.
It's our
responsibility to tell them about Jesus. And why
wouldn't we want to?
We have the answer to their pain.
We know the One who can ease their hurting, who can
heal their broken heart.
Why would we keep that to ourselves? I often
think about Jack Bryant.
I wonder, "Could I have made a difference?
What if I had been the Christian influence that I
could have been?
Would Jack be alive?
Would Jack have accepted Christ?" What's the
lesson in the final plague?
Our trials may seem like an eternity, but if someone
dies without Jesus Christ, it won't just seem like an
eternity in pain, it will be one. The Lord
has commissioned us to "Go."
Go tell others about the saving grace offered so
freely to all who will receive.
Tell them verbally, show them with our lives, do
whatever we have to do, but God help us, we've go to tell
them about Jesus.
I want you
to think about someone who you know is lost.
Friend, family member, co-worker, neighbor...get
someone in your mind.
Are you willing to tell them about Jesus today?
Show them this devotional, share your testimony, tell
them what Christ means to you...just don't let them enter
into eternity without at least trying one more time. I don't
have a flowery finish.
I don't have a clever thought to wrap this up with,
nor do I have some well turned phrase.
I think Christ said it best on this
one..."Go." P.S. Today's devotional was the final one in the IT SEEMED LIKE AN ETERNITY series. While it's the end of the series, God continues to teach me lessons about the Christian life. Some are learned easy, while others require an occassional plague. The Christian life is a journey, and you never really stop learning until the journey's over. "For the which cause I also suffer these things: nevertheless I am not ashamed: for I know whom I have believed, and am persuaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day." - 2 Tim 1:12 (KJV) Have a "Wonderful DAY in Christ," |
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