“I live on the wrong side of the county,” I told the older
man.
“How’s that?” He asked. “Don’t you like your neighbors?”
“Oh, our neighbors are fine,” I said. “We might live in Hell Bend, but I think most
of the moonshiners have taken up other employment. It’s actually a quiet part of the county.”
“Then what’s the problem,” he asked me, curiously.
“Just that we live west of Brookneal,” I said, thinking that
that explained everything.
“I still don’t understand,” he said.
“I work in Brookneal,” I said.
“Sure,” he agreed. I
wasn’t telling him anything he didn’t know.
“Well, somehow Congress passed a new regulation and the sun
rises in the east and sets in the west,” I said. “The problem arises in that I am driving
towards the sun in the morning when it goes up and then in the evening, when I
go home, it seems to be setting right in the middle of my windshield. Truly, I am blinded by the light…!”
The other man didn’t seem to have much to say in response to
this. Of course, barring another act of
Congress deciding that the sun should rise in the west and set in the east, it
seems likely that sunglasses lie in my foreseeable future.
Of course, I’m not actually driving towards the sun. It is a long way away from Virginia – 93 million
miles they say – and drive as fast as I could, I don’t think I could ever reach
it.
The issue of course is driving with the sun in my eyes. It can almost blind you as you come around a
corner and discover its brilliant presence dazzling your retinas.
It strikes me that Christians should always drive towards
the Son. “Looking unto Jesus, the author
and finisher of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the
cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of
God.” (Hebrews 12:1)
It is challenging.
There are lots of distractions that we’d rather look at and beyond all
that, Jesus’ example makes us realize how poor a job we truly do at following
Him. It’s easier to focus on other
humans or even our smart phones.
We are still called to pursue Him and to focus our gaze on
Him. Even if doing so blinds us to many
of the other things around, we will see far better than on anything else. It is when the light is strongest that
darkness is truly defeated.