“I think Vincent and Elliot
would be great at curling!” My eldest
daughter declared. For some reason, she
is really into the Winter Olympics and while four years transpire during which
the great sport of curling is not mentioned in our home, February of 2026
brought a deluge of mentions of things like curling, slalom, and speed skating.
“I don’t think so,” Vincent
said. “I am not very good with ice
skates on. I’d fall over pretty fast.”
“Maybe he’d do better at the
skeleton,” I suggested.
“Definitely not,” Vincent
said. “80 miles per hour is too fast for
me.”
“You don’t wear ice skates for
curling,” Anna persisted. “They just
wear some kind of shoe with a slippery sole that lets them slide across the
ice. You’d be fine, Vincent.”
“I don’t think so,” Vincent
said in a grumbly sort of voice.
“But you and Elliot are used to
sweeping,” Anna said, warming to her subject.
“With all the practice you’ve gotten sweeping at home and at school,
you’d be awesome at guiding the stones!
It would be so awesome – Vincent and Elliot Waldron, Gold Medal winners
for Curling!”
While curling may not be as
scary as skiing down a steep slope 70 miles per hour, it seems as though there
is major skill involved with it. Simply
being able to create a dirty pile with a kitchen broom isn’t the same as
sliding in front of a stone, moving across the ice and direct it using special
broom. Maybe these athletes are also
good at cleaning up after a meal, but I’m guessing the skills don’t actually
translate that well.
For some reason, my mind was
drawn to a situation that the Apostle Paul and Barnabas experienced on their
first missionary journey. Acts 13 tells
us that part way through this journey, John Mark, who was supposed to be
helping them left and headed for home.
No one knows why he left. Maybe he was home sick. Maybe the challenges of the journey and the
threat of persecution were too much for him.
The reason doesn’t really matter, John Mark let them down.
So it was, when Barnabas and
Paul were thinking about their next trip, Barnabas suggested bringing John Mark
with them again and Paul turned him down.
“And Barnabas determined to
take with them John, whose surname was Mark. But Paul thought not good to take
him with them, who departed from them from Pamphylia, and went not with them to
the work. And the contention was so
sharp between them, that they departed asunder one from the other: and so
Barnabas took Mark, and sailed unto Cyprus; And Paul chose Silas, and departed,
being recommended by the brethren unto the grace of God…”
We know that over time, John
Mark developed maturity and towards the end of his life, Paul asked that John
Mark would accompany Timothy, to visit him in prison. Earlier on, John Mark needed someone like
Barnabas in his life – a man who would give him opportunity to grow and a
second chance to serve.
Most of all, he needed someone
who would understand that he wasn’t fully formed, but that he was still
developing the skills needed to share the gospel and minister to other’s
needs.
Each of us needs a Barnabas or two in our lives to encourage us and give us opportunities, both to succeed and fail. More than that, we need to be willing to be a Barnabas for others around us. Simply expecting that because your brothers can sweep the floor will let them medal in the Winter Olympics is only bound for failure – even if it produces some interesting dinner conversation along the way.












