Faith



The Uphill Escape Route

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Life - Faith
Written by Jon Acuff   

I have a book problem. At any given moment I have three or four that I am reading in addition to the handful of different magazines I subscribe to. It’s a bit much, but every now and then I come across something interesting that feels applicable.


While reading “The Go Point” by Michael Useem, I found a story about the 1994 South Canyon fire in Colorado that was surprisingly convicting. In the fire, through a series of poor decisions, 12 highly-trained firefighters died. The chapter I read chronicles the impact of each decision, but the one I want to mention today is the escape route.


The leader of the brigade decided that the safe spot, that area of land the firefighters would retreat to if overtaken by the blaze, was going to be on top of a ridge. It was not a long way away and at the time seemed fairly easy. But as the fire mounted a charge, with a wall of flame reaching estimates of 300 feet, it is difficult not to call the escape route into question.


The mistake that the leader made was that the escape route was difficult. After battling fire for hours, with pounds of wet, hot gear on, the firefighters were not prepared for a desperate uphill scramble through the Colorado forest. When the call came, and all hope was lost, all 12 began to sprint up the small hill.


It was too steep though, and as the firefighters ran at 3 feet per second, the fire climbed at 9 feet per second. At 4:16 it caught them, killing all 12, less than 100 yards away from safety.


I think we all need escape routes. I think we need plans on how to handle and flee from the things that tempt us or push us off course. They may not be as obvious as a wall of solid flame, but the burn they carry can be just as real. A husband that gets too emotionally connected to his young secretary. A cash strapped business that makes some grey decisions about which money to report to the IRS. A student that doesn’t want to be the only one in the car that isn’t high.


Every day we face our own forest fires.


The question becomes, are your escape routes uphill or downhill?


That is, in the midst of disaster, will they be easy to use or difficult?



If your accountability partner never answers their phone or returns messages, that’s an uphill escape route.


If your accountability partner is always available via his cell phone and regularly returns messages, that’s a downhill escape route.


If you don’t have a filter on your computer and your plan for keeping your heart pure is to just “not click on questionable material,” that’s an uphill escape route.


If your web activity gets automatically emailed to your accountability partner, that’s a downhill escape route.


We could play this game all day, but it’s a pretty simple idea.


What do your escape routes look like? Are they downhill or uphill?



In the last 10 years, Jon Acuff has written for everyone from John Mayer to Andy Stanley. He won over Oprah with only four words, broke sales records at Home Depot and taught Chick-fil-A how to make grown men cry. And then he started www.stuffchristianslike.net

Angel images courtesy of AlicePopKorn under

 

Jesus In the Margins

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Life - Faith
Written by Brian Lemmings   
Like most people in their mid-30s I was first introduced to Rick McKinley by Donald Miller in his book Blue Like Jazz. It was here that I first read about Rick’s passion to re-imagine church – to change the image of church for people that feel beyond reach. Pastor Rick and his wife moved to Portland, Oregon to establish a community “for people to discover the love of Christ in the reality of life,” (taken from his book’s back cover).

In Rick’s book, Jesus in the Margins, he explains how the encompassing love of Jesus reaches down into the margins of society. That He came to Earth for those broken souls that usually go unnoticed by mainstream society. Throughout the book, Rick walks the readers into the margins of life, showing them that it is in the margins that we see the image of God (Imago Dei incidentally is the name of the community started by he and his wife).

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