Cut the Rope!
(This week’s devotions are based on Sunday’s message: Win the Day…Cut the Rope – LISTEN HERE)
Until the mid-1800s people were afraid to personally ride in lifts, or elevators. For the most part buildings were five stories or under because that was the threshold people were willing to walk steps. Lifts were secured by a rope or cable and were used to raise and lower goods from one floor to another. The danger of people riding in lifts was if the rope broke, the lift would plummet to the ground causing severe injury or even death.
In 1852 Elisha Otis came up with an ingenious design that would keep the lift from falling to the ground should the rope break. The trouble? People were not buying his version of lift because they were skeptical it would work.
Until 1853.
In 1853, the World’s Fair came to New York City. Elisha Otis built a three-story tall model of his lift and safety break. To the delight, but skepticism, of the crowd, he stood on the lift and had himself lifted three stories off the floor. When the lift was at its highest point, he yelled to an assistant on the platform above the lift, “Cut the rope!”
The crowd gasped, but the safety mechanism sprung into action and with just a short fall, the mechanism caught and Elisha avoided a quick plummet down three stories.
Sales were no longer a problem and the Otis Elevator Company was formed. Estimates are today that every three days the equivalent of the world’s population rides an elevator…without thinking twice about the elevator plummeting to the ground floor.
Why?
Because Otis was willing to cut the rope!
To be sure, to many in Otis’ day, cutting the rope to a lift with a person on it would be a foolish idea. The rope is what most would say gave security to the lift. However, Otis saw a way to secure the lift that others didn’t. As a result, he could cut the rope and rely on something or someone different.
As people saw the demonstration, their confidence a) in using an elevator increased and b) as a result the skyline of New York and other cities changed.
Still today, when I think about it, what makes me feel safe in an elevator is not the cable that moves the elevator, but the safety mechanisms in place should the cable break.
As we go through life, the natural things to rely on are the “ropes” we are used to. The ropes are the things we can touch, experience, and have proven we can depend on. Confidence in human attributes, intellect or creations has a limit to the trust factor.
This week as we desire to win each day for the Lord will be the encouragement to cut the rope and to rely on what we cannot see.
This is the essence of faith as the writer to the Hebrews wrote:
Hebrews 11:1 Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.
I have never seen a safety break in an elevator, yet I trust it is there. I wish I could honestly say I have the same, consistent trust in the Lord, his power and promises. It is too easy to rely on what we can see and limit God to what we think is possible.
The rope we are used to is hard to cut. Much greater than Otis’ invention is the confidence we can have to walk today by faith.
Apply: What challenges you to walk by faith?
Prayer: Lord, forgive me for the times I have limited life to what I can see and experience. Help me to walk by your Spirit in the confidence and certainty of faith. AMEN.
Fly the Kite…expect more than you can imagine!
(This week’s devotions are based on Sunday’s message: Win the Day…Fly the Kite – LISTEN HERE)
Did Homan Walsh think he would be known as the boy who bridged two countries? Probably not. A 16-year old and a kite and long string and desire to win became the start of what would facilitate hundreds of thousands of people and goods crossing between the United States and Canada for years to come. If one interviewed Homan at the end of his life in 1899, I wonder if he would have said, “I never would have imagined what happened as a result of flying my kite on that cold January day.”
How much greater is the way that God works.
The Apostle Paul marveled and praised the Lord: (Ephesians 3:20) Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, 21 to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen.
Paul had his own life to marvel at as God took a prosecutor of Christians to become one of the most prominent proclaimers of the Gospel. “I would never have imagined God could use me to bring salvation to so many souls.”
The disciples had different and varied backgrounds who became fishers of men for the sake of Christ. “I would never have imagined that God could take my experiences and let them impact others for the strengthening of their faith.”
Christians went through persecutions and hardships for their faith. “I would never have imagined that God would build and strengthen and grow the number of believers because of the convictions of those being persecuted.”
A widow gave her last few cents to honor the Lord. “I would never have imagined that the Lord would use my little gift to inspire the giving of many believers for years to come.”
Timothy had conversations with his mother and grandmother about the Scriptures and the Christian faith. “I would never have imagined that simple conversations in my home about the Lord and about faith would prepare me to be a follower of and proclaimer of Jesus.”
The blind man who was healed by Jesus. “I would never have imagined my blindness would turn into anything good, let alone an encounter with Jesus and experiencing his healing hand.”
What is your “I would never have imagined…” moment with the Lord? Can you look back and see that God took a simple, routine, or mundane activity and turned it into something far greater than you could ask or imagine? It may have not been what you expected, but it’s impact and importance were or are much bigger than your imagination?
God loves to do more than we can ask or imagine. So grab a length of string, your kite and step to the edge of the bank of the river and fly your kite!
Apply: What is God calling me to step forward and do under the confidence in his power and certainty of his love?
Prayer: Lord thank you for being God and doing more than I could ask or imagine. Help me to never limit you because of my limiting beliefs. AMEN.
Fly the Kite…Anchor the string!
(This week’s devotions are based on Sunday’s message: Win the Day…Fly the Kite – LISTEN HERE)
Imagine the feeling that Homan Walsh had at age 16 when his kite spanned the river gorge and an individual on the other side of the river was able to catch his kite and secure the string to a tree. Mission accomplished! What maybe seemed like a simple contest and simple task was not your usual kite flying outing.
Did he think he could do it? I would guess so or a) he wouldn’t have entered the competition and b) he would have given up after the first failure.
Believing you can do something is important.
I was listening to a reel by Tom Brady indicating his path to NFL stardom was not a constant success. He was a back up quarterback on a 0-8 high school team. He was a late recruit to college and drafted in the 6th round of the NFL draft with skepticism if he would even make the team.
He indicated that in order to be a quarterback you have to believe in yourself. You don’t want to step into a huddle and exude a lack of confidence. You need the other 10 players to believe, “You can get the job done.”
This is true in life and can be left to just the secular component. However, as God’s people we have an even greater reason to have confidence…not just in ourselves…but in God who raised Jesus from the dead.
We truly can expect the incredible to happen.
We may not always know what it will be or how it will show up, but as we are connected to the God of all power, our confidence and expectations can be great. Mark Batterson wrote in his book Win the Day, “God wants do things in you that are beyond your ability, beyond your resources, beyond your imagination.”
Do we limit God? Do we keep God’s ability in the realm of our abilities and awareness? I have to admit that I too often do.
So what’s the cure? How do we keep a perspective that God can do incredible things beyond our own ability?
I don’t know if Homan Walsh had a vision for what his kite string would start, but in order for the contest to be won, his string had to be secured on both sides to a tree. Later solid anchors would hold the cable that would become the suspension bridge across the gorge. We may think the string or the bridge is the incredible thing, but rather what makes that string significant is what it is anchored to.
So in our lives, what our confidence and hope is anchored to is so important. The Apostle Paul writes in Ephesians 3:14-22: For this reason I kneel before the Father, 15 from whom his whole family in heaven and on earth derives its name. 16 I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you with power through his Spirit in your inner being, 17 so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, 18 may have power, together with all the saints, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, 19 and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God.
We cannot grasp the fullness of God’s power until we appreciate the fullness of his love. For his power is exhibited best in his acts of love on our behalf. The power of God created the world in which we live. The power of God orchestrated history to carry out his plan. The power of God brought Jesus into the world to live. The power of God held Jesus to the cross. The power of God brought Jesus out of the tomb alive. And why did he do all this and more? Because he LOVES you!
The width, length, height and depth of God’s love is hard to grasp, but we get glimpses of it as he acts in power to secure our eternity with him in heaven.
If this is where our hearts are anchored and we marvel at his incredible love, we can more expect the incredible work of God to show itself!
Apply: What will help today to anchor your day in the love of Christ? List five things that you know and experience as God’s love for you today?
Prayer: Lord, thank you for showing the greatness of your power by showing how much you love me. AMEN.
Fly the Kite…Be Faithful in the little things!
(This week’s devotions are based on Sunday’s message: Win the Day…Fly the Kite – LISTEN HERE)
Other than the kite flying contest in 1848, we don’t know much about Homan Walsh other than he moved to Nebraska and died in 1899.
Once in a while opportunity comes that provide a opportunity for notoriety and fame. The proverbial “15 minutes of fame” can come to us and then its significance fades into oblivion. Fame and notoriety might be fun for the moment and linger for a while, but life is not so much about the moments of fame, but the faithfulness in the moments of each day.
In two parts of the new testament, Jesus teaches about faithfulness and trustworthiness in the little things of life. In Luke 19:10 Jesus teaches, “Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much, and whoever is dishonest with very little will also be dishonest with much. 11 So if you have not been trustworthy in handling worldly wealth, who will trust you with true riches? 12 And if you have not been trustworthy with someone else’s property, who will give you property of your own?
Mark Batterson, author of the book Win the Day, writes: “How you do anything is how you will do everything.”
True isn’t it? How we handle the little things of life will determine how we handle the big things of life. If we are dishonest in little things, it will be easier to be dishonest in the big things. If we are trustworthy in the little things, it will be easier to be trusted in the larger things.
Jesus used the parable of the bags of gold (parable of the talents) to encourage the same.
Matthew 25:19 “After a long time the master of those servants returned and settled accounts with them. 20 The man who had received five bags of gold brought the other five. ‘Master,’ he said, ‘you entrusted me with five bags of gold. See, I have gained five more.’
21 “His master replied, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant! You have been faithful with a few things; I will put you in charge of many things. Come and share your master’s happiness!’
22 “The man with two bags of gold also came. ‘Master,’ he said, ‘you entrusted me with two bags of gold; see, I have gained two more.’
23 “His master replied, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant! You have been faithful with a few things; I will put you in charge of many things. Come and share your master’s happiness!’
The servants were given bags based on their ability. They had a track record with the master and he entrusted to them with what he understood their level of trustworthiness to be. The ones with five and two bags did not disappoint. As they had done in the past, they put the masters’ money to work…even when the master wasn’t looking, even when the master was gone, they handled his money in a trustworthy way.
The result? They were rewarded with more trust.
Faithfulness in the little builds trust.
It’s why the servant who received one bag of gold and buried it was harshly reprimanded. He continued his track record of unfaithfulness. He hid the bag instead of putting it to work.
I don’t know if you will have 15 minutes of fame today, but I know the Lord will give you opportunities to be faithful in the little things…and how you do the little things will build trust in your ability to handle the bigger things.
Apply: What does faithfulness in the little things look like for you today?
Prayer: Lord, thank you for trusting me with what I have. Help me to be faithful and trustworthy with what you have given to me so that there might be a return for your glory and your kingdom. AMEN.
Fly the Kite…Win the Prize!
(This week’s devotions are based on Sunday’s message: Win the Day…Fly the Kite – LISTEN HERE)
What’s the prize?
The motivation for Homan Walsh was to win the $10 prize with his kite. The money didn’t come easily, as he had to retrieve his kite after the string broke and navigate back and forth across the river in the dead of winter (See yesterday’s devotion).
But he didn’t give up. While no one else was watching he was focused on accomplishing the challenge to get his kite across the river.
Are you one that sticks with a task or easily gives up?
Even in today’s money, the prize for getting the kite across the Niagara River was not that much. $10 in 1848 would be about $400 in today’s money. Would you have braved the cold, navigated the river twice, fixed a broken kite and obtained another length of string?
I would hardly seem worth giving up a week of school or a week of work for that reward.
But Homan didn’t give up. He was determined to fly the kite.
Sometimes we can evaluate what we are doing at work, at school, in the home, etc. and determine that what we are doing doesn’t matter. Homan didn’t get recognition from the other kite fliers. No one was necessarily cheering him on. He went about the contest with the resolve to win the prize.
Every day we get to fly the kite, but the question is, what is the prize you are working for?
Sometimes we make the prize the affirmation of our boss. We do a good job at work and work hard as long as someone acknowledges and praises us for our work. Sometimes our motivation is the financial gain. If a bonus is offered, we work hard. If not, our work slips to the minimum required to not get fired. Sometimes our motivation is the athletic win. We practice and play hard when we believe we can win, but if the win seems elusive, our effort dwindles with it. Sometimes our motivation is a hug and affection from the ones we love. Our effort around the house is stellar until no one affirms or acknowledges it.
To be sure, encouragement and appreciation for jobs well done are important, but consider this as a deep down, always constant motivation for what you do today and every day.
Colossians 3:22 22 Slaves, obey your earthly masters in everything; and do it, not only when their eye is on you and to win their favor, but with sincerity of heart and reverence for the Lord. 23 Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for men, 24 since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving.
It would have been easy as a slave to be resentful of their position in society and the work load that was demanded of them. It would have been easy to be motivated by the approval of the master and unmotivated when the master was gone. The Apostle Paul reframes it not just for the slaves of the first century, but for every Christian. You are working for the Lord…not men. Your prize is not the affirmation of men, it is the inheritance promised from the Lord.
People may never notice. A bonus may never come. You may never get the championship trophy. But you will win prize.
Because each day you are engaging in life for one purpose: to serve the Lord Christ.
Apply: What is on your agenda for today? What changes about your engagement and enthusiasm for that task when you see it as an opportunity to serve the Lord?
Prayer: Lord, thank you for not only giving us life to live, but noticing and in your grace rewarding a life lived for you AMEN.