Typically, we hire a guide for two basic reasons. (1) The guide can lead
us to a new, unknown destination. (2) The guide knows how to lead us to
that destination safely. In the process of taking us where we wish to go
safely, the guide blesses us in many ways. He knows how to care for the
unexpected. We do not. He knows how to identify and interpret dangers. We
do not.
An expert guide's value is seen in his understanding and knowledge. He
knows when to be concerned--and when not to be. We who need a guide commonly
lack that understanding and knowledge. Things that seem strange or out of
place concern us. Such things may be nothing more than ignorance. We often
are unconcerned about true danger. Lack of concern about true danger does
not neutralize it.
To lead us safely to our destination, the guide is equipped with insights
that realize when concern is necessary--and unnecessary. To utilize all the
guide's ability, to make his task "possible," we must trust the guide. If
our guide is skilled and knowledgeable, he leads and we diligently follow.
We never forget he is the guide. We always remember that we are followers.
We understand our guide is always necessary.
All of us are on a journey going where none of us have been. None of us
know how to recognize all the dangers. None of us know when to be and not
to be concerned. Without question or argument, we need a guide.
Each day is a new adventure. Each age is a new territory. As the adult
journey begins, we are blessed physically, but have little experience. As
our journey nears its end, we have a lot of experience, but physically have
declined. In our early years, the destination is so far away it seems
unreal. In our later years, the destination is so close we cannot ignore
it. Our own deaths are the doorway to our destination.
Only one person made the journey, passed through death's doorway, and
returned to be our guide. Less than 24 hours before passing through that
doorway, he told his closest friends, "I am the way, the truth, and the
life; no one comes to the Father, but through me" (John 14:6).
Jesus is the only guide who can take us safely to our destination. Jesus
knows how to live, how to die, and how to go to the Father. He knows how to
endure temptation and not sin. He knows how to forgive. He knows how to
live and die in peace. He knows false danger and real danger, and he knows
how to distinguish between the two.
We do not know how to live, how to die, or the way to the Father. Of
ourselves, we do not know how to endure temptation, forgive, live in peace,
die in peace, or distinguish between false and real dangers.
We urgently need the only guide available. Is Jesus your guide?
Link to other Writings of David Chadwell