Jesus, on at least one occasion, admonished His followers about the danger of “looking back (Luke 9:62). But I must admit that on occasion have looked back, and have thought how differ ant things would have been, or in some cases, how the course of history might have been altered:
- If Daniel had said, “I don’t do dens.”
- If Peter had said, “I don’t do Pentecosts.”
- If Moses had said, “I don’t do rivers.
- If Jochebed had said, “I don’t do bulrushweaving.”
- If Joseph had said, “I don’t do pits.”
- If Mary Magdalene had said, “I don’t do feet.”
- If David had said, “I don’t do giants.”
- If Noah had said, “I don’t do arks.”
- If Rebekah had said, “I don’t do camels.”
- If Zaccheus had said, “I don’t do sycamore trees.”
- If Andrew had said, “I don’t do loaves and fishes.”
- If Martha had said, “I don’t do meals.”
- If John the Baptist had said, “I don’t do deserts.”
- If Phoebe had said, “I don’t do deaconing.”
- If Abraham had said, “I don’t do pilgrimages.
- If Dorcas had said, “I don’t do garments.”
- If Paul had said, “I don’t do epistles.”
- If Ruth had said, “I don’t do barley fields.”
- If Jesus had said, “I don’t do stables; nor do I do crosses; nor do I do resurrections.”
What if Jesus hadn’t been born to a virgin in that Galilean stable? Or hadn’t given His lifeblood on that humiliating cross? Or hadn’t risen triumphantly from the tomb on that first Easter morning? The Apostle answers that question: “If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins” (1 Corinthians 15:17). So maybe it IS good to look back. And remember!
–Paul W. Brubaker
September/October 1996
September/October 1996