Oh My God! Oh My God! Oh My God!

oh-my-god2jpg
Noel Caldwell
Retired, Midlands Technical College
Columbia, South Carolina

[April 11, 2010] –

As I walked through the parking lot toward the entrance of Wal-Mart, a young woman came running by me frantically crying, “Oh My God! Oh My God! Oh My God!”

Her unattended car was rolling out of its parking space toward other cars. She had apparently neglected to place her car in “park” while talking on her cell phone. Fortunately, several men stopped it in time.

Neglecting The Important

Seeing this, I wondered how many die neglecting the single most important thing in life. Busy about so many things, they fail to get to acknowledge their sin and to establish a personal relationship with Him. Then it is too late!

Jesus asked, “What good will it be for a man if he gains the whole world, yet forfeits his soul? Or what can a man give in exchange for his soul?”(Matthew 16:26).

In academia, we have a platform to influence students, faculty, staff and others for Christ. I ask myself:
“Am I being proactive to use the gifts and abilities God has given me?
“Am I too passive, doing almost nothing?
“Have I literally ‘forsaken’ any by not sharing the indispensable good news of eternal life offered through Jesus Christ?”

Those men in the parking lot could have ignored the woman’s plight. They had their own errands to attend to. But they chose to care, and to help. Each of us influences the lives of others, intentionally or not.

A faculty member in electronics asked if we could meet privately somewhere outside my office. He indicated that his observation of my life prompted his request to meet.

Later that day, in a secluded laboratory, he told me he had drifted away from the Christian faith and now he wanted to return. He recommitted his life to Jesus Christ as we prayed together. We are still in touch and he still follows Christ.

The Holy Spirit’s Prompting

Over lunch with another colleague I sensed that the Holy Spirit was prompting my sharing. I told my friend Randall how he could know Christ personally.He questioned enthusiastically, “You mean I can pray right now and receive Christ?”

In the noisy restaurant, we prayed together. About a year later he learned he had prostate cancer that proved to be terminal. Several Christian colleagues visited and encouraged him right up to the time he was called home to be with the Lord.

In these days of diminishing returns on investments, isn’t it great to know that we can lay up treasures in heaven where neither moth nor rust destroys? We could just ignore the opportunities. But it really is worth it to interrupt our day sometimes — and to care.

© 2010 Noel Caldwell

Least Likely

least-likelyEric Jones
Exercise Physiologist
Kinesiology and Health Science
Stephen F. Austin State University

[April 4, 2010]—

How would your friends in high school have described you?

I received a call recently from a high school classmate concerning plans for a reunion. Her phone call started my own walk down memory lane, where I thought about many of the “most likely” awards given way back at graduation:
• Most likely to succeed,
• Most likely to play professional sports, etc.

Then I thought about awards I might have received:
• Most likely to be incarcerated or die early
• Least likely to succeed

After reminiscing for a time, I reminded the caller that, having dropped out of high school for a time, I graduated two years after her and the rest of our class!

College Years

Following high school I worked for several years in industry and construction with little idea of what I aspired to do. Finally going on to college, I took classes in all areas but quickly found my passion in exercise physiology.

But I still had two problems: 1) the past I was running from, and 2) I still had no idea where I wanted my life to go. However, success during undergraduate studies led to several assistantship opportunities for graduate school.

I viewed graduate school as kind of a vacation and jumped in head first, little knowing that God had been planning all these things for quite some time. For at that time I came to know Jesus and His grace, and I found I no longer had to run from my past. This came about largely with the help of my academic and spiritual mentor, Phil Bishop.

He taught me about everything a Ph.D. requires (research, service, etc.) and more importantly how to have a passion for God through prayer, evangelism, and Godly service. Early in my faith, he satisfied my many questions that came with receiving something so new. As I progressed, he showed me how my profession and my confession of faith were not items to be separated. God chose a “least likely”, rather than a “most likely” arena for me and there I came to know Him.

Academy Years

Shortly after accepting my first job as a professor, I felt the desire to follow the example of my mentor and experience Christian fellowship in the academy. However, I thought surely I was the least likely person to put together gatherings for Christian faculty.

My list of reasons were many – I had been here for a short time; I was young; I knew no one; I was not tenured. But my experiences as a “least likely” and the possibility of being a mentor for the next “least likely” were hard to ignore.

God places us where He wills, in spite of ourselves. My mentor’s willingness to live for God’s purposes as he went about his academic career helped lead to my peace in Christ. Hopefully through me there will be many more to come to know that peace.

Have you considered that God may call you to your “least likely” places, and that He can bless you there? I believe He can and will.

© 2010 Eric Jones

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