I kept thinking this week about the scenario I mentioned a few days ago about slaves wanting to escape. It occurs to me that this metaphor works for many of the situations in our lives. What lessons can we draw from it?
My mind keeps going back to those plantation slaves a couple of centuries ago. There were many of them. There were few people guarding them. Why didn’t more of them escape? Or at least make serious attempts?
The answer I keep coming to disturbs me, because it condemns me for things I’ve done at various points in my own life — maybe even including the present — because it suggests that the reason is fear and a cowardly need to be certain. Escaping doesn’t come through fear or chasing certainty. It comes from exercising openness and faith. Most of us are naturally afraid of the uncertainty in the distance, so we cling to whatever kind of bondage we’ve gotten ourselves into.
There are a lot of things I’m not certain about. In fact, “I don’t know,” is something I say frequently — and I’m comfortable with that. I know that if I insist on certainty before I take a risk, I’m dooming myself to a kind of misery stuck with what I have. I say that because I’ve done it before.
Barbarians with evil ideas taking our entire culture off deadly cliff
The things we regret the most show us what we really value
If abortion is just simple choice, why is killing babies for gender bad?
I’m drawn to tales of brokenness, rescue and ultimate redemption
When I’ve done something great, nothing seems impossible to me
World is an insane roller coaster and I need this insanity to stop
Taxation is theft: It’s time to take a stand about a serious moral issue
People who confront harsh reality are ones who survive bad times
Intolerance isn’t just an American thing; it’s common to all humans