Deprecated: Creation of dynamic property ET_Builder_Module_Comments::$et_pb_unique_comments_module_class is deprecated in /home/csmediatexas/murphymonitor/wp-content/themes/Divi/includes/builder/class-et-builder-element.php on line 1425
Bluegrass

Good News: Wanna Get Away?

by | Aug 14, 2017 | Opinion

By Craig Rush

Campus Pastor, Chase Oaks Church – Woodbridge

We’ve probably all the seen the Southwest commercials involving an embarrassing moment followed by an invitation to go on a trip far away. I’ve had several of these moments in my life but a few seem to come to mind more readily. In college, I worked at the library and over the course of a semester starting getting the warm fuzzes over a coworker. We didn’t know much about each other outside of the work sphere but one day I wanted that to change. I decided to ask her on a date. The library was about a five-minute walk from my frat house so the whole time I’m giving myself a pep talk to keep moving my feet in the direction of the library. Everything in me wants to about face and retreat. I enter through the library doors and head down the hallway to the circulation desk; the point of no return. In awkward fashion, I blurt out the rehearsed lines and what happens next far surpasses any nightmare imaginable.

It’s way too embarrassing for me to share in a newspaper article so you’ll have to ask me the next time I see you. Just kidding! Her boyfriend was standing just down the counter from our conversation so she says, “that’s really nice of you to ask me on a date but I’ve already got a boyfriend. Would you like to meet him?” Unbelievable! Talk about a wanna get away moment!

We’ve all got those wanna get away moments that we can look back on now and laugh but some are much more painful. Moments or even seasons when our lives are such a wreck we’d rather just get away. Maybe it’s a father facing the long drive home after losing a job or a high school student battling depression that never seems to end? It’s in those moments we just wanna get away.

If this is where we find ourselves today there’s some good news. We’ve all experienced wrecks in our lives. The metaphorical kind of wrecks that are sometimes self-induced but other times not. In either case, we see time and again in the Bible that God is an expert in redeeming wrecks. God rarely goes after the squeaky clean because wrecks bring out our need. Something we as humans have a hard time admitting. Let me give you a prime example.

After a 40 year timeout in the desert, God mobilizes His people, Israel, to occupy a new land. It’s a big mission that will alter the course of human history. Right as it begins God does something surprising. He flips the script and tells the story through the eyes of a Gentile prostitute named Rahab. Talk about someone who had made a wreck of things and yet God looks down and offers her the opportunity for redemption. Rahab’s not a passive participant though. She takes a step of risky faith by aligning with God and His people in the face of imminent danger and the rest as they say is history.

We love the wreck to redemption story but the question becomes are we willing to take a step of risky faith? God loves to redeem wrecks but chooses to operate in the realm of our risky faith. If you find yourself in a place today that you never expected and don’t know what to do, consider it an opportunity for God to redeem through risky faith. Whether self-induced or not God’s an expert in redeeming wrecks and He does so in the realm of our risky faith.

For more stories like this subscribe to our print or e-edition.

Collin WSM Summer/Fall 2026 Registration #2

0 Comments

Public Notice - Subscribe

Related News

In the cards

In the cards

Columnist John Moore spent most Saturday nights of his childhood watching the adults play cards and drink lots of coffee. Photo John Moore By John Moore | TheCountryWriter.com In 868 A.D., according to Chinese historical records, a princess was said to have...

read more
State’s wind projects at a standstill

State’s wind projects at a standstill

Dozens of Texas wind projects have been halted because the Department of Defense has not approved the federal permits required for them to move forward, the Austin American-Statesman reported. Data from the American Clean Power Association indicate that the state...

read more
Who’ll stop the rain

Who’ll stop the rain

Columnist John Moore wonders if we can stop the rain we started. Photo John Moore By John Moore | TheCountryWriter.com Back in 2011, it didn’t rain. It didn’t rain for a long, long time. It didn’t rain for so long that fires began to pop up where I live. One of them...

read more
Rockin’ down the highway

Rockin’ down the highway

Columnist John Moore has played guitar since he was eight. The Doobie Brothers helped remind him of why he still plays. Photo John Moore When I first picked up a guitar in 1970, my fingers didn’t make the sounds I wanted to hear. But I knew that if I kept trying, I...

read more
Listen here

Listen here

Columnist John Moore has a book on communication his wife bought him in the early 90s. He intends to read it soon. In the early 90s, there was a self-help, relationship book called, “Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus.” The goal of publishing this was for the...

read more
That whatchamacallit

That whatchamacallit

Columnist John Moore speaks Southern. He learned it in his grandfather's blacksmith shop. Photo John Moore Southern folks don’t need proper nouns. We have whatchamacallits and thingamajigs. My grandfather had the only blacksmith shop in Ashdown, Arkansas. That’s where...

read more
Berry berry good

Berry berry good

Columnist John Moore picks blackberries each spring. Something he’s done for a very long time. Photo: John Moore There wasn’t anything accidental about blackberry season in our family. When harvest time came, dad had the harvest trip mapped out long before the berries...

read more
Sounding off

Sounding off

Columnist John Moore still listens to the albums he bought over 50 years ago. Photo John Moore New music coming out used to be an event. Most of the time, you and your friends knew it was coming and you were waiting, money-in-hand, at the record shop to buy it. I...

read more
Hanging out

Hanging out

Columnist John Moore has endured many difficulties, but nothing's worse than wallpaper. Photo by John Moore There are two true tests for how solid your marriage is — COVID-19 and hanging wallpaper together. As I awoke from 9½ hours of sleep, all rested and ready for...

read more
Unity critical to retain House majority

Unity critical to retain House majority

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick warned last week that the GOP risks losing its majority in the state House this November and urged party unity behind the winner of the May runoff between U.S. Sen. John Cornyn and Attorney General Ken Paxton. Without that unity, Patrick said that...

read more
Public Notice - Subscribe