
Overlooking the village of Mijas with the Mediterranean in the distance.
But as beautiful as this place is, the transition to Spain isn’t easy. With Africa just to the south, I’m reminded why I’m here at G42. Spain seems very safe, yet the reality of where God soon may be calling me lies within reach. It’s easy as a guy who has the desires of a warrior to dream about adventuring and taking Jesus to new frontiers when they are thousands of miles away. It seems exciting and amazing and incredible! Yet being this close to places where God could call me, I’m realizing the cost of what my desires and my calling could be.
Ultimately going to tough areas like Africa, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, or India places the reality of persecution within reach to have the opportunity to share the life of Christ. The World Race was easy, but in the places I’m longing to go, people are killed and imprisoned today for sharing the Gospel. Could that happen to me? Am I willing to lay my life in the hands of my God, trusting Him with how long He wants me to be on this earth? Am I really willing to entrust my family to God enough to go to places that aren’t easy … so that others who otherwise may never hear about Jesus don’t miss out on an eternity with our creator?
God has placed us on this earth to experience and share His life. Yet we see signs all around us that what we see is temporary. People age; suffering and hurt is everywhere. Ultimately, we all die! I don’t want to desperately try and preserve and hang on to the diminishing threads of beauty in this life. Don’t get me wrong – I really long to enjoy what God gives me today, and see God touch people with His healing. Yet I know that all we see is to be soon to be made new. We will be given a new heaven and a new earth. We will have new bodies that don’t age. Pain and suffering won’t exist! But how do I practically live that out today?
In Band of Brothers, a documentary sharing the story of Easy Company in World War II, an officer noted to a soldier struggling to engage the enemy, “The only hope you have is to accept the fact that you’re already dead. The sooner you accept that, the sooner you’ll be able to function as a soldier is supposed to function.”
