Updated 12:47 pm.EST, Sun November 22, 2009

Opinion|Mon, Dec. 22 2008 10:16 AM EST

Why Not Spend Christmas Out On A Limb?

By Dr. Tony Beam|Christian Post Guest Columnist

I grew up a country boy. I rambled freely in the woods and fields that surrounded my boyhood home. It was a full quarter of a mile from the back yard to the dirt road that ran past my grandmother’s house and the space in between was filled with trees made for climbing.

One wonderful summer my two cousins, who had lived far away for most of my life, came to live with my grandmother. We spent the summer days engaged in our two favorite pastimes…playing in one of the three creeks that bordered our farm and climbing all the way to the top of one of the huge pine trees that occupied the field between the back yard and the dirt road.

Usually, my cousins and I were content to stay close to the trunk of the tree where the limbs were nice and fat and we could quickly wrap our arms around the trunk if the wind began to blow. But every now and then, we would dare each other to see how far we could move out on a limb away from the safety of the trunk. Being way out on a limb was scary because when the wind would blow, the limb would move up and down and back and forth, causing us to have to hold on for dear life! It didn’t take long for us to permanently trade the relative safety of staying close to the trunk for the thrill of riding the wind way out on a limb.

Matthew 1: 18-25 tells the story of Joseph…a man sitting on a big fat limb up close to the trunk of life’s tree. Joseph’s life was set. He had been taught a valuable trade (carpentry) which would provide him with a poor but sustainable living. He was betrothed to marry a beautiful young Jewish girl named Mary. He was respected in the community and he was looking forward to settling down and starting a family.

That’s when God pulled Joseph away from the trunk and sent him on the ride of his life!

Before Joseph and Mary came together (in the biblical sense) it was discovered that Mary was pregnant. What would Joseph do? The law required that Mary be put to death for her obvious adulterous ways but Joseph loved her. Not wanting to see her harmed or even shamed he decided to handle the matter privately. Joseph stepped gingerly away from the trunk of the tree when he bucked tradition by showing mercy to Mary. That night, God appeared to Joseph in a dream, revealing that Mary had not been unfaithful to him. It must have been difficult for Joseph to believe but he decided to go out on a limb with God by believing the message of the angel. He took Mary as his wife and his normal, everyday, life up against the tree trunk came to end.

I believe Joseph discovered three things when he made the decision to believe God and move out on a limb. First, he discovered that God’s ways are out on a limb. Staying close to the tree may keep us safe and secure but God’s greatest glory is gained out on a limb. Maybe Joseph remembered the story of David, who left the trunk security of a shepherd boy’s life and embraced the limb of giant slaying and nation building. Maybe he remembered Joshua, who rejected the trunk safety of traditional warfare and moved out on the limb of marching around Jericho seven times, and was rewarded with seeing Jericho’s walls fall at the sound of a shout. Maybe he remembered Gideon who pushed away from the trunk certainly of an army of over thirty thousand and followed God out on the limb of just three hundred. Whatever was going through Joseph’s mind, he came to the conclusion that great things for God are most often accomplished when we are hanging on for dear life rather than hanging on to our own dear life. Continue »

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  • Mon Dec 22, 2008 6:34 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    The Redeeming Risk
    Benario Overstreet

    Admitting disadvantage being small
    Standing where crowding men stood tall
    Zaccheaus hied himself up a Sycamore tree
    The better the Lord to see.

    At that height there was vouchsafed to him
    The view according only to the mortals
    Who climb out on a limb.

    Zaccheaus was astonished!
    For down on earth his mind had never brought the thought to birth
    That balancing at that precarious height,
    Man sees but likewise puts himself in sight.

    Above the crowding curious folk Eye counted eye
    And it was Christ who spoke

    "Come down Zaccheaus, I am going home with you."
    Zaccheaus scrambled down more rapidly than he had climbed the tree.
    He stood with Christ and what he knew he knew!
    His words were tumbling joy

    "Half I own I will be employed to feed your poor
    And wealth I haven't earned except by force and guile will be returned...
    Fourfold, is that your way?"
    "You will be blessed fulfilling what you say."

    Now if you would add a moral to the story let it be this.
    No man afraid of Glory should climb out on a limb,
    For at that height, Life shows in new perspective
    And the sight is hard on wealth's self made pomposity
    Let only valiant men go climb a tree!
    This was given by Dr. Overstreet at a Methodist Youth Training session in Birmingham, Ala.
    When Dr. Joseph B. Kennedy, Sr. was President of the Birmingham District Methodist Youth Fellowship.
    She repeated it once over dinner before he drove them to the Airport. It has never been published and
    It is believed his memorization is the only reason it was preserved.

    1 Corinthians
    Chapter 13
    1
    1 If I speak in human and angelic tongues 2 but do not have love, I am a resounding gong or a clashing cymbal.

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