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You Can Be a Giant Slayer!

Poor poor Jack…all he wanted to do was save his family and perhaps impress the princess. But as chance and destiny would have it, a handful of beans and the right amount of rain catapulted Jack from a keeper of kernels to a slayer of giants.

Oops, I should have given you a spoiler alert. Well now that I've spilled the beans, you should know that in the much anticipated "Jack the Giant Slayer," Jack surprisingly ends up slaying giants.

But before all that transpires, you'll be treated to 190 million dollars of CGI adventure that puts a new spin on one our all time favorite old tales. Think movie mash up of "The Smurfs," "The Princess Bride," and "The Lord of the Rings" with a little "Shrek" thrown in, and you get the picture.

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And surprisingly, the only named giants are Fee, Fie, Foe and Fum…go figure.

Odds are that if you go see "Jack" you will forget most of the film by the time you go to bed that night, but what will remain is the compelling intrigue of being a giant slayer. Beyond the "once upon a time" is the reality that we all have gargantuan two-headed, people-eating monsters that stomp all over our hopes and dreams. We'd love to face and defeat them, but more often than not, we cower away in the corner and tremble our lives away.

Perhaps stories like Jack's can inspire us, but I'm personally more motivated to charge my titanic troubles when I know that someone in the real world was victorious.

And that someone was David.

Unlike our fairy tale teenager Jack, David was a real life, flesh and bone adolescent who faced up to a giant bigger and badder than any we will face. There was no beanstalk or imaginary kingdom in the clouds in this event, but there was a nine foot tall gargantuan monstrosity named Goliath who mocked the God of Angel Armies.

Yet instead of sending His winged warriors to dispense with the behemoth blasphemer, God sent the boy who had the heart of a lion. Picture this scene as it transpired in all its glory:

David took his walking stick in his hand and went to find five smooth stones from the stream. He put the five stones in his shepherd's bag and held his sling in his hand. Then he went out to meet the Philistine.

The Philistine slowly walked closer and closer to David. Goliath's helper walked in front of him, carrying a large shield. Goliath looked at David with disgust. He saw that David was only a handsome, healthy boy.

Goliath said to David, "What is that stick for? Did you come to chase me away like a dog?" Then Goliath used the names of his gods to say curses against David. He said to David, "Come here, and I'll feed your body to the birds and wild animals."

David said to the Philistine, "You come to me using sword, spear, and javelin. But I come to you in the name of the LORD All-Powerful, the God of the armies of Israel. You have said bad things about him.

Today the LORD will let me defeat you. I will kill you. I will cut off your head and feed your body to the birds and wild animals. And we will do the same thing to all the other Philistines too. Then all the world will know there is a God in Israel. All the people gathered here will know that the LORD doesn't need swords or spears to save people. The battle belongs to the LORD, and he will help us defeat all of you."

Goliath the Philistine started to attack David. He slowly walked closer and closer toward David, but David ran out to meet Goliath.

David took out a stone from his bag. He put it in his sling and swung the sling. The stone flew from the sling and hit Goliath right between the eyes. The stone sank deep into his head, and Goliath fell to the ground-face down (1 Samuel 17:40-49).

And this is a true story that you should definitely not forget by the time you go to bed tonight.

The reality is that you and I also face some seemingly invincible giants that taunt us every waking moment and keep us awake at night. Remember that they are only as powerful as we allow them to be.

To the Hebrew army, Goliath would crush them like ants…To David, Goliath was the ant compared with the mighty power of the God who spoke the universe into existence

David minimized his focus on the giant and maximized his vision of God - and the same is still true for us, no matter what you are facing in your life. Perhaps you have Godzilla-sized issues that cripple your confidence? Or maybe the burden for souls that comes with living for THE Cause of Christ looms over your life like a nine foot giant?

Whatever the case, remember that you can defeat these giants by lifting your eyes to heaven and resting on the promise that "the battle belongs to the Lord."

If you focus on giants – you will stumble.
If focus on God – your giants will tumble.

Lane Palmer serves as a writer for Dare 2 Share Ministries (D2S) in Arvada, Colorado, a ministry committed to energizing and equipping teenagers to know, live, share and own their faith in Jesus. For more information about D2S, please visit http://www.dare2share.org/.

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