Friday, February 23, 2018

HUMAN LIMITATIONS

Standing at the base of the tall pine tree,
I stared up through the branches trying to see how far it was to the top. The kids around me challenged, “Just start climbing and see how far you get!” Being about 11 years old, I figured I’d better get moving before someone double dog dared me. Shortly after climbing a few branches, my hands were already sticky from sap. Maybe this will help to keep my grip, I thought to myself. Moving further up the tree, the trunk began to narrow and the branches got thinner. At that point, the wind was very noticeable, causing the tree to sway back and forth. Thanks to the encouragement of my buddies hollering from below, “Don’t be a sissy, keep going,” I pressed on. As I felt a branch crack under my foot from the weight of my body, it suddenly became difficult to weave through the narrowing branches. Figuring I was probably high enough off the ground, I took a quick moment to enjoy the view and began my descent. Upon making it safely back to the ground, I brushed the bark and pine needles from my hair and out of my shirt. Looking up the tree, I felt confident in my conquest.

Just as my ego started to inflate, some smart aleck kid said, “That’s nothing, I’ll show you how to do it.” He jumped up to the first branch and like a chimpanzee, continued to swing from branch to branch. In a matter of seconds, he was most of the way up the tree. I asked one of my buddies if the kid reached as far as I did. “No, he’s about ten feet higher,” he replied. “I never liked that kid,” I huffed under my breath and walked home. I spent the next week trying to wash the sap from my hands. Sometimes, we would like our bodies to be able to do things that are just not possible.

John 3:6 That which is born of the flesh, is flesh. And that which is born of the Spirit, is spirit.