A little boy was spending his Saturday
morning playing in his sandbox. He had with him his box of cars and
trucks, his plastic pail, and a shiny, red plastic shovel. In the
process of creating roads and tunnels in the soft sand, he discovered a
large rock in the middle of the sandbox. The lad dug around the rock,
managing to dislodge it from the dirt. With no little bit of struggle,
he pushed and nudged the rock across the sandbox by using his feet. (He
was a very small boy and the rock was very huge.)
When
the boy got the rock to the edge of the sandbox, however, he found that
he couldn't roll it up and over the little wall. Determined, the little
boy shoved, pushed, and pried, but every time he thought he had made
some progress, the rock tipped and then fell back into the sandbox. The
little boy grunted, struggled, pushed, shoved -- but his only reward was
to have the rock roll back, smashing his chubby fingers. Finally he
burst into tears of frustration.
All
this time the boy's father watched from his living room window as the
drama unfolded. At the moment the tears fell, a large shadow fell across
the boy and the sandbox. It was the boy's father. Gently but firmly he
said, "Son, why didn't you use all the strength that you had available?"
Defeated, the boy sobbed back, "But I did, Daddy, I did! I used all the strength that I had!"
"No, son," corrected the father kindly. "You didn't use all the strength you had. You didn't ask me."
With that the father reached down, picked up the rock, and removed it from the sandbox.
Do
you have "rocks" in your life that need to be removed? Are you
discovering that you don't have what it takes to lift them? There is One
who is always available to us and willing to give us the strength we
need. When the apostle Paul faced times of a broken spirit and sapped
strength, he proclaimed to the Corinthian church, "My grace is enough
for you. When you are weak, then my power is made perfect in you" (2
Corinthians 12:9b NCV). When we are broken in spirit and our strength is
spent, we can turn to our Savior Jesus.
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