Romans 2:6 (NIV)
God “will repay each person according to what they have
done.”
Brian Jones and Bertrand Piccard had the hardest decision
of their life to make as they entered the final leg of their journey with
Orbiter 3. Bertrand was on the phone with his wife, his "weather
eye," pondering if they should attempt crossing the Atlantic Ocean. Fuel
was low for the 180 foot high Breitling Orbiter 3 after it had begun its
historic journey sailing into the sky 2 weeks before from Chateau d'Oex,
Switzerland. At the rate they were going, they would never be able to complete
the journey.
But his wife was trying to reassure him saying, "If
you allow Orbiter 3 to go a few hundred feet higher, you will catch another jet
stream. Just a few hundred feet," she had pleaded. In desperation, he
fired up the burners, obeying her suggestions. With grandeur, the ship rose to
36,000 feet and into this new jet stream where the winds were 2-3 times faster,
topping 230 miles per hour. They crossed the Atlantic quickly and soon were
over the deserts of the Sahara landing near Mut, in south-western Egypt. On March
21, 1999, they landed, having covered 29,055 miles.
With their fuel nearly spent and after riding the winds
for 19 days, 21 hours and 55 minutes, the two pilots--Piccard, a Swiss
psychiatrist whose grandfather invented the pressurized capsule for high-altitude
ballooning, and Jones, a veteran British balloonist--took title to being the
first balloonist to circumnavigate the globe, claiming the $1 million prize.
"Did you sense something spiritual, an awakening or
force in your trip?" They were asked.
"Yes," they responded, but somehow, they could
not put their finger on exactly what it was. They did see Mother Earth
releasing her dew and fragrance to nurture and sustain earth's creatures. Yes,
they were overwhelmed and captivated by the closing scenes of the sand dunes in
the desolate Sahara Desert. Yes, they were in awe that something symmetric,
sovereign and stupendous had to design this creation. Yet, they could not put
their finger on exactly what it was. St. Augustine agreed when he wrote:
"If something cannot be explained, it most likely is
God-designed."
Just a few hundred feet higher. That's what did it!
That's what could make it for you as well when you decide to sail past your
limits and see a new life in God. Just a little higher and you may sense the
finger of God working within your life, your capsule. If you step out in faith,
spend just a little more fuel and reach just a little higher, you can reach
that jet stream.
You may be in the closing scenes of your desolate Sahara
Desert but God can do a great wonder within you if you but ask Him into your
life and take charge or control. It may be the hardest decision in your life
but the prize is well worth it. This quote may be yours: If something cannot be
explained, it most likely is God-designed. He is symmetric, sovereign and
stupendous!
Dear Lord, Help us to fly higher. Help us make the effort to not just go along
but to give a little extra so we can reach greater things for you. In Jesus’
Name, Amen.
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