• Week 122 Sep. 24 •

Preach the Gospel at all times and when necessary use words.” - St. Francis of Assisi

There once was a man who worked in a small town as the operator of a drawbridge on a river. A train track ran across the bridge, and the operator's job was to keep the bridge up when no train was coming so that the boats could pass underneath. When a train approached, he was to blow the whistle and let down the bridge. One sunny morning, the man brought his seven-year-old son along to work with him. The boy could frolic along the river, skip rocks on the water, chase butterflies, or even try to catch a fish.

Shortly before noon, a passenger train was due to come through the area. The man began to make preparations to let the bridge down so the train could pass safely across the river. As he examined the bridge, he noticed that someone—a small child—had somehow climbed over the guardrail next to the bridge, and was playing at the very spot where the bridge would come down. As he looked closer, he realized with horror that the child was his son. In desperation, he yelled out his son's name, but the sound of the approaching train drowned out his screams. He knew he had to make a quick decision. If he lowered the bridge now his son would die. But if he didn't, all the people on the train would die as the train plunged into the river. He barely had time to think. As he screamed in agony, the man thrust forward the lever to lower the bridge just as the train arrived. His son died instantly. And as the train passed by, the people just smiled and waved as they passed the man in the control booth, with his head bowed low, oblivious to what had just taken place. (Adapted from: “To Sacrifice a Son” by Dennis Hensley)

The Gospel of Christ tells the story of great sacrifice. It is not a myth or a maybe, it's the one truth that saves. Jesus died so that many could have life. There are many in this world still oblivious to the personal sacrifice that Christ made for them. They go about their days in false security and empty hope. They believe in created things or the foolishness of their limited understanding.

The actions of belief speak louder then the vocabulary of knowledge. It is our lives that need to be transformed by the gospel. We should live in constant movement out of the life changing truths found within the words and works of Jesus Christ. The truths of grace, forgiveness, mercy, and redemption should ooze from us into the world. I think St. Francis of Assisi dedicated his life to moving, living, and learning the gospel daily for himself and for those who where without it. We must show the world the gospel of Christ. We must live it!

To find out what it looks like to live the Gospel start reading the book of John in the Bible and learn from the best, learn from the life of Jesus.

-Josh