Blog Post: Mid-life
Crisis Veteran
I am preaching Sunday at the Roseville
Church and was going through some old files looking for a sermon I am sure I
wrote up at one point. I didn’t find it, but I did run across a letter I had
written for the Opinion page of the Tallahassee Democrat on Thursday, September
23, 1982, thirty-eight years ago. Thought I’d share it:
It is titled “Midlife Crisis Veteran”.
I am 40 years old and an expert
on midlife crisis. I had my first one at 18 and have had one every year and a
half since. During that time I have wanted to be a doctor, a lawyer, short
order cook, an entrepreneur, an emergency medical technician, a Marine Corps
pilot, an FBI agent, an inventor, a computer genius, a high school social
studies teacher, a large animal vet, a U.S. Senator, the Secretary of Health
and Rehabilitative Services, a bunch of things I have forgotten, and a few I
don't care to mention in a public forum.
I think that the most significant
one was about 4 years back when I came to grips with the fact that all the gold
in California is in a bank in the middle of Beverly Hills in somebody else’s name.
I have no reason to believe that the last half of my life will be any different
from the first in this regard.
The one stabilizing factor in my
life through all this has been my conviction, as Paul expressed in his letter
to the Christians at Rome, “that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons,
neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth,
nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of
God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.” If you think that's a powerful saying
you should read the rest of the letter.
David May
I like that, Dad. Very good.
ReplyDeleteWhen you take the time to read that quote slowly, it is powerful enough to get you through anything Satan can hurl at you today!
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