Tunnel vision
The other day at work I went looking for two appliances (I work in an appliance store). They had to be delivered that afternoon. I looked where I had last seen them, not there. I looked in the back room, not there. I crawled over stacks of boxed appliances to see if they were hiding in the background, not there. I did it all again, they had to be there or I would have to talk to a very unhappy customer. In utter dispare I sat down on a stool at the cashier's site and glazed out at the other half of our store, the half with beds and furniture. There sitting in the midst of the recliners were my two appliances. Someone had moved them to make room for new merchandise. They were within 15 feet of where I was looking but tunnel vision precluded me for seeing them. As my heart slowed down after the scare of "losing my appliances", I thought where else has tunnel vision prohibited me from seeing what was right in front of me.
- Other people's needs blocked out by my concentration on only my needs.
- What God is really trying to say filtered by tradition and self-righteousness
- What is unknown but maybe possible hidden by the security and comfort of the known
Lord I pray that your Spirit will open the eyes of my heart in order that I may know the hope to which I have been called, the riches of his glorious inheritance in the saints and his incomparably great power.
1 Comments:
Let's see, this looks like the tunnel at Green River, WY.
In Brett Hoover's book Losing Your Religion, Finding Your Faith he mentions that we all suffer from the commute attitude in our Christian walk. The commute attitude causes us to see only the end of the trip and ignore the ride. Almost like having tunnel vision all our life. He proposes that we take a "road trip" which enjoys all the scenery and joys of the trip. Even taking detours.
I guess we all get tunnel vision sometimes because we are in a hurry and focused. We need to open our eyes and enjoy the ride.
Post a Comment
<< Home