Shortly before we headed home, about a 10-hour drive, another visitor arrived in Louisiana. However, Gustav was not invited, and certainly was an unwelcome visitor. He did not cheer the hearts of those he visited. In addition, when he left, there was debris and destruction all around. What a contrast.
On our way home today, we passed a number of convoys of large cherry-picker trucks from a variety of electrical contractors, mostly out of Pennsylvania, but also some from New York (I even saw two trucks from Indiana!). They were all south-bound on I-81, and onto I-40 as far as Knoxville. When I first spotted them, I guessed they were headed to Louisiana to help clean up after Gustav. I became very sure when, just north of Bristol, Tennessee, we caught up with a large truck from one of the six companies I’d identified pulling a trailer marked “Disaster Emergency Response Command Center.”
Next to rescuing and helping victims in direct danger, re-establishing a region’s infrastructure is most important. Clearing roads and restoring power are the most important first steps. So it only made sense to see a large contingent of trucks and workers headed south.In ways, sin causes a similar need in our lives. Sin disrupts our connection with the power we need to withstand further attacks by Satan. Like Gustav in Louisiana, sin in our lives creates damage, some immediately noticeable, some only to be noticed later on. Some damage can be repaired; sometimes, even though lives are healed, permanent scars are left. The folks without power in Louisiana are incapable of restoring their own power. Likewise, we are unable to clean up the mess of sin in our own lives. We are in need of the Heavenly Electrician to restore the sin-preventing power in our lives, and to clean up the mess left by sin. And we don’t have to wait for Him to arrive by truck from New York or Pennsylvania. He can be there as soon as we call.
And remember, if you see the hurricane of sin coming, don’t wait to evacuate the area.
Dr. G

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