AMERICAN FOG
Not Where We Thought
.
Fog-masked
Glorietta Bay hid any landmarks that night as I brought the 25-foot Catalina
under the San Diego Bridge. The family,
who charted the sunset-sail, fell silent as the claustrophobic atmosphere
closed in on all sides.
.
“No
worries.” I assured them, “I sail in and out of this bay sometimes two and
three times a day. We will sail 200
yards past the bridge, and then turn ninety degrees to starboard. There will be a lighted buoy a mile ahead, where
we turn again and the lights from Coronado will guide us the rest of the way
in.”
.
If they had
chartered a 27-footer, there would have been a compass mounted on the binnacle,
but not on the 25-footer. However, I did
not need to take my handheld compass from my sail bag. Instead, I posted the family on watch for the
buoy and/or hazards ahead, and I concentrated on avoid the Navy Seals Training
Base to port and the golf course to starboard. Within thirty minutes, I knew we had a problem,
because I caught a glimpse of trees on the portside, where the treeless
training base should have been.
.
Focused on the
fuzzy blackness on either side of the boat, I had strayed off course, and then
the faint glow of the bridge over our bow proved I had turned completely around. No longer, the self-assured master of the
elements, I brought the vessel about.
Then with flashlight and compass in hand, I guided us safely to the lit
buoy and on to the dock.
Somewhere,
in our human certainty, as Oswald Chambers warns, we will reach a place where
God must say,
“Don’t be
blind on this point anymore; you are not where you thought you were. Up to the present I have not been able to
reveal it to you, but I reveal it now.”
.
I believe his
caution has more than a personally spiritual application. We, United States citizens, have reached a
point of self-confidence, politically, where we have mistaken shadows for
reality, and falsely believed we would never wreck our own boat. However, every indication is that we strayed
off course while focused on the blackness on both sides. Now is the time for the nation to refocus on
its more noble goals. Our national goal finds
its simplest expression in two documents, the Preamble to the Constitution and
the Declaration of Independence.
.
“We the People of the United States, in
Order to form a more perfect Union,
establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity,
do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”
.
Our
Declaration of Independence gives the rationale behind concentrating on these
goals.
.
“We hold
these truths to be self-evident, that all
men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain
unalienable Rights, that among these are Life,
Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That
to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their
just powers from the consent of the
governed.” (The bold type was added
to emphasize that goal.)
.
Those
documents describe a free people, all with rights protected by a government deriving
its power from the consent of the governed. The unique goal of Christian Americans is love
of God and others, whether in a majority or not. Christians need to conceder how to express
Christ’s love in the furtherance of our national goal. Honestly, our self-confidence has deceived us,
and we are not where we thought we were. It is time to come about, pick up the compass,
and turn on the light.
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