Distracted

abred.jpgTHE DAY WAS April 21, 1918…
It occurred during World War I. Baron Manfred von Richthofen led his flight of triplanes to search for British observation aircraft. An engagement ensued between a flight of Sopwith Camels led by Canadian Royal Air Force pilot Captain Arthur Roy Brown. Brown’s friend, Lt. Wilfred May, was a rookie on his first offensive patrol. May had been ordered to keep out of combat, but he couldn’t resist. He jammed his guns and, defenseless, headed away from the battle. Richthofen spotted the lone plane and chose it for kill number 81. Brown observed the scene below him and dove to help his fellow airman, knowing that May was no match for Richthofen.
Read was happened next: “It was then, with Brown closing from behind, that Richthofen, usually a meticulous and disciplined fighter pilot, made a mistake and broke one of his own rules by following May too long, too far, and too low into enemy territory. Two miles behind the Allied lines, as Brown caught up with Richthofen and fired, the chase passed over the machinegun nests of Australian Field artillery.” The debate continues over who fired the fatal shot that passed through Richthofen’s torso. Ultimately it doesn’t matter–whether hit from the air or the ground, the Red Baron was mortally wounded.
Richthofen was good. Probably overconfident. But he broke one of his own rules. Maybe in his mind he was just stretching the rule a bit. Or he was distracted by something that appeared too good to be true. Whatever the cause, he compromised his own standards, which led to his demise. For the Red Baron, the temptation of number 81 was too much.
THOUGHT: The temptation always exists for you and for me to focus on the wrong things. it is easy to be distracted by “the number$” or something else. Then we find ourselves flying too long, too far, and too low into enemy territory, into the bondage of sin, and ultimately to our own destruction (Romans 6:23; Matthew 7:13-14). The right thing to do is to set our eyes on Jesus and follow Him, for He will lead us to eternal life in heaven. (David A. Sargent)
KneEmail: “Looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith, who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God” (Hebrews 12:2).

Pressure

abpp.jpgHAVE YOU EVER had someone pressure you into doing something you didn’t want to do…?
“Come on, it’ll be fun. Just tell your parents you’re spending the night at my house, and I’ll tell my parents I’m spending the night at your house. Then we can go to that party and stay as late as we want.”
“Let’s skip school today after second period. No one will ever know. Trust me.”
“Go on, try some. Don’t be such a chicken.”
Even when we know it’s the wrong thing to do, even when it puts our own safety and reputation at risk, it’s hard to say no when the pressure’s on. We want to be liked. We want to be accepted. We’ve vulnerable.
Satan tried to pressure Jesus into sinning, and he did it at a very vulnerable moment in our Lord’s life, to (cf. Luke 4:1-13). Jesus had just completed a forty-day fast. He was hungry. So guess who happened to show up with a plan for “doing lunch”? Satan said, “If you are the Son of God, tell these stones to become bread.”
Notice how he tried to make Jesus think He had something to prove. Often, when the pressure’s on us, it’s to get us to prove something, too — that we’re not chicken, that we’re not nerds, that our friendship is real, or that we’re part of the “cool” group.
Jesus knew He had nothing to prove. He was the Son of God whether Satan was prepared to accept that or not. The only person who did have something to prove was the one applying the pressure.
THOUGHT: We don’t have to prove anything to anyone, either. We should already know who we are in Christ. So the next time someone tries to get you to do something wrong to prove your courage, tell them that by saying “no,” you just proved it. (Martha Bolton)
KneEmail: “He who leads the upright along an evil path will fall into his own trap” (Prov. 28:10).