Then Elijah stood in front of them and said, “How much longer will you waver, hobbling between two opinions? If the Lord is God, follow him! But if Baal is God, then follow him!” 1 Kings 18:21 NLT
At twelve, my
grandfather learned about straddling the fence.
When my
grandfather was in middle school, his father died. In a time when women mainly
worked at home and the man was the sole breadwinner, the family was in a
precarious situation. My grandfather was the only one who could take the reins
among three brothers.
With the help of
his Uncle Ransom, my grandfather got down from the fence and went to work.
Taking care of a mother and several female siblings at such a young age wasn’t
easy, but he knew what he had to do and did it. Quitting school meant he’d
never secure a job that would pay very much. And he didn’t.
When he later
quit farming, he worked at the Paradise Ice Company in Orangeburg, South
Carolina, where he worked for the remainder of his career. Though his pay left
much to be desired, again, he knew what he had to do and did it.
Elijah wasn’t a
fence-straddler, either. He summoned almost one thousand prophets and
prophetesses of the pagan god Baal to the summit of Mount Carmel and challenged
them to a contest to see which god was God. Before the contest began, he asked
the people how long they would hesitate between two opinions . . . how long
they would live with a divided mind.
Jesus once told
people they couldn’t serve God and mammon. Mammon could be money or material
possessions. But we can take anything and insert it in the place of mammon. We
can’t choose God and Baal. Baal was a fertility god. Worshipping him allegedly
brought prosperity and happiness. Our Baal can be anything that proposes to do
the same thing.
God presents us
with the same question as Elijah did to Baal’s representatives: “How long will
you live with a divided mind?” We must choose God as well as the things that
represent his nature. We can’t serve him and other gods. Nor does he want
half-hearted service from us after we choose to follow him. He wants our
undivided loyalty—not a divided mind.
Give God your
all. He wants it—and deserves it. And when you choose to get off the fence,
you’ll experience life as you never have before.
Father, give us
strength to follow you with all our hearts, souls, and minds.
Tweetable: Are you a fence straddler?
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