Skip to main content

Save One



 “The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life, and whoever captures souls is wise (Proverbs 11:30)”

Fear always accompanies first attempts. New adventures introduce so many unanswered questions, unknown variables, and untried abilities. All key triggers for uncertainty. Because we have never done it, whatever it is, gnawing feelings of doubt are a perfectly human experience.

In Zack Snyder’s Justice League, the Batman assembles a team of metahuman champions to take on a rising tide of super-villains. An ancient entity named Steppenwolf is leading an army of Parademons in a hunt for three Mother Boxes. Fused together, these boxes form a weapon powerful enough to destroy the planet. Humanity needs a hero, or a team of heros.

The film’s world of hightech heroics and cgi villainary is humanized when high school student Barry Allen is invited to join the league. Initially, Allen (aka Flash) is super-excited to be in a super-hero league. It is always more exciting to “be” than it is to “do”. And when it comes time to do what superheros do (i.e. save people), the Flash finds himself paralyzed with uncertainty.

Preparing to take on the evil Steppenwolf, the Flash tries to explain his emotional struggle to Batman;

“Here’s the thing. See, I’m afraid of bugs, and guns, and obnoxiously tall people. I can’t be here! It’s really cool you guys seem ready to do battle and stuff, but I’ve never done battle. I’ve just pushed some people and run away!”

Batman brings clarity to fear with two simple words: “Save one.”

Batman: Save one.
The Flash: What?
Batman: Save one person.
The Flash: Which one?
Batman: Don’t talk. Don’t fight. Get in. Get one out.
The Flash: And then?
Batman: You’ll know.

Big tasks are commonly accompanied with big doubts. And no task is bigger than that which is assigned to the follower of Jesus. “As you go,” Jesus tells his followers, “make disciples of all people” (Matthew 28:19). Making disciples is a formidable goal, and “all people” is a tall order. Our task is global in focus and eternal in effect. When we consider our call, it is enough to swallow us in feelings of doubt and insufficiency.

But the good news is, we aren’t called to reach the world by ourselves, and we aren’t called to reach it all at once. All that is required of each of us is one, small, simple act of obedience. In the face of fear and uncertainty, take that first step, save one.

Jesus Christ meticulously handcrafted his followers one-by-one.

With any significantly large project, our minds are rarely capable of envisioning all the various steps involved. The objective must be broken down into smaller, bite-sized, portions. When it comes to our call to make disciples of all people, that means one lost, broken, hurting soul at a time. “Save one!” And after you reach just one person with the Gospel, just like the Flash, “You’ll know.”

Chances are, you aren’t called to change the world, just the life of one person at a time. Who’s that person for you right now? Get in! Get one out! Save one!


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Is Your Pastor a Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing?

In this age of cultural Christianity, and what I mean by that is Christianity that is changed to fit the current popular ideas.  Christianity that is custom tailored to suit the community’s various wants, tastes, and needs. Did you know that when one of the trendy new “modern churches” are planning to plant a campus (that’s the new trendy name for these modern, progressive churches now, “campuses” ) they send interviewers into the community to talk with people to find out what they want in a church.  What sort of programs they like and what kind of sermons they want to hear, and then they tailor the entire worship service around what the community wants.  This is not church folks, this is a social club.   The problem with this new fangled Christianity is that people may know very well what they want, but what they need is an entirely different story.  Many people today want to be entertained in a worship service.  They want loud music, they want drama skits...

Why the Reformation Still Matters

  In an era of spiritual confusion and cultural fragmentation, the Reformation stands as a poignant reminder that truth is worth fighting for.    October isn’t just about falling leaves and pumpkin spice ;  it’s Reformation Month. On October 31, 1517, Martin Luther nailed his 95 Theses to the church door in Wittenberg, sparking a movement that would reshape the church, challenge empires, and recover the gospel’s blazing center: salvation by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone. This month, I’m launching a series of blog posts that explore why the Reformation still matters, how its truths confront our modern confusion, comfort our weary hearts, and call us back to the beauty of biblical grace.   When most people hear the term “Reformation,” they think of dusty history books, old church controversies, or perhaps Martin Luther wielding a hammer. However, the truth is that the Reformation isn’t just a chapter in church history; it’s a living legacy. It’...

America is no Longer Good

French writer Alexis de Tocqueville, after visiting America in 1831, said “I sought for the greatness of the United States in her commodious harbors, her ample rivers, her fertile fields, and boundless forests, and it was not there. I sought for it in her rich mines, her vast world commerce, her public school system, and in her institutions of higher learning, and it was not there. I looked for it in her democratic Congress and her matchless Constitution, and it was not there. Not until I went into the churches of America and heard her pulpits flame with righteousness did I understand the secret of her genius and power. America is great because America is good, and if America ever ceases to be good, America will cease to be great!”   I read Democracy in America in college.  De Tocqueville traveled all over America searching for what made us a great nation and he found the old time church with old time preachers, preaching hellfire and brimstone sermons was what made America ...