Storms
in the southeast had delayed flights just enough so that David and I just missed
our 8:50 pm flight from Atlanta to Greenville/Spartanburg. Because of this we had been rebooked to 9:00
am on the following day. It was going to
be a long night if we went to our plan C, which was to rent a car and drive
back. Plan B was to fly standby. David, a biology professor at BJU, talked
with the nice lady at the counter in Atlanta and thankfully she was able to get
us tickets on the last flight out, which didn’t leave the terminal until about
11:15 pm. This was still better than
driving. I had a window seat next to the
left wing, and it was right by one of the emergency exits. The flight attendant told us how the door
worked and asked the three of us in that row if we were able and willing to use
it and to assist others in the event of an emergency. After agreeing, my mind drifted off to Flight
1549 and how Captain Chesley B. "Sully" Sullenberger had landed it
safely in the Hudson River. Again I was
filled with admiration for his skill, and again I saw the open emergency doors
with people climbing out onto the wing, waiting to be rescued.
We
were returning from a conference in Grand Rapids, MI. The lines back in the Gerald R. Ford
International Airport hadn’t been bad at all.
After just a few minutes I stuck my cell phone onto the boarding pass
scanner and proceeded with the usual drill.
Off came the shoes, and they were joined with my laptop in the gray
plastic tray. I pulled out all the
containers of liquids and put them into another tray, and then I added the
contents of my pockets. After shoving
both trays, my laptop case, and my carry-on bag into the tunnel I stepped back
into position for my personal security scan.
The
TSA security officer told me to stand on the yellow footprints on the outside
of the scanner and asked me, “Have you emptied your pockets?” I answered in the affirmative. “Sir, what is that in your shirt pocket?” My shirt was dark brown with faint tan
stripes—please believe me when I say that it looks much better than it
sounds—and sticking out was the end of the receipt from my supper, the white
paper shining brightly against the brown background. Yes, I knew it was there, but I thought it
didn’t matter. After all, I had on a
belt with a metal buckle, a metal watch with a metal band, a metal wedding
ring, glasses with metal around the lenses with metal embedded in the temples,
and to complete the ensemble a healthy dose of titanium metal tubes and screws
connecting my L1-L3 lumbar vertebrae. Surely
a little piece of paper could be ignored. “A receipt,” I replied. TSA Man was rather loud and insistent: “Sir,
that’s something in your pocket! Stand
up here in the scanner, you can hold it in your hand, and put your hands up
here!” Somewhere in the background my
supportive colleague was busting up. I proceeded
to do everything that TSA Man told me to do—exactly
as he said to do it. I began to wonder
if I would ever realize my dreams of a career as a TSA security screener.
Next
on the agenda were the usual pre-flight safety spiels from the flight attendants. You know, the ones about wearing seatbelts,
not smoking, and how you would get into really big trouble if you vandalized the
smoke detector by the toilet. I made up
my mind to not do that. And then one of the
attendants said, “In the event that you should need oxygen during this flight,
an air mask will drop down and….” The
chemist immediately thought, “In the event that I should need oxygen? I always
need oxygen.”
Others
things that we always need include clean water, food, clothing, and shelter. We need money to get these, and to get money we
need to use our abilities. Of course, we
also need intangibles such as companionship, love, and forgiveness.
·
We look to the material
world to satisfy our physical needs. John tells us of Christ’s role: “All
things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was
made.” (John 1:3, ESV)
·
Paul speaks of all
that we have, including our abilities: “What do you have that you did not receive?”
(I Corinthians 4:7, ESV)
·
Our need to
understand our significance in the world is satisfied only if we take God at
his word: “So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created
him; male and female he created them.’” (Genesis 1:27, ESV)
·
We crave purpose
in life. There are many, of course, but
two of the highest are to glorify God and worship him: “Who
will not fear, O Lord, and glorify your name? For you alone are holy. All
nations will come and worship you, for your righteous acts have been revealed.’”
(Revelation 15:4, ESV)
·
Don’t we need
peace in our hearts? Christ responds: “Let
not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me.” (John 14:1,
ESV)
·
What about those
times when no person can meet your need?
“Every good gift and every perfect
gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights with whom there is no
variation or shadow due to change.” (James 1:17, ESV)
In the event that you should
need anything, turn to God.
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