My wife
and I were on our way home from church; (on the same street as my previous
illustration). Jean was driving our old green 1980 something Oldsmobile; a
somewhat longer vehicle than one generally sees on the road today. We were
traveling at 50 MPH, or greater, and as we neared an intersecting road on our
right, which was marked with a stop sign, hardly stopping, a small blue car
pulled into our pathway.
We could plainly see a man and woman in the front of the car, and a little boy and girl in the back seat. Less than 50 feet separated the two vehicles, as Jean locked up the brakes. An accident seemed inevitable. As with so many traumatic events, time seemed to slow down. (Interestingly enough, I have read that this syndrome is possible because the brain is processing more information than usual in a brief amount of time).
It was
obvious that my wife had every intention of plowing headlong into the smaller
car, (and no doubt, all the occupants of that vehicle would have been seriously
injured or killed.) Though we were driving a much larger automobile, we also
would not have been spared. You see, we weren’t
wearing our seatbelts.
Suddenly,
I just KNEW what I had to do.
I reached over with my left hand, took
the steering wheel from Jean, and began steering it in a direction that would
take us around the rear of the small vehicle. Amazingly, we cleared the back
bumper of the little car by a foot. Both my wife and I found ourselves leaning
hard in the direction of the driver’s window. (As a result of that event, I can
relate to the G-forces the astronauts endure, as they reach maximum acceleration.)
But the ride was far from over. Our
ungainly old car began a 180 degree slide. Suddenly, the back end was where the
front end was just seconds before. Now we were sliding backwards. As the car
lost momentum, we neared a wooden fence to our left which bordered a house. We
finally slid to a stop in a grassy area, a few feet from the fence, very
shaken, but not a scratch on either of us.
As for the small blue car, it was
nowhere to be found. As we had continued our surrealistic journey, I noticed it
as it turned left into the opposite lanes of the four lane highway. However, I
would have NEVER expected the driver to “keep on keeping on.” The decent thing
to have done, the only thing to have done, would have been to stop and check on
our status. But that is not what happened.
However, just about this time another
car pulled up to the stop sign from whence the former vehicle had come. Having
seen the spectacle falling together around him, I have no doubt that he had
watched the proceedings with awe. The motorist asked if we were okay, and after
we assured him we were, he drove away.
There's an old story Jerry Clower used
to tell about the preacher who drove too fast on mountain roads, and ultimately
drove his car off a cliff. A friend of his happened to be following, pulled
over, and ran down the side of the incline to the wrecked vehicle. As he
reached the bottom the preacher was climbing out the shattered window. The
friend asked, "Preacher, are you okay?" To which the disheveled
minister replied, "Well, yes, thank you, the Lord is riding with me."
Billy Bob smiled, and exclaimed, "Well, you better let him ride with me,
before you kill Him!"
(Perhaps after our near miss, our
angels felt like riding with someone else)! But in all seriousness, I am
grateful for God's provision.
Paradoxically Providential.
Momentarily Miraculous.
As I have previously alluded, both my
wife and I have experienced multiple episodes such as the foregoing one, while
too many of our classmates left us as the result of the first traumatic
incident they had ever encountered.
There is a trite, well-used phrase
which occurs to me here, one which every one of us have heard quoted more than
once in our lives.
“I guess the Lord was finished with him
(or her).”
Well, I don’t know about that.
However, as the result of so many near
misses, I am assured that God still has a work for me to do, and for my wife to
fulfill.
I suppose we ought to get about
finishing that work.
by Wm. McDonald, PhD. Copyright pending
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