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A WONDERFUL LIFE

It is a wonderful life

Irreverent from Rev. magazine
November/December2007

Unless you're a) stranded on Exile Island, b) in a persistent vegetative state, or c) Amish, you'll probably see one of the three hundred showings of It's a Wonderful Life this holiday season. The 1946 film starring Jimmy Stewart, tells the story of George Bailey: a man with lofty dreams who is stuck in the "crummy little town" of Bedford Falls and conscience-bound to run his late father's "penny ante" savings and loan.

It's more than just a sappy, sentimental movie, it's a valuable lesson in ministry. For instance . . .

    I'm shakin' the dust of this crummy little town off my feet and I'm gonna see the world. Italy, Greece, the Parthenon, the Coliseum. Then, I'm comin' back here to go to college and see what they know. And then I'm gonna build things. I'm gonna build airfields, I'm gonna build skyscrapers a hundred stories high, I'm gonna build bridges a mile long. George Bailey

Every pastor worth his or her ordination certificate, dreams of pastoring a mega church with a TV ministry and best-selling book. We have a vision and a ten-year plan.

    I know what I'm gonna do tomorrow and the next day and the next year and the year after that. George Bailey.

But like George Bailey, 99.9 percent of us are stuck in a "crummy little town" with a church attendance of less than 100. (The national average is 124.) And so, we get discouraged, and perhaps despondent.

    A man down on earth needs our help. . . . He discouraged. At exactly 10:45 pm tonight earth time, that man will be thinking seriously of throwing away God's greatest gift. Franklin, a senior angel.

The whole premise of the movie, then, is receiving a heavenly view of just how incredible our impact is on this earth:

    You've been given a great gift, George: a chance to see what the world would be like without you. One man's life touches so many others, when he's not there it leaves an awfully big hole. Clarence Oddbody, Angel Second Class

George discovers that his seemingly insignificant life has saved the lives of hundreds of soldiers when he saved his war-hero brother from drowning as a boy, saved the life of a family (and kept the town druggist out of prison) by discovering poison in a prescription, kept his uncle from losing his mind by keeping him from losing the family business . . . and the list goes on and on.

Oswald Chambers reminds us that "a river reaches places which its source never knows. And Jesus said that, if we have received His fullness, 'rivers of living water' will flow out of us, reaching in blessing even 'to the end of the earth' regardless of how small the visible effects of our lives may appear to be. We have nothing to do with the outflow—'This is the work of God, that you believe. . . .' God rarely allows a person to see how great a blessing he is to others."

Every now and then, we get a glimpse of that great blessing. I recently received an email from a woman who had visited my Web page on suicide:

    Your article [on suicide] saved my life tonight and showed me a path toward hope. I have very little words to say, still in severe pain from the death of my boyfriend six months ago. But I felt a need to say thank you.

And so, my Christmas wish for you this season, is that God will give you a glimpse of the impact you have had on lives here on earth and for eternity: marriages that have been saved because of your counsel, those addicted to vices who have been delivered because of your prayers and support, young men and women who have been called into ministry because of your influence, people who have been "conformed to the image of Christ" because of your messages, lives that have literally been saved because of your prayers, and—most of all—people who now have eternal life because of your influence. Without you, not one of those lives would have been changed!

    You see . . . you really have had a wonderful life. Clarence Oddbody, Angel Second Class

© Copyright 2007 James N. Watkins



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