Too bad they can't get all that on the sign, because that's what I was actually seeing when I saw the words "Detour Ahead." I knew about the detour, but I had let myself get distracted and autopilot had kicked in.
In early August, construction crews tore out a bridge at Davis Creek. It's not a very big bridge. I'm not sure that it is two car lengths across. Its absence has reminded me of that saying, "you don't know what you've got until it's gone." Two months later, we are still left with this gaping hole and no signs of a new bridge being installed. The newspaper recently ran an article about the lack of action on the new bridge and how it is adversely affecting local businesses. This little hole is causing big problems.
Some people may not have even realized it was a bridge before it was removed. Our rural roads have all kinds of these little bridges that seamlessly go along with the roadway. On our road there are two little one-lane bridges. If either of them had to be taken out, it would present a major problem. We would be up a creek . . . literally. Sure, there is a back way off our hill. It is a narrow gravel road that is nearly impossible to travel in the winter. And did I mention that you have to drive through the creek before you come back on the main road? I am grateful for those one-lane bridges. If you kept track, you might be surprised by how many times you cross a bridge in the course of a day around here.
Bridges are important structures. They help us get over something. They connect us with something or someplace. They transition us from one place to another. One day when someone was whining about something that had happened (I'm sure it wasn't me, lol), my husband looked up and said, "Oh just build a bridge and get over it already!" What great advice. Sometimes we get hung up on little things that happen or something that was said and we can't move on. For example, if someone has hurt your feelings you could mope around and cry and tell everyone what a terrible person they are. You could dwell on it for days and let it hold you back from enjoying yourself or getting things accomplished. Or you could forgive them and get over it and get on with your life. Why would you sink into the pit when you could sail across it?
John 14:6
Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.
There are a lot of bridges we can build through love, forgiveness, caring, truth, fidelity, trustworthiness, fairness, honest communication, etc. Our relationships with each other can be tricky. It takes work and it takes commitment. We have to be willing to build bridges, not tear them down. However, there is one pit we all have to cross over and we can't do it by our own means.
When I was checking out that hole where the Davis Creek bridge used to be, I thought about how ugly and awful it looked. As ugly as it was, I thought, it didn't even touch how ugly and awful the pit of Hell must look. Right now I am here on this earth, but one day my journey will end and I will cross over into Heaven. If I am going to cross over the pit of Hell, I am going to need a safe, secure, strong bridge. The bridge's name is Jesus.
Some people might look at a gaping hole between them and Heaven and think, "I'm fast and strong. I can just get a good run at it and I'll be able to jump across." These are the people who think they can make it in by their own strength and abilities. Others will look at the chasm between them and God and say, "I am a good person. I am nice to people and I help others whenever I can." These are the people who think they can get to Heaven through their works. (Ephesians 2:8-9 For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith-and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God- not by works, so that no one can boast.) Still others will stand around bewildered, wondering why no one ever told them there would be a bridge to cross. But Jesus said that we know the way and that He was the way.
Matthew 7:13-14
"Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.
Most people do believe that there is life after death. Most of them even acknowledge that God exists. Unfortunately, a large percentage of those people have not taken the time to get to know Him. They are on that broad road and they need to turn around (repent) before they go through the wrong gate and end up in the pit of Hell.
Don't go down that road! The bridge is out!
The only way to the Father is through the Son. You have to accept Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior of your life. You can't do it in your own strength. You can't do it in your own good deeds. You will be saved when you repent and you acknowledge Jesus. It is by the grace of God and His grace is sufficient.
"The Message" quotes Matthew 7:13-14 this way: "Don't look for shortcuts to God. The market is flooded with surefire, easygoing formulas for a successful life that can be practiced in your spare time. Don't fall for that stuff, even though crowds of people do. The way to life-to God!-is vigorous and requires total attention."
If I had ignored the warning signs and the orange cones on the road that day, I would have driven my car into the hole where the bridge used to be. My car would have been totaled and I might have been killed. That would have been pretty stupid, right? All I had to do was turn around and get back on the right road and I reached my destination safely. So, why would a person, who has seen and the heard the warnings, continue on a road to Hell? Their life will be totaled and it will be lost. That would be pretty stupid, right? It's never too late to stop and turn around. Some critics of God complain about that small gate and narrow road being too small and narrow. What they don't realize is that it is always open to anyone and everyone who chooses it.
I am thankful that I have a Savior to bridge the gap for me - who has made the way for me to spend eternity with Him and with the Father. I am not going across because I am strong and I am good person and I am perfect, because I am not. I am going across because I can admit that I am a sinner and I need the blood of Jesus Christ to wash away my sin.
When I cross that bridge, I am afraid that if I look down I will see the faces of friends and loved ones who chose the wrong road. I want to see all my family and friends in Heaven for eternity. To those of you who have accepted Christ, I ask that you please keep praying for the salvation of others. If you don't know Jesus and don't understand God's plan of salvation, I hope that you will ask Him to reveal Himself to you. I hope that you will get to know Him and that you will invite Him to be your Savior. I hope that when your "bridge day" comes, you will be on the right road and that you will "get over it" and spend your everlasting life with Him.