Going Deeper

We can be wrong

 Men can be irrational creatures, to say the least. One of the more bizarre examples of weird life on planet male is our deep reluctance to believe what the petrol gauge on our car is desperately trying to tell us. Despite the ominous sight of the white needle hovering just above the ‘E’, the yellow flashing light in the shape of a petrol can, and (in the case of some higher end European luxury cars) the terrifying voice of a German woman booming the news through our car stereo that we are getting low on fuel, somehow we take this as a personal challenge and do everything we can to get home without taking the two or three minutes needed to do the obvious – and fill up with fuel. So it was on a family holiday with friends. We were in the West Country, and were about to venture onto Dartmoor, and despite the fact that we were moving into foggy, treacherous territory where the Hound of the Baskervilles roams free, I decided to ignore the fact that we had only a quarter of a tank left.

But that was my first mistake of the day – there would in fact be a trinity of errors. The second error came, when, unsure about our route once we were actually on the moor, I took a turning that I felt convinced was right (because I have an intuitive sense of direction, not), and that took us down what felt like a waterlogged pot-holed farm track, which was probably because it was actually a waterlogged pot-hold farm truck. We then found ourselves in an area which had sported lots of red flags that fluttered bravely along the roadside. We marvelled at how lovely it was that the locals got together for frequent fetes and carnivals, and then realised that we were slap bang in the middle of an army firing range. My confidence that we were on the correct road had led us into a place where we could easy end up in the sights of a goggle wearing military man in a tank; a man with a lifelong ambition to fire an armour piercing shell at a moving target. Like us.

And so now, we were lost on the moors, with the petrol gauge on E, praying that the Lord would miraculously provide us with a large petrol station (and preferably that served cappuccinos) in the middle of a potential war zone. But there was yet more to come.

We finally made our way back to civilisation (and filled up with petrol), and then noticed a house for sale. We stopped and eagerly jumped out of the car, and wandered up to the For Sale sign, which also contained some leaflets that showed the price. Thinking of myself now as an expert in the UK housing market, I turned to my friend and made a solemn declaration of absolute certainty. ‘Mark my words, this house will never, ever sell. It’s just priced way out of the market. These sellers are crazy’.

At that exact and precise moment, a car drew up that carried an estate agents sticker on the driver’s door. A suited man hopped out and walked swiftly over to the ‘For Sale’ sign, and tacked a huge ‘Sold’ sign over it as I looked on haplessly.

It was then that I realised once again a truth that is unpalatable to most of us, and quite unthinkable to some: and that is, that we can be wrong.

Perhaps we get used to the feeling that we are in the right – the fact that we hold a Bible in our hands, which we rightly insist is the inspired word of God, gives us a sense of being in the know. But then we rush to the conclusion that our choice of music, our understanding of the bible, our brand of church, and our entire worldview on life – that we are basically in the right, most, if not all of the time. And while we insist on being experts, our churches implode, our marriages erode, and others around us take a vow of silence rather than take us on.

Take notice of the fuel gauge. Read the map. Don’t jump to conclusions about property prices. In short, let’s know this, and it might just prevent us from getting shelled by a tank: we might be wrong.

 

Privacy Notice | Powered by Church Edit