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“Now It’s YOUR Turn!”
Comments to the Seniors
It’s been a stormy day hasn’t it! From our tornado dash into the
Krober room early this morning, to our sloshing here across the river tonight, the
winds and the water have challenged us. I thank you for inviting me to say a few words
to you here. I know the major purpose tonight is for you to celebrate a great accomplishment
and to enjoy one another’s company. So I will try not to abuse
the privilege of these few moments.
I’d like to leave you with the thought tonight that “Now it’s Your
Turn.” In the summer of 1971, the summer I graduated from college, I spent 6 weeks
in Air Force training camp at Pease Air Force Base in New Hampshire. Most of the
time was spent on classroom instruction and physical training, but though
few of us would ever go on to be pilots it would not have been the Air
Force without some orientation flights. So we enjoyed flights on everything from huge prop
and jet powered cargo planes to small scout planes. But the best one ride was in a T-33 jet
trainer; a small fast two seater. The Air National Guard pilot giving me the flight loved
scaring the pants off these neophyte airforce recruits. We climbed to 8000 feet, it seemed
straight up. By now, over the Atlantic Ocean, he explained how the “stick”
worked. “Push it left and the plane banks left. Push it right and the plane banks right.
Pull it back and it climbs, push it forward and it dives.” Easy! The next thing I knew
he pushed it left and held it. We corkscrewed through the sky at 400mph while my eyeballs
swirled in their sockets. Then almost immediately he pulled it back hard and held it. We aimed
for the sun, looped the loop and left my rear end somewhere a few thousand feet behind (sic!).
In my helmet I heard, “Now it’s Your Turn!” Riiiiigghtttt!” He was
serious. I nudged the stick left gingerly. He said, “No push it hard!”…and
jammed it into my left thigh. I held on and my eyeballs swirled again. Then I drew the stick back
hard and we looped. “Now both at the same time he said!” Emboldened by his
confidence and my extensive flying experience of the previous 2 minutes, I pulled back hard,
pushed left hard and wonder of wonders, we looped and rolled all at once!” What a
thrill…what a wonder…what power! Then I got sick!
To you seniors, Greenville College class of 2003, many of you my good friends,
I’d like to say, “Now it’s Your Turn.” And that means two things
I’d like leave with you tonight. First, be sure to take the initiative.
In the words of that one you’ve heard me quote often, Oswald Chambers, “We
re in danger of forgetting that we cannot do what God does, and that God will not do what we
can do. We cannot save nor sanctify ourselves—God does that. But God will not give us good
habits or character, and He will not force us to walk correctly before Him.
We have to do all that ourselves…..No one is born either naturally or
supernaturally with character; it must be developed. Nor are we born with habits—we have
to form godly habits…” We have tried over the past years to show
you examples, to demonstrate from our lives; often I am afraid quite
imperfectly. But now it’s your turn. You must take the initiative,
make new beginnings, self-start yourself. When God speaks to your heart, be sure to
act on it immediately. Don’t hesitate, don’t reconsider so long you lose your
nerve, act! Make your decision to follow Him an irrevocable one. No
half-hearted measures will do. Nudging the “stick” of your life will not bring real
discipleship. The character and the service you have heard me speak of so often do not arise
without habits of attitude and behavior. And those attitudes do not come from half-hearted
measures someone else does for us….not even God Himself. Take the initiative to
form those habits in yourself. You’ve begun under direction here. Now it’s your
turn!
Second, don’t forget that the real test of character is not in the flashy
moments, but in drudgery. As I have begun to take flying lessons myself, I have
quickly discovered that it is really all about lengthy periods of boredom punctuated by
brief moments of sheer terror. Puttering along forever it seems to Litchfield at 80mph,
but then watching your life pass before your eyes as you slip a crosswind onto runway 18
at Greenville International Airport. Taking your turn in life only works as you have
concentrated patiently and persistently on forming good habits in the moments of drudgery,
so that in those moments of crisis you do what is needed by reflex. As Chambers puts it,
“The greatest hindrance to our spiritual life is that we will only look for big
things to do. We all have those times when there are no flashes of light
and no apparent thrill to life, where we experience nothing but the daily
routine with its common everyday tasks. The routine of life is actually
God’s way of saving us between our times of great inspiration which
come from Him. Don’t always expect God to give you His thrilling
moments, but learn to live in those common times of the drudgery of life by
the power of God…. If I will do my duty, not for duty’s sake
but because I believe God is engineering my circumstances, then at the very
point of my obedience all of the magnificent grace of God is mine through
the glorious atonement by the Cross of Christ.
I’d like to leave you with a wonderful passage from 2 Peter. Like me with you tonight,
Peter is not sure how long he will have with the dear people to whom he writes. But his love
and concern for them is evident in his words. Please take these words as from my heart and
from Ellen’s heart, and from the hearts of your teachers at Greenville College. (Reading
from the Message paraphrase)
2Grace and peace to you many times over as you deepen in
your experience with God and Jesus, our Master.
3Everything that goes into a life of pleasing God has been
miraculously given to us by getting to know, personally and intimately, the
One who invited us to God. The best invitation we ever received!
4We were also given absolutely terrific promises to pass on to you--your
tickets to participation in the life of God after you turned your back on a
world corrupted by lust.
5So don't lose a minute in building on what you've been given, complementing
your basic faith with good character, spiritual understanding,
6alert discipline, passionate patience,
reverent wonder,
7warm friendliness, and generous love, each dimension fitting into and developing
the others.
8With these qualities active and growing in your lives, no grass will grow under your
feet, no day will pass without its reward as you mature in your experience
of our Master Jesus.
9Without these qualities you can't see
what's right before you, oblivious that your old sinful life has been wiped
off the books.
10So, friends, [Greenville Seniors] confirm God's
invitation to you, his choice of you. Don't put it off; do it now. Do this, and you'll
have your life on a firm footing,
11the streets paved and the way wide open into the eternal kingdom of our Master
and Savior, Jesus Christ.
12Because the stakes are so high, even though you're up-to-date
on all this truth and practice it inside and out, I'm not going to let up
for a minute in calling you to attention before it.
13This is the post to which I've been assigned--keeping you alert with frequent
reminders--and I'm sticking to it as long as I live [you are on
campus].
14I know that I'm to die soon; [that you will graduate soon]
the Master has made that quite clear to me.
15And so I am especially eager that you have all this down in black and white so that
after I die, [you leave] you'll have it for ready reference.
16We weren't, you know, just wishing on a star when we laid the facts out before
you regarding the powerful return of our Master, Jesus Christ. We were there for the preview!
We saw it with our own eyes:
Seniors, I want you to know that like Peter, I too can stand before you testifying to the marvelous
grace of the risen Jesus who is my personal Savior and Lord. He walks with me and talks with
and tells me I am His own. I pray you will know that same intimacy in your relationship with
him. Now it’s your Turn!
Dr. Jim Mannoia
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