Lifting Power
Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you (1 Peter 5:7, NIV).
An Amazing Fact: Among the fastest of all insects, dragonflies have been clocked at more than 25 miles per hour. Fossils also tell us that before the flood, some dragonflies had wingspans of about 30 inches. And they’re strong too! About half of their body mass is devoted to flight muscles, and they have the ability to lift more than twice their bodyweight…a feat that no manmade aircraft has ever come near.
Dragonflies can also take off backwards, accelerate quickly, and then stop in an instant. They can also execute an un-banked turn as if on a pivot, summersault in the heat of combat, and fly virtually any maneuver using nearly an endless combination of four wings.
Not only can the dragonfly out maneuver anything else with wings, it can also see better too! Its wrap-around compound eyes contain more than 30,000 lenses, providing a 360-degree field of view. In fact, a dragonfly can see a gnat three feet away, dart from his nest, seize and devour the prey, and then return to its perch in about one second. The U.S. Air Force has even studied the amazing flight versatility of dragonflies in wind tunnels, hoping to uncover the secret of incredible aerodynamic abilities.
The Bible tells us that God can lift us up and care for us under any circumstances. “Humble yourselves, therefore, under God’s mighty hand, that He may lift you up in due time” (1 Peter 5:6 NIV). There is no situation too difficult, no trial too big, no problem too complex, that the Lord cannot carry you through it. God’s angels surpass in strength and skill anything you can imagine—including dragonflies. They quickly accelerate at our call and God’s command to pick us up.
But there is a secret to being lifted up. It is to first bow down in humility. Unless we acknowledge our helplessness, we cannot be open to receive incredible help that the Lord is ready to provide.
*****
Personally, I do not always do well in the humility department. I forget to say thank You and even think of myself as “better than.” I truthfully don’t mean to do it but it comes so naturally. I have to fight against that mindset. That is, of course, until I run into trouble and then my earnest pleas for help are offered up quickly. I can get really humble in a hurry! Wouldn’t it be nice if we were that way more often?
Heavenly Father, let us come before You all the time with humble hearts—not just when we are afraid or in trouble. AMEN.
Photograph Michael Johnston