.
It is
the
eleventh
hour.
My
yellow
pad is
covered
with
false
starts
and
vain
ramblings
— all
fallen
short
because
they
lacked
integrity.
The
problem?
Right
now
integrity
is
calling
me to
face
the
ugliness
and
deceitfulness
of my
heart
and I
would
rather
write
around
it,
not at
it.
Better
yet,
I'd
like
to
wait
until
tomorrow;
then
perhaps
these
painful
insights
will
have
blown
over.
But I
can't
wait.
There
is no
tomorrow
for
this:
it's
the
eleventh
hour .
. .
for
many
things.
My
insurance
policy
is a
telling
example.
I've
committed
myself
to
provide
for
and to
protect
my
wife,
but I
let my
life
insurance
policy
lapse
for
nine
months
and
only
reinstated
it at
the
last
minute
because
I was
about
to
step
onto a
plane
headed
for
South
Africa.
If it
had
not
been
for
the
trip
and
the
reality
of
danger,
I
would
have
let
the
policy
go
indefinitely
(unknown
to my
wife),
but I
had to
do
something.
It was
the
eleventh
hour .
. . as
it is
for
many
important
things.
It is
the
eleventh
hour
for my
marriage
. . .
I have
also
promised
to
nourish
and
cherish
my
wife,
but
I'm so
busy
with
myself
that I
don't
even
notice
her or
her
needs.
When
we
talk,
I'm
the
center
of
attention.
She
gladly
and
selflessly
gives
me
that
attention.
She
lavishes
encouragement
upon
me
again
and
again,
only
to
watch
me
walk
through
yet
another
day of
compromise,
another
day of
not
following
through,
another
day of
stopping
short
of
what I
really
want
to do
and be
in my
life.
It is
the
eleventh
hour
for my
pride
. . .
I
don't
really
want
to do
this.
No,
not
here.
Is
this
book
an
appropriate
place
to
unravel
my
pride?
I ask.
In
front
of all
these
people?
I add.
"Is
there
a more
appropriate
place
somewhere
else?"
comes
the
reply.
So
this
is the
beginning
of
integrity.
Am I
to be
honest
only
when
it's
pleasant?
I
can't
wait
for a
less
humiliating
time
to
face
this
question,
because
there
is no
time
to
spare.
It is
the
eleventh
hour
for my
Christian
faith
. . .
A
faith
that
has
been
so
comfortable,
so
safe,
yet so
abstract
for so
long.
Now
when
it has
to
mean
something,
will
it
stand
the
test?
The
largest
responsibilities
in my
relationship
with
God
are
all
His:
His
grace,
His
love,
His
forgiveness,
His
faithfulness,
and
His
mercy
—
without
these,
it
would
be
impossible
for me
to
know
Him.
But
many
duties
are
also
mine:
my
faithfulness,
my
whole-hearted
love,
my
obedience,
my
honesty,
my
confession,
my
repentance.
No
one,
not
even
He,
can do
them
for
me. I
have
treaded
upon
His
grace,
used
it as
an
excuse
for
laziness,
and I
have
taken
my
responsibilities
lightly.
Expecting
God to
make
up the
difference,
I have
only
gone
halfway.
I've
counted
on Him
to
bail
me out
—
after
all,
someone's
always
done
it for
me
before.
But in
spite
of His
great
patience,
even
He
must
be
growing
tired.
I also
realize,
all
too
clearly,
grace
and
mercy
are
for
those
who
have
tried
and
failed.
Well,
I have
failed,
all
right,
but
sometimes
I
wonder
if
I've
ever
really
tried.
If I
haven't
tried,
then I
haven't
earned
the
right
to
fail.
Instead,
I've
qualified
for
grace
with
cheap
failure.
Never
intending
to do
anything
about
my
problem,
I have
run to
grace
as a
disobedient
son
runs
to his
mother,
to be
consoled
with a
kind,
"There,
there.
Everything
is
going
to be
all
right."
I've
also
twisted
my
theology
to
incorporate
my
selfishness.
Knowing
that
failure
and
sin
lead
to
grace
and
forgiveness,
I have
not
fought,
aware
that
grace
will
be
there
to
cover
me
over,
I have
compromised
again
and
again.
I'm
hardly
a
Jacob.
I
haven't
wrestled
with
any
angels
until
they
would
bless
me,
and I
feel
my
blessings
are
thinning
out.
It is
the
eleventh
hour
for my
faith.
When I
boarded
the
plane
for
South
Africa,
it was
the
eleventh
hour
for my
heart.
Traveling
to a
land
that
faces
its
own
eleventh
hour,
I did
not
want
to be
a pawn
of
apartheid.
I did
not
desire
to
sing
nice
songs
about
Jesus
while
ignoring
a
political
system
that
oppresses
and
dehumanizes
men
and
women
who
have
been
created
in
God's
image.
I was
worried
that
television
cameras
might
show
me
smiling
with
blacks
while
the
government
smiled
down
on the
oppressed
and
told
the
world,
"See.
There's
no
problem
here.
Look
how
happy
the
blacks
and
whites
are
together."
I
would
have
dishonored
and
even
degraded
the
Gospel
by
being
more
impressed
with
myself
on
national
television
than
with
the
heart
of the
God
who
sent
Christ
to
preach
good
news
to the
poor,
proclaim
freedom
for
the
prisoners,
recovery
of
sight
to the
blind,
and
release
to the
oppressed.
It's
the
eleventh
hour
and
the
clock
is
ticking.
Time
is
never
on
hold.
Time
is
almost
up.
It's
time
to
act.
John
Fischer
from
his
book,
"Real
Christians
Don't
Dance"
http://www.fischtank.com/
All
rights
reserved.
Reproduced
with
permission
of
author