And I said, ‘what shall I do, Lord?’ And the Lord said to me, ‘Rise, and go into Damascus, and there you will be told all that is appointed for you to do.’ Acts 22:10 ESV
In the 1960’s, one of my favorite songs was the Simon and Garfunkel tune, “Like a Bridge Over Troubled Water.” Their song eerily reminds me of when in 1983 a one-hundred-foot section of a highway bridge over the Mianus River in Connecticut, collapsed at midnight. The first car that come upon it was able to stop in time and the driver jumped out and frantically tried to wave down the other vehicles. Tragically in the dark and confusion of the moment 2 cars and 2 trucks ignored the driver’s warnings and tumbled off into the river. An interstate highway is a road on which we normally feel sure that all is safe, but that night it was deadly.
In all of our lives there are times when we take some roads that we think are right, but in reality, we are driving off a spiritual bridge in the night. Just like Paul we think we know what to do but are radically missing what God has planned for us. Thankfully there are times when God’s grace comes and knocks us to the ground, but we need to pay attention. He has put that roadblock across our path because He sees ahead that the road we are on leads to destruction. God stops us in our tracks, because we have been speeding down life’s highway in the wrong direction. We must remind ourselves that God can never teach us anything, as long as we are sure that we already know all the answers. But when we cry out in astonishment with Paul, “What shall I do?” God is delighted to come and show us what He has had in mind and through Jesus Christ He really does become our “Bridge Over Troubled Water”!
For the younger folks among my readers who have no idea of who Simon and Garfunkel were, I have posted a link to their song.

Pete, this is one of my favorites, too. When it first came out, I was visiting a church, and they played it at the end of the service, and we just listened to presumably the voice of Jesus singing over us. ❤
The tragic story of the bridge in Connecticut is such a good picture of the way we try to warn people of eternal consequences of ignoring God (and us). Tragically, some believers don't warn, because they assume they'll be ignored, they don't want to "bother" or "offend" people, or because they themselves don't want to be bothered. I have used the illustration of a hotel on fire – do I wake up the other guests and inconvenience them, or do I slip out and let them keep sleeping peacefully?
Amen, so true!
A great Biblical lesson Pastor Pete. Simon and Garfunkel was one of the first cassettes I bought as a middle schooler. In my humble opinion they are ageless.
O you had that new fangled technology! I listened on one of those round vinyl disk things with tiny grooves. Great lyrics, beautiful harmonies, unique melodies. Thanks for commenting Beth!
LOL. As children my kids called records the “round black thingy’s.”
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