Monday, December 10, 2007

The Call

To whom are left the rousing soliloquies?
That word that stirs the heart, challenges the spirit?
To whom the sword? To whom the final stand-off?

Those at the battlefront.

Our lot - our chosen lot is not to stand aside and let others fight
for our freedom, no. Our lot - our chosen lot is not to watch while others
- bolder than ourselves, with greater conviction, more reckless of their
own lives, more envisioned, more consumed with purpose - our lot is not
to watch these charge the battle lines.

It is for us to be among them.

A more frightening yet inspiring vision I know not of. Our place is to storm
the castle, lay siege to the strongholds, give our every last breath, our every
last strength, ourselves to the cause. To say, " I died today - but Christ lives
in me."

The front-line men. The ones who stood when others ran. The ones who fought
when surrender called. The broken front-liners who bore the first onslaught,
plunged into the sea of the enemy - to swarm, to crush, to tear down, to destroy,
to smite the enemies' weapons with a single blow. Not by power and not by might
but by His Spirit.

To crush the enemy. To crush the enemy!

Our lot, nay - no more. But our call, our destiny.
Mine. Yours. Ours.
For we are front-liners.
The baton is in our hands.
Nay yet again...
for it is a torch.

2 comments:

Jameson Gadzirai said...

"Ha!
'Swounds, I should take it, for it cannot be
But I am pigeon-livered and lack gall
To make oppression bitter, ...."

Many a time we find ourselves like Hamlet, pigeon livered and lacking gall to seize the moment, make the call certain...

Nice one... just wondering... when does a call cease to be one, when we do accept it, or when we continue to hear its bells toll, while inside we toss and turn on whether to accept or not

Chiratidzo Chiweshe said...

Interesting question. when does a call cease to be a call? I would put to you another question: does a call cease to be simply because for one reason or another, we no longer hear it?