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Living the letters: Colossians...Continued from page 1

Written and compiled by John Blasé

The Navigators

faith. Is it taut, slack, threadbare, or what? How do you think hope plays into the condition of your faith?


READ

 

From Scott’s Last Expedition by Robert Falcon Scott2

 

Monday, January 8

(In November 1910, the vessel Terra Nova left New Zealand carrying a team of explorers led by Robert Falcon Scott. Scott’s goal was to be the first man to reach the South Pole. He kept a detailed journal until March 29, 1912, when the last of the team was lost in a blizzard.) It is quite impossible to speak too highly of my companions. Each fulfills his office to the party; Wilson, first as doctor, ever on the lookout to alleviate the small pains and troubles incidental to the work; now as cook, quick, careful and dexterous, ever thinking of some fresh expedient to help the camp life; tough as steel on the traces, never wavering from start to finish.

 

Evans, a giant worker with a really remarkable headpiece. It is only now I realize how much has been due to him. Our ski shoes and crampons have been absolutely indispensable, and if the original ideas were not his, the details of manufacture and design

and the good workmanship are his alone. . . .

 

Little Bowers remains a marvel — he is thoroughly enjoying himself. I leave all the provision arrangement in his hands, and at all times he knows exactly how we stand, or how each returning party should fare. . . . Nothing comes amiss to him, and no work

is too hard. It is a difficulty to get him into the tent; he seems quite oblivious of the cold, and he lies coiled in his bag writing and working out sights long after the others are asleep.

 

Of these three it is a matter for thought and congratulation that each is specially suited for his own work, but would not be capable of doing that of the others as well as it is done. Each is invaluable.

THINK

 

“I took all this in and thought it through, inside and out.” (Ecclesiastes 9:1)

 

• In Colossians 1:1, Paul says that he’s on a “special assignment.” Scott was on an expedition to the South Pole. Can you see any benefit to viewing the life of faith in these kinds of terms? Why or why not?

 

• A little more than two months after he wrote this journal entry, Scott and a few remaining men froze to death in a brutal blizzard. Yet his writing seems to describe vigor, vitality, and oblivion to the cold. How do you account for this?

 

• Have you ever experienced anything like this — an extreme sturdiness in the face of insurmountable odds? This doesn’t have to be a polar expedition. It might be as mundane as surviving the holidays with your family.

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