Below is a blog post I wrote for the Greensboro Fellows program (aside from some made up words not making it to the official copy). Check out some of the other things we have been up to this year http://www.greensborofellows.com/#!following-the-fellows/c43a
This past week The Greensboro Fellows, as well as our honorary members Elspeth Glasgow and Chris and Jessie Meriwether, traveled to Baltimore Maryland. I have been looking forward to this trip since before I joined the program because we were going to see Ravi Zacharias. Ravi (we are first-name close, check the picture), is a Christian speaker I have queued up on my podcast app to give myself an intellectual mind blown't experience. However, my big take away from the trip was not anything Ravi said, but the opportunities seized in transit.
This past week The Greensboro Fellows, as well as our honorary members Elspeth Glasgow and Chris and Jessie Meriwether, traveled to Baltimore Maryland. I have been looking forward to this trip since before I joined the program because we were going to see Ravi Zacharias. Ravi (we are first-name close, check the picture), is a Christian speaker I have queued up on my podcast app to give myself an intellectual mind blown't experience. However, my big take away from the trip was not anything Ravi said, but the opportunities seized in transit.
Our taste of nomadic
lifestyle had me resonating with a biblical verse in a new way. 1 Peter 2:11a: "Dear friends, I urge you, as foreigners..."
By design we are not meant to be stagnant in any
sense of the word. I think it is easy in the hustle and bustle
of routine to hinder God's "little" blessings, or at least not notice
them. This adventure to Maryland was not weighed down with such monotony. We made memories with
former strangers, had opportunities to
pray for previously unknown siblings in the kingdom and had
doors open by opening doors with no expectation of repayment. All these
beautiful interactions happened in literal transition as we were
making our way to another location. If we would have been consumed about
reaching our destination with efficiency as the highest priority, I
would say this trip would have been one big missed opportunity after the
next. In such an isolated incident as a road trip, it could be
enticing to believe this type of intentionality is not intended to be a
daily practice. In fact, I believe it would be advantageous to our
faith if we, as a body of believers, made it habitual to be more concerned with
people than our agendas.
I’ll end with just one story of how this willingness
to communicate rather than being blinded with the need to do what’s
next, played out in Baltimore, John Hopkins’ campus to be more precise.
Before I do, I want to acknowledge I was pretty vague in my description
of blessings we encountered, but it was purposeful. I do not want to
box in what this perspective change will bring you or, even worse,
the belief you are entitled to a
like experience when you encounter a masterpiece of God's you have
not met before. With that said it's good to share small ways you have been
encouraged.
We were rushing to the building where Ravi was speaking, and
a woman asked if we were heading that way and if she could follow us.
Waving her and her two campaigns on, we continued on
as a group. Fighting the urge to rush to the front of the group to
get to the building a split second sooner than the others, I started talking to
the most recent members of our entourage. It turns out that they
work for Ravi and two of them were going to be on stage with him
to address the Q&A portion of the talk. Ruth, the
woman who first inquired about our destination, handed Andrew and me
a business card, telling us to contact her and she will try to send
us a book or something. To be clear this is not a “treat everyone nice
because there is a chance they are a connection to someone
famous” plea, the other like stories on the trip involved average Joes in
the world’s eyes, but we got a glimpse into the masterpiece God has
for them through our interaction. This is “let’s be a people that
truly believe we have the same Father and big brother in Christ, and treat them
like so, valuing them over our to-do list.”
![]() |
Ravi |