Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see. ~ Hebrews 11:1 +T+
I turn 58 later this month and I can attest to the fact that most of my life I have been “almost good enough” in pretty much most of what I have set out to do. In school, I was almost good enough to be called a good student. My peers probably liked me because I was good for helping with the grading curve with my anemic grades. When I was playing sports, most might very well have described me as almost good enough…..to be good, at least at some of the things I was able to do. In my first career as a farmer, I was almost good enough to be classified as a good farmer. I might have needed more time and more results in my portfolio to get that decided but left after 17 years while still under the direction of my father. In my second career as a salesman, I was almost good enough to be labeled as a successful salesman. Able to make a decent living but never able to get over the hump and be considered an outstanding salesman. And in what I am doing today for a career, I once again suppose I could be in that description of being almost good enough. I have been able to build a little bit from my first year, into recent years, my clientele. On this next one, there might be some that disagree with me, but as a husband and a father, I’m almost a good one. I’m almost good enough to be called a good husband and father. I know I have usually put myself ahead of my family in many things. I should have played games with my kids more and I should put my wife ahead of my own desires but I have rarely done that. So once again I qualify for “almost good enough” and that has become a way to describe me.
What about my faith you might ask. Once again I can honestly say that at one time, maybe even yet today, I was almost good enough. For over 50 years I would likely have been called a good Christian by those around me. That would probably be because I was always going to church and doing things like serving on the church council and teaching vacation Bible class to teenagers. To be sure, I earned that moniker of “Almost Good Enough.” All those things make no difference to salvation. I was almost good enough but there is no grade curve for receiving His grace.
See, the enemy is puffed up; his desires are not upright— but the righteous person will live by his faithfulness ~ Habakkuk 2:4
To be blunt, I needed to be smacked upside the head to finally learn that Salvation is not something that one can be almost good enough to receive. When I looked at the picture of me lying in the street in a pool of blood after getting hit by the hit and run driver while walking home, I was able to finally see that I was lacking in giving all of my trust to Jesus. It was then that I was able to see that I was not in as much control of my life as I thought I was. I had tried to convey the appearance to my peers that I was a good football player, a decent baseball player, an up and coming farmer, a budding superstar salesman. I was nothing. Simply nothing without His grace to embrace.
And without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly seek him. ~ Hebrews 11:6 +T+
Don’t get me wrong, I still have much ground to cover and my faith is in its infancy and it needs to be strengthened each and every day. I am more than good enough at sinning against the Word of God. One of the few things that I can claim to be pretty good at. I must choose to be better and to live more Christ-like each day.
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Dave Christenson
About David Christenson: He is a lifelong resident of South Dakota, grew up on a farm north of Claremont and attended school in Amherst and Britton, graduating from Britton in 1977. David married Gretchen Tisher in 1984. Gretchen is also a graduate of Britton and teaches math and drama at Britton-Hecla high school. David and Gretchen have two children. Zach is an engineer for Continental Ag in Norfolk, Nebraska and his wife Amanda is a nurse. Margo lives in Denver and works as a Marketing & Outreach coordinator for MyLifeLine.org, a cancer support not-for-profit entity. David started a cow/calf operation in the 1980s and farmed on the family farm after his high school graduation until December of 1994 when he accepted a sales position at the John Deere store in Britton. David left the John Deere sales position in March of 2006 and became a licensed crop insurance agent in May of 2006. David also started a rental business in 2010 and remained in the cattle business until January of 2012. David, age 55, has had some extraordinary circumstances in his life. He was run over by a farm tractor before age 6 and had three heart attacks a few months before turning 40. Then he suffered life threatening injuries a few months after turning 50 in a hit and run incident. David was diagnosed with leukemia in 2012 and skin cancer in 2014. David started writing his recovery experiences on Facebook in December of 2009. Over the next four years those Facebook notes became what would become chapters in his book, “Why Are You Here?” which was published in December of 2013.

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