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			 Tonight 
			I followed a group of men as we made our way out past the east side 
			of campus, to some trucks and dumpsters. At the time I was walking, 
			I didn’t know where we were going or what we would find. As I got 
			there, I saw guys pulling wood pallets out of the dumpsters, peeling 
			off the plastic and bindings and tossing them to the ground where 
			they were then loaded on trucks. Cardboard boxes soon followed, and 
			clothes, and stuffed animals. “Will it burn?” We loaded the trucks, 
			threw pallets on top, carried the trash by the armfuls to a fire 
			that was already started.         
			
			 
 Pallets were added to the fire, then cardboard boxes, then clothes, 
			then more pallets, and the bonfire was banked higher and higher, the 
			heat emanating from it tremendous as we stood twenty feet away, then 
			thirty, then forty.
 
 “We’re in Lincoln,” somebody said. “A little dot on the map. We want 
			the planes to see this.” Raw power. Pure energy. Powerful, untamed, 
			visible, with the potential to break out uncontrolled. But what I 
			think this guy was saying was, “I want to leave a mark. I want to 
			make a difference. I want to do something big, even if it’s in 
			Lincoln, Illinois.”
 
 As I looked into the flames, and saw dancing orange and yellow 
			flames, felt the heat singe my face and hands, and then looked 
			around the fire at the scared, excited, invincible faces, I tried to 
			figure out what was going on. Here was energy and power in the fire. 
			Here was energy and power and the spirit of invincibility and 
			something reckless in the faces of the men around me. Part of me was 
			afraid of the potential force for destruction. Part of me wanted to 
			listen for something bigger.
 
 
            
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            In ancient cultures fire was used for cooking, for 
			light, for religious ceremonies and sacrifices. People passed 
			through the fire, whether it was walking on hot coals like some 
			cultures still practice, or a metaphor for human sacrifice. There 
			was something destructive, primal, and representative of worship and 
			spiritual practice in the fire. 
            Maybe it’s no surprise that God first appeared to 
			Moses as a fire that could not be consumed on the mountain. It 
			grabbed his attention, drew him in. I don’t know how long it took 
			him to realize that the bush wasn’t burning, but he was captivated. 
			God had mesmerized him, lured him in to show him what He was up to.
 
  
 At times God used fire to light the way for the Hebrews as they were 
			wandering in the desert places or running from the Egyptians. God’s 
			fire consumed Sodom and Gomorrah, Nadab and Abihu, and consumed 
			Elijah’s offering as he was competing against the prophets of Baal. 
			Fire is a powerful, dangerous, and awe-inspiring thing. The same 
			words could be used to describe God.
 
 In Matthew, John talks about Jesus baptizing with the Holy Spirit 
			and with fire. In Acts, the Holy Spirit came on Jesus’ followers as 
			tongues of fire, the writer of Hebrews says that God is a consuming 
			fire, and Paul says not to quench the fire of the Spirit.
 
 In us is potential for great fire. I saw it tonight, and wondered 
			which way the fires would burn. Would we destroy, or is there 
			something in us that wants to be part of something big, powerful, 
			unpredictable, a fire that cannot be quenched, a following the ways 
			of God in such a way that will leave a mark, that will burn into our 
			hearts and minds and hands and feet, that will be permanent. Fire 
			can be quenched, it can destroy, it can do terrible things, but my 
			prayer is that this year will ignite a God fire in us, that will 
			leave its mark on us, consume us, mesmerize us. And we will never be 
			the same.
 
              
              [Cliff 
				Wheeler - LCC Faculty] 
              
               
              
              
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