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							 I take 
							care of my wife’s vehicle fuel 99% of the time. I 
							bring two important acts of service to her as she 
							sees it: I kill bugs and I keep her car gassed up. 
							(Whatever it takes to keep her working! LOL) I’m 
							happy to do it; I only ask her to tell me when she’s 
							down to a quarter tank. But that must be way too 
							boring! As we all know, people are different; 
							especially the way they treat a fuel tank on a 
							vehicle. Some are extra cautious and as soon as that 
							tank is half empty, they seek to fill it up. These 
							are the kinds of people with a bomb shelter in the 
							backyard. Me, I like to fill up when the tank is at 
							the quarter mark. (My dad taught me that keeps the 
							fuel pump lubricated.) Sure, why not! But some are 
							adventurers. You push it down to the bottom. “Let’s 
							see how far we can go on empty!” You like to push it 
							till you get caught or you barely make it to the gas 
							station. You love the rush. That is the usual state 
							of my wife’s car. The idiot light is not only on but 
							is quickly dimming from it’s pending death due to 
							fuel starvation. Bonnie likes to bet on if I can 
							make it to the gas station or not. Which brings us 
							to our October Sermon Series titled, “Running on 
							Empty.” This is really a series about hope. | 
            
			 
			Hope to the soul is like fuel to the tank. Keeping 
			our tank full isn’t easy these days. Everyone will, from time to 
			time, experience something that is draining our tanks. We all have 
			an emotional tank. We have a spiritual tank. We have a confidence 
			tank, a relationship tank, and a strength and vitality tank. Any 
			good driver knows we need to be intentional about checking our gas 
			gauge and keeping our tank full so we don’t become stranded and 
			alone and empty. But how does one keep a full joy tank these days 
			when so many troubles are contributing to our emptiness? 
			Unfortunately, many are fed up, burned out, weary, mad, strained, 
			stressed, and discouraged. What do we do when life becomes too busy, 
			too troublesome, too painful, too irritating, too crazy? What do we 
			do when our tanks are dangerously low? Ignore it? Try harder? Fill 
			our lives with things we know will fail? No. There is a better way. 
			Join us in October as we look at “Running on Empty!” 
 Ron Otto, Preaching Minister at Lincoln Christian Church
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