While making his landmark documentary about World War II, filmmaker Ken
Burns and his colleagues watched thousands of hours of military footage. Scenes
of the devastating Battle of Peleliu often invaded their dreams at night. Burns
told Sacramento Bee reporter Rick Kushman, “You’re listening
to the ghosts and echoes from an almost inexpressible past. If you do that, you
put yourself into the emotional maelstrom.”
There’s a price to becoming involved in the struggles of others, whether
artistically or spiritually. Paul experienced this in his work of sharing the
gospel: “Apart from such external things, there is the daily pressure on me of
concern for all the churches. Who is weak without my being weak? Who is led
into sin without my intense concern?” (2 Cor. 11:28-29 NASB). Oswald Chambers
said we enter this spiritual struggle as we “deliberately identify ourselves
with God’s interests in other people” and “find to our amazement that we have
power to keep wonderfully poised in the center of it all.”
Paul realized that God’s strength is made perfect in our weakness (2
Cor. 12:9). Jesus paid the greatest price to be involved in our world, and He
strengthens us as we share His love with others.