Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Submission to incompetence

The Union Army conjured up a masterful strategy to inflict a serious blow on the Confederate soldiers at Petersburg, VA. The idea was to tunnel into the Confederate defensive trench system and detonate a huge quantity of explosive. This would expose the trenches and allow the soldiers to override the confederates.

A five-hundred foot tunnel was dug and the explosives detonated, producing a hole of 135 feet across. A brigade of troops was sent into the crater to flush out any soldiers. But the troops weren’t briefed, so they milled around at the bottom of the hole waiting for orders. The orders never came, because the man in charge of this part of the operation, General James Ledlie was in his tent, drunk. He had been selected by General Ambrose Burnside to lead this operation -- by a cast of lots.

No ladders were provided to the soldiers to climb out of the trench and fan into the trenches. Sure enough, the Confederate soldiers regrouped and found easy targets. 5,300 Union soldiers were killed or wounded at the bottom of that crater.

What was a great plan was destroyed in the execution. The generals didn’t see the plan through to the troops. It looked great on paper, but they weren’t given the full picture or the tools.
General James Ledlie

You are probably formulating how this applies to your life – perhaps your workplace. As soldiers, we are often left to the enemy and have no choice. We weren’t told the plan and we yet we have to suffer the consequences.

How does the Red Letter Believer react when others are sending us to what seems destructive? Power is greatly abused in our fallen world. We are to submit to our authorities, and yet we are to be wise. We have been given insight into a whole world of understanding. Do we sit on our hands in blind obedience? Where is the balance? What do you think?


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3 comments so far - add yours here:

Lisa said...

Hey,

I couldn't help but think of Psalm 57 when I read this...

http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=psalm%2057&version=31

6 They spread a net for my feet—
I was bowed down in distress.
They dug a pit in my path—
but they have fallen into it themselves.
Selah

Glynn said...

It's a tough situation that I've found myself in before. It takes a lot of discernment and prayer. A lot. You struggle with the authority God's placed over you, and you look for what He's trying to teach you. But you pray. And pray some more. Perhaps that's what it's about - submission to Him.

It doesn't help that this is one area -- authority -- where I've always struggled. I guess He knows that.

Bradley J. Moore said...

What a gruesome story. It reminded me of the whistle-blower stories with Enron and even with Bernie Madoff (there was one guy who kept insisting that something was wrong), These few people stood up for what was right, at their own career risk, while the rest of the employees were walking right down into the crater. Interestingly, the whistle-blower woman (forgetting her name) from Enron is a Christian and often speaks about her experience.

Luckily for me, I work in a company that places high value on moral and ethics. But that does not mean we are not constantly running into issues that are gray and we have long discussions over what might be "the right thing to do"

Sometimes I wish our world was simpler.

"What makes our labor holy, what makes it eternal, is not just the work but the state of our hearts while performing that work. When we comprehend that truth, then we realize washing dishes is as significant to the Kingdom as operating on a patient; driving a truck is as eternally triumphant as leading a company. Then, even in the zig-zags of our careers, when life seems more random than ordered, when it feels like we're running in thick mud with heavy boots, we can rest in the knowledge we're serving God as we labor faithfully and diligently."

-- Randy Kilgore, Made to Matter