Guard Your Heart
Prov. 4:23
It was
1:30 A.M. on Friday, December 6, 1991. Patrolman Tommy Garrison of the
Byhalia (Mississippi) City Police had pulled over a gray Monte Carlo for no
tag on Highway 309. Garrison walked to the car where three men were waiting.
The driver said he didn't have his license with him but knew the number.
Then Garrison saw three VCRs stacked in the back seat.
"Where
did you get those VCRs?" he asked. That's when all three men got out. The
first attacked Garrison with a knife. While the police officer was wrestling
with him, a second man pulled a handgun and shot twice. The first bullet
struck the officer in the stomach and knocked him off balance. When the
second hit his chest, Garrison was flung to the ground.
The
three men jumped back into the Monte Carlo and spun out, heading north
toward the Tennessee line. Before they were out of sight, however, Garrison
stood up and ran back to his car to put out an all-points bulletin. He was
shaken up and bruised, but unwounded.
That
morning Garrison had put on one of the department's bullet-proof vests. The
seven-year-old vest was two-and-a-half pounds of discomfort and reeked with
sweat. Garrison had not been wearing it regularly because it was such as
nuisance. But that Friday had been cool, and Garrison had worn the vest all
day. And at the critical moment, it had saved his life by guarding his
heart.
God
warns, "Above all else, guard your heart, for it is the wellsprings of life"
(Prov. 4:23). In other words, maintain your purity, your integrity, your
commitment to the Lord.
Whenever you keep something precious safe, you can cherish and enjoy it, and
its value appreciates. The longer we guard our heart—the more time and
attention we invest in its care, the easier it is to keep up the watch. The
more carefully we guard it, the more secure it will keep us.
In love,
Thomas Sneed
Pond
Church of Christ