| COMMENTARYCaution: Slippery Slope Ahead!By Norris BurkesContributing Columnist
 
CBN.com 
   (ChaplainNorris.com) 
  -- Among the worst songs ever written has got to be "Torn Between Two Lovers" 
  -- that "Me Generation" ballad in which Mary MacGregor whines that she's torn 
  between two lovers, and that "loving them both is breaking all the rules."
 
 While I've been torn between pizza and burritos, I've never been torn between 
  two lovers. But years ago when I was a pastor, I did have a congregant who was 
  torn between two "loves" -- his love for his wife and his love for helping others. 
  The trouble started when the "other" love involved was not his wife.
 
 "We've got to do something about Deacon Mike," began Deacon Chairman Joe in 
  a grim voice which echoed through our empty vestibule.
 
 "Is there something new?"
 
 On the previous week Joe and I had cautioned Mike about the inappropriateness 
  of his lengthy visits to the home of a marriage in trouble. We were hoping to 
  keep him off that slippery slope of good intentions that so often leads us so 
  far off course.
 
 "I saw Mike's car at Bob and Sarah's house on my way home from church last night."
 
 I paused, processing information I didn't want to hear.
 
 "Bob's gone for the week... remember?"
 
 "Well, maybe he, uh..."
 
 Joe held up his hand to stop me. "I saw Mike drive into Sarah's driveway on 
  my way here this morning."
 
 "Not good," I thought, picking up the phone to call Sarah.
 
 "Sarah, is your husband there?"
 
 "No."
 
 "Then I'd like to talk to Mike."
 
 In a quick, curt exchange, we arranged to meet Mike at his house 30 minutes 
  later.
 
 As Joe and I approached his door, our footsteps were answered with a muffled 
  voice -- "It's open."
 
 The light of the opening door exposed a shamed deacon lying in a fetal position 
  with an unopened Bible clutched to his chest. Was he consulting the Bible or 
  saying goodbye to
 it? We couldn't be sure.
 
 In any case, his body language indicated that we were witnessing a man's surrender 
  to the death of his ministry.
 
 "Mike," I said softly, trying to enter his world without breaking it, "we need 
  to talk."
 
 "Darn it!" he screamed. "I haven't done anything wrong!"
 
 "We didn't come with stones," I told him, holding up empty palms. "We just want 
  to talk."
 
 After meeting a few more of his expletives with similar assurances, Mike sat 
  up and looked at us. We were willing to listen, and so was he.
 
 "Her husband's never home," Mike charged. "He doesn't talk to her. He has them 
  deep in debt. He's nothing but a selfish child."
 
 The thin strand of logic in Mike's rationalizations began to reveal the complicated 
  truth -- this wasn't a hormone-driven coveting of another man's wife, no. This 
  was a good man intent on "rescuing" a distressed damsel from the slippery ice 
  -- only to find himself sliding full speed toward a disastrous drop over a cliff.
 
 Caught up in feeling like a hero to Sarah, Mike was in a heady place.
 
 "Mike," I asked, pointing to some suitcases, "are you asking your family to 
  pay the price for Sarah's rescue? If so, you're looking at a total faith meltdown!
 
 "If you leave them to help her, it will be a lifetime of forevers before your 
  family will be able to have faith in anyone again.
 
 Are you willing to have them pay that price?"
 
 Mike had to make a choice. Like an Everest climber deciding to abandon one injured 
  person in order to save the rest of the party, Mike was torn between trying 
  to hold on to his family and trying to rescue someone else. It didn't seem unreasonable 
  -- but that's the nature of slippery slopes. And when you're on one, it helps 
  to have some friends to keep you anchored. That's what we tried to do.
 
 Eventually Mike saw the necessity to abort this rescue attempt. He altered his 
  path. He grabbed hold of his own family and made it safely down the mountain. 
  He went to counseling. He rediscovered his calling.
 
 And he found a new place in ministry. Now he's not only Deacon Mike, he's "Sherpa 
  Mike" -- helping others find their way down their own slippery slopes.
 For more information about Norris Burkes please log onto his website at 
    www.chaplainnorris.com. 
     
 
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