Wally
A flock of
wild ducks were flying in formation, heading south for the winter. They
formed a beautiful V in the sky, and were admired by everyone who saw
them from below.
One day,
Wally, one of the wild ducks in the formation, spotted something on the
ground that caught his eye. It was a barnyard with a flock of tame ducks
who lived on the farm. They were waddling around on the ground, quacking
merrily and eating corn that was thrown on the ground for them every
day. Wally liked what he saw. "It sure would be nice to have some of
that corn," he thought to himself. "And all this flying is very tiring.
I'd like to just waddle around for a while."
So after
thinking it over a while, Wally left the formation of wild ducks, made a
sharp dive to the left, and headed for the barnyard. He landed among the
tame ducks, and began to waddle around and quack merrily. He also
started eating corn. The formation of wild ducks continued their journey
south, but Wally didn't care. "I'll rejoin them when they come back
north in a few months," he said to himself.
Several
months went by and sure enough, Wally looked up and spotted the flock of
wild ducks in formation, heading north. They looked beautiful up there.
And Wally was tired of the barnyard. It was muddy and everywhere he
waddled, nothing but duck doo. "It's time to leave," said Wally.
So Wally
flapped his wings furiously and tried to get airborne. But he had gained
some weight from all his corn-eating, and he hadn't exercised his wings
much either. He finally got off the ground, but he was flying too low
and slammed into the side of the barn. He fell to the ground with a thud
and said to himself, "Oh, well, I'll just wait until they fly south in a
few months. Then I'll rejoin them and become a wild duck again."
But when
the flock flew overhead once more, Wally again tried to lift himself out
of the barnyard. He simply didn't have the strength. Every winter and
every spring, he saw his wild duck friends flying overhead, and they
would call out to him. But his attempts to leave were all in vain.
Eventually
Wally no longer paid any attention to the wild ducks flying overhead. He
hardly even noticed them. He had, after all, become a barnyard duck.
Sometimes
we get tired of being wild ducks-followers of Jesus Christ. It's not
always easy to be obedient to God and to discipline ourselves to hang in
there for the long haul. When we are feeling that way, that's when Satan
tempts us to "fall out of formation" and to join the barnyard ducks -
the world.
But look
what happened to Wally. He thought he would just "check it out" for
awhile and then leave when he wanted to. But he couldn't do it. Sin is
like that. Sin is a trap, and it has a way of changing us into people we
don't even want to become. Eventually we lose touch with who we really
are--the sons and daughters of the Most High. We become barnyard ducks.