A Winter Road. A Spiritual Lesson. A Faithful Captain.

Opening
The weather outside may be frightful, and the roads may be anything but delightful. Snow piles up, visibility drops, and ice hides beneath the surface waiting to surprise the unprepared. On days like this, the wise stay home. But if you must venture out, safety is job one.
Take it slow in the snow.
Because where there is snow… there is almost always ice.
1. The Four‑Wheel Drive Myth
A lot of folks hit the winter roads thinking four‑wheel drive makes them invincible. But every seasoned driver knows the truth:
All tires slide on ice.
Four‑wheel drive helps you get moving — it does nothing to help you stop.
And sometimes?
Four‑wheel drive just gets you into trouble faster.
Spiritually, pride works the same way.
1 Corinthians 10:12 — “Let him who thinks he stands take heed lest he fall.”
Overconfidence is black ice for the soul.
2. Weight: The Hidden Stability
Years behind the wheel taught me something most people don’t understand:
An empty truck bed is unstable.
A loaded truck settles down.
Weight increases traction.
Weight presses the tires into the road.
Weight gives you control.
Spiritually, the same is true.
Psalm 119:11 — “Your word I have hidden in my heart, that I might not sin against You.”
A believer with Scripture inside them has spiritual downforce.
An empty soul slides.
A weighted soul stands.
3. Traction: Obedience Under Pressure
Dualies give you more rubber on the road — but only when there’s weight pressing them down.
Empty dualies?
They float on snow.
They lose grip.
They slide sideways.
But load that truck…
and those dualies bite into the surface and hold steady.
Obedience works the same way.
James 1:22 — “Be doers of the word, and not hearers only.”
Traction isn’t about speed — it’s about grip.
It’s about consistency.
It’s about doing what God said even when conditions are slick.
4. Modern Parables from the Road
Parable 1 — The Invisible Ice
Black ice looks like pavement.
Temptation looks like opportunity.
Proverbs 14:12 — “There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death.”
Parable 2 — The Slow Driver Who Arrives
The one who slows down in the storm is the one who makes it home.
Isaiah 30:15 — “In returning and rest you shall be saved; in quietness and confidence shall be your strength.”
5. The Road as an Altar — First Person Revelation
I’ve spent a lot of years behind the wheel.
Long roads. Long nights. Long storms.
And if there’s one thing driving has taught me, it’s this:
Experience helps… but experience alone won’t save you.
I’ve learned to feel the road through the steering wheel.
I’ve learned how a truck talks when the bed is empty,
and how it settles down when it’s carrying weight.
I’ve learned the difference between snow and ice,
between a slide I can correct
and a slide that’s already decided for me.
But even with all that experience,
I’ve had moments where the road reminded me:
You don’t know what you don’t know.
And that’s exactly what happened on the Sea of Galilee.
The disciples weren’t rookies.
They were experienced fishermen — men who grew up on that water.
They knew the winds.
They knew the currents.
They knew the storms that came out of nowhere.
But one night, a storm hit that was bigger than their experience.
Mark 4:37 — “And a great windstorm arose, and the waves beat into the boat…”
These seasoned men panicked.
Why?
Because experience can teach you a lot —
but it can’t teach you everything.
Experience can make you skilled —
but it can’t make you sovereign.
Experience can help you navigate storms —
but it can’t calm them.
Only Jesus can do that.
Mark 4:39 — “Then He arose and rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, ‘Peace, be still!’”
And someone always brings up Paul’s shipwreck as a rebuttal —
“See? Even a man of God can go down in a storm.”
But look closer.
The ship wrecked…
but the people didn’t.
Acts 27:22 — “There will be no loss of life among you, but only of the ship.”
Why?
Because a man of God was on board.
Because God had a purpose for Paul that no storm could cancel.
Because Jesus wasn’t just along for the ride —
He was the Captain of the outcome.
And that’s the lesson I’ve learned on the road:
I can have experience.
I can have skill.
I can have traction and weight and wisdom.
But if I try to navigate a storm on experience alone,
I’m headed for a wreck.
But if Jesus is in the cab with me —
better yet, if He’s the One holding the wheel —
then even if the truck slides,
even if the road gets rough,
even if the storm gets violent…
I’m going to make it.
Not because I’m a great driver.
But because He’s a faithful Captain.
Psalm 121:8 — “The LORD shall preserve your going out and your coming in…”
Final Reflection
And before I close this out, let me say one more thing — something personal, something true, something I carry with gratitude every single day:
I’ve survived over three million miles behind the wheel.
Accident‑free.
Incident‑free.
Storms, snow, ice, long nights, empty roads, and crowded highways —
and I’m still here.
Not because I’m the best driver.
Not because I always made the right call.
Not because experience never failed me.
I’m here because Jesus piloted my ship.
Three million miles…
and not one of them driven alone.
Thank You, Jesus.
Closing
If you have nowhere to go today, let it snow.
Rest. Be still.
But if God calls you forward, take it slow in the snow.
Move with wisdom.
Move with awareness.
Move with Him.
Because the One who guides you through the storm
is the same One who clears the road ahead.
Proverbs 3:6 — “In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths”

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