Trusting ourselves to God can...
Illustration
Trusting ourselves to God can be as risky -- and as exciting -- as trusting ourselves to an untested new invention. Joseph Merlin discovered that to his own chagrin (and peril).
Merlin, a renowned maker of violins and harpsichords, moved from Belgium to London in 1760. He hatched the idea of replacing the blades on ice skates with metal wheels. To demonstrate the possibilities, he dressed up as a minstrel and made a spectacular entrance on "roller skates" at an elegant masquerade ball. He dazzled the other guests as he wheeled gracefully about the ballroom floor while playing a violin. But then, as the mesmerized guests looked on in horror, he lost control and sailed headlong into a crystal mirror, demolishing it and his handcrafted violin. (It wasn't until 1860, when roller skates finally caught on, that he was posthumously vindicated.)
Merlin, a renowned maker of violins and harpsichords, moved from Belgium to London in 1760. He hatched the idea of replacing the blades on ice skates with metal wheels. To demonstrate the possibilities, he dressed up as a minstrel and made a spectacular entrance on "roller skates" at an elegant masquerade ball. He dazzled the other guests as he wheeled gracefully about the ballroom floor while playing a violin. But then, as the mesmerized guests looked on in horror, he lost control and sailed headlong into a crystal mirror, demolishing it and his handcrafted violin. (It wasn't until 1860, when roller skates finally caught on, that he was posthumously vindicated.)
