The eighth-grade shop class...
Illustration
The eighth-grade shop class was getting a demonstration on using a band saw. The teacher, who had a reputation as an excellent finish carpenter (she had her cabinet-making papers), and as a perfectionist who demanded perfection from her pupils, put her piece of wood flawlessly through the blade of the saw. Her cut was straight and clean -- not a splinter to be seen. The feat didn't look all that impressive to the novices, after all, how hard could it be? But, when the teacher asked one particular pupil to try, everyone discovered just how hard it was. The boy grabbed the piece of wood and was about to switch on the machine when the teacher stopped him. "If you hold the wood that way, you'll end up cutting off your fingers," she said, and demonstrated again the proper way to approach the saw. Once the pupil mastered that technique, he switched on the saw and put his wood through. But he pushed too hard and the saw groaned in protest. Then, he let the wood stray from the guide, only to correct his mistake by pushing the wood back to the guide. As a result, his cut was anything but straight, and the wood was splintered along the whole cut.
I don't know if Peter thought walking on the water looked easy, but according to the gospel reports, he didn't master the feat that night.
I don't know if Peter thought walking on the water looked easy, but according to the gospel reports, he didn't master the feat that night.
