The Glove Switch
On September 4, 1993, Jim Abbott took the mound for the New York Yankees against the Cleveland Indians. Abbott was born without a right hand. Every single pitch required a quiet act of defiance — he would throw left-handed, then rapidly switch his glove from his right wrist to his left hand, ready to field. That night, he threw a no-hitter. Final score: 4-0. Twenty-seven outs without allowing a single hit.
What made Abbott's courage so striking wasn't simply that he pitched in the major leagues. It was that he refused to let anyone else define his limits. Scouts doubted him. Critics questioned whether a one-handed pitcher could survive at the highest level. Abbott answered not with arguments but with preparation, discipline, and a stubborn unwillingness to quit.
Scripture tells us that when God called Moses, Moses protested, "I am slow of speech and slow of tongue" (Exodus 4:10). The Almighty didn't remove Moses' limitation. He said, "I will be with your mouth and teach you what you shall speak." God has never once been intimidated by our inadequacies.
Courage is not the absence of limitation — it is faithfulness in the middle of it. Whatever voice tells you this week that you are not equipped, not qualified, not enough, remember: the God who formed you knows exactly what He placed in your hands. And it is enough.
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