My Experience in the Fort Lauderdale Airport

Steve Fish • Jan 12, 2017


No, I wasn't in the Fort Lauderdale airport on the morning of January, 6 when a young man opened fire in the baggage claim area killing 5 people. However, I was in the airport a little over a month before that time. I remember the experience vividly. I recall the area we were in feeling old and outdated. I remember how little signage there was to guide us to rental car bus.


As we finally figured out the situation with the bus, I remember saying to my wife, "this feels like an airport in a third world country." As a frequent traveler who has been in around 60 different airports over the last 5 years, that was the not so brilliant comment I remember making during my short time in the Fort Lauderdale airport.


Several days after the shooting, I began to piece the experience together in my mind and I began to feel the gentle, but oh so powerful conviction of the Spirit within, as I meditated on my few moments in the airport. "I was there, and all I did was talk about how bad the airport was." "I don't remember even speaking one word of blessing or even a one sentence prayer for the airport or the city." There was not an ounce of condemnation, accusation or guilt in these thoughts, but an ever so clear awareness that I am called for something better, something higher, something heavenly.


The thoughts flooded through my mind, "What if I had even just said, "Bless this airport, Lord."?" "Bless this city, bless this airport for upgrade. Protect it, prosper it and establish the atmosphere of heaven in this place." "What if?"


In the past, I have seen the tremendous power even the smallest prayers or spoken blessings carry. God has given us the power to see individuals, cities, and nations changed. A one word blessing in Jesus' name can release tidal waves of heaven's transformational power.


One day I was driving through a fast food restaurant in my city. It was taking a long time to get my order and I could tell things were not going well for the restaurant. So, I simply said, "help them, Lord!"


Several weeks later, I returned to the restaurant and things were going amazingly well. They were waiting on me like it was a much fancier restaurant! As all of this was going on, I said, "Lord, what happened?" Immediately, He reminded me of my prayer several weeks earlier when the restaurant was struggling. "Help them, Lord." What if I had even prayed that prayer during my moments in the Fort Lauderdale airport?


What if? What if when I complain I'm immediately convicted to shift out of complain mode and into prayer mode?


What if in 2017 I convert every possible complaint into a prayer or a blessing? What if every believer made this shift in 2017?


What if we didn't complain about our government in 2017, but began to pray and bless instead?


What if we became great non-complainers and awesome blessers?


That is what I learned from my experience in the Fort Lauderdale airport.

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Movement leaders from around the world gathered together for the deeply spiritual act of eating pizza together. In this home setting you could feel the energy in the air. Seasoned leaders who had pastored and led revival movements for 50 years and young pastors just getting started in the journey. Something so beautiful happens when the generations converge! I floated from conversation to conversation and from pepperoni to veggie to meat lovers as the evening progressed. Finally, I found myself surrounded by some amazing young leaders and as we began to sample the dessert table the questions began to flow and something incredibly profound begin to unfold. One of the younger pastors interjected, “Tell us more about the revival move you experienced in the 90’s.” It’s hard to express the wild mixture of emotions I felt in this moment. Honor. I felt honored that someone would value and recognize the treasure of what I’ve seen God do in the past. Shock. Yes, shock. I was much older and farther down this road before I learned how to truly value the testimony of older generations. But now, a generation is rising up that is not only looking for the “new thing”. They know it’s about the double portion that comes from combination of the old and the new. I’m thankful for the patience of leaders who surrounded me in my early days when I came in as the young leader all about the new thing. At times I had very little honor or value for the old or for the price paid by a previous generation to open up the highways I was freely enjoying. As we began to reach the point where there was no more room in our stomachs for even the best of the desserts on the table, it happened. What do you call it? It’s that moment of connection when "the deep" of one generation begins to really connect with "the deep" in another generation. It's that moment when you know something precious is being imparted from generation to generation. That "something" no amount of money can buy. And it's not a one way thing. It's a two way highway of transference. It's that moment where the sound of the testimony of one generation convergences with the sound of another generation and the "baby" in each generation leaps with the expectancy that greater things are about to be birthed than any of us have seen or imagined. It's not a sound that says, "let's go back to 1981, 1993, or 2007." God forbid! No. An older generation is rising up that has no desire to try to squeeze a new generation into an old movement or wineskin. A older generation is rising up that will not resist or even simply tolerate the fresh move of God they will once again be captured by it. An older generation is rising up that does not see themselves as lifeguards watching safely from the shore to correct the young crazy swimmers. No. A generation is rising up that is not here to watch and judge from sidelines but is ready to dive into the deep waters again with the younger generations. From the raging wild untamable currents of the precious river of the Spirit of God we will imperfectly and humbly together be overwhelmed and conquered by something neither generation can control. The waters of the old will converge with the waters of the new as something wild, crazy, and holy is conceived. The host of the evening began to clean up. The conversation came to an end. We went our separate ways. We were not the same. Pizza, precious treasure, and the convergence of the generations. Deep is calling to deep and the stirrings of a fresh move of God are being felt across the earth. I see and feel hunger like I haven't seen or felt in years. I feel the foundation, testimony and faith of the old and the untamed fury and fire of the new. Yes, count me in, Lord!.
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