Very impressive; dramatic like nothing else. Since I have  worked and lived
at the Grand Canyon at two different times in the past no-one needs to tell 
 me
how spectacular and dangerous it is.
 
Discovery's telecast was first rate. Since Wallenda was wired for  sound
and you could hear him in his prayers and hear his conversations with 
his "coach," everything was even more you-are-there realistic.
 
Wallenda clearly is a believing Christian, there were repeated prayers  to 
Jesus
and  they were very much part of the story.
 
Not sure what to think of everything. Yes, it was a witness for Christ, 
but  I could not help thinking, would Jesus actually have wanted  Wallenda 
to take that kind of risk?  I don't think so, and I would guess that  most 
viewers
had similar questions.
 
Of course, he did it. Amazing. Just standing on terra firma at the edge of  
the
canyon and you can get a queasy feeling because of the height, in some  
places
looking a mile down. But even a 'measly' quarter mile down sheer drop
is frightening enough. And he walked over the chasm on a cable  ?
 
Think of  it, there you are, in mid air, over 1000 feet from the  bottom
of the canyon and maybe 700 feet from the rim looking either forward 
or backwards. That certainly captures your attention.
 
 
What is true beyond doubt is that his faith allowed him to make the  effort.
Maybe the lesson  -and maybe what Wallenda hoped for-  is that  with faith
almost anything is possible.  My personal prayer is that millions of  people
seeing this will ask themselves,  what about my  faith? What can  I do
with faith that might be impossible without it ?
 
Billy
 
---------------------------------
 
 
 
Nik Wallenda Constantly Prayed to Jesus During Successful Grand  Canyon 
Tightrope Walk





 
By _Anugrah Kumar_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/anugrah-kumar/)  , 
Christian Post  Contributor
June 24, 2013




 
High wire artist Nik Wallenda constantly prayed to Jesus as he walked 
without  a harness on a 1,400-foot long high-wire across a 1,500-foot tall 
gorge 
near the  Grand Canyon on Sunday, successfully completing the death-defying 
feat that was  broadcast live on the Discovery Channel. 
"Thank you Lord. Thank you for calming that cable, God," The Associated 
Press  quoted Wallenda as saying as he had reached halfway through the 
tightrope. He  had no safety tether attaching him to his line at a height 
taller 
than the  Empire State Building, and was facing sudden wind gusts of over 20  
mph.

 
 
Discovery chose to broadcast the event with a 10-second delay, not wanting 
to  take a chance as even one wrong step could have proven fatal for 
Wallenda. 
Wallenda murmured prayers to Jesus almost constantly along the way, and  
completed the walk in 22 minutes and 54 seconds. 
"It took every bit of me to stay focused that entire time," Wallenda, 34,  
said, according to Reuters. "My arms are aching like you wouldn't believe." 
He had to stop and crouch down twice due to the wind for the first time, 
and  later the cable picked up an unsettling rhythm. But it "was a dream come 
true,"  he said. "This is what my family has done for 200 years, so it's 
part of my  legacy." 
The "#Skywire" hashtag received more than 700,000 tweets on Twitter. 
Pastor Joel Osteen of Lakewood Church in Houston, Texas, tweeted just 
before  the feat, saying, "Here at the Grand Canyon with my friend 
@NikWallenda. 
Praying  for his success!" After the event, he tweeted again. "Congrats to 
@NikWallenda  for making history. Your courage and faith is inspiring." 
Pop music singer Keith Urban also tweeted, "GO NIK WALLENDA!!! Absolutely  
astounding feat AND faith!!!! We were with you every single step!!!! –KU." 
Golfer Paul Azinger said on Twitter, "@NikWallenda Wow! You are physically  
smart and a mental giant." National Football League player JJ Watt said, 
"Really  didn't think I would be this locked in. It's captivating." 
The U.S. government did not allow the use of the Grand Canyon proper for 
the  event. Therefore, Wallenda walked above a stretch of the Little Colorado 
River  Gorge on Navajo Nation land, which was equally dangerous. 
Wallenda, a married father of three, last summer became the first man in  
history to walk 1,800 feet on a tightrope across the roaring Niagara Falls 
from  the U.S. to the Canadian side of the falls. Soon thereafter he announced 
his  desire to cross the Grand Canyon. 
He is the seventh generation of the legendary Great Wallendas and began  
walking the wire at age 4. His great-grandfather Karl Wallenda fell off a wire 
 to his death in 1978. 
In his memoir, Balance: A Story of Faith, Family, and Life on the  Line, 
the high wire artist writes, "I believe that God gives us the power  to 
transform any story from darkness to light." 
Wallenda had earlier told The Christian Post, "I visualize myself crossing  
the Canyon over and over again. I visualize myself making that first step,  
quarter of a way, half way, three quarters of a way and then finishing that 
 walk. That's really a lot of the mental prep." 
He said he often talks to God while he is on the wire. "I find that 
peaceful  and relaxing and He's the only one up there listening to me." He 
added 
that his  faith plays a crucial role in what he does. "My life is based on my 
faith. I  guess the biggest role that it plays is that if I do fall and die 
I know where  I'm going."

-- 
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