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Ships in the harbor
are safe but that is not what ships were built for. We remember
Jesus saying to his disciples, ”Launch out into the deep.”
Ships are built
to launch out into the deep and if they don’t do that, there
is no excuse for their existence no matter how safe and secure
they may feel in the harbor.
We were also created
to launch out in the deep. Paul describes some of his experiences
and he tells us that he was shipwrecked three times. On one
occasion he had spent a day and a night floating around in
the deep before being rescued, yet he did not hesitate to
board a ship and set sail for distant lands whenever he had
an opportunity to spread the gospel message.
It is possible
for us to be over timid about our preaching. We may feel safe
in the harbor, in the privacy of our own home, and we may
feel frightened to launch out and tell others the saving message
that Jesus is coming and they should be preparing for his
return.
We need to be
willing to launch out into the deep, to get out in water over
our heads and set sail with our banner flying that we belong
to the Lord and we want to share the good news of His soon
coming kingdom with all we can reach.
Ships with dropped
anchors sitting in the calm water of the harbor certainly
are safe, but what good are they? To be of any value to the
owner, the ship must be laden with cargo, then it is untied
from the dock, the anchor is hoisted up from the bottom and
it launches out into the deep to deliver its cargo to some
distant land.
Compare us to the
ship. We sit at home safe and secure in our comfortable chair.
While we may feel unthreatened there, what good are we to
our Creator if this is all we ever do?
Shouldn’t we be
spending the time we are at home (tied up in the harbor for
the ship) filling our minds with the word of God which is
able to make one wise unto salvation? (loading the cargo hold
of the ship with needed supplies).
The time should
arrive for us to get up out of our comfort zone (pull up anchor
for the ship) and go out to share our knowledge of God’s saving
word (deliver our cargo to others).
Of course there
is risk involved. Nothing worthwhile has ever been done without
risk. There are no waves in the harbor. As we sail past the
breakwater the sea becomes choppy and our little vessel may
begin to toss to and fro but we are not afraid for as we often
sing, ”the rough winds may wrestle, our God will perform,
with Christ in the vessel we smile at the storm.”
Our Lord is able
to calm the sea but we need to have launched out into the
deep and be busy taking the precious cargo of the word of
God to others. In olden days it required wind to drive the
ship so we should want and expect some turbulence.
People talk about
what they will do when their ship comes in but their problem
is that they have not sent a ship out. If we have not sent
one out, there is none to come back. If we do not sow, we
do not reap, if we do not launch out into the deep, we cannot
sail to distant ports. We may be safe in the harbor but what
useful purpose can we do to serve God, tied up at the dock
with an empty cargo hold?
Let us get busy
filling our minds with the word of God and then let us be
willing to launch out and share the good news of God’s soon
coming kingdom with everyone we meet.
David tells us
about those ”that go down to the sea in ships, that do business
in great waters.” ”He maketh the storm a calm, so that the
waves thereof are still. Then are they glad because they be
quiet; so he bringeth them unto their desired haven.”
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