“For this cause everyone who is godly shall pray to you in a time when you may be found.” (Psalm 32:6)
Since I’m on vacation this week, I decided to feature a devotion I wrote several years ago with a vacation theme. It’s told in the form of a parable – a situation in everyday life that contains an important spiritual truth.
We had friends who were vacationing in Florida. Their daughter and niece were playing on rafts out in the Gulf of Mexico. All were unaware that a major storm was brewing several hundred miles out in the Gulf, even though the undertow was already beginning to show the early signs that a storm was on the way.
These two little girls drifted out beyond the breakers and one of them lost her float. Her cousin told her to hold on to the raft until help arrived, but no one seemed to be noticing that they needed help. Meanwhile, the undertow repeatedly overpowered the little girl, only to relinquish its strength long enough for her to get her head back above the water and catch her breath.
Suddenly, out of nowhere, a lifeguard appeared. However, he couldn’t overcome the power of the undertow either and told the girls that if they drifted out beyond the next row of breakers, there would be no coming back.
I’m not going to drag out the suspense. The lifeguard managed to get the girls safely back to shore, but I couldn’t let the spiritual truth in this story go to an early grave.
This parable is told in the context of our own culture; consequently, most of us have no trouble understanding its connection to the burden of sin and the timing of salvation in the life of an unbeliever. Indeed, as Paul put it, “For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord”. (Romans 6:23) However, what many of us fail to understand the sense of urgency what Paul said, “Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation”. (2 Corinthians 6:2)
Each of us knows as unbeliever who thinks he can decide when it is time to repent of his sins and open his heart to Jesus. While he will freely admit he sometimes feels God’s pull, he doesn’t think he needs God right now. “There’s plenty of time left before I need to make that decision,” he will tell you.
He may be deadly wrong. God told the Prophet Isaiah, “Seek the Lord while he may be found; call on him while he is near.” (Isaiah 55:6)
The truth is that God will not wait on us to come to him. When he knocks, it may be our only opportunity to answer his call. His word constantly reminds us that it is he who decides who may come to him; and it is he who will decide when it is time to shut the door. That’s why Jesus said, “Once the master of the house has risen up and shut the door, and you begin to stand outside and knock at the door, saying, ‘Lord, Lord, open for us,’ and He will answer and say to you, ‘I do not know you, where you are from’ ”.
(Luke 13:25)
Aren’t you glad that when you were drowning in your gulf of sin, a lifeguard appeared to let you know that if you got out much farther, there would be no coming back. Like I wrote last week, “For God did not send his son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through him might be saved”. (John 3:17)
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