This article alerts us to the fact that we as the church may lose sight of our primary mission: to evangelize. Jesus' purpose must always be our purpose: to seek and save the lost. (Luke 19:10)
A Crude
Lifesaving Station by Theodore Wedel
On a dangerous
seacoast where shipwrecks often occur there was once a crude lifesaving station.
The building was just a hut, and there was only one boat, but the few devoted
members kept a constant watch over the sea, and with no thought for themselves
went out day and night tirelessly searching for the lost. Many lives were saved
by this wonderful little station, so that it became famous. Some of those who
were saved, and various others in the surrounding area, wanted to become
associated with the station and give of their time and their money and their
effort for the support of its work. New boats were bought and new crews were
trained. The little lifesaving station grew.
Now some of the
members of the lifesaving station became unhappy, in time, however, because the
building was so crude and so poorly equipped. They felt that a more comfortable,
suitable place should be provided as the first refuge of those saved from the
sea. And so they replaced the emergency cots with beds, and they put better
furniture in the now enlarged building, so that now the lifesaving station
actually became a popular gathering place for its members. They took great care
in decorating it beautifully and furnishing it exquisitely, for they found new
uses for it in the context of a sort of club. But fewer members were now
interested in going to sea on lifesaving missions, and so they hired lifesaving
crews to do this work on their behalf, and in their stead. Now, don’t
misunderstand, the lifesaving motif still prevailed in the club’s decoration
and symbols - there was a liturgical lifeboat (symbolic rather than fully
functional) in the room where the club initiations were held, for example - so
the changes did not necessarily mean that the original purposes were totally
lost.
About this time a
large ship was wrecked off the coast, and the hired crews brought in boatloads
of cold and wet, half-drowned people. They were dirty people and they were sick
people, some of them with black skin, some with yellow skin. The beautiful new
club, as you might imagine, was thrown into chaos, so that the property
committee immediately had a shower house built outside the club where these
recent victims of shipwreck could be cleaned up before coming inside the main
clubhouse.
At the very next
meeting, there was a split in the club membership. Most of the members wanted
to stop the club’s lifesaving activities for being so unpleasant, as well as
for being a hindrance to the normal social life of the club. Some members
insisted upon lifesaving as their primary purpose, pointing out that, indeed,
they were still called a lifesaving station. But these few were finally voted
down and told that if they wanted to save the lives of all the various kinds of
people who were shipwrecked in those waters, they could begin their own
lifesaving station down the coast. And so, they did just that.
Now as the years
passed, the new station down the coast came to experience the very same changes
that had occurred in the older, initial station. It evolved into a club, and
yet another lifesaving station had to be founded to restore the original
purpose.
Well, history
continued to repeat itself, so that if you visit that seacoast today, you will
find a great number of exclusive clubs along that shore. Shipwrecks are
frequent in those waters, but most of the people drown!”
Cory Collins
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