RESCUE THE PERISHING
An artist, seeking to
depict on canvas the meaning of evangelism, painted a storm at sea. Black
clouds filled the sky. Illuminated by a flash of lightning, a little boat could
be seen disintegrating under the pounding of the ocean. Men were struggling in
the swirling waters, their anguished faces crying out for help. The only
glimmer of hope appeared in the foreground of the painting, where a large rock
protruded out of the water. There, clutching desperately with both hands, was
one lone seaman.
It was a moving scene. Looking at the painting, one could see in the tempest a symbol of mankind's hopeless condition. And, true to the Gospel, the only hope of salvation was "the Rock of Ages", a shelter in the time of storm.
But as the artist reflected upon his work, he realized that the painting did not accurately portray his subject. So he discarded the canvas, and painted another. It was very similar to the first: the black clouds, the flashing lightning, the angry waters, the little boat crushed by the pounding waves, and the crew vainly struggling in the water. In the foreground the seaman was clutching the large rock for salvation. But the artist made one change: the survivor was holding on with only one hand, and with the other hand he was reaching down to pull up a drowning friend.
That is the New Testament picture of evangelism--that hand reaching down to rescue the perishing. Until that hand is extended, there is no Gospel--and there is no hope for the world. (Copied)
We should take some of our Christian Hymns seriously. "Rescue the
perishing, care for the dying, Jesus is merciful, Jesus will save."
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