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he box of tools sitting in the back hallway was my first
clue. The hammer, nails, drill, screw
drivers, bolts, washers, and other assorted fasteners confirmed what I knew to
be true. Daddy had been hanging something
in the house. It didn’t matter whether
the object weighed 1 pound or 100 pounds; daddy always treated it the same
way. He wanted to make sure that
whatever the object; it had zero chance of falling or coming off the wall.
The object in question was a mantle piece mother wanted
mounted in the kitchen of our home. As
soon as she mentioned the word “hang”, daddy was already elbow-deep in the tool
chest, getting out all the fun toys he would use to attach the mantle to the
wall. From what I understand, it was
quite a production. Not only did he use
special bolts to anchor the mantle to the wall, he also drove nails in it,
making sure each one was driven solidly into a wooden stud that supported the
wall. He wanted to make sure the mantle
never came loose.
He did a wonderful job too.
Mother was convinced that if the house collapsed, the mantle piece would
be suspended in thin air! In fact, when
my parents moved, they couldn’t take the mantle piece down because removing it
would prove too difficult and would ruin the kitchen wall. When daddy anchored something, he really
anchored it! Nothing in the tool box or
in any other tool box for that matter, could remove it from the kitchen
wall. It was a permanent fixture and as
much a part of the house’s structure as its foundation or walls. Now, I’m not giving my dad hard time. That mantle taught me several lessons, one of
which is the subject of today’s Tidbit.
The writer of the book of Hebrews understood the importance
of being anchored in Christ. In fact, he
used the analogy of a ship’s anchor to make a very important point about the
Christian’s walk and his faith in God. Hebrews 6:19 reads, “We
have this hope as an anchor for the soul, firm and secure…” What is the
hope the author speaks of and what can we glean from this picture of a ship’s
anchor? Let’s take these two questions
in order, shall we?
First, the author is speaking about the certainty of God’s
promise to the believer. When God
promised Abraham he would have a son and that the entire world would be blessed
through his descendants, He took an oath.
God took the oath in His own name because there was none greater to
swear by. Therefore, God, Himself,
guaranteed this promise to Abraham. And
since we, as believers in Christ, also partake in this promise, we have a
wonderful hope from God.
Second, the notion of a ship’s anchor paints a vivid picture
of this reality. A ship’s anchor holds
it in position, preventing it from drifting away on the tide. Although storms come, although winds blow
against the ship, and although waves beat against its hull, the anchor holds it
firmly in position, keeping it safe and secure.
But there are other ways of anchoring things as my dad
demonstrated in the example above. It is
possible to anchor one object to another by the use of strong fasteners. These fasteners marry one object to another
so that the two are inseparable. This, I
believe, is also a picture of the message contained in this passage of
scripture. When we believe in Christ and
become one of his followers, we are anchored to God in him. That means we are so closely identified with
and attached to God, that nothing can separate us from His love. No matter how rocky the road, no matter how
steep the incline, and no matter how rough the seas, nothing will ever be able
to separate us from God and the salvation we find in His son, Jesus Christ.
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hat day in our kitchen I learned a great lesson which I am
only now beginning to appreciate. Daddy
exerted all that effort and went to such great lengths to make sure that mantle
piece never pulled away from the wall, no matter what! In a similar way, on Calvary ’s
hill, God did exactly the same thing.
With the same tools, the hammer and the nail, God anchored, once and for
all, our salvation! By placing His son
on a tree to pay the penalty for my sins and yours, God anchored every believer
to Himself. We are securely and firmly
placed in Him when we accept Jesus Christ as our personal savior. Are you
anchored to the wall today?
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