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of my favorite movies of all time is The Hunt for Red October, a movie based on
the Tom Clancy novel by the same name. The story is rather
straightforward. During the height of
the Cold War a Russian admiral decides to defect to the United States . The whole thing is complicated by the fact
that the admiral has stolen the latest and most advanced submarine in the fleet
and intends to turn it over to the United States when he defects. His
actions prompt the Soviets to track him down with the goal of destroying him
while the United States
desperately tries to locate him and give him political asylum.
In
order to avoid detection, the Russian admiral orders his crew to take the
submarine to great depths. As they descend, the vessel moans and groans as it
acclimates to the pressure changes it encounters on the way down. The deeper the vessel sinks, the greater the
pressure on the outside hull. Although
the submarine makes noises, the metal skin holds, protecting the men
inside. They go about their business,
knowing they are safe within the protective arms of the submarine.
The
Christian life is exactly like this and the Apostle Paul knew it only too
well. After his conversion to
Christianity, Paul had several opportunities to experience the kind of
persecution he himself had inflicted on the followers of Jesus. He was beaten, shipwrecked, imprisoned,
rejected, and hunted throughout his life.
He knew what it was like to be tired.
He knew what it was like to be in great pain. He knew what it was to have plenty and he
also knew what it was like to live with nothing. Paul understood the pressures
and the demands that walking with Jesus can require of his followers. And he
was all too glad to suffer all things for the cause of Christ.
In
2 Corinthians 4:7-9, Paul shares his
faith and confidence in Christ with his readers. He writes, “But we have this treasure in jars of clay to show that this
all-surpassing power is from God and not from us. We are hard pressed on every
side, but not crushed; perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not
abandoned; struck down, but not destroyed.”
What a resounding statement of faith this is. Paul wants his readers to understand that we
are simply jars of clay. Paul wants them
to understand that whatever is accomplished in his life, it is accomplished by
the Spirit and the power of God.
But
notice the wonderful list of opposites that follows. Paul says that he is hard pressed from every
direction. The mounting pressures of
life are all around him. There are those
who seek his life and there are those in the churches he founded who are doing
their best to cause upheaval and discord.
Yet, Paul is not crushed. He
finds it difficult to understand the why’s and how’s of his situations but he
is not in despair. Even in persecution
he clings tight to Jesus’ promise never to leave or forsake his own and
although he is struck down again and again, Paul refuses to be destroyed!
This
is the life of faith and of confidence in Jesus Christ. This is what it means to come to the end of
one’s self and to know that no matter what happens we are resting safely in the
hand of God. Like sailors hundreds of
feet below the surface of the ocean where the crushing pressure of the water is
at its greatest, the all powerful hand of our God keeps and protects those who
are firmly rooted and established in Him.
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can never know just how strong God’s love and care for us are unless we plummet
to great depths and endure great pressure.
When the walls of your heart moan, when you feel as if you can’t go any
further, and when your prayers seem no more than mere whispers, that is when
God’s presence, His power, His strength, and His love are the most
evident. Pressed on every side we may
be, but we are still afloat!!!
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