River rescue - how I almost drowned and what it taught me
Three years ago, I almost drowned. I was rafting on a Class Five river when our raft hit a boulder and we were hurled out. Our brief Rafting 101 talk we received back at base camp did nothing to prepare me for the shock of icy water, the panic of drowning, or the continuing slap of brown river water I was choking on.
I tried to estimate whether I could swim laterally against the current to either bank. Not a chance. It was too far. My guide and raft were too far up river to pull me out, the current having carried me too quickly away from our raft. My only hope was another guide's raft about 50 yards ahead. Would he see me? I had no strength or ability to contribute to my hope of rescue. The water was strong and fast. I was powerless and in danger of drowning. And as they say, the orange life jacket just makes it easier to find your dead body.
Thankfully, the other boat saw me. I don't know how the guy pulled my soaking, 6 feet- 2 inch, dead- weight body out of the water, but he did.
Later, while sorting through everything that happened God said, "Jim -- this wasn't about your failure to handle the situation. It wasn't about your capacity at all. It was about my ability to rescue you."
This is the Gospel. This is the ongoing nature of the Christian life -- Jesus' ability to 'save' us didn't simply cease after we said 'yes' to his offer to "save us from our sins."
We need the experience, not simply the idea or hope of being rescued. Through these experiences of rescue, we gain a perspective that is more real and confident than the one we had on paper. We can only gain that experience by taking the risks God is asking us to -- by placing ourselves in situations (again, when God counsels us to take the risk) where unless he rescues us, we're toast.
Is there anything he's asking you to risk, so that you can experience more life?
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