“The
ULTIMATE RESCUE!”
Pastor Dick Brookes
Pastor Dick Brookes
Interim
Senior Pastor: The Coila Church
As tornadoes tore through Oklahoma this week, there were reports of
people who were being “saved” from the wreckage. I have a friend
who was a helicopter pilot for the Coast Guard and for years he was
involved in “saving” people who were on sinking ships in the
storms of the Atlantic Ocean.
“Saving”
people is regularly the topic of news programs and articles in
magazine. It usually involves someone being rescued from a
potentially deadly situation. Some condition that traps you and
perhaps enslaves you – such as the present horror of human
trafficking.
“Salvation”
is a central concept throughout the Bible. Israel was “saved”
from its captivity in Egypt, Jonah was “saved” from being in the
belly of the whale, the disciples were “saved” from the terror of
a storm on the sea of Galilee, but the most common use of the term
“saved” in the New Testament has to do with a different kind of
rescue. It is a rescue that every human being needs; but which many
either reject or are not interested in.
Years
ago I had a visit at my home by a pollster from the Gallup
organization. It was the first time I had ever had personal contact
with a “pollster” and it was a very interesting experience. At
the end of our conversation she asked me, “What do you believe is
the greatest problem facing the United States today?” My immediate
response was – “the economy.” She thanked me and went her way.
But after she left I realized I had given her the wrong answer. The
greatest problem in the U.S. or the world for that matter is sin! Sin
traps people and enslaves them to lives that they hate. Every form of
addiction, and every horrible character trait can be traced to this
problem. Sin traps people and enslaves them. And whether that
involves an addictive problem like drugs or alcohol or enslavement to
selfishness and a mean spirit; it is something that ultimately
destroys us from within.
The
Gospel of Jesus Christ offers SALVATION – a RESCUE from the problem
of sin. This is a free offer from God through faith in His Son Jesus
Christ and it involves being saved on three levels:
First
– we are JUSTIFIED by faith. That means we are saved from the
PENALTY of sin. We are no longer headed for hell.
Second
– we are SANCTIFIED by faith. That means that we are being saved
from the POWER of sin in our lives. We are learning to access God’s
power working through us to overcome our sin.
Third
– we are finally GLORIFIED by faith. That means that when we die,
we will be delivered from the very PRESENCE of sin. In God’s
heavenly Kingdom, sin will no longer exist.
God’s
salvation is the ULTIMATE RESCUE! Have your been rescued by God? Have
you begun this wonderful journey of being rescued from the penalty of
sin, the power of sin, and eventually the very presence of sin? It
can begin today. “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you WILL BE
SAVED!!”
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Why a Savior?
Pastor Jim French
St.
Luke's Church
jim.french.137@gmail.com
Jesus
told us that he came into the world, not to condemn it, but that
through him the world might be saved
(John 3:17). To all who would
receive him he offers a restored relationship with God (John 1:12).
Since Jesus claimed to be the world's savior we must then conclude
that we need saving. One does not need a savior unless one needs
saving from something.
The
bottom line is that we are all in trouble. The Bible says that we
have all sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, (Rom 3:23). We
have violated God's commands and stand separated from him with no way
to restore our relationship; and that's why we need Jesus to save us
from eternal death. Only Jesus can save us from ourselves.
I
like to equate Jesus assignment on earth as a rescue mission. The
human race was trapped in sin with no way to restore our relationship
with God. Jesus mission was to restore that relationship with God
through his death on the cross.
A
few years ago an email floated around cyberspace that went something
like this: There was a man who had climbed to the roof of his house
to escape the rising waters of a terrible flood. The man prayed
desperately that God would come and save him. A short while later
the local police came by in a small boat and offered him rescue. The
man declined saying, “No, God is going to save me.” Sometime
later the police again came by in a larger boat and offered to take
the man to safety. He once again declined saying, “No, I'm waiting
for God to come and save me.” As the water threatened to wash the
man to his death a police helicopter arrived dropping a rope-ladder
to save him, but he refused to climb aboard insisting once again that
God would save him. The water eventually swept the man to his death
and he found himself immediately in the Lord's presence. The man
looked at Jesus and said, “Lord, I'm confused. I prayed for
rescue; why didn't you rescue me?” The Lord replied, “I sent you
2 boats and a helicopter, what more did you need?”
The
point of the story is that each of us is the man caught in the flood.
We need saving; someone to save us. We need a savior. But we also
must make the choice to be saved. No one can force us to accept
Jesus' offer of salvation. Each of us, on our own volition must make
the choice to get in the boat. Each of us must choose to be saved by
receiving Jesus Christ as our Lord and Savior. And he is the only
way to be saved.
To
be saved means that we are in right-standing with God; that our sins
have been forgiven through the blood of Jesus Christ and we can
stand before God blameless because of what Jesus did for us on the
cross.

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