The children loved Zip their Collie dog, but sometimes he was a bother. He had to go everywhere they went since he seemed to feel it was his job to take care of them, especially when they were swimming. Again and again they would chase him out of the water, because he would grab their bathing suits in his teeth and tug them toward the shore. From the shore he would watch them playing in the water, with an alert worried-dog-look in his eyes.
One day while the children were swimming, Freddy found a sun-dried log that floated like a cork. He could swim a little, and a good log was actually more fun than an inner tube. He paddled with his hands and feet and soon was out beyond the rest of the children who were swimming. It made him feel brave to be out where the water was deep, and out there he could have his log all to himself.
But after a while it did not seem so much fun to be alone. The others seemed to be having fun playing a game of water tag together. So Freddy rolled off his log and began to swim toward shore. He swam until he was tired, and it seemed to him that he should be in far enough to touch bottom with his feet. He stopped kicking and let his feet go down.
Blub-blub-blub. . . oh-oh! Where was the bottom? There was nothing to stand on! Not just his feet had gone down, but his head had gone under too. He splashed hard with his arms and tried to kick with his feet. Slowly his head came up out of the water, but just long enough for one good breath of air! Down he went again! He splashed hard again, but he just wasn’t able to make any progress.
Up and down he struggled in the water until he was so tired. Freddie had never been so frightened in his whole life. Was he drowning? With eyes wide open, he saw big bubbles churning in the water around him.
He was coming up again, slowly. What was that? . . . Something reddish brown was in the water beside him . . . it looked like Zip’s tail!
Freddy grabbed it and held on with all the strength he had left. Zip seemed to understand. He swarm straight to shore with Freddy holding tight to his tail!
Freddy loved Zip even more after that. He had saved his life! He never would forget the awful feeling of reaching for the bottom of the lake with his feet and finding nothing to stand on!
Is that a little bit like the way people will feel someday when they stand before God to be judged for their sins? Because Freddy was a Christian, he could say, “He brought me up also out of a horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and set my feet upon a rock, and established my goings” (Psalm 40:22He brought me up also out of an horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and set my feet upon a rock, and established my goings. (Psalm 40:2)).
Freddy had learned when he was just a little boy that he was a sinner and could not save himself. He had read, “He that heareth My Word, and believeth on Him that sent Me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto life” (John 5:2424Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto life. (John 5:24)).
Reaching out in faith, he had taken hold of God’s promise just as simply as he had taken hold of Zip’s tail, and the Lord Jesus had “rescued” him. Freddy was saved, and the Bible told him that his feet were safely upon the Rock—Christ Jesus.
Someday will you have to face God with nothing to stand on? Excuses, good works, friends—none of them will help you when that time comes. Reach out in faith today and accept the Lord Jesus Christ as your Savior.
ML-05/14/2017