by Mona Hunter
What does the following list of words all have in common? Royal
Carribean, Carnival, Windstar, Abracadabra, Blue Lagoon, Celebrity,
Princess, Festival, Majestic, Regal, Spirit, Temptress, and Voyager. These
are the names of cruise line companies from all over the world. The names
are romantic and exciting and conjure images of moonlit nights, dancing,
good food, great shows, fishing, dolphins swimming by— well, you let
your imagination run on. These cruise line companies all have at least one
thing in common. They all depend on boats. (You knew that.)
By now you may be asking, "What does this have to do with God?
We're not going anywhere on a boat." That's not entirely true. The
very first boat we read about in the Bible was the ark. Jesus preached
from boats. He calmed the storm from a boat. Some of Jesus' disciples were
fishermen who fished from boats. Boats have played an important role in
Biblical history.
Did you know that many churches (including ours in Lone Wolf & Elk
City) are designed for the ceiling to look like the bottom of a boat. It
is called the nave. There is a big difference between our ‘boat' and a
cruise ship, however. Cruise ships are designed for pleasure and partying.
Those are not bad things. But the ‘boat' of Christians is designed as a
rescue ship just like the very first boat, the ark that rescued Noah. When
we look outside the ‘boat' of the church, we don't see dolphins. We see
"people screaming for help as they flail and drown". Take a
minute to ask yourself: What kind of boat is my church? Am I willing to
throw out a life-line from my boat? Am I letting Jesus captain my boat?
"Jesus has charted the course for our journey: But you will
receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my
witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of
the earth.'