A recent trip to New York included the usual trips to the Bronx and the new Yankee Stadium. Across the street the once proud “House that Ruth Built” was being slowly demolished. About one-third of the stadium was still upright. It was a sad sight. I recalled the recent and very different demise of Texas Stadium in Irving, Texas. In about a minute that once grand structure came crashing down in a spectacular implosion. The demise of something important in your life is sad whether it comes by agonizing demolition or dramatic implosion.
I thought of fellow sojourners of faith whose once solid foundation of belief has been destroyed. For some it seemed like their spiritual demise came out of nowhere. A spiritual implosion if you will. But the truth is that there is rarely a quick implosion of faith. It almost always occurs slowly over time. Bringing down Texas Stadium took months of targeting the foundation and key structural supports. After thousands of hours of planning and work the building came down in about a minute. But that dramatic minute was just the final result. So it is with our faith foundation. The Enemy plants a explosive device of doubt on one part of the foundation. Self-effort to fix sin issues weakens another part of the structure. Hiding who you are from God and others fatally weakens more support structures. Forgetting to nourish the soul with God’s Word rusts the steel of perseverance. Failing to pray causes cracks to become fissures. And then a wound, a broken relationship, an illness, a betrayal or a loss causes the button to be pushed and the detonation occurs. Faith implodes. But it was not that one issue or event that caused faith to blow up. It was the slow destruction of faith’s foundation over time. Jesus described the process in the Gospel of Luke.
“So why do you keep calling me ‘Lord, Lord!’ when you don’t do what I say? I will show you what it’s like when someone comes to me, listens to my teaching, and then follows it. It is like a person building a house who digs deep and lays the foundation on solid rock. When the floodwaters rise and break against that house, it stands firm because it is well built. But anyone who hears and doesn’t obey is like a person who builds a house without a foundation. When the floods sweep down against that house, it will collapse into a heap of ruins.” (Luke 6, NLT)
Check your foundation. Build only on the Solid Rock of Jesus. Then you can stand against whatever the world throws at you.
ashleigh
i needed to be reminded of that last verse. i kindof scanned through the blog roll but ive been struggling with an ungodly romantic relationship and its really difficult to deal with and figure out, but as long as i obey the Word of God and DO thr Right thing I believe God’s wIll will work out … For HIS Glory and my good… amen~
Jessica Renshaw
Hi Dave,
I let you know some time ago that I read your article, Christian Identity Theft, to the members of a small group in our home in Long Beach, California, called Letting God Speak Truth to Lies You Believe. (We held the class twice.)
I have just started a blog, His Scribe, and in tomorrow’s post I am giving the URL of this article (since I don’t know how to link within a post) and have added your blog to the blogs I am following publicly. I Iook forward to reading all 756 posts!