"Why do you call me 'Lord, Lord,' and not do what I tell you? Everyone who comes to me and hears my words and does them, I will show you what he is like: he is like a man building a house, who dug deep and laid the foundation on the rock. And when a flood arose, the stream broke against that house and could not shake it, because it had been well built. But the one who hears and does not do them is like a man who built a house on the ground without a foundation. When the stream broke against it, immediately it fell, and the ruin of that house was great."
(Luke 6:46-49, ESV)
This week, the ruin of the Gulf Coast is great. Stories pour into the media consciousness minute by minute, depicting what can rightly be considered the basest of human behavior: looting, carjacking, prison riots and hostage situations, shots fired at police officers trapped on a rooftop. The entire region is in chaos, and I haven't yet heard anyone express surprise.
I've been seeing reprints of disturbing, long-ago-published news articles and scientific caveats that forewarned of the situation in which New Orleans is currently (and literally) mired. "You live below sea level, surrounded by water. When the hurricane hits -- and it is a question of when, not if -- there will be nothing you can do."
People chose to ignore the warnings. Understandably so, if you consider the charm and uniqueness of the city's culture and history, coupled with passing decades free of incident. Still, there was awareness in the background: New Orleans is a city of above-ground mausoleums because the water table is simply too high to allow below-ground burial of the dead. And now, tragically, many houses of the living have also become houses of the dead. No one yet knows how many desperate souls have perished, trapped inside the homes they could not or would not leave.
It's a cautionary tale for those of us who deem ourselves immune to disaster. Floods, tangible or metaphorical, will come. Devastation will come. Destruction and despair and desperation will come. This, too, is a "when, not if" matter.
In the above passage, Jesus was not warning people to build a literal foundation for their literal dwelling place. He was not warning them to live somewhere else in a physical sense. For as we have seen, even a strong physical foundation won't necessarily save a building in a hurricane, and even people who move to avoid hurricanes may face other destructive natural forces.
Instead, Jesus' admonition, His forewarning and exhortation, is this: build your life on the only foundation capable of withstanding the worst thing that you will ever face. So what is that?
Maybe you will lose your job, or your house, or your loved one, or your health. Maybe you will lose your entire community. Maybe your entire city, your culture, your way of life. Can dependence on Christ and the true inner peace He brings help you through these earthly trials? Absolutely. But to say only that, I think, would be missing the point.
Because someday, you will also lose your life.
It might not be in a hurricane. It might not be tomorrow. You might be one of those fortunate people -- and there will be some -- who will live out the rest of your existence in comfort and privilege, never in need or even in want, seamlessly transitioning from stage to stage of life until you die peacefully in your sleep.
Then what?
Two doors. The first door is wide open and welcoming, and scores of good, charitable, generous, loving, kind, gentle, community-serving, justice-seeking, churchgoing people will pass through the portal to live an eternal life marked by the common denominator they shared on Earth: a rejection of God, His precepts, and His mercy. The other door is locked, the only key being acknowledgment and acceptance of the gift God offered, which is the humbling forgiveness (through Jesus Christ) of everything bad or wrong you've ever done, a slate-wiping grace. The thing is, at this point, you will have already chosen your door. It's the point of no return. What's behind door number one isn't as pretty as things are here in this life, and forever is a long, long time.
I know some of you who read this blog don't agree with me, don't believe as I do in the claims of Christ. That's your decision, the outcome of which doesn't mean I'll love you any more or any less. You can say I'm full of it, a fool, that I have no good reason to believe these things or to present them to you in this manner. You can say you don't need God. You can even say you don't believe in Him at all.
Just don't say He didn't warn you.
