LESSON 1
THE IMPORTANCE OF ANCHORS
"Now these things happened to them as an
example, and they were written for our instruction.” (1 Corinthians
10:11)
Divine
Arrangement:
1. The wilderness is part of God’s physical
creation; it is also part of His divine arrangement as applied to Christian
experiences. Any critic can relegate
these times of dryness, distress, and difficulties in Christian experience to
Satan or to disobedience.
2. Human logic can easily arrange Scripture to
suit itself. However, the Paul applies
them as the wilderness experiences of Israel to the Christian experience.
3. The entire setting of “these things”
which “happened to them”
is in the wilderness
(verses 1-10). Two significant verses
(12 and 13) relate the success of Christian living to understanding, learning,
and applying the lessons of the wilderness.
4. In the first of these two verses, Paul gives
warning to one who is already standing, “Therefore let him who thinks he
stands take heed lest he fall” (v.12)
he would of necessity have to be standing in order to fall. The term “thinks he stands” does not
refer to the one who is deceived in believing that he is standing while he
really is not. He is standing.
5. To those who are standing in a victorious
Christian life, Paul gives warning to pay attention to what he is saying. Many believers learn nothing from experience
of Isreal in the wilderness. Paul plainly indicates that without this
learning there is the possibility, if not the certainty, of falling from
victorious living.
6. Understanding and learning from the failures
of others bring us into an awareness necessary for the
success we desire in our Christian life.
Jesus warns us of unawareness in Luke;
“Take heed to yourself, lest at any time your heart be overcharged
with surfeiting (dissipation), and drunkenness, and cares of this life,
and so that day come upon you unaware.”
(Luke 21:34)
7. Paul echoes this
warning; “While they are saying peace and safety!
Then destruction will come upon them suddenly like birth pangs upon a woman
with child; and they shall not escape.”
(1 Thessalonians 5:3) “Suddenly” is from the same Greek word
used in Luke 21:34 (translated “unaware”).
The meaning is “unawareness,” as the woman is not aware of her moment of
delivery until the birth pangs strike.
8. The second
significant verse immediately following Paul’s reference to Israel’s wilderness
experiences is known by memory by most believers. “No temptation has overtaken you but such
as it common to man; and God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tempted
beyond what you are able, but with temptation will provide the way of escape
also, that you may be able to endure it.”
(1 Corinthians 10:13)
9. In its context,
this verse relates to the experiences of Isreal in
the wilderness as related and applied to our Christian walk today. Many believers have failed to recognize and
therefore understand the lessons and purposes of the wilderness. As a result, some of these believers, if not
most of them, continually fall in victorious Christian living.
10. It is
the hope these lessons will aid in preventing failure, and bring those already
in failure out of it into in victory.
Out of
Egypt:
1. “Out of Egypt” is a term used among believers
to indicate a born again experience and/or deliverance from this present
world’s philosophies. The believers
should remember that once one comes out of Egypt he is headed
to the wilderness. As soon
as the children of Isreal came out of Egypt; “they
took their journey from Succoth, and encamped in Etham,
in the edge of the wilderness,” (Exodus 13:20)
2. The Israelites left slavery, but they also
left pleasant things. Egypt was a
pleasant land. It is often referred to
in parallel to “pleasures of sin” (Hebrews 11:25), that parallel
certainly applies
3. But there is an opposite parallel of Egypt’s
lushness, which is a believer’s life of great blessing and joy. When God’s people let Egypt
they left a land of pleasant greenery, “a well watered land.”
4. About 500 years prior to Israel’s exodus from
Egypt, and prior to Sodom and Gomorrah’s destruction, the lushness of the
Jordan Valley was compared to Eden-like Egypt. “And Lot lifted up his eyes, and beheld
all the plain of Jordan, that it was well watered every where, before the LORD
destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah, even as the garden of the LORD like the land of
Egypt, as thou comest unto Zoar,” (Genesis 13:10)
Eden
Always?
1. A newborn babe in Christ finds that they are
in the garden of the LORD, well watered everywhere. Their spiritual and physical senses are dramatically touched by spiritual water and
greenery. Their spiritual taste buds
have experienced the goodness of the Lord.
They, in their elation, is totally unaware that
they are on his way to the wilderness.
2. Egypt, to whatever it is
likened, is tasty. The children
of Israel left the land which produces great tasting
melons. The best watermelon I ever ate
was in Egypt. The Israelites, once in
the wilderness, longed for those melons along with other foods of flavor. “We remember the fish, which we did eat in
Egypt freely; the cucumbers, and the melons, and the leeks, and the onion, and
the garlick.”
(Numbers 11:5)
3. That which is behind the Israelis and that
which is ahead of them are in great contrast to each other. The people leave a land of pleasant
greenery. Now they are on their way to a
place of stark contrast, a land in which none of their comforts and palatable
delights are found. They are on their way to the Wilderness
of Etham.
4. Our beginning in God is delightful as the
goodies of Egypt. We have the
pleasurable sense of God’s closeness and His unusual and frequent
manifestations. All this is a prelude to
our journey to the wilderness, to the land of stark contrast. But we are happily
unaware of that which lies before us.
Four
Anchors:
1. Who
would ever think that anchors would be needed in the
wilderness? There are floods in the
wilderness have turned over vehicles and taken human lives. But the floods for
which we need anchors are of another kind.
We can be drowned in the wilderness by distress
and discouragement.
2. The
need of four particular truths, which I will refer to as anchors, is not
apparent to most who are on their way to the
wilderness for the first time.
Unawareness was the case s it related to the physical aspects of my
first experience with the wilderness of Mauritania.
3. I was
not aware that within ninety minutes in the wilderness I would need water. So I took no water,
and suffered dehydration for it.
4. These
four truths are very important. These
anchors will save us from drowning in despair; they will save us from
dying. Less serious, they will spare us
many headaches and heartaches.
5. If we
have something which will hold us in difficult times,
it becomes a tremendous benefit in our lives a real lifesaver. Remember the Angel stood before Paul in the
ship that night and said to him, “Fear not, you will appear before Caesar,”
(Acts 27:24) storm or no storm. By this time the sailors had lost all hopes of being saved. “And when neither sun nor stars in many
days appeared, and no small tempest lay on us, all hope that we should be saved
was taken away” (Acts 27:20), but the angel gave Paul hope and he passed it
on to others. Yet a danger was feared: “fearing lest we should have fallen upon
rocks” (Acts 27:29)
6. In our progress into
Gods, in our spiritual journey. There should be a concern about falling upon
the rocks, and making shipwreck of our lives. There are dangers. The children of God faces
them daily. This is why Paul
urges us to take heed in 1
Corinthians 10:12.
7. We should be concerned when we are standing,
concerned enough to take heed to the Word of God, to the things of
God, to the Spirit of God, and to the leading of God.
8. We should take heed so that we are able to
prevent ourselves from falling upon the rocks. Let us avail ourselves of the
anchors God has provided for us.
9. These four anchors from the ship in which
Paul traveled kept that vessel from possible destruction during the long and
difficult night. They may have saved the
lives of those sailors, soldier, and prisoners who were aboard ship with Paul. They probably enabled Paul to fulfill the
words of the angel to him, to fulfill the will of God. They will certainly do as much for you.
10. These four anchors I have for you are four
truths found in the Book of Exodus , and relate to
Israel’s first trip into the wilderness.
These can become the four anchors which you might
cast, and will hold you from being dashed upon the rocks during the lashing
storm.
11. Any storm in our life can last a long time,
months or even years. God expects us to
endure the storm. “Thou therefore
endure hardness, as a good soldier (sailor) of Jesus Christ.” (2 Timothy 2:3), “Endureth
afflictions” (2 Timothy 4:5), “Blessed is the man that endureth temptation,”
(James 1:12), “He that endureth to the
end shall be saved.” (Matthew 10:22) The anchors are designed
to help you endure.
12. The Israelites move out from Egypt. They camp in Etham
at the edge of the wilderness. At this point we will begin to pick up the anchors. May we allow the Holy Spirit make them a part
of our lives.