There
are three things, the writer of Proverbs says, that are amazing to him – four
that he does not understand. Then he lists them, one by one. The first one is
“the way of an eagle in the air.” The second one is “the way of a snake on a
rock.”
A ship’s power
A
ship sails into storms with the bow facing forward. It is designed for give and
take as it wrestles through billows and storms. Cargo ships try to stay well offshore when there is a
major storm at sea. If the ship is too close to land, the storm can drive the
ship onto the land. Brian Anderson says:
If
your ship is built correctly, . . . it’ll take the beating not by force, but by
a calculated give and take.
Any
massive seafaring ship worth its weight in salt is designed to flex through
rough waters—. . . maritime engineers and architects who build these
things . . . [do so by] . . . calculations to allow big ships to twist
slowly side to side like a sea snake on Ativan, and also bow up and down (this
is what’s known as hog and sag.) If not for these applied mathematicals, the
vessels would literally snap apart.
A
ship is built to withstand the tempests it meets. It is built to transport
passengers and cargo from one shore to another. Sometimes a ship is built for
the purpose of defense or protection. No matter its purpose, it must be built
to withstand the waves on the oceans. When it glides across smooth waters or
moves in rhythm with turbulence, it is a sight of beauty.
The way of a ship on
high seas
High seas are
international bodies of salt water without jurisdiction of specific countries
and shores. The water is open, free, and continually moving with the ebb and
flow of the tides. The way of a ship on high seas is to slice through oceans of
depth, moving from one continent or country to another. It involves transfer
and time. The way of a ship on high seas is to bend and move with the waves,
whether they be turbulent or calm. The ship is not changed by the storms or the
calm; it merely responds without flexing resistance, riding out the storms.
This is how it is sustained.
Learning from a ship
on high seas
Ships
are designed and built to charter waters, no matter how soft or strong the
gale. Ships are designed to flex through turbulence, remaining unbroken. There
is power in the way the ship is built – and even more power in the way it
handles itself during turbulence, using its design to move in sync with the
storm instead of against the storm. We are designed to withstand turbulence
because our Maker is our sustainer.
Our
purpose is to continue to move through chartered or unchartered waters without
breaking because we bend with the wind and come out strong. By keeping the bow
facing forward into the storm, we remain strong. Our course is set by the Word
of God. When we follow that course, we remain safe.
Originally Posted HERE
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