Several years ago, Peter Michelmore wrote about some
harrowing experiences that Walter Wyatt, Jr. endured:
Normally the flight from Nassau to Miami took Walter
Wyatt, Jr., only sixty-five minutes. But on December 5, 1986, he
attempted it after thieves had looted the navigational equipment in his
Beechcraft. With only a compass and a hand-held radio, Walter flew into
skies blackened by storm clouds.
When his compass began to gyrate, Walter concluded he was
headed in the wrong direction. He flew his plane below the clouds,
hoping to spot something, but soon he knew he was lost. He put out a
mayday call, which brought a Coast Guard Falcon search plane to lead him
to an emergency landing strip only six miles away. Suddenly Wyatt's
right engine coughed its last and died. The fuel tank had run dry.
Around 8 p.m. Wyatt could do little more than glide the plane into the
water.
Wyatt survived the crash, but his plane disappeared
quickly, leaving him bobbing on the water in a leaky life vest. With
blood on his forehead, Wyatt floated on his back. Suddenly he felt a
hard bump against his body. A shark had found him. Wyatt kicked the
intruder and wondered if he would survive the night. He managed to stay
afloat for the next ten hours. In the morning, Wyatt saw no airplanes,
but in the water a dorsal fin was headed for him. Twisting, he felt the
hide of a shark brush against him. In a moment, two more bull sharks
sliced through the water toward him. Again he kicked the sharks, and
they veered away, but he was nearing exhaustion. Then he heard the sound
of a distant aircraft. When it was within a half mile, he waved his
orange vest. The pilot radioed the Cape York, which was twelve minutes
away: "Get moving, cutter! There's a shark targeting this guy!" As the
Cape York pulled alongside Wyatt, a Jacob's ladder was dropped over the
side. Wyatt climbed wearily out of the water and onto the ship, where he
fell to his knees and kissed the deck. He'd been saved. He didn't need
encouragement or better techniques. Nothing less than outside
intervention could have rescued him from sure death. How much we are
like Walter Wyatt.
*
Because of our sins, our condition is much like that of
Walter Wyatt: lost and dying, unless someone comes to save us (Romans
3:23; 6:23).
God loves us so much that He sent His Son Jesus to rescue
us (Galatians 1:4). In order to save us from sin, Jesus had to give us
life for us to pay the price for our redemption (Ephesians 1:7; 1 Peter
1:18-19).
We must be willing to “take hold” (accept) the salvation
that Jesus offers through our trusting obedience. God will save and
give eternal life to those who place their
faith
and trust in Jesus (Acts 16:30-31), turn from their sins in
repentance
(Acts 17:30-31),
confess
Jesus before men (Romans 10:9-10), and are
baptized
(immersed) into Christ for the forgiveness of sins (Acts 2:38). He will
continue to cleanse from sin those who continue to walk in the light of
His Word (1 John 1:7-9).
Nothing less than outside intervention can save us from
our sin. Thanks be to God that He has already responded to our
desperate situation. He’s awaiting each of us to accept His salvation
by clinging to His Son in trusting obedience.
-- David A. Sargent
* Information gleaned from an article by Peter Michelmore, Reader's
Digest, October, 1987 as it appears in
www.sermonillustrations.com
David A. Sargent,
Minister
Church of Christ at Creekwood
1901 Schillinger Rd. S.
Mobile, Alabama 36695
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