In January 1997 British yachtsman Tony Bullimore was
sailing solo deep in the Southern Ocean. A gale was raging. The waves,
reaching the height of a five story building, rushed on him with a sound
like roaring thunder. As his yacht plummeted down the face of a wave it
hit something submerged in the water and turned upside down.
Tony,
who had been sheltering in the six- by 10-foot cockpit, found it had
become his prison. As giant waves buffeted the boat, water poured in
and out a broken window, knee high at one end, waist high at the other.
The air temperature was down to 36 degrees, and it was pitch black – the
sun couldn’t penetrate the upturned yacht.
Twelve times Bullimore left the cockpit in a vain attempt to release his
life raft. Meeting with no success he took refuge in his little cabin.
Sitting inside the cold inky darkness Bullimore had few rations – some
chocolate and a device for making fresh water from salty sea. His
fingers became frostbitten and Bullimore thought that he was going to
die. The odds of being rescued seemed impossibly small.
For
four long days Tony survived, until late Wednesday night when a RAF
plane located him and dropped an electronic probe next to his yacht.
Bullimore could hear the faint pings, and with hope rising in his heart,
started tapping on the hull to communicate to whoever was listening that
he was alive. Early the next morning the HMS Adelaide drew
alongside, and some sailors were dispatched to bang on the hull. Tony
heard the banging, took a deep breath, and swam out through the wreckage
of his yacht to meet them.
How
did he feel at that moment? Bullimore says “When I looked over at the
Adelaide, I could only get the tremendous ecstasy that I was
looking at life; I was actually looking at a picture of what life was
about. It was heaven, absolute heaven. I really, really never thought
I would reach that far.”
Reflecting on the experience later Bullimore told reporters, “In these
last six days I’m a different person. I won’t be so rude to people, not
that I was, but I’ll be much more of a gentleman and, equally, I’ll
listen to people a lot more. And as a dear old friend of mine, David
Matherson, said when he had a heart attack… he said that when he got
over it and opened his window in his bedroom and he peered out and smelt
the fresh air and all the rest of it, he said: ‘It was like being born
all over again; life was great!’ Well that’s how I feel now – like
being born all over again.”
Scott
Huggins explains: “Tony Bullimore learned the power of hope. It was
hope of being rescued that drove him to survive and it was the
fulfillment of hope that brought him such joy and a new perspective on
life. In the same way the Gospel promises hope to all of us, and
particularly to those of us who find life tough going. A time will come
when the Rescuer will arrive and release the world from the pain and
suffering. And it’s that hope that drives us forward.” *
Peter
reminded Christians of the hope that they had in Christ: “Blessed be the
God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to His abundant
mercy has begotten us again to a living hope through the resurrection of
Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance incorruptible and
undefiled and that does not fade away, reserved in heaven for you” (1
Peter 1:3-4).
Because Jesus died on the cross for our sins and rose again so that we
might receive the gift of eternal life, we can have hope beyond this
life! We can rejoice in that hope when we accept His offer on His terms
by placing our faith and trust in Jesus (Acts 16:30-31), turning from
our sins in repentance (Acts 17:30-31), confessing Jesus before men
(Romans 10:9-10), and being baptized (immersed) into Christ for the
forgiveness of sins (Acts 2:38). God will continue to cleanse us from
our sins and sustain our hope as we continue to walk in the light of His
Word (1 John 1:7; Colossians 1:22-23).
That
hope enables us to endure the storms of life, looking forward to eternal
life in heaven – all because of what Jesus did for us.
Won’t
YOU accept His offer of salvation and know the hope of eternal life?
-- David A. Sargent
Source: Slightly adapted from an article by Scott Higgins. Bullimore
quotes taken from The Sunday Age, January 1997. Higgins’ article
is found in Stories for Preaching (www.storiesforpreaching.com).
David A. Sargent,
Minister
Church of Christ at Creekwood
1901 Schillinger Rd. S.
Mobile, Alabama 36695
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