 The Dangers Of Drifting From God
The Dangers Of Drifting From God
Author Unknown 
 
 
                 
“For this reason we must pay much closer attention to what we         have heard, lest we drift away from it.” -Hebrews 2:1
Drifting off course is one of those great evil influences which         affects the believer as much as the unbeliever. The Christian life has         its own defense mechanisms ready against open attack. It's armed at all         points against the obvious temptations - but it's relatively open to the         subtle and deceitful influence of drifting. “For this reason we         must pay much closer attention to what we have heard, lest we drift         away.” Those words from Hebrews, given to a Christian Church, are         a solemn reminder to all Christians of the danger we're exposed to.
         First of all, look at how silent and unnoticed the pull of drift is.         If it disturbed us, if it jarred or jolted us, if it drew attention to         itself, this might be enough to put us on our guard. But, look! no such         warning signal is ever given. No alarm bell is ever sounded. We drift         away softly and silently, like a ship floating down the tide.
         This process is so unconscious because we're floating on such great         currents. The currents are both within us and around us. The currents         within are the drives of our natural desires - our love of ease and         comfort, our fleshly appetites, and our worldliness of spirit. Around us         are other tides set in the same direction - great drifts in life itself,         the spirit of the age, social customs and habits, materialistic         attitudes in business, literature, and entertainment. All these roll         around us ceaselessly, touching us, nestling close to us, acting on us,         and finding allies in the soul to which they are kin. They capture the         tower almost without our being aware of what has happened.
The Path Of Least Resistance
The life of drift is a pathetically easy course to follow. It takes         no output of energy to float down a stream, or to be carried forward on         the crest of a running tide. All that's necessary for a life of drift is         to relax, to do nothing, to let go, to cease struggling, to submit to         the worldly influences within us and around us. “The gate is wide,         and the way is broad that leads to destruction.” (Matt. 7:13)
         No man by chance ever drifts towards Christ. That needs energy         and force of character. But to drift away from Christ needs         neither. We only have to surrender ourselves to the force of our natural         instincts. It's as easy as that.
         It's because the life of drift is so seductively easy to follow that         every person who has followed Christ for some time feels the necessity         to encourage himself to stand up to and firmly resist life's drifts. Who         can fail to see that simple challenge in the teachings of Jesus?
Coming Against The Tide
Christ is always urging men to develop personal initiative and         determination, and to cease being tossed to and fro like leaves on the         stream of life. His condemnation of the men who lived in the days of         Noah was not that they were men of violence - but that they lived         unexamined lives, drifting on the surface of things, weakly to the         infection of social influences, eating and drinking in a day of God's         visitation. (See Matt. 24:37-39)
         His praise for John the Baptist, on the other hand, was that he was a         man of inflexible moral purpose, not “a reed shaken by the wind,”         tossed about by every passing breeze of opinion, but one who took his         own line and held to it, in spite of the consequences.
         So high was Jesus' value of a directed life, and His sense of the         worthlessness of a drifting life that, to secure the one and avoid the         other, He judged that the most drastic efforts were to be taken.         “Pluck out your eyes rather than miss life,” He said. “Cut off         your hands, your feet. Strive to enter by the narrow door.” (Matt.         18:8-9; Luke 13:24) To be saved demands effort, thoughtfulness, and         self-discipline. To be lost makes no such demands. All that's needed is         merely to follow the drift. What could be easier?
Seemingly Innocent Steps
Again, let everyone understand how serious and tragic the final         consequences of a drifting life are. In its early stages the gravity of         drift is rarely ever seen. It's only when it has run its full course         that we see the disastrous result. Then we realize it's as deadly as the         most blatant sin.
         A ship can be just as effectively wrecked by drifting as by running         into an obstacle on its charted course. For the masses of people who         make moral shipwreck of their lives by “dragging sin to themselves         with cart ropes” (see Isaiah 5:18), there are many more         who reach the same tragic goal by simply letting their ropes loosely         slip off the dock.
         There's a great story in the Old Testament which powerfully         demonstrates this point. When Lot selected the lush pasture lands of the         Jordan for himself, he was well aware of the evil reputation of the         cities of the plain. Even in his wildest dreams he never thought of         making Sodom his home. Yet that was the end he finally reached by         gradual and seemingly innocent steps.
         In five grim sentences the story of his moral drifting is summed up. “He         chose the valley of the Jordan” (the location of Sodom); “he         moved his tent as far as Sodom”; “he lived in Sodom”; “he sat in         the gate of Sodom” (that is, he became one of its most influential         citizens). And when the insistent angels urged him to leave this den of         corruption, he had become so callous that we read, “He lingered in         Sodom.” In Lot's ruined home and blasted soul we see the end of         drift. (Genesis 13:10, 13:12, 14:12, 19:1, 19:16)
Slowly Paralyzed
What should concern us more than anything is the power of drift to         numb our sense of danger. Few men seriously believe that they can drift         into the open jaws of Hell. Even when we are conscious that we're         drifting from our charted course and that our spiritual senses are         becoming duller, there's always a false hope in our minds that a little         energy and effort on our part can at any time turn the whole situation         around. We underestimate the paralyzing influence of drift.
         One winter a bird was seen on a piece of wood floating down the river         towards Niagara Falls. It was evidently enjoying the movement of the         swiftly gliding stream. It had no sense of danger. Why should it be         afraid? Didn't it have wings? Couldn't it just fly off when the point of         danger was reached? So it thought, as it rested free from care on the         piece of wood which carried it down near the dizzy edge.
         When it reached the point of danger it tried to soar, but alas! it         could not. The river's mist had frozen upon its wings, and so it         miserably perished as the waters plunged over. Isn't there a serious         danger that our habits fix us so immovably to the drift of our         circumstances that we cannot free ourselves, even when we want to?
The Anchor Of The Soul
What can we do to end the terrible consequences of drifting, and stop         the influence of these currents in life that threaten to destroy us? The         author of Hebrews gives this practical exhortation, “We must pay         much closer attention to what we have heard, lest we drift away from         it.” (Heb. 2:1) The translators questionably insert the phrase         “from it,” which is not in the Original Greek. The insertion of         these words lessens rather than increases the gravity of the moral         issue.
          The writer's meaning is that, if we become indifferent to what God         has spoken, not only do we miss the encouragement of His teaching, but         our lives cease to have stability, and become carried along by chance         and circumstance. We drift away to any tragic goal.
         “What we have heard” are just the great Gospel facts,         truths, values, and warnings, which make and keep us morally and         spiritually healthy. These Gospel truths, if seriously followed, have         the power to give direction and stability to our character.
         And in support of this point, this writer never gets tired of         counseling his readers to “consider Christ,” in whom all Gospel         truth is incarnated. Read again the story of Christ's life and reflect         on the significance of His Cross which shows His militant protest         against a life of drifting. Let the strong resistance of our Lord to all         the drifts of His time lay hold upon our minds and saturate our         innermost being, until it steels our wills to a similar endurance.
         Above all, let us align our lives to the power of His risen life, and         we will be able to hold our ground and stand firm and immovable. It is         written that He is able to keep us from falling (Jude 24), and         again, “May our Lord Jesus Christ Himself and God our Father, who         has loved us and given us eternal comfort and good hope by grace,         comfort and strengthen your hearts in every good work and word.” (II         Thess. 2:16-17) Let us pay close attention to these facts. Let them         be the directing, stabilizing forces in our lives.
          Let us anchor our souls to them and above all to Him, the ever-living         One, who supports and guarantees all these things. There is only one         absolute refuge from drifting, and that is to be safely anchored. A ship         securely anchored never drifts. And a life anchored to Christ by the         four cables of faith, hope, love, and service, consciously made and         continuously tested, will never drift.
         “... we who have fled for refuge in laying hold of the hope set         before us. This hope we have as an anchor of the soul, a hope both sure         and steadfast.” (Heb.6:18-19)
Author Unknown, 3/27/2012