October 22, 2018 (Monday)
The most famous ship of all time is possibly the Titanic, the supposedly unsinkable ship that went down on its maiden voyage. Many movies have been made and many books written about the fateful journey. Few will include the story of Scottish evangelist John Harper. Harper was a passenger on the Titanic.
In 1912 Harper was travelling to Chicago to take up his appointment as Pastor of Moody Church. He had his daughter Nana on board with him. His wife had died a few years earlier. When the Titanic struck the iceberg and began to sink he put Nana into a lifeboat and then ran throughout the ship yelling “Women, children, and unsaved into the lifeboats!” When the ship finally went down he had already given his lifejacket to another passenger. Survivors report that to the very end Harper was witnessing to anyone who would listen. One survivor recalls clinging to one of the ships spars when Harper floated near him.
“Man, are you saved?” cried Harper.
“No I’m not” replied the man.
“Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved” pleaded Harper.
The waves carried Harper away and brought him back a little later. “Are you saved now?” asks Harper.
“No, I cannot honestly say that I am” says the man.
Again Harper pleads with him, “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved”.
Shortly afterward Harper went down. The man who survived was one of only six people rescued, but in a public meeting four years later, recounting this episode he said “There, alone in the night, and with two miles of water under me, I believed. I am John Harper’s last convert.”
Source: Reported by Elesha Coffman, Christianity Today, August 7,200. The story is told in The Titanic’s Last Hero (Moody Press, 1997)
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A husband was questioning his wife about a visitor from the church who had come to their home. “What did he want?” asked the husband. “He just wanted to meet us and invite us to the church.” “Is that all?” he asked. “No,” she said, he asked me, “Does Christ live in this home?” “Well, I hope you told him to mind his own business,” the husband firmly said. His wife replied, “If you had been here, you would have thought it was his business.”
Do we have a burden on our hearts for folks who have not accepted the Savior for their very own? Do we pray for lost people? Are we concerned? Jesus commissioned us, just before He ascended into Heaven, to go into all the world, make disciples for Him, and baptize them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. This has long been known as “The Great Commission,” and it is still what the Lord wants us to do.