Not long ago, my wife, Patti, and I visited Caesarea
Maritima in Israel, an ancient ruin of a city built by Herod the Great around
12 B.C.E. Before Herod took control of
it, Caesarea was nothing more than a small fishing village, but he built it
into a center of trade, politics, and power.
Caesarea became the administrative capitol for Pontius Pilate and the home
of the tenth Roman legion. In that
place, Herod managed to build one of the largest man-made sea ports ever built
in a place that had no natural harbor.
But in order to turn a small fishing village into a
bustling, powerhouse of a city, Caesarea needed water. .. a lot of it. And so, Herod built an aqueduct that would
carry water to the city from the mountains more than 7 kilometers (about 4
miles) away. In some places the aqueduct
ran underground, in others above it, and in places where they needed to
maintain its height, it ran in an elevated channel that was supported by enormous stone
arches. As we visited Caesarea, we could
still see it on the beach outside of town.
Herod’s aqueduct was used for over a thousand years,
and although it was repaired and rebuilt several times, what is seen to day is
nothing more than a dry and empty ruin.
Even as a ruin, it is still imposing and impressive. But as impressive as it is, Herod’s aqueduct
is useless.
As I looked at this massive structure, I was
reminded of a story that I read a number of years ago which asked whether our
lives were intended to be pools or channels.
The answer is given to us by none other that Jesus in John chapter 15
where he said, “I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you
will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing.” What Jesus tells us, is that our function as
followers is to be a channel that carries his strength from the source to the
fruit. We aren’t the roots and we aren’t
the grapes. We are the branches.
And so it is with the aqueduct. Our calling is not to receive God’s message,
his Spirit, and his power and store it for later. We aren’t meant to be dams, lakes or reservoirs. Instead, our job is to be like streams,
rivers or the aqueduct. We are meant to
be channels through which God’s grace, mercy, love and strength can flow into
the lives of others.
But too many of us look just like the aqueduct in
Caesarea… dry, useless, and empty. We remember
better days when we were once filled to overflowing, but somewhere along the
line we became disconnected from the source.
Rivers are powerful because they are connected to
the source of their strength in the mountains.
Herod’s aqueduct was useful because it carried water from mountain
springs to a thirsty city. But
disconnected from the source, rivers and aqueducts are nothing more than dry
relics of a better day. The only way
that they can do what they were intended to do is for them to remain connected
to the source.
The same is true of us.
Whether we think of ourselves as branches or
aqueducts, our role is the same. Our
mission is to carry the message and power of Jesus Christ to a world that is
desperately thirsty.
But the only way we can is for us to keep drinking
from the spring. When we think that we’ve
had enough, learned enough, studied enough, or done enough and we stop drinking
from the source, we become disconnected, dry, and useless.
Every city needs water.
The world still needs the mercy, forgiveness,
compassion, strength, and love of Jesus.
But the only way the world can get what it needs...
...is
for us to stay connected to the source.
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