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"SHE
WAS
GIGANTIC,
awesome,
the
pride of
the
British
White
Star
Lines.
Measuring
882.5
feet in
length
with a
beam of
92.6
feet and
weighing
almost
50,000
tons,
she was
the
largest
ship
afloat.
Her two
38-ton
wing
propellers
were
accompanied
by a
center
steam
turbine
propeller,
capable
of
propelling
her
through
the
waters
at 24
knots.
Her four
massive
funnels
weighed
sixty
tons
each and
were
large
enough
for two
railway
locomotives
to pass
through,
side by
side.
She held
6,000
tons of
coal to
feed her
29
coal-fired
boilers.
Her
100-ton
rudder
was as
high as
a large
house
and her
main
anchor
weighed
15 tons.
Her
interior
was
fitted
with the
best in
materials
and
craftsmanship;
nothing
afloat
could
match
her
sheer
elegance.
Her name
—
TITANIC
—
comes
from
Titan,
the sun
god of
ancient
Greeks,
and also
means,
“One
gigantic
in size
or
power.”
DEPARTURE
Wednesday,
April
10,1912.
—
11:45
A.M.
With
a blast
from the
largest
and
loudest
deep-
throated
sirens
ever
made,
she
slipped
away,
with
majestic
great-ness,
from
Southampton,
England,
to begin
her
maiden
voyage
to New
York. At
the helm
was a
veteran
of the
sea,
Captain
E. J.
Smith,
who had
previously
commanded
seventeen
ships
for the
White
Star
Lines.
If
passengers
ever had
total
confidence
in a sea
captain,
it was
in
Smith.
The
ship’s
builders
had
announced
this
vessel
to be
unsinkable.
She had
a double
bottom
and
sixteen
water-tight
compartments.
Smith
said,
“I
can’t
imagine
any
condition
that
would
cause a
ship to
founder
. . .
modern
shipbuilding
has gone
beyond
that.”
Some of
the crew
assured
passengers,
saying,
“God
Almighty
couldn’t
sink
this
ship!”
In their
minds
the name
TITANIC
suited
her
well!
Little
did her
passengers
and crew
know
that
this
sailing
was not
only her
maiden
voyage
— but
her
last!
The
TITANIC
was
heading,
in all
her
splendor,
for a
rendezvous
with
death.
Is there
not a
lesson
in this
for us?
God
says,
“Boast
not
thyself
of to
morrow;
for thou
knowest
not what
a day
may
bring
forth”
(Proverbs
27:1).
If your
rendezvous
with
death
were
tonight
— what
then?
DELIGHT
Four
days out
to sea
— what
a unique
and
pleasurable
experience
it was!
No
vibrations,
so
common
to
sea-going
ships,
were
felt
from the
leviathan
engines.
Unexcelled
comfort
and
entertainment
on board
were
combined
with
speed
unparalleled
in those
days.
Pride
filled
crew and
passengers
alike,
as the
Titan of
the Seas
plowed
through
the
Atlantic’s
forbidding,
icy
waters.
Never
had a
ship
carried
so many
millionaires
in its
first
class
quarters.
Even J.B.
Ismay,
Chairman
of the
White
Star
Lines,
was
aboard.
This
sailing
was a
voyage
to be
remembered
— in
more
ways
than
one!
DEAFNESS
It was a
crystal-clear,
calm
Sunday
night as
the
TITANIC
sailed
on at
full
speed
— but
nature
was
against
her in
three
ways:
(l) a
mild
winter
had
caused
an
enormous
spawning
of
icebergs
from
Greenland’s
northern
coast
into the
shipping
lanes of
the
Atlantic;
(2) no
breeze,
which
would
have
created
ripples
around
an
iceberg’s
base,
producing
a
phosphorescent
glow
visible
for
miles;
and (3)
a
moonless
night,
thus
darkness.
Philips,
the
chief
wireless
operator,
had
received
five
warnings
that day
of
icebergs
nearby
from
other
ships.
Ignoring
these,
the
TITANIC
never
slackened
her
pace.
Many
today
are the
same.
Turning
a deaf
ear to
the
warnings
of God,
they
continue
on their
sinful
course,
regarding
not
their
fate.
“For
God
speaketh
once,
yea
twice,
yet man
perceiveth
it
not”
(Job
33:14).
How
about
you?
DESPAIR
AND DOOM
Sunday,
April
14th,
1912 —
11:40
P.M.
Up in
the
crow’s
nest,
seaman
Fleet’s
eyes
peered
ahead
into the
cold,
moonless,
starry
night.
The
TITANIC,
curling
a white
wave of
foam at
her bow,
plowed
on at
full
speed!
Suddenly,
Fleet
saw it!
Ringing
the
warning
bell, he
screamed,
“Iceberg,
dead
ahead!”
Murdoch,
the
First
Officer,
yelled
to the
helmsman,
“Hard-a-Starboard!”
Then he
sprang
to the
lever,
closing
the
watertight
doors.
But it
was too
late —
an
ominous
shudder
ran
through
the ship
as a
huge
spur of
ice
under
the
waterline
tore a
300 foot
gash in
the
starboard
forepart
of the
ship.
She had
sailed
546
miles
that
day, to
meet her
fate.
Two
hours
and
forty
minutes
later,
at 2:20
A.M., on
April
15th,
she
raised
her
stern as
a final
tribute
to the
North
Atlantic
which
was
claiming
her. The
costly
and
“unsinkable”
TITANIC
made her
death
plunge
to a
watery
grave
2-1/2
miles
below.
Her life
was
short,
reminding
us of
ours.
“They
are
passed
away as
the
swift
ships”
(Job
9:26).
“What
is your
life? It
is even
a vapour,
that
appeareth
for a
little
time,
and then
vanisheth
away”
(James
4:14).
There
were not
enough
lifeboats
for all!
Listen
to the
testimony
of a
survivor:
“The
agonizing
cries of
death
from
over a
thousand
throats,
the
wails
and
groans
of the
suffering,
the
shrieks
of the
terror-stricken,
and the
awful
gasping
for
breath
of those
in the
last
throes
of
drowning,
none of
us will
ever
forget
to our
dying
day.”
Six
hours
later,
the last
survivor
was
taken on
board
the
CARPATHIA.
The
count
was made
— 705
saved,
over
1500
lost!
Most
perished
that
night.
How
similar
to
man’s
spiritual
condition
today,
regarding
God’s
salvation.
The Lord
says,
“Few
there be
that
find
it”
(Matthew
7:14).
However,
unlike
the
TITANIC,
God has
a
Lifeboat
for all,
and that
Lifeboat
is
Christ!
He shed
His
blood at
Calvary.
He died,
then
rose
again,
and He
is
willing
to save
you by
virtue
of His
finished
work.
“For
the Son
of man
is come
to seek
and to
save
that
which
was
lost”
(Luke
19:10).
Are you
lost?
Then,
“Believe
on the
Lord
Jesus
Christ,
and thou
shalt be
saved”
(Acts
16:31). |