[cog] The Train

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From: "Jan Ross" <rross@...>
Date: Wed, 19 Apr 2000 13:38:51 -0400
THE TRAIN.

There was once a bridge that spanned a large river. During most of the
day the bridge sat with its length running up and down the river
paralleled with the banks, allowing ships to pass through freely on
both sides of the bridge.

But at certain times each day, a train would come along and the bridge
would be turned sideways across the river, allowing the train to cross
it.

A switchman sat in a shack on one side of the river where
he operated the controls to turn the bridge and lock it into place
as the train crossed.

One evening as the switchman was waiting for the last train of
the day to come, he looked off into the distance through the
dimming twilight and caught sight of the train lights. He stepped
onto the control and waited until the train was within a prescribed
distance when he was about to turn the bridge.

He turned the bridge into position, but, to his horror, he found
the locking control did not work. If the bridge was not securely
in position, it would cause the train to jump the track and go
crashing into the river. This would be a passenger train with MANY
people aboard.

He left the bridge turned across the river and hurried across
the bridge to the other side of the river, where there was a lever
switch he could hold to operate the lock
manually. He would have to hold the lever back firmly as the train
crossed.

 He could hear the rumble of the train
now, and he took hold of the lever and leaned backward to apply
his weight to it, locking the bridge. He kept applying the pressure
to keep the mechanism locked. Many lives depended on this man's
strength.

Then, coming across the bridge from the direction of his
control shack, he heard a sound that made his blood run cold.

"Daddy, where are you?"

His four-year-old son was crossing the bridge to look for him. His
first impulse was to cry out to the child, "Run! Run!" But the train
was too close; the tiny legs would never make
it across the bridge in time.

 The man almost left his lever to snatch up his son and carry him to
safety. But he realized that he could not get back to the lever in
time if he saved his son. Either many people on the train - or his
own son - must die.

He took but a moment to make his decision. The train sped safely
and swiftly on its way, and no one aboard was even aware of the
tiny broken body thrown mercilessly into the river by the on rushing
train. Nor were they aware of the pitiful figure of the sobbing man,
still clinging to the locking lever long after the train had passed.

 They did not see him walking home more slowly than he had ever
walked; to tell his wife how their son had brutally died.

Now, if you comprehend the emotions that went through this
man's heart, you can begin to understand the feelings of Our Father in
Heaven when He sacrificed His Son to bridge the gap between us and
eternal life.

Can there be any wonder that He caused the earth to tremble and the
skies to darken when His Son died?

 How does He feel when we speed along through life without giving a
thought to what was done for us through Jesus Christ?

I hope you choose to pass this on.


(author unknown)


Jan Ross
jross@...
http://focusontheword.com
ICQ#18767082
"For a day in thy courts is better than a thousand.  I had rather be a
doorkeeper in the house of my God, than to dwell in the tents of
wickedness."  (Psalm 84:10)