“I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service.” Romans 12:1
The Titanic was designed by some of the most experienced engineers of its time and built with the most advanced technology available. It was considered unsinkable. So when it sank, the world was stunned.
What many don’t realize is that during the design phase, engineers proposed using a newer, larger type of davit—equipment capable of lowering lifeboats over the side of the ship. With these davits, the Titanic could have carried up to 64 lifeboats… enough to save more than 4,000 people, exceeding the ship’s total capacity.
The davits were approved. The lifeboats were not.
The White Star Line chose to install only 16 wooden lifeboats, which was the minimum requirement set by the Board of Trade. Though the ship could carry over 3,500 passengers and crew, there were lifeboats for only 1,178 people—just 33% of its capacity.
- They broke no laws.
- They violated no regulations.
- They met the standard.
- But the standard wasn’t enough.
The decision was partly aesthetic. More lifeboats would clutter the deck and disrupt the luxury experience. The ship looked magnificent. Its gold accents, crystal chandeliers, and lavish tapestries were tragically unprepared for disaster.
They didn’t understand the danger of living at the minimum.
Where’s The Line?
As a new Christian I would ask, “Where’s the line? What can I get away with and still make it to heaven?”
I wasn’t asking how to grow closer to God,I was asking how close I could live to the edge. I was searching for minimum-requirement salvation.
The Titanic didn’t sink because it lacked beauty or brilliance; it sank because it lacked lifeboats. They believed nothing could take it down. And then, suddenly, an iceberg appeared.
In our lives, we may look the part. We may say the right things. We may appear spiritually sound. But an iceberg is coming, it is only a matter of time.
The question isn’t if we will face it, it is whether we are prepared when we do.
So today, let’s ask God:
- How can I draw closer to You?
- How can I prepare myself for eternity?
- How much of Jesus do I truly want?
- How much of myself am I willing to give?
Today, let’s go deeper and live fully surrendered lives that go far beyond the minimum.
