24 “Everyone then who hears these words of mine and acts on them will be like a wise man who built his house on rock. 25 The rain fell, the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house, but it did not fall, because it had been founded on rock. 26 And everyone who hears these words of mine and does not act on them will be like a foolish man who built his house on sand. 27 The rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell—and great was its fall!”It's always difficult revisiting well known scripture passages, because we all come to it pretty much knowing what it means. If you grew up in the church, this is probably one of the passages you remember seeing put up on the felt board or singing about or building a craft for during Sunday school. We get into the routine of quoting this passages when times get tough or when talking to someone about coming to faith. One of my favorite hymns, The Solid Rock, is well known. So we approach these verses and immediately think, "What more is there to say?"
The problem is that we often only read half of this passage. "Everyone who hears these words and acts on them is like the wise man who built his house on rock. And everyone who hears these words and does not act of them is like the fool who built his house on sand." The storms often feel like they're thrown in for dramatic flair, and we tend to live out the verse that way. We're mot convinced that if we build on the rock, we'll have a storm repellant house, that we'll somehow be free of any storms that will hit our lives. When we ask why bad things happen to good people, the underlying assumption is that the good people should have found the key to avoid the storms altogether. Yet Jesus says nothing to this effect. In fact, he doubles down on the inevitability that you will be hit with a storm with enough force to blow your house over. And when that day comes, you will know whether your house was ready for the storm.
We read this passage often in times when the storm is not hitting our lives, and I know for me, I struggle to feel any sense of urgency. Much like those in the time of Noah, I most often assume that the storm is non-existent, but even if it is, I assume it's not going to hit me any time soon. And let's face it, it's much easier to build sandcastles than houses. We can play in the sand, sometimes building pretty impressive structures that seems so easy to manipulate and wield. Houses are stressful and painful; they require attention and focus not just to erect but also to maintain. A little sand here or there on a sandcastle and everything is as good as new, but a house requires a commitment and process. And in a culture where we desire quick, easy solutions, often sandcastles seem more appealing than houses.
Of course we all know those sandcastles don't last. Even the smallest of waves will topple that structure to the ground, washed away and destroyed. But even in the worst storms, though a house may seem completely destroyed, usually the foundation will remain. Sure, it may be cracked and broken, needing repair, but a firm foundation will always remain.
The trap we often fall into is believe that we can start building just before the storm comes or shortly after it hits. Our faith is more of a contingency plan rather than our insurance. We'll try everything else first, but if all else fails, we still have faith. The problem is usually our faith is sitting on a shelf in the house than serving as its foundation, and when all else has failed to keep our lives secure, our faith gets thrown out with the rest of the rain soaked garbage the storm has destroyed. Jesus is calling us to build our foundation on the rock, that our first line of defense should be our faith. To use a common political ad analogy, at 3 AM, when everything seems to be crashing down, our first call should be to God. God is not just a contingency plan that we thrown into place once all else has (inevitably) failed. God's faithfulness is what keeps us going, no matter how hard we a battered and broken.
If you're familiar with engineering or just with home construction, you'll know that most of the strength of a building and its height is determined by how strong its foundation is, and that in order to have a taller bigger building, you must have a much more solid, firmer foundation. The same is true of trees. Many trees fall not because they have weak trunks but because they have shallow roots. The reason why the Redwoods of Sequoia National Park or the Bristlecone pines in the Sierra Nevada Mountains still stand is because they have deep roots. Those roots allow the tree to bend, contort, and twist so that no matter how strong the winds are or how powerfully the rain breaks up the soil, the tree will still be able to stand. And the same is true of our faith. We don't stand, we don't survive, we don't thrive without deeps roots in our faith. Sure, you can choose to grow in different soil, with vast shallow roots, but it's no better than building your house on sand. Once the ground starts shifting, it's hard to stay standing.
Jesus us asks us and invites us to build on a firm foundation where in even the worst storm your house will still stand. And make no mistake: the storms will come. Jesus never claims that this life is easy no matter what you believe. The storms will come when you least expect them and often when you're least prepared. Build your house on the solid rock. When all else fails, the rock will remain.