On Second Thought
There is something unsettling about the word drift. It does not sound rebellious. It does not sound dramatic. It sounds almost harmless. A boat does not announce that it is leaving the dock; it simply moves with the current. A heart rarely declares that it will abandon Christ; it simply loosens its grip.
Hebrews 2:1 gives a sober warning: “Therefore we ought to give the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard, lest at any time we should let them slip.” The Greek word translated “slip” or “drift away” is pararreō, a nautical term describing something slowly carried downstream. The writer is not describing open apostasy, but subtle neglect. That is what makes drifting so dangerous. It feels gradual, almost invisible.
I have seen this in pastoral ministry more times than I can count. Two friends begin with zeal—Bible open, prayers frequent, service joyful. Then pressures increase, schedules fill, compromises creep in. The movies seem harmless. The friendships shift. The Word becomes occasional instead of daily. Nothing dramatic happens at first. In fact, the enemy whispers, “See? Nothing happened.” But something did happen. The heart shifted.
Titus 1:9 calls leaders—and by extension every believer—to be “holding fast the faithful word.” The phrase “holding fast” comes from the Greek antechomenon, meaning to cling firmly, to grip with intention. Drifting happens when gripping stops. Sound doctrine, Paul tells Titus, is not abstract theology. It is stabilizing truth. It enables us “to exhort and convict those who contradict.” The Word both strengthens and corrects. Without it, our discernment weakens.
Compromise rarely begins with a public declaration; it begins with small concessions. Hebrews urges us to “give the more earnest heed.” The word for “earnest heed” (prosechō) implies attentive devotion, careful focus. When attention wanes, direction changes. It is possible to attend church and still drift. It is possible to sing worship songs and still loosen your anchor. Drifting is not always visible in outward activity; it often shows first in inward affections.
The paradox is that no one intends to drift. In fact, most of us would insist we are committed. Yet all of us feel the subtle temptation not to be “too serious” about our faith. The culture gently pressures us to moderate our devotion so we will not appear extreme. But consider Christ. He did not moderate obedience to the Father. He did not compromise holiness for acceptance. He “gave up everything,” as Philippians 2 reminds us, emptying Himself and becoming obedient unto death.
If Jesus took the will of His Father with utmost seriousness, how can we treat it lightly?
The writer of Hebrews continues in 2:3, asking, “How shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation?” Notice the word neglect. Salvation is not rejected outright in this warning; it is neglected. The danger is not hostility but apathy. Neglect happens slowly. It is the missed prayer time. The Bible left unopened. The justified compromise. Over time, the attitude shifts. Lifestyle follows.
Yet there is hope embedded in the warning. If drifting happens subtly, anchoring can happen deliberately. “Anchor your life to the Word of God and you will never drift.” That statement is not sentimental; it is structural. An anchor does not remove the waves. It stabilizes the vessel amid them. Psalm 119:105 declares, “Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path.” The Word does not eliminate darkness, but it guides through it.
Charles Spurgeon once said, “A Bible that is falling apart usually belongs to someone who isn’t.” That observation is both gentle and searching. Regular exposure to Scripture reshapes the heart. It renews the mind. It recalibrates affection. The Spirit of God uses the Word of God to form the people of God.
And here is another layer we must not miss: drifting is rarely solitary. The Christian song referenced in the study tells of two friends who began together. Community matters. Hebrews later exhorts us not to forsake assembling together (Hebrews 10:25). Isolation accelerates drift. Shared accountability slows it. We need voices around us who hold fast when our grip weakens.
None of us is immune. The strongest believer can drift if vigilance relaxes. But grace remains greater. The same Christ who warns also intercedes. The same Spirit who convicts also restores. If you sense that your devotion has cooled, the solution is not despair but return. Draw near again. Reopen the Word. Reengage in prayer. Confess compromise. Re-anchor.
Drifting does not have to define your story.
On Second Thought
Here is the paradox we rarely consider: drifting often feels like freedom. To loosen our grip can feel like relief. To moderate devotion can seem like balance. The world applauds flexibility. But the irony is this—what we call freedom may actually be bondage to current and tide. A boat without anchor is not liberated; it is vulnerable. It goes wherever forces stronger than itself dictate.
In the same way, a believer untethered from the Word is not free; he is at the mercy of culture, emotion, and impulse. We imagine that relaxing our spiritual discipline will make life lighter. Yet neglect quietly erodes joy, clarity, and conviction. The anchor of Scripture does not restrict us; it stabilizes us. It keeps us from being “tossed to and fro” (Ephesians 4:14). What feels like seriousness is actually safety. What seems like discipline is actually delight in disguise.
On second thought, perhaps the greater risk is not being too devoted—but not being devoted enough. Christ did not drift from the Father’s will. He held fast, even unto the cross. And because He held fast, we are held secure. The invitation is not to strain harder in fear, but to cling more firmly in gratitude. Anchored hearts are steady hearts.
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