In Part 1 I suggested that death is more like a curtain than a cave. That it is passage as opposed to a place. I suggested that maybe our fears are rooted in the fact that we cannot see what lies beyond.
But I think there’s more…
I think in our hearts we sense that what lies on the other
side is somehow more important… more real than what we now call “real”. I wonder if in our hearts we suspect we are
only dreaming and that death is a waking up into something more true, more
powerful, more pure than what we are presently experiencing.
What if all our attempts at religion are rooted in this one,
almost universal thought that, somehow what we do in the “hear-and-now” is
impacting the hereafter. What if there is
an eternity and the way I treated my spouse and my kids and my 3rd
grade teacher impacts what’s behind the curtain? What if the light I face on the other side is
the end of the proverbial tunnel …or an oncoming bullet train and which one is
determined not by the roll of a dice but by the choices and actions I am
engaging in right now?
…maybe it’s good to be scared…
But there is a writer in the Bible named Paul the Apostle
who seems to mock death…
“Death,” he writes, “where is your victory? Where is
your sting?”
What made death “sting” - according to Paul - what made
death so frightening was the fact that death puts us face-to-face with the God
we’ve spent a lifetime rejecting. The
sting of death - again according to Paul - is the fear of the judgement of God
…then he writes two words which I so desperately love in
scripture, “But God!”
“But thanks be to God who has given us victory through the
gracious work of the Lord Jesus Christ!” Because of Christ’s forgiveness
made available through His work on the cross we no longer have to fear
death! Death is no more than a wasp without a stinger for those who
have been set free from sin! For us,
death brings not judgement but grace.
Curtain, doorway, gateway… death is nothing more than the
passageway into eternity. A doorway that Christ passed through and then walked
back out!
This is why in His letter to Philippian believers, as the
apostle Paul contemplates death, he could write – If I live, I live faithful to
Christ.. if I die, I gain! If I had to choose laying down my life for the
faith, or going on in service, that would be a tough decision. You see, I long to be with Jesus… but there
is so much work for me still to do.
For those who fear death… call on Jesus…
For those who are called by His name… there is work to do…
…just sayin’…
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